Saturday, January 31, 2026

Nun who founded Cork homelessness charity celebrates 'remarkable' 108th birthday

A well-known Cork homelessness charity is celebrating its founder's birthday as she turns a 'remarkable' 108 years old today. 

Sister Colettte Hickey has been a lifelong advocate for the homeless who set up Edel House as an emergency refuge for women in children in 1972.

Born in Waterford, Sr Hickey is a member of the Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, who dedicate their lives to the care of women and children in difficulty. 

In 1972, Sr Hickey opened the original Edel House Emergency Accommodation on Dyke Parade, laying the groundwork for the charity's modern operations.

Now situated in Grattan Street, Sr Hickey's work enabled Edel House to become the organisation it is today. Each year, the charity helps hundreds of women and children escape homelessness and other difficult situations as they rebuild their lives. 

Sr Hickey has been widely recognised for her charitable work over the years, becoming the first ever Cork Person of the Year back in 1993.

While Sr Hickey has stepped back from the day-to-day operations of the charity, she still enjoys hearing updates on the tremendous work being done by staff and volunteers.

A spokesperson for Edel House said: "Today, we honour and celebrate the incredible 108th birthday of Sr. Colette Hickey, a visionary who planted the seed that blossomed into what we now know as Good Shepherd Cork over 50 years ago.

"Born on 31st January 1918, at the foot of the stunning Comeragh Mountains in Co. Waterford, Sr. Colette has lived a life of profound dedication and impact. Though her body is frail, her mind remains sharp, and she continues to enjoy hearing updates from the Good Shepherd Cork community.

Sr Hickey's life of selfless dedication has helped inspire many Rebels in their own acts of kindness. In the run-up to Christmas, Edel House received a literal bus-load of toys in a charity drive organised by local chef Bryan Clarke.

Originally from Cavan, Bryan is the head chef at the Briar Rose in Douglas. When he was young, Bryan's mother left the family home with him and his siblings, eventually securing accommodation at a women's refuge. 

Reflecting on that experience after his mother's passing, Bryan reached out to the staff at Edel House with an idea to help make Christmas special for the families living there.

Since lockdown ended, Bryan has been running a toy drive for the children at Edel House, and he spends his Christmas day preparing a festive feast for those living in sheltered accommodation. It's one of countless acts of selflessness and kindness that have helped write the story of Edel House, and it all began with Sr Hickey's diligent work.

After such a remarkable 108 years, it's safe to say that there will be plenty of people wishing the charity founder well today. Happy birthday, Sister Hickey.

Spanish court orders rebel nuns out of convent - again

A Spanish court has rejected an appeal by a group of excommunicated nuns who joined a sect and were ordered to leave their convent, confirming their eviction, an archbishopric said on Friday.

Nine nuns from the Order of Saint Clare split from the Vatican in May 2024 over a property dispute and doctrinal wrangling, an affair that has fascinated Spain.

The Archbishopric of Burgos asked them to leave their 15th-century convent in the northern town of Belorado, saying they had no legal right to remain there after the excommunication.

But the nuns stayed put after a court ordered them out last year. They said the convent belonged to them and appealed their eviction.

The Archbishopric of Burgos said in a statement that it had received the judgement of a higher court that dismissed the nuns' argument.

The property is a "legal entity subject to Canon Law", while "the ownership of the convent's assets belongs to the legal entity, and not to the nuns that inhabit it", the statement said, quoting the ruling.

As for the former abbess, her decision to separate the convent from the Catholic Church along with the nuns "is clearly beyond her authority", according to the ruling.

"Having established the defendants' lack of ownership rights over the Convent of Saint Clare in Belorado, they must be evicted," the statement said.

The women have declared allegiance to an excommunicated ultra-conservative priest who has rejected the validity of all popes since the death of Pius XII in 1958. 

The Church considers the movement a sect.

South Korea probes church over alleged election interference

South Korean authorities launched an investigation into a controversial church amid allegations it mobilised followers to influence recent elections.

Police and prosecutors raided the headquarters of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus in Gyeonggi province on Friday, according to KBS, after search and seizure warrants were issued citing suspected breaches of the Political Parties Act and laws related to business interference.

The investigation centred on church founder Lee Man Hee, who was accused of pressuring church members to join the People Power Party of former president Yoon Suk Yeol and support it during the 2021 presidential election and the 2024 general election.

Investigators examined claims that large numbers of Shincheonji members were encouraged to enlist as party members in a coordinated manner, potentially affecting internal party votes, leadership contests and candidate selection processes.

South Korean media reported that former Shincheonji executives and officials had already been questioned as part of the inquiry.

Shincheonji denied the allegations. In a statement, the church said there was no evidence it had ordered members to join any political party or engage in political activity, adding that “organisational involvement in elections is structurally and practically impossible”.

Authorities had not said when the investigation would conclude or whether charges would follow.

Glasgow's Catholic archbishop criticised over 'failure in care'

A Catholic parish has lodged an official complaint with the Church over the conduct of the Archbishop of Glasgow, William Nolan. 

The move, thought to be unprecedented in recent times, follows a bitter dispute between members of St Albert on the city’s south side and Archbishop Nolan about plans to shut down their church and parish.

The detailed 2000-word complaint lists a multitude of grievances, including the archbishop’s alleged “failures to make proper arrangements for the pastoral care of the parishioners at St Albert the Great” following his decision to withdraw Sunday Mass provision from this Sunday onwards.

Holy Land Church leaders announce renovations to Grotto of the Nativity

The Custody of the Holy Land and the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem have announced the Grotto of the Nativity will soon undergo renovations.

The restoration work for the “hallowed site” follows a decree from the Presidency of the State of Palestine and will be undertaken by an Italian firm that was also entrusted with the recent rehabilitation of the Basilica of the Nativity, according to a joint statement by the leaders.

“Through this collective effort, the Churches of Jerusalem protect the Gospel heritage entrusted to them and ensure that the faithful of all traditions may continue to venerate the birthplace of Christ with reverence,” the statement said.

