Tuesday, December 24, 2024

CWI : Operation TRUTH (15) : No Room At The Inn

The grieving husband of recently deceased Bishop Pat Buckley is at the centre of a ‘No Room at the Inn’ row with the Catholic Church after being given just ONE MONTH to quit his home.

Eduardo Yanga was hauled before the courts this week and told by a judge he had a month to quit the mansion he had shared with Bishop Buckley in Larne for the last 14 years.

Twelve years ago — following a protracted courtroom battle over squatters’ rights — the Church agreed the controversial clergyman’s ‘estate’ could remain rent free in the former Parochial House until six months after his death.

The compromise was reached when Bishop Buckley claimed squatters’ rights after he was ousted from his post as parish priest of Larne by the Diocese of Down and Connor.

But on Monday in the Chancery Division of the Royal Courts of Justice in Belfast, Mr Justice Huddleston, made it clear to Mr Yanga that any agreement his deceased husband had with the Catholic Church concerning the property didn’t automatically transfer to him.

And when Mr Yanga pleaded for an additional time to find alternative accommodation, the judge told him: “The reason I’m giving you a month is because it’s Christmas.”

After the case concluded, Mr Yanga, who is originally from the Philippines, spoke of his bitter disappointment at the ruling and he said he had been left with no alternative but to appeal it.

He said: “It may sound odd, but the night Pat died, he warned me I would come into real conflict with the Catholic Church over our home. He was having his usual nightcap of brandy and Benedictine. Suddenly he raised his glass and said the time will come when my feet will be in his shoes and I should be prepared to do battle with the Church.

“I told Pat I didn’t have the courage to take on the Church in the same way he did. But he raised his glass again and said. ‘We will see, we will see’. Hours later, Pat died in his sleep. And so our last meaningful conversation was about me finding the courage to fight the Church over my right to remain in the house which had been our home.''

“And guess what? Here I am. I’m determined to appeal it,” he said. 

Representing himself at a previous hearing, Mr Yanga asked Judge Huddleston that in the event of him appealing the case, would it be possible to have it heard before a court on the UK mainland, as he “didn’t believe it was possible for him to receive justice in this country”.

But the judge told him: “You’re being a bit premature, Mr Yanga.”

The dispute started in May immediately after Bishop Buckley’s death aged 72 when the Catholic diocese of Down and Connor serviced notice on Eduardo (46) to quit the large rambling villa at No. 6 Princes Gardens, which they had moved into after their marriage 14 years ago.

It was where Buckley went on to establish his own Independent Catholic Church in a converted stable at the rear of the property.

Buckley set up a small chapel where he officiated at numerous weddings and christenings for people who found themselves at odds with the mainstream Catholic Church.

In particular, he catered for members of the Travelling community and gay couples. They appeared more comfortable with Buckley’s less formal approach to religious matters. And in one stand-out case, Pat Buckley even agreed to marry a Belfast couple, using only their cats as witnesses.

Mr Yanga also said this week he was also bitterly disappointed by a recent decision by the Public Prosecution Service not to bring a case against his alleged attackers after he was assaulted in a bar near his home.

“I don’t think I’m being treated at all fairly by the authorities in Northern Ireland. Pictures showing my injuries appeared in the papers at the time. They show I was seriously injured. And funnily enough, the row erupted because some people took issue with my public statement that I intended to remain in the house which was home to Pat and I in Larne.''

“I honestly believe Pat is guiding me through the difficulties I’m currently facing with regards to the legalities surrounding my right to remain in the house and also the PPS decision not to prosecute my attackers,” said Mr Yanga.

He added: “I will be appealing both decisions. I’ve no other choice.”

NSW Police charge priest with child sex offences after he allegedly groomed teenage boy online

A retired Sydney priest has been charged with child sex offences after he allegedly groomed a 14-year-old boy online.

NSW Police arrested Guy Norman Hartcher in Pendle Hill around 12:15pm on Monday.

According to police, Facebook had identified an account sharing child abuse material overseas that was allegedly operated by the 77-year-old.

The account was shut down and referred to the National Centre for Missing and Exploited Children, who referred it to NSW Police in early December.

An investigation into the religious leader was then launched under Strike Force Trawler.

Detectives purporting to be a 14-year-old boy allegedly communicated with Mr Hartcher on the internet.

Detective Superintendent Jayne Doherty said in a press conference on Tuesday that Mr Hartcher allegedly shared "sexually explicit photographs and discussed in detail sexual acts he'd like to commit" with the teenage boy during the online conversation.

He allegedly organised to meet with the boy in Pendle Hill, where he was arrested by detectives.

Mr Hartcher was charged with use carriage service-procure under 16 years for sex with another and use carriage service to send indecent material to person under 16.

'There is no more serious or grave offence'

Superintendent Doherty said the alleged offences were "extremely serious".

"We have a 77-year-old male who we allege has turned up to meet a 14-year-old boy for sexual act. There is no more serious or grave offence against a child," she said.

Superintendent Doherty urged parents to be aware of who their children were communicating with online.

"The online exploitation of children is a very real thing in our community today," she said.

"Parents need to be aware of how easy it can be for their children to discuss online sexual acts with people that they do not know."

Mr Hartcher was previously the head priest of the Gresford-Dungog parish in the Maitland-Newcastle Diocese.

He was refused bail and is expected to appear before Parramatta Local Court today.

Investigations under Strike Force Trawler continue.

