Gospel

The Authority of Christ. Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

Joseph Evans comments on the readings for the 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time and Luis Herrera offers a short video homily.

Joseph Evans-July 11, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

Jesus sends his apostles out to preach lacking basic resources, but with the only thing they really need: his mandate. He gives them "authority over unclean spirits." but "he instructed them to carry for the road a staff and nothing else, no bread, no saddlebag, no money loose in the girdle.". They could wear sandals, but not two tunics. Interestingly, in other accounts in which Jesus sends his disciples, he also insists on radical poverty, but there are slight differences as to what they may or may not wear. For example, in Mt 10:10 they are not allowed to carry a staff or sandals. The point is that what matters is radical poverty, but what exactly radical poverty is can vary according to circumstances. In some places something really is an indispensable necessity; in others it is not.

Jesus is telling us that the only essential requirement is His command, the call from Him, the authority He gives us. If we have this, nothing else is as important. And without it, nothing will succeed. There is an episode, for example, in which the Israelites - having refused to enter the Promised Land when God told them to do so - try to do so later, but against their will. Not surprisingly, the whole effort ends in complete disaster (Num 14:39-45; Deut 1:41-45).

A similar idea appears in today's first reading, in which Amaziah the priest orders the prophet Amos to leave the sanctuary at Bethel and return to the land of Judah. This is "the sanctuary of the king and the house of the kingdom."he tells Amos. A previous king, at the time of the schism between the north and the south of Israel, had erected Bethel as a sanctuary to prevent people from going to Jerusalem. It was a nationalized religion. For Amaziah, the authority of Bethel came from the king. But Amos counters by saying that his own authority came from God. He had not been part of a family or group of prophets, but God called him when he was a simple sycamore farmer. It is God's call that counts, not the king's patronage.

That is why today's readings teach us to look for our support where it is to be found: in God, not in possessions, not in human power. The only thing that matters is that God has called us, has called us, has called us, has called us. "chosen in Christ"as we heard in the second reading. Christ's call is all the authority and support we need.

Homily on the readings of Sunday 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

The priest Luis Herrera Campo offers its nanomiliaA short one-minute reflection for these Sunday readings.

The World

Religious representatives from around the world commit to promote the ethical development of AI

Religious representatives from around the world signed the document "Rome Call for AI ethics" on July 10 in Hiroshima, with the aim of promoting technological development that does not lose sight of the dignity of the human being.

Paloma López Campos-July 10, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

On July 9 and 10, several representatives of religions from all over the world met at HiroshimaJapan, in an event that aims to promote a genuine commitment to the pursuit of peace through the signing of the document "Rome Call for AI Ethics".

The event was initiated by the Pontifical Academy for Life, Religions for Peace Japan, the Peace Forum of the United Arab Emirates and the Commission for Interfaith Relations of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel. By signing the document, influential people from all over the world and from various fields commit themselves to fostering a sense of responsibility in the development of the Artificial Intelligence.

During the first day of the event, attendees heard presentations not only on the ethics of using Artificial Intelligence, but also on scientific, technological and legislative developments. Among the personalities who spoke in the sessions were Microsoft President Brad Smith and Amandeep Singh Gill, Technology Envoy of the Secretary General of the United Nations.

Interfaith cooperation

On the other hand, on the 10th, the signing of the document took place. The President of the Pontifical Academy for Life, Archbishop Paglia, highlighted the importance of this event saying that "all religions are called to work together for the good of humanity". 

Yoshiharu Tomatsu, secretary of "Religions for Peace Japan", said that the challenges that come with the development of Artificial Intelligence move them to commit to "promote inclusiveness and mutual respect for everyone".

For his part, Shaykh Abdallah Bin Bayyah, Chairman of the UAE Peace Forum, stressed that "cooperation, solidarity and working together are necessary to deal with developments in Artificial Intelligence, where interests, dangers and benefits are mixed, to ensure that systems and products are not merely advanced, but also morally correct."