Exorcism demands spike as churchgoers urge priests to ‘deliver us from evil’

Growing numbers of people are approaching the Church of England seeking an exorcism, senior church officials have claimed.

Dr Anne Richards, the national officer for "deliverance ministry," and the Right Rev Dominic Walker, former bishop of Reading and Monmouth, revealed that more people are requesting assistance to "deliver them from evil."

However, it has been revealed that actual exorcisms bear no resemblance to dramatic, and often horrifying, cinematic portrayals.

"It's about reassuring people, lowering not upping the temperature," Dr Richards told The Times, dismissing dramatic Hollywood imagery of "shouting and screaming and blood and vomit."

Church officials described genuine exorcisms as "vanishingly rare" and characterised them as "quiet and calm" occasions involving prayer, typically following psychiatric consultation.

It follows news of an NHS chaplain in Norfolk consulting the church about "paranormal incidents" at a hospice, where staff and residents had described seeing a "small child in a red dress."

Despite initial reports suggesting an exorcism took place, church sources revealed this was not the case. Instead, a blessing was conducted to provide pastoral support and reassurance to those at the facility.

Each diocese maintains a deliverance team comprising between three to seven members who carry out this work alongside their regular duties.

These teams handle cases where individuals believe something malevolent may be affecting their lives.

Dr Richards noted a clear increase in people seeking help, though the requests rarely involve casting out spirits from individuals.

"It starts with people who are bereaved who think they have heard their loved one. People who feel uneasy," she said.

The pandemic also triggered a notable surge in cases, with many people reporting unusual sounds in their homes during lockdown.

"Most of the time it was the plumbing," Dr Richards observed.

Others approach the church after experimenting with Ouija boards, fearing they may have welcomed something sinister into their lives.

Many seeking assistance are not religious themselves but experience what Dr Richards described as a "sense of oppression or something wrong."

Reverend Dr Jason Bray told The Telegraph that he deals with up to a dozen incidents per year, but when discussing how exorcisms are portrayed in films, he wrote: "That couldn’t be further from the truth. It’s not dramatic."

Rev Walker, who spent decades training priests in deliverance ministry, revealed he conducts even less - just six exorcisms throughout his entire career.

During his time as a London priest, the team handled one or two cases weekly, while in Monmouth the frequency dropped to one or two annually.

"Ninety-odd per cent are people with psychiatric or psychological problems who therefore really need counselling," he said, adding that some individuals come from cultures with a "much greater belief in the demonic."

The process typically involves referral from a parish priest to the diocese, where a psychiatrist, experienced priest and safeguarding officer assess the situation together.

Exorcism remains a measure of "last resort," requiring a bishop's explicit permission and typically following a period where the individual is invited to holy communion or confession.

Rev Walker dismissed the Hollywood image of priests brandishing crosses while shouting and throwing holy water as "mumbo jumbo."

"It needs to be quiet and calm. Often it's simply a matter of saying some prayers," he explained.

Two of his six exorcisms were performed in psychiatric wards after doctors concluded it was the only remaining option to comfort patients.

Asked whether the results were psychological or genuinely spiritual, Rev Walker acknowledged: "We don't always know and can't always tell because it's very unclear what the origin of the evil is."

Priest of Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate detained in Kharkiv for Russian propaganda

A clergyman of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate was detained in Kharkiv for publicly humiliating Ukrainians and justifying Russia's armed aggression against Ukraine.

According to Ukrinform, this was reported by the Office of the Prosecutor General.

According to the investigation, between March and July 2025, the clergyman of one of the religious communities of the Kharkiv diocese of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) systematically spread anti-Ukrainian narratives. The cleric left comments on pro-Russian Telegram channels in which he humiliated Ukrainians and formed a derogatory and stereotypically negative image of the people.

“In addition, in his posts, he broadcast Kremlin propaganda, in particular stating that ‘Kharkiv has always been, is, and will remain a Russian city,’ effectively justifying the Russian Federation's armed aggression against Ukraine,” the OGP noted.

During searches of the religious building of the UOC-MP, where the cleric lived, law enforcement officers seized a mobile phone with evidence of illegal activity, as well as cash in Russian rubles and other currencies totaling more than ₴2.6 million. According to preliminary data, these funds could have been received as remuneration for carrying out information and subversive activities in favor of the aggressor state.

Law enforcement officers detained the clergyman.

Under the procedural guidance of the Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor's Office, he was notified of suspicion under the following articles of the Criminal Code of Ukraine: Part 1 of Article 161 - intentional actions aimed at inciting national enmity and hatred; Parts 2 and 3 of Article 436-2 - repeated production and distribution of materials containing justification of the Russian Federation's armed aggression against Ukraine.

At the request of the prosecution, the court imposed a preventive measure in the form of detention on the suspect.

During the pre-trial investigation, evidence was also found of other criminal offenses against the state security of Ukraine, in particular, the unauthorized dissemination of information about the locations of units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. During the investigation, the issue of additional legal qualification of the suspect's actions will be decided.

As reported by Ukrinform, the Holosiivska Pustyn monastery of the Moscow Patriarchate will be checked for ties to the Russian Orthodox Church.

Greek village offers incentives to recruit full-time, live-in priest

A village in northern Greece is offering free housing and heating as part of an incentive package designed to attract a full-time, live-in priest.

State ERT television reported Friday that the village of Panagitsa in the Pella region has lacked a resident priest since 2018. 

Since then, visiting clerics have conducted services and dealt with residents’ spiritual needs, usually driving about 30 kilometers to get there from the nearest town, Edessa.

Panagitsa is also promising to help the wives and children of interested priests find work locally if they so wish.

Village officials say they have already received several responses from prospective resident priests.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Saviour of Laois convent cross to be honoured this weekend

A BRAVE workman who risked his life to save a Laois convent cross from destruction will be honoured this weekend, when the restored cross will be unveiled at its original site.