Priest numbers down 51% in Cork and Ross since 2004

The number of diocesan priests in the Catholic district of Cork and Ross has reduced by more than 50% over the past 20 years, and moving forward more parishes will not have their own resident priest, Bishop Fintan Gavin has said.

The diocese, which is geographically the largest in the country, has an estimated population of about 280,000 Catholics, with average weekly Mass attendance of between 30% and 40%.

Cork and Ross currently has 70 priests assigned to its 68 parishes, and those parishes are organised in to 16 groupings, called families of parishes.

Of those 70 priests, 59 were ordained for ministry in the diocese, while the remaining 11 are on loan from other countries, from religious orders, or from missionary societies.

Some 37 of those diocesan priests were under 75 years of age, while 16 of them were under 65.

Bishop Gavin told The Echo that Cork and Ross had 122 diocesan priests in 2004, meaning that with 59 diocesan priests in 2024, their number has reduced by 51.6% over the past two decades.

He said this decline was due to a combination of deaths, retirements, and a decline in vocations.

“Many priests have died, some relatively young, others are now retired after long years of service, and we have not ordained many priests,” he said.

Bishop Gavin said that despite talk of the Catholic Church being in decline, the overall number of people who engage with it is still increasing, especially at what he called key life moments.

In 2023, there were 2,857 baptisms in Cork and Ross, while 3,706 children received First Holy Communion and 3,552 children were confirmed. There were 2,454 funerals in the diocese in 2023.

“They’re huge numbers, there’s huge work goes into supporting those [services], so trying to support that pastorally, sacramentally, is challenging, when you’re trying to preach the Gospel, make disciples, go on mission, which is what the Church is really about,” he said.

Bishop Gavin said that sometimes people come to the Church for a service rather than to have a real engagement and to help build up a faith community. “We’re trying to look at how we can encourage people to get more involved and engaged and to see this as their Church rather than somewhere they come to get a commodity,” he said.

“We’re asking, ‘What’s the parish about? And if we just keep doing that, will we actually have people in the parish?’

“If we’re not engaging, evangelising, getting new members to commit, to be disciples, will we have them in a generation’s time?”

He said the Church was facing several challenges, with those “who have been very faithful and supportive [wanting] to keep what they have — even if it is not sustainable. More parishes will not have their own resident priests. The priests we have cannot sustain an increased workload. We need to find ways to train, support and fund more positions for lay people to work in the Church,” he said.

“We need to encourage vocations to the priesthood.” Bishop Gavin said many good things are happening in Cork and Ross, with “green shoots” recognisable in the high proportion of immigrants wanting to be part of the Church, and he cited growing communities of Brazilian and Indian Catholics in the diocese.

He said there was a new generation of young people discovering the value of a Christ-centred faith, and he said a recent gathering of 160 young people in UCC was particularly heartening.

“We also had 60 young people, from student nurses to secondary school students all help out with our recent Lourdes pilgrimage, so of the 450 that went, 60 were young people, and there was a whole programme of formation and support with them,” he said.

NOLLAIG 2024 : DIOCESE OF DERRY

The last few years have been difficult for many people. 

There’s been the pandemic, there’s been the financial crisis, there’s homelessness for many, and broken relationships.

I know parents do great work at home in order to try and cheer up the children, but there’s lots of things hanging over us. 

And of course we’ve seen so much of war, particularly in the land where Jesus grew up. 

We’ve seen how high tech weapons have been used for the wanton slaughter of so many individuals, completely harmless and completely unarmed.

And yet there are many groups which do huge work to try and cheer everyone up.

There’s great generosity, there’s great charity, there’s great goodwill. There’s great quiet secret Santas who do lots of things in order to enable people to have pleasure at least for a couple of days over Christmas.

I’m still amazed that so many people come to the crib at Christmas. It’s more than just a nice little baby and shepherds. It’s a story of one who’s in solidarity with us in all the messiness of our lives. He, after all, was a nobody who had to flee from his home. He was under threat from an early stage in his life. It speaks of a God who somehow or other is still in solidarity with our broken world. 

And for me, the message of Christmas, the 12 days of Christmas that begin on December 25 and go through to January 6, the message of Christmas is that we can, if we work together, face the challenges of 2025.

Dark clouds hangover us. The sun of hope may be obscured very often, but together, if we pull together, if we are sensitive to one another in our predicaments and in our joys, then we can face what comes ahead; what’s facing us round the corner.

I hope you have a blessed Christmas and Happy New Year.

Donal.

NOLLAIG 2024 : Bishop Alan McGuckian SJ

As we celebrate the joy of Christmas, I send heartfelt greetings to all the faithful of our diocese, embracing the hope that Christ brings into our world. 

In this Jubilee Year of Hope, may the tender love of God shown by the birth of Jesus guide us, inspiring renewal and deepening our faith. 

I extend my deep gratitude to the clergy and our dedicated parish volunteers whose selfless service brings the warmth of God’s love to life in our community. 

May God’s abundant blessing be with you and your loved ones this Christmas and throughout the coming year.

NOLLAIG 2024 : DERRY & RAPHOE

Advent is a joyful season, a time when we look forward to Christmas and prepare to celebrate Christ’s birth – the moment when, as John writes, “the Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us”.

In many of our homes and churches we put up cribs to remind ourselves of this extraordinary moment. These captivating nativity scenes – a baby lying in a stable, watched over by his devoted mother and father, as the three Magi pay homage and the shepherds look on – enthral children and stir something in many adults, as well. For a while, we, too, become onlookers.

And yet, how fully, I wonder, do we grasp the magnitude of what’s being celebrated?