The representative of the Commission on Interfaith Relations of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel, Eliezer Simha Weisz, also stated that "as people of faith, we have a unique responsibility to infuse moral clarity and ethical integrity into our pursuit of Artificial Intelligence."

"Rome Call for AI Ethics, a proactive engagement

Pope Francis, who was not present at the signing, wished to send a brief message message to all the participants of the event. As head of the Catholic Church, he called on the signatories "to show the world that we are united in calling for a proactive commitment to protect human dignity in this new machine age."

In addition, the Pontiff stressed the importance of involving members of different religions in this "Rome Call" commitment. He assured that "recognizing the contribution of the cultural riches of peoples and religions in the regulation of Artificial Intelligence is key to the success of your commitment to the wise management of technological innovation".

The representatives who attended this event in Hiroshima join the other great personalities who have already signed the document promoted by the Vatican. The Anglican Church, IBM and the Sapienza University are other well-known entities that have also committed themselves to developing Artificial Intelligence without losing sight of ethics based on the dignity of the human being.

Moments of sanctity

We all want to be healthy but few of us seek to be saints. However, these are not independent pursuits. Health and holiness are intertwined.

July 10, 2024-Reading time: 6 minutes

The author of the letter to the Hebrews exhorts us to live in search of peace and holiness, because finding peace will help us to live fully in this life, and finding holiness will lead us to live eternally in the next life. Living in peace with everyone around us will achieve the most sublime gifts and virtues that will spiritualize life. These healthy lifestyles will be fertile soil for sowing fruits of holiness.
When we think of saints, of whom do we think of? The names of St. Francis of Assisi, St. Teresa of Avila, St. Teresa of CalcuttaSt. Ignatius of Loyola, St. John Bosco. Although the list is long, in reality there are only about 10,000 saints recognized by the Catholic Church. If we calculate that there were 300 million inhabitants on earth when the Christian era began, and today we are about 8 billion, not counting all those who have died in the last 2000 years, then 10,000 saints is a tiny fraction in relation to the billions of beings who have lived in the human population!

Why is it so difficult to become a saint?

We have heard of the long processes that sometimes take years when the Church diligently analyzes the life, miracles and teachings of a candidate for beatification or canonization. Let us rather think that it is difficult to be declared a saint, but day by day you and I are supposed to live in processes of sanctification, which also means purification and transformation, even if we are never declared saints.

Holiness is not only a mystical experience of some gifted and privileged few who have lived heroically the virtues. Holiness is also a goal and a human trajectory related to purity of heart, purity of intentions and acts to which we are all called to manifest. As Psalm 24:3-4 says, who shall ascend the mountain of the Lord, and who can stand in His holy place? He who has clean hands and a pure heart.

Many people ask themselves, can we be saints in a corrupt world, full of seductions to evil, where the normal is the sinful and the banal? Evil has always existed. Let us remember some biblical characters. For example, in Noah's time, the rampant sin of the paganized world in all its surroundings defied divine mercy, to the extent that God wanted to wash the face of the earth of all wickedness with the flood. But he set aside one family who found refuge in the heart of God and in the shelter of a boat. That ark is a symbol of the Church where we seek protection from the evil outside, to find refuge in one another under the shelter of a family and spiritual community of brothers and sisters in faith.

Let us also remember Moses who, after renouncing the seductions of Pharaoh's palace life, led his people out of the abundance of Egypt and into the wilderness to purify themselves and rid themselves of the identity of slaves before entering a land of free men. Throughout salvation history there have been many of us who have found in the heart of the ark and in the refuge of the Church the protection and wisdom necessary to grow in obedience to God and in holiness. We have also known prophets, pilgrims, and hermits who have needed the desert and the cloisters to silence the voices of the world and learn to listen only to the voice of God. 