A prayer service in Abbeyleix on Saturday afternoon will pay tribute to the late Paddy Langton, who rescued the town’s Brigidine Cross in 1992 and safeguarded it for more than three decades.

Fr Paddy Byrne PP will lead the prayer service at 4.30pm outside the Church of the Most Holy Rosary, Abbeyleix, to acknowledge and honour Paddy and his family from Rathnamanagh, Portlaoise.

Thanks to five generous local professionals, the ornate four-foot cross has been restored and erected in the original convent grounds, in time for the service on Saturday 31 January.

The cross will be unveiled by Sr Mary Hiney, the last remaining Brigidine nun still living in Abbeyleix, who will sadly leave the town before this summer. Her return to Tullow, Co Carlow will end the Brigidines’ long association with Abbeyleix, where the convent opened in 1842.

The community will gather to see the cross standing once again in its rightful home, on a new limestone base, after an absence of more than 33 years. A special Mass at 5pm will follow the unveiling, to celebrate St Brigid and the Brigidine tradition on the eve of her feast day.

Local historian Noel Burke said: ‘The significance of returning this 184 year old Brigidine Cross to its original site cannot be overstated. For the people of Abbeyleix, a proud heritage town, and for the Sisters of the Brigidine Order who will join us on the day, this is a homecoming of deep emotional and historical meaning.’ 

He added: ‘We owe sincere gratitude to the Langton family for ensuring the cross was preserved and ultimately returned to the community it belongs to.’ 

In an extraordinary act of courage, Paddy climbed onto the roof of the Brigidine Convent in Abbeyleix, moments before the building was demolished in 1992.

Determined to save the historic rooftop monument, he tied a rope around both his waist and the base of the cross while heavy machinery ripped through the building.

Despite falling through collapsing timbers while still tied to the cross, he somehow escaped without serious injury. Then he and colleagues lifted the heavy cross into his van and he brought it home, where it lay undisturbed in a turf shed ever since.

Paddy passed away last November, at the age of 91. On 16 January, it was a poignant but proud moment when Paddy’s son, Patrick, invited Noel into his home to collect the cross, ensuring that a unique piece of local heritage would be preserved for future generations.

The five generous experts who gave their time to restore the cross are Bosco Whelan of Jet Stone Ltd in Ballyroan, builder P. Kirk from Shanahoe, Tom Delahunty of Del Engineering in Cullohill, Michael Kerry of Portlaoise M&M Sandblasting and auto paint technician Ben Campion from Ballinakill.

The group is also deeply grateful to Fr Byrne, who offered the newly formed Abbeyleix & District Historical Society a site on the original Brigidine Convent grounds, for the permanent return of the restored cross.

An online crowdfunding campaign, with a target of €1,000, was set up on idonate.ie to cover the cost of restoring the cross and constructing the limestone base.

Noel said on the fundraising page: ‘This restoration is not just about a cast iron cross - it’s about people. Together, we can safeguard a piece of Abbeyleix’s soul. When the convent faced demolition in 1992, the Brigidine Cross was nearly lost forever. It survived because one man stepped forward.’

‘I didn’t want to make a scene in God’s house’, vicar defends objection at Archbishop’s Confirmation

A retired vicar who objected to the confirmation of Sarah Mullally as Archbishop of Canterbury during the ceremony at St Paul’s Cathedral has told Premier he felt he had no other option after being repeatedly ignored by the Church of England when he has raised safeguarding issues.

Rev Paul Williamson, who was priest in charge of St George’s Hanworth until he reached the church retirement age of 70, was escorted from the cathedral after he shouted “I object” during the service.

The 77-year-old who carries a walking stick, said he was ready to walk out quietly but was “treated brusquely”.

During the ceremony, the Vicar General said there had been "no valid objection" to Dame Sarah being confirmed as archbishop, something Rev Williamson disputes.

“It was nonsense to say that there were no objections," he said. "I objected and I’m not into making a scene in the house of God”.

Lambeth Palace told Premier that public notices are always displayed before the Confirmation of Election for any diocesan bishop at the place where the Confirmation is due to take place. On this occasion, ahead of the Archbishop of Canterbury's Confirmation of Election, notices were displayed outside Lambeth Palace and St Paul’s Cathedral.

However, Rev Williamson said it would have been impossible for people outside London to read the notices and be aware they had to raise an objection before the King signed the Confirmation papers in December. 

Rev Williamson said he had last week met the Vicar General of the Province of Canterbury, Timothy Briden, to document his own formal objection ahead of Sarah Mullally’s confirmation.

Premier has seen the documents which outline what Rev Williamson described as “three impediments” to the elevation of Bishop Sarah to the see of Canterbury. He cited the death of Fr Alan Griffin, a priest who took his own life after being falsely accused of abuse in the Diocese of London. A coroner strongly criticised the way the case was handled. Bishop Sarah apologised “unreservedly” to Fr Alan’s family and friends.

Rev Williamson also alleged that Bishop Sarah had been too slow to act on information contained in files in the case of Martin Sargeant, a Diocese of London employee. Sargeant was sentenced to five years in prison in 2022 for defrauding the London Diocesan Fund of over £5m over a decade.  He had also compiled rumours about dozens of priests in the diocese, which led to the compilation of files into 42 vicars which became known as the ‘Brain Dump’.

Rev Paul also disclosed to the Vicar General that he had himself been driven to contemplate suicide over what he claimed was a lack of care by Sarah Mullally when he was evicted from his clergy housing in 2024. He claims that despite Lambeth Palace contacting Bishop Sarah to inform her of his situation, her only course of action was an email three weeks later containing information about a support group.

The Diocese of London had previously said his tenure in office had come to an end in 2018 when he turned 70 and he had been given additional time to stay in the rectory rent-free until 2019. He continued to remain in the rectory until his eviction. 

In a statement at the time, a spokesperson for the Diocese of London said: "Mr Williamson’s eviction follows the issuing of a possession order by Staines County Court. The diocese has offered pastoral and practical support to Mr Williamson over the last six years, and has done so again ahead of today, including the offer of help in finding suitable accommodation, which we are reassured to know he has secured.”   