For Christians, Jesus’s birth is one of the two greatest events in human history – and I use the term ‘human history’ quite deliberately. “‘The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son’, Matthew writes, ‘and they will call him Immanuel (which means “God with us”).’”

Jesus came among us fully human and fully divine. He experienced the human condition in its raw completeness. His life story – an infant refugee growing up in an occupied land; witnessing poverty, inequality and oppression; experiencing injustice, persecution, bereavement, betrayal, mockery and abuse; feeling abandoned and, ultimately, suffering an unimaginably brutal death on the cross – means that Jesus endured many of the hardest trials that can befall humankind.

Whenever we feel lost or abandoned, when our world is in turmoil, when the valley is at its darkest, Jesus is the one constant we can turn to. He knows what suffering feels like. Our Lord’s birth, the Incarnation, is one of God’s greatests gifts to us. It allows Jesus to empathise with us, and he will never forsake us. God’s second great gift is, of course, the promise of eternal life for those who believe in him and follow his way.

This Advent, if you find yourself an onlooker at the Nativity scene, open your heart to the wonder at its core and experience the joy of Christmas in all its fullness.

I wish you every blessing this Christmas, and a happy and peaceful New Year.

NOLLAIG 2024 : GALWAY, KILMACDUAGH & KILFENORA

London has “Tower Bridge”. San Francisco, the “Golden Gate Bridge”. New York has the “Brooklyn Bridge”. Venice has the “Rialto Bridge” and Florence the “Ponte Vecchio”. 

Last April, the newest bridge in Galway got a name too – “Droichead a Dóchais” – the “Bridge of Hope.”  

Carrying pedestrians and cyclists, it stretches across the Corrib from Newtownsmith to the Cathedral of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St Nicholas.  I like the name “Droichead a Dóchais” – “The Bridge of Hope”.

This Christmas … Christmas 2024 … in St Peter’s Basilica in Rome, Pope Francis will launch the year 2025, a Jubilee Year or a Holy Year. Such special years normally takes place every twenty five years. They offer us a time to reflect on an important aspect of the life of faith. 

During the Holy Year 2025, Pope Francis has asked people to reflect on the idea of “Hope”… the desire that no matter how dark things get there is always light at the end of the tunnel.

Today, our world is dark indeed. It is riven with anxiety and fear. War rages in so many places – even the land of Jesus’ birth is not spared such terrible suffering. Hatred and harsh talk abound. Poverty, hunger and homelessness are all about us. Sickness and depression are many people’s lot. The planet is in crisis and the human heart is restless in its search for something more.

An essential characteristic of being a Christian is the fact that no matter how dark things get – the Christian does not lose hope. The story of Christmas itself tells us that God comes close to us in our need. Divine Love instinctively seeks to reach out and help. In the gentleness of the Child of Bethlehem, God whispers to the frightened human heart – do not be afraid, trust in me, for together we can conquer all that weighs us down. Hold my hand and let 2025 be the year that together we cross our own “bridge of hope”. Cross our own “Droichead a Dóchais” over the troubled waters of our world and our own lives towards a better, brighter world and a more hope filled way of living.

Wishing you all God’s blessings this Christmas and a healthy and happy, hope-filled Holy Year 2025.

Guím Nollaig naofa, beannachtaí Íosa, Nollaig Chroíúil  agus athbhliain dhóchasach oraibh ar do chuid agus do chairde.

+Michael Duignan

Bishop of Galway and Kilmacduagh
Apostolic Administrator of Kilfenora
Bishop of Clonfert

NOLLAIG 2024 : CLONFERT

London has “Tower Bridge”. San Francisco, the “Golden Gate Bridge”. New York has the “Brooklyn Bridge”. Venice has the “Rialto Bridge” and Florence the “Ponte Vecchio”. 

Last April, the newest bridge in Galway got a name too – “Droichead a Dóchais” – the “Bridge of Hope.”  

Carrying pedestrians and cyclists, it stretches across the Corrib from Newtownsmith to the Cathedral of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St Nicholas.  I like the name “Droichead a Dóchais” – “The Bridge of Hope”.

This Christmas … Christmas 2024 … in St Peter’s Basilica in Rome, Pope Francis will launch the year 2025, a Jubilee Year or a Holy Year. Such special years normally takes place every twenty five years. They offer us a time to reflect on an important aspect of the life of faith. 

During the Holy Year 2025, Pope Francis has asked people to reflect on the idea of “Hope”… the desire that no matter how dark things get there is always light at the end of the tunnel.

Today, our world is dark indeed. It is riven with anxiety and fear. War rages in so many places – even the land of Jesus’ birth is not spared such terrible suffering. Hatred and harsh talk abound. Poverty, hunger and homelessness are all about us. Sickness and depression are many people’s lot. The planet is in crisis and the human heart is restless in its search for something more.

An essential characteristic of being a Christian is the fact that no matter how dark things get – the Christian does not lose hope. The story of Christmas itself tells us that God comes close to us in our need. Divine Love instinctively seeks to reach out and help. In the gentleness of the Child of Bethlehem, God whispers to the frightened human heart – do not be afraid, trust in me, for together we can conquer all that weighs us down. Hold my hand and let 2025 be the year that together we cross our own “bridge of hope”. Cross our own “Droichead a Dóchais” over the troubled waters of our world and our own lives towards a better, brighter world and a more hope filled way of living.

Wishing you all God’s blessings this Christmas and a healthy and happy, hope-filled Holy Year 2025.