In each case it is the same search for God of hungry and thirsty hearts to find the meaning of life and purpose in Him. We need correction from our brothers and sisters in community. Living in community offers us a model of healthy and replicable behavior. But we also come to moments of holiness in our personal deserts alone with God, to engage in deep analysis and conversations with Him that will give us personal revelation of the Holy Spirit and communion of hearts.

What is your path to holiness?

I am convinced that very few of us will be declared saints, but all of us will be able to experience moments of holiness.

To live moments of holiness is to cleanse the heart and strip the mind of everything that does not allow us to seek and long for God's will. To live moments of holiness is to live seeking to please God above pleasing the flesh or the expectations of the world.
To achieve this we will need inner healing, as St. Paul suggests in Romans 12:1-2: "Therefore, brethren, in view of God's mercy, I urge each of you, in spiritual worship, to offer your body as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. Do not conform yourselves to the present world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to prove what is the will of God, good and acceptable and perfect".

Those of us who follow Jesus, walk in faith, depend on His grace and also strive in acts of love and mercy, the complement of all integrated in the same experience. 

As 1 Peter 1:15-16 says: "But be holy in everything you do, just as he who called you is holy; for it is written, 'Be holy, for I am holy.'"

We will approach holiness if we resist spiritual mediocrity, if we speak the truth and act in charity. We will approach holiness with moral, spiritual and behavioral discipline. Everything that projects us to be better human beings will help us to sanctify ourselves. The invitation to holiness is an invitation to constant changes and transformations: change of nature, moderating reactions, impulses, tendencies, passions, and eradicating obsessions.

The opposite of holiness is the degradation of our human behaviors by normalizing and excusing moral decadence, sin, defects and imperfections. The opposite of holiness is also when we sin not only with deeds, but also with thought. The opposite of holiness is to take pleasure in the worldly, to be attracted to the corrupt, to enter into complicity with sin, and to harbor its consequences without desire to change. The enemy's plan is decadence. In that plan of decadence and loss, is the acceptance of sin as part of the normality of life. The enemy always wants us to believe that being a sinner is part of the complexity of being a simple human being.

In Jesus' plan we are presented with a longed-for program of healing and overcoming, leading us to perfection. Jesus said, "be holy as your heavenly Father is holy" (Matthew 5, 48). Do you know how else Jesus described the Father? As loving, caring, compassionate, understanding: so all these attributes are synonymous with holiness.

Although holiness has always seemed to us a mirage or an unattainable reality, the truth is that we can all live moments of holiness. When do we live moments of holiness? As Matthew 25:35-36 says "when I was hungry and you gave me food, thirsty and you gave me drink, naked and you clothed me, in prison and you came to visit me".

When do we experience moments of holiness? When we go against the desires and impulses of the flesh; when we accept the circumstances that cannot be changed and commit to what we must and can change; when we pair wisdom with humility and when we exchange resentment for empathy and mercy.

When do we live moments of holiness? When we seek God's presence in the silences, bustles and crossroads of life, and show hunger and thirst for His gifts, to please His heart, and when we turn every sacrifice into thanksgiving and praise.

When do we experience moments of holiness? When we are kind, helpful, grateful, faithful, authentic, compassionate: because all this is contrary to human instincts, and to manifest this new nature we need the Spirit of God whom we also call the Holy Spirit.

We will live moments of holiness every time we sacrifice ourselves in love by responding to a needy person, caring for a sick person, whether it corresponds to us or not; when we do not abandon our elderly parents in a nursing home but dedicate ourselves to them in the last years of their lives, feeling that the cross is not heavy but bearable because it is carried with authentic love.

We will live moments of holiness when we defend the truth over lies, when we defend the faith and propagate it tirelessly until we get others to convert and change their lifestyles.

We will live moments of holiness when we allow ourselves to be used prophetically and miraculously by God who always needs vessels available and obedient to His call and the impulses of grace.

We will live moments of holiness when we leave a confessional having accepted Jesus' forgiveness and mercy, and when we are able to forgive others when they offend us, just as He taught us; and when we prostrate ourselves before the Blessed Sacrament in profound reverence surrendering our burdens to Him and raising to Him our untiring praises.