In a statement in December, Bishop Sarah said: “I understand why now, as I prepare to become Archbishop of Canterbury, there will be renewed scrutiny of past cases, and especially my role… we must all be willing to have light shone on our actions, regardless of our role in the Church.

“I continue to be determined to improve safeguarding across the Church of England.”

Church dismisses case against two clergy criticised over Smyth

The cases against two Anglican clergy who faced disciplinary proceedings over their handling of abuse disclosures relating to the late Christian barrister John Smyth have been closed.

In a statement on its website, the Church of England said that following a formal investigation, the case against former Archdeacon of Horsham Roger Combes was referred back to the President of Tribunals, who has now decided there is no case to answer.

In the second case, the National Director of Safeguarding sought permission from the President of Tribunals in October to bring an ‘out of time’ allegation of misconduct against retired vicar Iain Broomfield.

The statement said: “Having considered the representations of both the Director and the Respondent, the President has decided that permission will not be granted. This determination brings matters to a close.”

Roger Combes, who retired in 2014, was criticised in the Makin review into Smyth’s abuse for having received a document compiled in 1982 which detailed abuse against young men at Christian summer camps. He told the review that he had “held this unopened on his knee, realised the seriousness and the nature of the report and chose not to read it", believing that “the victims would be embarrassed if he knew the details".

Iain Broomfield led the camps where Smyth would meet his victims, between 1987 and 2000. The Makin report said that, around 1998, Broomfield informed a young priest that there was a “previous issue” regarding Smyth and that “something bad” had happened at Winchester College.

At the time of the Makin review, Broomfield had been suspended as vicar of Christ Church, Bromley, over an unrelated safeguarding case. He was rebuked by the Church in 2022 for “conduct unbecoming and inappropriate to the office and work of a clerk in Holy Orders”.

The National Safeguarding Team announced in February 2025 that it would bring disciplinary proceedings under the Clergy Discipline Measure (CDM) against ten clergy, including Combes and Broomfield, who were named in the Makin Review into Smyth’s abuse. 

A further name was announced in October.

Christian woman pleads not guilty to ‘buffer zone’ abortion facility offence

A Christian woman has pleaded not guilty to allegedly breaching the UK's new “buffer zone” abortion law.

Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, 48, from Malvern, Worcestershire, appeared at Birmingham Magistrates’ Court on Thursday after being charged in December 2025 under the Public Order Act 2023. 

The legislation bans harassment or intimidation within 150 metres of abortion facilities. 

Premier Christian News has previously reported that Vaughan-Spruce has been accused of silently praying on a public street within a Kings Norton abortion facility “buffer zone".

Speaking in court, she said: “I’ve simply stood inside an abortion ‘buffer zone,’ on a public street, and silently prayed, meaning my thoughts were turned towards God. I’ve not held any posters, offered any leaflets, spoken with anyone, or spoken out loud at all. Yet I’m being treated like a criminal. This is viewpoint discrimination. Standing is not a crime, silence is not a crime, thinking is not a crime.”

Her legal team at ADF International argued the charges violate her right to freedom of thought and religion. 

Jeremiah Igunnubole said: “The fact that someone can be criminally prosecuted merely for their thoughts and beliefs should serve as a wake-up call.”

“We will continue to robustly challenge this unjust censorship, and support Isabel’s right to think and believe freely as is the right of every person in the UK,” he added. 

Vaughan-Spruce is set to face trial between 6th and 9th October 2026.

I do ‘exorcisms’ for the Church of England. I’ve seen enough to believe ghosts may be real

When people hear about my job, they assume I burst into people’s houses like the exorcist from the film. 

That couldn’t be further from the truth. It’s not dramatic. 

I’m much more likely to turn up and say, “Hi, I’m Jason – I’ve been sent to sort the leak in the temporal timeframe, if you could just show me where it is.” 

Like a gas engineer, but for paranormal activity.

As well as being an Anglican priest and the dean of Llandaff Cathedral in Cardiff, I am a “deliverance minister” dealing with poltergeist activity, houses that are “haunted” and things that go bump in the night, as well as people who believe they are possessed. 

There are some misconceptions about how the Anglican Church deals with the supernatural. The fact that every diocese in England and Wales has a team of people like me shows that the Church is more open to these things than people assume. 

In my diocese, we deal with about a dozen incidents a year. Despite what people often think, it’s no worse on Halloween.

My own experience of the paranormal started in the house I lived in as a newly-ordained minister in South Wales that I believe was, for lack of a better word, haunted. This was 27 years ago. 

My wife and I had a newborn son, and there was a cold spot – a sudden, localised area of low temperature that some people believe indicates the presence of a ghost – around his cot. I went away for the weekend and when I came back my wife, who is incredibly sensible, said his room felt like stepping into a freezer.

Not long after, I went to the bathroom one night and felt a presence on the other side of the door. I got a clear mental picture of what it looked like: it was a man, about my height, wearing a mask, with piercing grey eyes, staring at me with unbridled hostility. 

When I came out of the bathroom in a panic, my wife said, “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”

I replied, “Well, I haven’t seen one, but I might as well have.”

Enough was enough. I called the vicar, who came over and said some prayers in Latin and sprinkled holy water in the house. To this day, I don’t know what he said, and he’s since died so I can’t ask. 

But I do know the atmosphere completely changed. Friends who came over afterwards commented on how much warmer and more inviting the house felt – those who didn’t know what had happened just assumed we had redecorated. 

Whatever presence had been in the house was banished for good.

A few days later, I had a conversation with the church warden, who asked how we were finding the house. I replied that yes, it’s a nice place to live – as by that point, it genuinely was. 

There was no way he would have known about what had gone on there. “Interesting,” he said. “When they built that house, they disturbed a Roman burial ground.” 

And he left it at that. 

Had something been disturbed when the house was built? I have no idea. That’s the nature of this job: you can’t verify anything. 