Guím Nollaig naofa, beannachtaí Íosa, Nollaig Chroíúil  agus athbhliain dhóchasach oraibh ar do chuid agus do chairde.

+Michael Duignan

Bishop of Galway and Kilmacduagh
Apostolic Administrator of Kilfenora
Bishop of Clonfert

NOLLAIG 2024 : ARDAGH & CLONMACNOISE

When I was appointed bishop of Ardagh & Clonmacnois by Pope Francis last year, I chose Deus Spes Mea – God is my hope, as my episcopal motto. 

A motto is defined in the dictionary as a brief statement used to express a goal or ideal. I chose it for a number of reasons, but most especially because it expresses what is at the heart of our Christian faith. 

Its core message is that God overcomes all obstacles through the fire of hope. We live in a troubled world where all around us there is difficulty and pain, so much so that at times we are inclined to despair. 

What is needed in all of us, you and me, and all those who believe in Christ is that fire of hope. This is the gift that we give to others and pass on to our children. 

The people who have gone before us have left us a legacy of perseverance in the faith, keeping Christian hope alive in their time. 

Now is our turn to persevere, so that this same light of hope shines from us. We do not know what the future brings, but we do know that the flame of Christian hope can continue to burn brightly, even in the most difficult situations. 

The beauty of the Christmas message is the hope that is found in this weak and vulnerable Christ child who has come to save us. 

We are reminded of the love that God has for each of us, that He is a kind and merciful God. 

We are reminded that despite the darkness that engulfs our world today, especially in the Holy Land, the light of hope, of faith will endure.

To quote Pope Francis: Let us exult in this gift of grace! 

Rejoice you who have abandoned all hope, for God offers you His outstretched hand; He does not point a finger at you, but offers you His little baby hand, in order to set you free from your fears, to relieve you of your burdens and to show you that, in His eyes, you are more valuable
than anything else. 

I wish every one of you a blessed, peaceful Christmas, full of the joy and peace that the Christ child brings into our lives.

Mourners outraged at horses seen trampling through Tipperary graveyard and defecating near resting places

Tipperary locals have hit out at the “disrespectful” sight of horses being allowed to wander around a local cemetery while families are laying Christmas wreaths.

Clonmel residents are now demanding that action be taken over an issue which has caused great offence locally – and is in clear breach of guidelines as to the operation of cemeteries.

Strict “no animal” rules are in place for all Irish cemeteries – with the only exceptions being special assistance dogs or horses that are harnessed to funeral carriages.

Horses wandering and grazing in the Clonmel cemetery has become an issue over recent years, but families were upset over recent weeks at the sight of horses in the graveyard in the run-up to Christmas when families are tending graves and laying Christmas wreaths.

In some cases, families were appalled to discover horse droppings and deep hoof prints near graves.

Locals now want a special ­cattle grid installed at the entrance to the cemetery to prevent stray or wandering animals from accessing it.

Councillor Richie Molloy warned that the issue is highly disrespectful and deeply upsetting for families visiting the graves of loved ones in the run-up to the festive season.

“I would say again to people that would consider bringing horses into a cemetery that it is very, very disrespectful,” he told TippFM.

“A number of older people have approached me on the matter.

“Especially now coming up towards Christmas, more and more people will be visiting the cemetery.”

Councillor Molloy raised the issue at the Clonmel borough council meeting – and warned that, after the issue had repeatedly occurred over the years, firm action now had to be taken with the installation of a special cattle grid.

He has also demanded that council staff visit the cemetery to see the issue for themselves.

“I asked (them) to go down to the cemetery and walk around,” he said.

“They would probably see the evidence for themselves. But it is something, I suppose, we will have to keep a close eye on,” Cllr Molloy added.

“Lots and lots of people visit St Patrick’s Cemetery so I’d say it to (people) that if they have seen any evidence to contact ­either myself or the council and that would be more evidence to support the idea of a cattle grid.”

Archbishop calls for ‘robust defences’ to fight the dark forces threatening Irish democracy

Without a vibrant democracy, dark forces will emerge to “exploit grievances and turn debate between opponents into a struggle against enemies”, the leader of the Catholic Church in Dublin has said.

Archbishop Dermot Farrell warned that a system of government and public administration was needed that provides “robust defences against those who target public figures for intimidation in person or on social media”.

He made his comments as churches and parishes across the country prepare for Christmas liturgies, traditionally the busiest time of the year for them.

Dr Farrell said that our system of government “must be seen to be capable of serving the common good” and meet “the needs of the people”. It must also produce outcomes that secure the dignity of all and “provide hope for a better future”.

A flourishing democracy, he said, also requires people who are willing to put themselves forward and accept the judgment of the electorate and “know how to live with one another and with political differences”.

Dr Farrell would not be drawn on the near-election of Gerry ‘The Monk’ Hutch in his own parish. 

However, he said there was much to ponder from the election results, not least the level of turnout in the electoral process itself.

“No one can be sanguine at low levels of participation and all must be attentive to indications of alienation or disillusionment, as well as disenchantment with the democratic process,” he said.

In his wide-ranging comments, Dr Farrell said homelessness is “the most obvious and disturbing aspect of the housing crisis being experienced in Dublin”.

Noting that the Commission on Housing report outlined the many factors which have contributed to this and the need for an appropriately comprehensive response from the public authorities, Dr Farrell said Dublin diocese is making its own “direct response to homelessness”.

It is generally agreed that increased housing supply of all kinds is a critical ingredient in the response to the housing crisis

This is being done through the provision of a family accommodation hub by Crosscare, the diocesan social care agency, in the premises of the former Mater Dei Institute.