But I had been spooked enough by the incident to be convinced it might have been.

In that parish, I had a couple of call-outs about suspected paranormal activity, so when the bishop offered for me to go on a Church of England training course on how to complete exorcisms myself, I accepted. That’s how most people get into this line of work, I think. They have an experience of it themselves or have been called out to deal with it.

Now, I get called out to people’s homes, offices and even shops. 

Occasionally people see things – for want of a better word, ghosts – and I am asked to investigate. 

Sometimes that’s someone who was in their life and keeps reappearing, or sometimes it’s what I call a “place memory” of something that happened historically; for example, the spectre of Roman soldiers marching through a house in York. 

In another case I dealt with, a family would walk over a “person” at the bottom of the staircase who’d fallen and broken his neck. People would just step over him, which was a bit weird, but he wasn’t trying to communicate with them – occasionally he would just appear, lying there. 

Sometimes, however, this can be very scary. I had one case where someone kept seeing a deceased relative appear in a jump scare on the other side of the curtain when they were showering.

For some reason, poltergeist activity – physical disturbances or movements – seems more often than not to involve shoes being thrown across a room. I have no idea why. I believe it really happens, but also thatit’s a phenomenon caused by the person, rather than any sort of ghost. It can also be part of astress reaction

: when someone has been in significant pain or is suffering from a serious illness, almost like static electricity has built up. The person is not aware of their part in it.

We also deal with people who fall into two categories. Some have called us as they are oppressed by something they can’t explain. Then there are those who believe they are possessed by a demon but, in my experience, if they have the self-insight to seek help from the Church, they usually aren’t. 

I am yet to come across someone in need of a dramatic exorcism like the kind you see in a film. 

While I’m open to the idea that there are cases like this, I believe they’re exceedingly rare.

There is quite a lot of overlap with mental health conditions, including schizophrenia, which is why we work closely with medical professionals. 

There are three signs that people really are possessed: preternatural strength; preternatural knowledge; and knowledge of languages they never learnt to speak. 

So, if you were called to a stranger who knew your deepest darkest secrets, attempted to throw the dining table at you, and then suddenly spoke in, say, Arabic, there would be a good chance. 

That’s the only time you would perform a major exorcism, using a special prayer handed to us by the bishop.

We always work in pairs. Wherever possible, I take the local vicar along with me to deal with a report of paranormal activity. I have a phone conversation with the person who has reported it. 

Then we visit in person. 

Almost always, I bless holy water, sprinkle it on the walls, and say a prayer for God’s presence to come into the building. Then we say the Lord’s prayer together. Usually that works.

I’m not in the business of trying to explain the unexplainable, but I have seen enough to be open to the idea that places really can be haunted. 

My job is to pray, and always to reassure people. It’s not like a scientific experiment where you can control the variables; you just have to deal with situations as you find them. 

I have come across buildings that have changed dramatically once the “exorcism” is complete: you could feel the temperature rising, like someone was turning the lights up. It was just astonishing. 

In other cases, it’s more of a psychological effect – people feel reassured and freed from whatever it was that was haunting them. 

There is a lot of evil in our world, but I fully believe that good will triumph eventually.

Church re-opens a year after storm damage

There was a sense of joy for the congregation of the Holy Trinity Church in Westport when it re-opened following a year-long closure due to damage inflicted by Storm Éowyn.

The storm on January 24th, 2025, rendered sections of the ceiling above the nave and the richly decorated sanctuary in the historic building dangerously unstable.

“It’s lovely to be back. It feels like a real fresh start,” Rev Suzanne Cousins told the Western People.

The Church’s Grade I Heritage status meant the repair works had to be painstaking and carefully carried out.

“It was lengthier than we expected but it all went really well. The damage at the time it didn’t look like much when you walked into the Church but nevertheless when we took advice it came out that the ceiling was unstable and large parts could come down at at any time,” explained Rev Cousins.

Holy Trinity Church was built in the 1860s and is the last of the churches built before disestablishment in 1870 when the Church of Ireland became independent from the Church of England.

It was built by the 3rd Marquess of Sligo whose love for ornate Italian design and architecture marks the Westport church out from similar places of worship.

“It’s very atypical of Church of Ireland churches,” Rev Cousins explained. “When you walk in it’s quite stunning and unique,” she added.

The restoration cost around €100,000, covered by government grants, Church of Ireland funds and fundraising events. The ceiling was repaired in two stages.

“For a small congregation it was a large sum but we have lived to tell the tale!” said Rev Cousins. “It was really joyful to re-open. People were ecstatic to a degree, “she added.

Rev Cousins thanked Fr John Kenny who offered the use of St Mary’s Church while the repair works were carried out.

“We experienced great joy going to and worshipping alongside our St Mary’s friends. We had such an amazing experience and there was just kindness, generosity, and hospitality shown to us.”

Nicaragua prohibits parish missions, insists church activities be confined to parish premises

The Nicaraguan regime has prohibited a Catholic diocese from carrying out pastoral missions by insisting all church activities must be confined to parish premises. 

Parishioners in the Diocese of León had planned to go door-to-door on Jan. 24, but were told to limit their activities to church property, according to exiled lawyer Martha Patricia Molina, who tracks Catholic persecution in Nicaragua.

‘Makes the activity a failure’

“The police banned the missions that were scheduled for next weekend and urged everyone to stay in ‘their parishes’ without going out to preach the word, which makes the activity a failure because the spirit of it was to take the word of God door-to-door,” Molina said in an X post. 

Nicaragua’s Sandinista regime has cracked down on dissent in Nicaragua since 2018 protests demanded President Daniel Ortega‘s ouster. 

The Nicaraguan bishops’ conference mediated a dialogue between student protesters and the regime, but withdrew as Ortega became intransigent. Ortega has subsequently persecuted the Nicaraguan Catholic Church and forced at least 305 clergy, churchmen and religious into exile, including four bishops, according to Molina.

Legal status revoked for NGOs

More than 5,000 nongovernmental groups, Catholic charitable and education projects and religious orders have had their legal status revoked.