“Over the years, parishes and religious communities have made sites which were not required for mission available for housing development,” he said.

“It is generally agreed that increased housing supply of all kinds is a critical ingredient in the response to the housing crisis. I expect that over coming years, as parishes in the diocese assess what is required for ministry, opportunities will be identified to support housing provision.”

On the back of projections for the Dublin diocese that priest numbers are set to fall by 70pc by 2044, Archbishop Farrell acknowledged there is “clearly a major pastoral challenge”.

Only two priests have been ordained in the largest diocese in the country since 2020.

Dr Farrell said it would “soon” become “more acute” as the number of priests available in the diocese “reduces sharply”.

He conceded that the number of candidates for priesthood in Dublin in recent years has been “remarkably small”.

“It is not difficult to identify reasons why discerning a vocation to priesthood and acting on it may be difficult, given our history and the state of popular culture,” he said.

“What is equally clear is that the people of our diocese greatly value the ministry of our priests.”

He believes the church and the faithful need to become “more intentional about fostering vocations and encouraging those who may feel called to this ministry to come forward”.

This is not in any way to take from the unique importance of priesthood

The former president of the national seminary in Maynooth said he was aware of a number of young men who are trying to discern whether they have a vocation to the priesthood, and he is “very grateful” to priests who have come to Ireland from other countries.

But he stressed that while prayer for vocations to the priesthood should continue, “we must also foster ministry and service among all the baptised within a framework of co-responsibility”.

Describing himself as “very encouraged” by the hundreds of parishioners who have come forward for training in different aspects of ministry and to serve on parish pastoral councils and parish finance committees, he said there are many tasks which traditionally fell to the local priest to which many talented and committed lay people now undertake.

“This is not in any way to take from the unique importance of priesthood,” he said.

“The diocese has also continued to attract men as permanent deacons, an ordained ministry which was not present in Dublin before 2012.

“Overall, there are many grounds for hope and confidence that the spirit will enable the church in Dublin to develop its mission even as the pace of change continues to accelerate.”

Trump taps critic of Pope Francis for Vatican ambassadorship

President-elect Donald Trump said Friday that he is picking the head of a right-wing Catholic advocacy group and critic of Pope Francis to serve as ambassador to the Holy See, potentially teeing up tensions with the Vatican.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said that Brian Burch, head of the group Catholic Vote, “loves his Church and the United States — He will make us all proud.” 

Trump also praised Burch for advocating for him and encouraging Catholics to vote for him in 2024.

Burch will face a Senate confirmation process, but it is unlikely he will encounter stiff resistance from Republicans, as his views aren’t considered controversial in the party.

Burch would be far from the first ambassador to the Holy See with a political background. 

Presidents from both parties have selected former elected officials who are practicing Catholics such as President Joe Biden picking Sen. Joe Donnelly of Indiana. 

Trump picked political activist Callista Gingrich in his first term. He also wouldn't be the first to have ideological or theological disagreements with the church.

But none of the picks to helm the Vatican to date would come into the role with as much a digital record of criticizing church leadership. 

On social media, Burch has criticized Francis’ leadership and shared the writings of some right-wing clerics who are critical of him. 

In 2023, he insinuated that church leaders were collaborating with controversial U.S. law enforcement probes into parishes that celebrated the Catholic Mass in Latin, a practice that was phased out decades ago for liturgy in local languages.

Writing on X, Burch said he is “committed to working with leaders inside the Vatican and the new Administration to promote the dignity of all people and the common good.”

Catholic Vote has engaged in tactics that have prompted criticism from more progressive factions of the U.S. church. 

In 2020, the organization used “geofencing” to identify Catholic voters who attended Mass in swing states and target them with ads boosting Trump.

At the time, Burch defended geofencing as needed to “reach our fellow Catholics in the pews” and “ensure that our fellow Catholic voters get the facts and hear the truth — not the latest lies peddled by the media.”

Pope sends letter to prison inmates: Welcome Jesus into your hearts

At the conclusion of a Mass with inmates at the Sollicciano prison in Florence, Italy, Archbishop Gherardo Gambelli read a letter from Pope Francis addressed to them. 

Cardinal Ernest Simoni also joined the Christmas celebration at the Florentine institution.

The Pope and the inmates

In his brief letter to the inmates, Pope Francis expressed his solidarity with them, assuring them of his “human and spiritual closeness.” 

Reflecting on the upcoming Christmas season, he encouraged the prisoners to trust in God as a merciful and good Father. The Pope invited them to “welcome Jesus who is born and fills our hearts with trust and hope.”

Pope Francis closed the letter wishing the inmates a Holy Christmas and peaceful New Year, and he extended his “fatherly blessing” “to the imprisoned brothers, to their families, and to the prison staff.”

Message of hope for the Holy Year

Reflecting on the reading for the day from Luke's Gospel, Archbishop Gambelli reiterated the message of hope tied to the nearing Jubilee Year. He encouraged the inmates with the image of the birth of Christ. 

This birth “took place in a difficult situation, of oppression, of poverty.” Yet through His birth, “the incarnate God brought light into all our histories.”

The Archbishop explained prison does not have to be a place without hope. Through trust in God, “prison can become the place where one finds peace in the heart,” he explained.

Cardinal Simoni: 28 years of imprisonment

Archbishop Gambelli used the example of Cardinal Simoni who suffered imprisonment and forced labor for 28 years under the communist regime in Albania. 

On Christmas Eve in 1963 he was arrested. 