Stories surfaced on social media in late January of the Capuchin Tertiary Sisters of the Holy Family abandoning a missionary project after 30 years of service in the community of Totogalpa. 

The Capuchin sisters’ Our Lady of Guadalupe province, based in neighboring Costa Rica, denied the project was closed due to regime pressure, saying in a Jan. 24 statement signed by provincial superior, Sister Maribelle Umaña Machado, “After a period of congregational discernment, it has been recognized that the objectives that brought us to this land have been fulfilled.” 

Many of the religious congregations leaving Nicaragua have departed quietly to protect staff and avoid reprisals for the communities they were previously supporting.

Regime faces increasing scrutiny by U.S.

The latest attacks on the Catholic Church comes as Nicaragua’s anti-U.S. regime faces scrutiny from the Trump administration following the daring raid on Venezuela — an ally of Nicaragua — which removed president Nicolás Maduro from power and brought him and his wife to New York to stand trial on drug charges.

Nicaragua subsequently released dozens of political prisoners following the U.S. intervention as the Trump administration increases pressure on repressive, leftist-regimes in the hemisphere. 

The Nicaraguan interior ministry said Jan. 10  that it would release “dozens of persons in the prison system.” The actions followed the U.S. Embassy in Managua saying Jan. 9 on X, “Venezuela took an important step toward peace by releasing a large number of political prisoners. In Nicaragua, more than 60 people remain unjustly detained or disappeared, including pastors, religious workers, the sick, and the elderly. Peace is only possible with freedom!”

Descended into disctatorship

President Donald Trump has not directly mentioned Nicaragua, which has descended into dictatorship under Co-Presidents Ortega and his wife, Rosario Murillo. A source familiar with Nicaragua’s foreign relations told OSV News that the regime was trying to stay ahead of other leftist-regimes such as Cuba and Venezuela by cooperating with the United States on migration enforcement and drug interdiction, or by releasing prisoners and opening dialogue.

“They know that just opening a discussion buys them time and really they’re looking to buy time,” the source said.

Exiled Auxiliary Bishop Silvio José Baez of Managua spoke of freedom and democracy “coming increasingly closer” in Latin America.

‘Not the time to remain silent’

“In many of our countries we live in moments of uncertainty and painful experiences of arbitrary powers that threaten, repress and imprison,” he said in his Jan. 25 homily at St. Agatha’s Church in Miami. “This is not the time to remain silent or to become discouraged.”

He added, “(It’s) time to speak to illuminate the darkness of the moment, feed the hope of the people and denounce the oppressive structures that have prevailed until now, but that are about to disappear.”

The regime in Nicaragua detained at least 60 people celebrating Maduro’s ouster, according to Blue and White Monitoring, which highlights human rights abuses in the country. Some analysts questioned if the released prisoners would have freedom of movement or simply face house arrest.

‘Political prisoners as bargaining chips’

“They want to deceive the international community,” Molina told OSV News. “What they’re doing is releasing a few political prisoners, but they’re also imprisoning a larger number because the dictatorship is using political prisoners as bargaining chips. It’s part of the game, the negotiation, and their habit of always having political prisoners in jail. So it’s not freedom.”

At least one priest remains in detention, Molina said. Father Frutos Constantino Valle Salmerón, an octogenarian serving as an ad omnia administrator in the Diocese of Estelí — where exiled Bishop Rolando Álvarez is apostolic administrator – remains confined to a diocesan seminary and unable to publicly perform ministry.

Three priestly ordinations prohibited

Father Valle was detained in July 2024, after being told by police that the ordination of three priests scheduled for the next day were prohibited.

Molina said Ortega and Murillo are likely seeking an overhaul of the country’s Catholic hierarchy, with regime-friendly clergy assuming senior leadership.

Some clergy have not been allowed to return to Nicaragua after traveling abroad. 

“Murillo is temperamental,” Molina said. “She’s displeased with Pope Leo XIV at the moment because he received the (four exiled) bishops,” Molina added.

Kharkiv Priest Charged with Inciting Hatred and Pro-Russian Propaganda

In Kharkiv, a priest from one of the religious communities of the Kharkiv Eparchy of the UOC MP has been charged with two counts: incitement of national hatred and justification of Russia. 

According to the Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office, during March–July 2025 he systematically spread anti-Ukrainian narratives. According to the SBU press service, the suspect is 62 years old.

In pro-Russian Telegram channels, the cleric left comments that demeaned Ukrainians, forming a contemptuous and stereotypically negative image of the people. Moreover, in his posts he transmitted Kremlin propaganda theses

– SBU press service

According to the Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office, the suspect is a priest of the UOC MP.

During searches, rubles and other currencies were seized totaling the equivalent of 2.6 million hryvnias. «According to preliminary data, these funds could have been obtained as remuneration for carrying out information-subversive activity in favor of the aggressor state»

«According to preliminary data, these funds could have been obtained as remuneration for carrying out information-subversive activity in favor of the aggressor state»

– Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office

During the investigation, the priest will remain in custody. The pre-trial investigation has also established signs of other criminal offenses directed against Ukraine’s state security, in particular the unauthorized dissemination of information about the locations of units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The issue of additional legal qualification of the suspect’s actions will be decided during the investigation, the statement said.

During the investigation, the issue of additional legal qualification of the suspect’s actions will be decided

– Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office

The suspect faces up to eight years in prison with confiscation of property or without such.

Cuban regime interrogates priests and dissidents over their public statements, activities

The Cuban regime summoned two priests and two peaceful dissidents for questioning on Jan. 23 and interrogated them for several hours, a move that has been described by one analyst as a means of “pressuring and punishing” those who defend the right to live in a free country.

The digital platform Cuba Trendings reported that priests Castor Álvarez Devesa and Alberto Reyes of the Archdiocese of Camagüey were summoned by State Security “without a stated reason.” At the time, both were on a spiritual retreat with the rest of the clergy.

The platform also reported that on the same day, Dagoberto Valdés Hernández and Yoandy Izquierdo Toledo, Catholic laymen and members of the Convivencia (Coexistence) Studies Center (CEC, by its Spanish acronym), were arrested in Pinar del Río.

The CEC is a nonpartisan, nonprofit think tank seeking to improve the situation in the country.

Both the priests and the laymen are known for openly expressing their views on Cuba’s lack of freedom and the severe economic crisis affecting the island nation.

Osvaldo Gallardo, a Cuban writer and religious freedom activist, noted that these incidents coincided with the 28th anniversary of the Mass that St. John Paul II celebrated in Camagüey, in which the pontiff encouraged Cubans not to “put off until tomorrow the building of a new society” and to “be the protagonists of their own history.”

The writer pointed out on Facebook that “these are not isolated or administrative incidents” but rather “acts of political intimidation directed against priests and laypeople who, out of their faith, conscience, and civic-mindedness, have defended human dignity, freedom, and the right to a better society.”

Álvarez and Reyes interrogated

Authorities questioned Álvarez for about three hours. The priest had been in Miami a few days earlier, and on Jan. 24, the Diario Las Américas news site published statements in which he not only reiterated the plight of the Cuban people but also asserted that, with the capture of Nicolás Maduro, the United States had “taken away the Cuban government’s control of Venezuela.”

The priest recalled that during the protests of July 11, 2021 — during which he was beaten and arrested — “people were saying that the United States had not supported the Cuban people. Today the perception is different. Even so, it is a cautious hope, a people who have suffered so much that they find it hard to believe in change. Many think that nothing will happen, but, despite everything, I believe there is hope.”

Reyes usually publishes a post every week on Facebook about the Cuban situation. On Jan. 16, he wrote that “it’s no secret” that after what happened in Venezuela, “hopes have soared for a radical change in Cuba that would bring an end to the dictatorship and usher in an era of democracy and prosperity.”

Also, on the morning of Jan. 23, the priest criticized the sentence against journalist José Gabriel Barrenechea, who was convicted for shouting slogans during a protest against the continuous power outages affecting the island.

CEC members interrogated

Dagoberto Valdés Hernández and Yoandy Izquierdo Toledo, members of the Convivencia Studies Center, also had to answer questions from the regime.

The CEC reported on Facebook that on the morning of Friday, Jan. 23, a patrol from the National Revolutionary Police arrived at Valdés’ home to arrest him and take him to state security headquarters in Pinar del Río.

Izquierdo was arrested when he and other members of the CEC approached the security headquarters to inquire about Valdés’ situation.

“The reason for the arrest, according to the legal affairs officer, was Valdés’ recent visit to Mike Hamer, chargé d’affaires of the U.S. Embassy in Cuba,” the CEC reported. “[Cuban officials] also said they would summon Izquierdo for having participated in that visit (which he did not attend).”

The CEC also reported that Valdés was accused of “terrorism” and of “collaborating with a foreign power that has threatened Cuba with military intervention.” Furthermore, parts of the column “The Future Is Here," which the dissident wrote on Jan. 19 and in which he advocated for a peaceful transition to democracy, were read to him.

The CEC reported that the men were permitted to return to their homes the same day they were taken in for questioning.

Gallardo said the regime’s warning that “‘sharing ideas can constitute a crime’ directly contradicts the universal democratic principles” that protect pluralism and freedom of thought.

He denounced the communist government’s mechanism of “forcing the acceptance of ‘warning notices’ without legal basis,” saying it “constitutes a form of systematic state harassment, incompatible with the international commitments assumed by the Cuban regime regarding human rights.”

Archbishop of York cleared after letting child abuse priest keep job

The Archbishop of York has been cleared of misconduct after letting a priest who was a child sex abuser remain in post

The Most Rev Stephen Cottrell had let David Tudor remain in post despite knowing that he had been barred by the Church from being alone with children and had paid compensation to a sexual abuse victim.

The findings emerged following a BBC investigation in December 2024, which led to calls for the Archbishop of York to resign just days before taking temporary charge of the Church of England following the unprecedented resignation of Justin Welby as archbishop of Canterbury.

However, on Thursday it emerged that the Church has dismissed a complaint against the Archbishop of York over his handling of the Tudor case. The internal church complaint is known as a clergy discipline measure (CDM).

The decision is likely to increase tensions as both archbishops now battle to convince survivors of church-related abuse of their commitment to safeguarding.

It also comes after Dame Sarah Mullally was installed as Archbishop of Canterbury at a ceremony in St Paul’s Cathedral on Wednesday, which was interrupted by a heckler questioning her safeguarding record.

Her election has been plagued by accusations that she has also mishandled abuse complaints, and she also had a CDM against her dismissed by the Archbishop of York, her closest-ranking colleague. 

This prompted accusations of “collusion” of both archbishops by the victim at the centre of the case, known as Survivor N.

However, just weeks after it emerged that the Archbishop of York had dismissed a complaint against Dame Sarah, it now appears that Dame Sarah had already dismissed a separate complaint against Archbishop Cottrell months earlier, before the CDM was appealed.

As a result of the Tudor case, which occurred while Archbishop Cottrell was in his previous role as bishop of Chelmsford, he was also made the subject of a CDM. On Thursday, that CDM was dismissed by the Sir Stephen Males, president of CDM tribunals.

‘Some mistakes were made’

He said: “I conclude that although some mistakes were made in the handling of David Tudor’s case, there is no case for the respondent to answer in respect of which a disciplinary tribunal should be requested to adjudicate.”

Following the verdict, the Archbishop of York said in a statement that he would “take a different approach” if presented with a similar situation in the future, thanks to today’s “trauma-informed understanding”.

However, he added that his decisions were taken “in accordance with legal and professional safeguarding advice given to me at the time”.

Tudor was banned from ministry after he admitted historical sex abuse allegations relating to two girls – including one under the age of 16 – between 1982 and 1989. He was a priest in the Diocese of Southwark at the time.