After his release in the 1990s, he forgave his jailers and worked to promote reconciliation in post-Communist Albania. 

In 2016, Pope Francis made him a Cardinal.

“His presence here today among you recalls a shared suffering,” Archbishop Gambelli said, It “signals that the dignity of the person must always be respected in justice.” 

Moreover, the Cardinal’s story testifies to the importance of faith in challenging moments.

A Jubilee for prisoners

On December 26, Pope Francis will open a Holy Door at Rebibbia's New Complex prison in Rome. 

This event will mark the start of the Jubilee at the prison. 

Commander Sarah Brunetti explained the importance of the Pope’s visit. 

She described it as more than a job, it is “a vocation, and now, thanks to the Pope’s visit, it becomes a recognition of our commitment as a mission of mercy and hope.”

Vatican inaugurates new post office in St Peter's Square

A ribbon-cutting ceremony on December 19 in St. Peter’s Square inaugurated the mobile post office donated by Poste Italiane (the Italian Postal Service). 

Already operational, the office is designed to offer pilgrims and visitors exclusive postal and philatelic products.

Present for the event were Cardinal President of the Governorate of the Vatican City State, Cardinal Vérgez Alzaga, and the Director of Poste Italiane, Giuseppe Lasco, and Sister Raffaella Petrini, Secretary General of the Governorate.

The new Vatican Mobile Post Office will not only be for work or service, but will be a place where it is truly possible to “send, receive, meet and be met by God's announcements.”

The prayer of blessing

Inside the office, after the blessing, the President of the Governorate sprinkled the building with holy water.

Afterwards, a crucifix was affixed to the wall on the left side of the building and Cardinal Alzaga and Director Lasco signed the deed of donation from the Italian Post Office.

A place of service to communication and communion

During the dedication ceremony, Cardinal Alzaga reflected on the Annunciation in the Gospels.

The angel Gabriel, the one who ‘brings announcements, sent by God’ reaches ‘even the most insignificant places, like Nazareth’ and ‘even the smallest people, like Mary, the little one from Nazareth,’ the Cardinal said.

He entrusted all the employees, pilgrims, visitors and anyone else who will use the office to the Blessed Mother as "a place of service to communication and communion."

A sustainable and accessible office

Located on the left side of St. Peter’s Square, the new office has three workstations and is made of low environmental impact materials, including wood.

It replaces the previous office, which was established on December 20, 2010 and was decommissioned on December 5 this year.

Ready to welcome pilgrims, citizens and visitors, the new office, in addition to the traditional postal services, offers a space dedicated to the study of postage stamps and postal history.

Patriarch Pizzaballa visits Gaza Christians

"The whole world is with you" the Patriarch of Jerusalem Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa said this morning while visiting the parish of the Holy Family in Gaza. 

He visited the small Christian community in the Gaza Strip who have taken refuge in the parish compound for more than 14 months. 

It was the first light of dawn when the Patriarch left Jerusalem to enter Gaza, escorted by Israeli soldiers, through the Eretz crossing.

The visit was eagerly awaited by the faithful who hoped to be able to celebrate Christmas with their bishop in an atmosphere of serenity and joy, at least for one day. 

This is the second time that Cardinal Pizzaballa has managed to enter Gaza and visit the community led by the parish priest Fr. Gabriel Romanelli, following his visit on 16 May last. 

To ensure maximum security on the route, news of the visit was only given after arrival in the community.

Solidarity with Gaza Christians

Cardinal Pizzaballa then presided over the Mass, celebrated with white vestments in a foretaste of Christmas joy. During the Mass he also imparted the Sacrament of Confirmation to a number of young people.

In his homily, the Patriarch congratulated the resilience of the Christian community: "You are the light of our Church and Christmas is precisely the feast of Light," the Light that is Jesus, and "Jesus who, never forget, is also here with you." "We are proud of you," continued the Cardinal, “not because of anything in particular, but because you have remained what you are: Christians with Jesus”. 

And again, "just as all the people of the world, not only Christians, are with you, so too you can give something to the world that looks at you, bringing the light of Christ to everyone with your example."

Visit to Bethlehem

After his visit to Gaza, the day after tomorrow, Christmas Eve, the Patriarch will make his solemn entry into Bethlehem, where he will be welcomed by another suffering community and where he will celebrate Christmas Eve Mass in St. Catherine's Church.

Jubilee: A new pedestrian area opens near the Vatican

A new pedestrian space has been inaugurated near the Vatican, and more precisely at the start of Via della Conciliazione, the long road that leads from Castel Sant’Angelo to St Peter’ Square. 

Known as Piazza Pia, the area has been redesigned to create a seamless connection between the Castle and the Colonnade, bringing the Vatican “closer” to those travelling to Rome throughout the Jubilee of Hope. 

The project, in fact, was completed just days before the Holy Door opens, kicking off the start of the Jubilee year 2025.

A new gateway to the Vatican

The redesigned Piazza Pia has brought Rome and the Vatican closer, creating a welcoming space for visitors and pilgrims alike. 

Close to the Tiber River, the square now features an expansive pedestrian zone that can accommodate up to 150,000 people. 

It has been designed with sustainability in mind, and includes shaded areas, fountains, and rainwater drainage systems, all improvements aimed at enhancing both the aesthetic and functional qualities of the area.

Parolin: Ancient and modern in harmony

The Vatican’s Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin was present at the inauguration, and in representing the Holy See, described the transformation of the Piazza as the culmination of decades of effort. He traced its roots back to the Jubilee of 1950 and the creation of Via della Conciliazione under Pope Pius XII. 