Surrey Police said it investigated a report in 2019 of “non-recent indecent assault offences”, but the Crown Prosecution Service determined there was insufficient evidence to take the matter to court.

The BBC investigation also revealed that Archbishop Cottrell was briefed in his first week as bishop of Chelmsford, a role he held between 2010 and 2020, about serious safeguarding issues surrounding Tudor.

These included that he was convicted of indecently assaulting three underage girls and was jailed for six months in 1988 – however, the conviction was quashed on technical grounds.

Archbishop Cottrell would also have known that Tudor served a five-year ban from ministry and that he had been working under a safeguarding agreement in 2008 preventing him from being alone with children – yet months later became an area dean in charge of 12 parishes.

By 2012, Archbishop Cottrell was told that Tudor had paid a £10,000 settlement to a woman who said she was sexually abused by him from the age of 11. 

In 2018, the Church of England issued an apology and a six-figure payout to another alleged victim.

The priest was suspended only in 2019 when a police investigation was launched after another woman spoke out alleging Tudor had abused her in the 1980s.

In a statement published today, the Archbishop of York said: “Mr Tudor shouldn’t have been allowed back into ministry in the 1980s. 

However, in relation to the way in which I handled this difficult situation, the President of Tribunals, an independent Court of Appeal judge, concluded that there is no case to answer and no possibility of a tribunal finding I committed misconduct.”

He added: “We all have much to learn from this case. There are some things I wish I had done differently.

“With today’s trauma-informed understanding – which rightly places greater emphasis on listening carefully to survivors and recognising the lasting harm caused by abuse – I would take a different approach now.”

Thursday, January 29, 2026

As Cardinal Pierre turns 80, what comes next?

A change is coming in 2026 for the pope’s top man in America. 

Cardinal Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States, turns 80 Jan. 30, and he is widely expected to have his retirement accepted by Pope Leo XIV in the coming weeks. 

Nuncio to the U.S. since 2016, Cardinal Pierre’s retirement would draw to a close his nearly five-decade career in service to the Holy See’s diplomatic mission.

The French-born cardinal, whose upbringing was spent in various French-speaking African countries, was ordained a priest in 1970 in his native Archdiocese of Rennes. 

After completing degrees at the Catholic Institute of Paris, the Pontifical Lateran University and Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy, the latter two in Rome, Cardinal Pierre entered the Holy See’s diplomatic service in 1977.

The next two decades brought him to postings first in New Zealand, followed by Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Cuba, Brazil and Switzerland at the European office of the Holy See’s mission to the United Nations in Geneva.

In 1995, Cardinal Pierre was named apostolic nuncio to Haiti by St. John Paul II and was ordained a titular archbishop the same year. After nearly four years in Haiti, where he facilitated the laicization of the county’s president at the time, former Salesian priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Cardinal Pierre was sent as apostolic nuncio in Uganda in 1999. There he decried the government’s advocacy of condom use as promoting “outright promiscuity,” as over 8% of the Ugandan population was infected with HIV/AIDS at the time.

In 2007, Cardinal Pierre was assigned to Mexico, where he served as apostolic nuncio until Pope Francis appointed him to the U.S. nunciature in Washington in 2016. Pierre followed the now-controversial Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, who served as apostolic nuncio to the United States from 2011 and, in 2024, was found to be excommunicated after standing trial at the Vatican for schism.

Three years previously, in an interview with Catholic News Service, Cardinal Pierre said Archbishop Vigano’s portrait stayed in the D.C. nunciature despite his inflammatory statements against Pope Francis. “We are not Americans (who) want to take away the statues. We respect history,” Cardinal Pierre had said.

During his tenure as nuncio in the U.S., Cardinal Pierre was without a doubt Pope Francis’ biggest defender in America, and he was named a member of the college of cardinals in 2023. Cardinal Pierre, who had known Pope Francis since Francis had been archbishop of Buenos Aires, observed in the same 2021 CNS interview that Pope Francis was “not a dictator” but was “a mobilizer,” describing his desire “to help the Church be Church here” was his primary motivation.

Cardinal Pierre’s regular addresses to the plenary assemblies of U.S. bishops often centered on application of Pope Francis’ emphases and priorities, particularly synodality — which the nuncio told CNS is emblematic of “the strength of the Church.”

As apostolic nuncio, much of Cardinal Pierre’s time was occupied in overseeing the process of appointing bishops in the United States. He has been widely respected among the bishops for identifying candidates who personified the qualifications Pope Francis wanted to see in bishops, and yet who were, at the same time, also less likely to fan the flames of any polarization or ideologies.

Several Church insiders have understood Cardinal Pierre’s role often as a check to Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of Chicago, one of two American members of the Dicastery for Bishops, which ultimately presents candidates for the episcopacy to the pope.

In retirement Cardinal Pierre is expected to split his time between his native France and Rome.

It is rumored that Cardinal Pierre’s successor will be in place in Washington by the spring, which will mean his first address to the U.S. bishops could take place at their June plenary in Orlando. Who it will be is anybody’s guess. But certainly Pope Leo, as the first American-born successor of Peter, will take keen interest in the appointment.

Whoever the new apostolic nuncio might be is expected to be fully Pope Leo’s man in the U.S., like Cardinal Pierre was for Pope Francis. He is anticipated to oversee the appointment of archbishops for several major American sees such as Chicago and Los Angeles, as well as replacements for a growing list of baby-boom-age bishops ready for retirement.

The new nuncio will also be Pope Leo’s key liaison with President Donald Trump, particularly as his administration’s immigration policies are increasingly met by resistance by the U.S. bishops and by Rome. 

And Cardinal Pierre’s successor will also take up the reins of animating unity at a time when some bishops are increasingly comfortable speaking without wide consultation and collegiality — seen most recently when three American cardinals entered the political fray outside of the episcopal conference — risking a further fracturing of the country’s episcopate.

But, ultimately, it would seem from Pope Leo’s leadership style so far, he doesn’t so much need a defender as much as a diplomat to help him bring the Church together.