“In this space, ancient and modern come together harmoniously,” he said, whilst highlighting the symbolic and practical importance of uniting a city historically divided by the Tiber. 

Cardinal Parolin praised the engineering ingenuity behind the project and celebrated its role in connecting pilgrims to the Vatican.

Meloni: A place for reflection

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Melon, who also attended the event, reflected on the importance of pilgrimage and introspection during the Jubilee. 

"A pilgrim’s backpack is light because it carries only the essentials," she noted, as she expressed hope that the Jubilee would offer visitors a chance to focus on faith and simplicity.

Overcoming challenges

The project, overseen by Italian infrastructure agency Anas, faced significant challenges, including archaeological discoveries near the new underpass. 

Throughout the months of work, engineers worked closely with cultural heritage authorities to preserve ancient artefacts while improving access and traffic flow. 

The final result is a modern space surrounded by history, seamlessly blending the Vatican's spiritual significance with the practical needs of a bustling capital city.

The inauguration concluded with a ceremonial ribbon-cutting, symbolising the opening of this reimagined gateway to the Vatican, ready to welcome millions of pilgrims during the Jubilee year.

Australia bishop faces court after new charges filed

An Australian bishop who resigned in 2021 appeared in court Monday after being charged with five more sexual offenses.

Bishop Christopher Saunders, the former Bishop of Broome, did not enter a plea to the new charges during his Dec. 23 appearance at Broome Magistrates Court. 

But his lawyer said he planned to plead not guilty at his next court appearance.

The new charges reportedly concern allegations of sexual assault against a 24-year-old man in 2016.

The 74-year-old bishop faces a total of 33 charges. Twenty-one charges relate to alleged assaults against three victims between 2008 and 2013. Saunders has pleaded not guilty to the 21 charges.

The bishop has not yet entered a plea to a further seven firearms charges, including illegal possession of a weapon.

Saunders is due to appear in court again Feb. 3.

The bishop was arrested in February of this year following a January police raid on his former residence in the Diocese of Broome, carried out by Child Abuse Squad detectives.

The bishop led the Broome diocese from 1996 until 2021, when he resigned citing “ill health,” amid allegations of sexual misconduct and grooming against young Aboriginal men.

His resignation followed a decision to step back from governance of the diocese in 2020, after accusations that he had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars of Church funds on gifts for vulnerable young men, including cash, phones, alcohol, and travel.

The police investigation that led to the raid and the bishop’s arrest came after Church authorities handed over a 200-page investigation conducted into Saunders alleged misconduct, ordered by the Vatican in 2022, after a separate police probe had been closed the previous year due to lack of evidence.

In April, Saunders’ former secretary told The Pillar she had been ordered by the bishop to make “hush money” payments to the bishop’s alleged victims during her time working for him.

The Broome diocese covers the Kimberley and Pilbara regions of the sparsely populated state of Western Australia, serving around 15,000 Catholics out of a total population of 44,000 people.

Pope Francis appointed Bishop Timothy North, S.V.D., as the new Bishop of Broome Oct. 14.

At his Dec. 4 installation Mass, North said: “I am here for ministry with you, I’m here for healing if it’s needed and it may well be. I’m here for listening, I’m here for working, I’m here for praying and I’m here for having some fun with you as well.”

Iraqi leader: No plot to kill Pope Francis during 2021 visit

After Pope Francis said this week that he was nearly assassinated in Iraq, a former political leader in the country said there was no thwarted plot to kill the pope, and that Francis might have gotten bad intelligence about his 2021 visit to the country.

“The talk of an assassination attempt might stem from some security entities' attempts to achieve media gains or draw attention, or possibly from incorrect intelligence reaching the pope,” former Nineveh governor Najm al-Jubouri said Dec. 18, according to Baghdad’s Shafaq News.

“We never heard of or saw any evidence of this alleged attempt, and it is surprising that such claims are being made now, especially since we in Iraq were unaware of these rumors,” al-Jubouri added.

The Iraqi politician’s statement came after an excerpt was published Tuesday from Pope Francis’s forthcoming autobiography, in which Pope Francs claims that he was told during his March 2021 visit to Iraq that at least two suicide bombers had plotted to attack a papal event in Mosul, the capital of the Nineveh Governorate.

“A woman packed with explosives, a young kamikaze, was heading to Mosul to blow herself up during the papal visit,” Pope Francis wrote, according to an except published in Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera. “And a van had also set off at full speed with the same intent.”

Francis wrote in the excerpt that he was told about the assassination attempt by British intelligence officers. He recounted being told that Iraqi police had stopped the would-be assassins, and “blown them up.”

But after that claim received international attention this week, al-Jubouri insisted it was not true.

“No report indicated any threat to the pope’s life, and all security operations and directives in Nineveh were issued under my direct supervision,” the former governor, a retired Iraqi general, said Wednesday.

“Nineveh enjoyed a high level of security and stability during that period, allowing the pope to visit the city comfortably. The Pope's visit was not the only one; it was followed by French President Emmanuel Macron's visit, who toured the old city and visited several sites without any security incidents,” al-Jubouri said, according to Shafaq News.

“The pope's visit in March 2021 was meticulously planned with no security threats or incidents,” the politician added. “The visit was pre-planned at the highest levels, with multiple teams arriving days in advance to ensure the Pope's safety from his entry into Nineveh, through his visit to the old city, and his trips to Alqosh and Hamdaniya.”

“Teams included personnel from Nineveh, Baghdad, British and American security teams, and a specialized Iraqi intelligence team.”

If there was a plot to assassinate Pope Francis in Iraq, it was not the most recent attempt to kill the pope.

In September, seven people were arrested by Indonesian authorities, who said the detainees had plotted to kill Pope Francis during his visit to the country. 

The alleged plotters were affiliated with ISIS, according to Indonesian media reports, and were angry that the pope planned to visit a historic mosque in the country, and that his visit had disrupted the national broadcast of an Islamic call to prayer on Indonesian television networks.

Neither the Vatican nor British intelligence services have commented on the conflicting reports of Pope Francis and al-Jubouri.

Under Pope Francis, a Red Hat Is No Guarantee of a Job (Opinion)

Let us be clear: In the Catholic Church, cardinals are supposed to have a job.

Typically, the Pope either assigns them a diocese or appoints them to a post in the Roman Curia.

Under Pope Francis, however, having a red hat is no guarantee of being given a position, at least not right away.

Cardinal Ángel Fernández Artime, for example, received his red hat more than a year ago. Since concluding his mandate as rector major of the Salesians in April, he has been without an assignment.

He’s not the only one. Since 2017, when his mandate as prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith ended, Cardinal Gerhard Müller has no longer had an office in the Curia or a diocese. 

And since 2020, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, who left the office of archbishop of Lyon, France, and was nevertheless acquitted in a trial for covering up abuse, has no longer been assigned to any office. He, too, has preferred to return to his original vocation, serving as a convent chaplain.

Also, Cardinal Raymond Burke has been without a job since ending his tenure as patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta in 2017, when Pope Francis shook up the order by placing it under the administration of a special delegate — the then-sostituto Archbishop Angelo Becciu, who was succeeded by now-Cardinal Silvano Maria Tomasi in 2020.

Of course, the now-Cardinal Beccui is himself without a post after Pope Francis asked him to resign in the wake of allegations of financial misconduct. Later tried and convicted in the so-called “trial of the century,” he is appealing his five-and-a-half-year prison sentence — still a cardinal, but with little else on his ledger.

Lacking a full-time role does not necessarily mean a cardinal is idle. Cardinals are invited to celebrate Mass, preach at spiritual retreats and speak at conferences, for example. And they are also always available should the Pope need them for a special task. 

Cardinal Burke, for instance, was sent by Pope Francis to Guam in 2017 to serve as the presiding judge for a sex-abuse trial involving Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

Some of this idling of cardinals has to do with the distinctive way Francis distributes red hats — sometimes to adjust the balance of the College of Cardinals and other times to prepare the ground for a future appointment.

For some cardinals, however, patience is required.

Cardinal Artime, is rumored to be in line to become the next prefect of the Dicastery for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, considering that the current prefect, Cardinal João Braz de Aviz, is 77 years old. 

But Cardinal Kevin Farrell also turned 77 and is still at the helm of the Dicastery for Laity, Family, and Life, raising the possibility that it may be some time yet before a change in leadership is made.

If so, Cardinal Artime’s case would be similar in some ways to that of the Conventual Franciscan Cardinal Mauro Gambetti, who, on Nov. 20, 2020, moved from the Sacred Convent of Assisi, where he was custodian, to the Sacred College. Pope Francis appointed him vicar general for the Vatican City State only three months later, on Feb. 20, 2021.

There is, however, another precedent, that of Cardinal Américo Aguiar, who was created cardinal in the consistory of Sept. 30, 2023, when he was auxiliary bishop of Lisbon. It was clear that he would receive another assignment because there was an imbalance between the non-cardinal patriarch and a cardinal auxiliary. 

Yet Cardinal Aguiar was appointed neither patriarch of Lisbon nor prefect of a Vatican dicastery. 

Instead, he was appointed bishop of the Diocese of Setúbal, which had never had a cardinal. Will this be Cardinal Artime’s fate?

Pope Francis has repeatedly used asymmetric appointments to create new situations of government. 

In the consistory of Feb. 14, 2014, he created Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti, then archbishop of Perugia-Città della Pieve and vice president of the Italian bishops’ conference. It was a clear signal that he wanted Cardinal Bassetti to become president of the Italian bishops, as then happened. 

Creating a vice president a cardinal meant, in that case, putting pressure on the then president, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, who nevertheless continued until the end of his mandate.

Pope Francis created Archbishop Michael Czerny a cardinal in the consistory of Oct. 5, 2019. Since 2016, he has been undersecretary of the migrants and refugees section of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development with now-Cardinal Fabio Baggio. 

The section was formally governed by Pope Francis himself temporarily. The creation of Archbishop Czerny as a cardinal created an asymmetry within the Pontifical Council: The prefect, Cardinal Peter Turkson, was a cardinal, and so was one of the two undersecretaries.

The dualism was resolved in 2021, when Pope Francis ended Cardinal Turkson’s service as prefect, first appointing Cardinal Czerny interim prefect and then confirming him. Cardinal Turkson was also out of work for a while: Having lost his post as prefect on Dec. 23, 2021, Pope Francis appointed him chancellor of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences on April 4, 2022.

The same dicastery is now experiencing dualism again. Pope Francis earlier this month created Father Fabio Baggio, who is still undersecretary of the dicastery, a cardinal. 

At the same time, the prefect is still Cardinal Czerny, who has reached 78 years of age and will soon retire.

Is this a sign that Pope Francis has already designated the newly elevated Cardinal Baggio as the new prefect?

We must wait, as well, to see who goes where.