We will live moments of holiness when, while we could opt for evil, for deceit, for fraud, we choose goodness, truth and sincerity: instead of hoarding, we share: instead of denying others of our bread or benefits, we share them.

His word confirms that the call is for everyone.

The authorMartha Reyes

D. in Clinical Psychology.

Culture

Juraj Šúst: "Thomism can both defend faith and dialogue with secular culture".

Omnes interviews Slovak philosopher, publicist and activist Juraj Šúst, who is the organizer of the BHD festival, one of the most important cultural events in Central Europe. This year's theme was "(Christian) Culture?". He tells us about this initiative, as well as about his own intellectual journey.

Andrej Matis-July 10, 2024-Reading time: 11 minutes

Juraj Šúst studied philosophy at the University of Trnava, where he also received his doctorate. He is an active person known to the Slovak public mainly as president of the "Ladislav Hanus Society" (SLH) and organizer of the festival "Bratislava Hanus Days" (BHD).

The BHD is a festival focused on discussions of Christian culture and engagement. It offers a variety of lectures, debates, workshops and artistic performances that aim to connect Christian faith with current social and cultural issues. The festival is held in Bratislava, and in recent years has attracted personalities such as Robert P. George, Scott Hahn and Philip-Neri Reese, O.P.

The history of Hanus and its involvement in the SLH and the BHD testify to the need for an open dialogue between faith, the secular world and cultures, as well as to the crucial role of the laity in contemporary Catholic education and intellectual life.

At this year's BHD, one of the featured guests was Professor Robert P. George, who spoke at one of the sessions about his minor intellectual conversion. It happened that in an elective he was assigned to read a text in which he was not very interested. He went to the library to read it, and when he did he experienced an intellectual conversion. It was Plato's "Gorgias," and it was a turning point for Professor George: he then decided not to look for what he liked around him and to devote himself to one and only one thing: the search for truth.

Have you experienced any similar intellectual conversion? What was your path to philosophy? 

- What happened was that in high school I was looking for a way to make sense of my life. My family came from a Catholic background, not very intellectually reflective, but at the same time I respected it. At the same time, however, I was clashing with what secular culture offered me: it often seemed to me, even in a good way, more action-oriented, richer than what I saw in my Catholic world. 

I grew up with these two perspectives, and in a way I chose philosophy to resolve them. In the end, studying it was disappointing to me. There we were studying the history of philosophy, while I wanted to address my existential questions, like Plato and Socrates. But along with my studies, I also met a particular person who was a kind of Socrates for me, and that got me going.

Who was a philosophical role model for you? 

- At that time I was sympathetic to liberal philosophies, as well as trying to live my Catholic life. 

I had read Popper's idea of an open society and it seemed reasonable to me, as it was about being open to all points of view in society; he was against Marxism and communism and totalitarian regimes. At that time he also seemed to me to be tolerant of religion. 

How did you go from Popper to Thomism? 

- Popper interested me during my studies, but what I always missed in his philosophy is that he did not give answers to the big questions. He only answered the practical and pragmatic questions, about how to live together without enmity. But for me, as a young person, I was interested in knowing what truth is, how I should live, and he didn't give me an answer to that... So that wasn't enough for me. Plato opened to me the classical question, the search for truth, and later I met Augustine, who influenced me because he was a very suggestive thinker and also a radical Catholic. That attracted me, and I said to myself: I have to be as radical a Catholic as he was. Augustine touched me very deeply and helped me to discover the beauty of Thomas as well.

How did you come on this personal philosophical journey to SLH, which opens the doors of philosophy and the search for truth to many other young people?

- I came to SLH about a year into its existence.

At the beginning my attitude was lukewarm: I felt a little bit that I did not find my way to others, some opinions seemed to me a pose, but little by little this was changing and when I was offered to be part of the training team of this community I accepted it. 

During my studies in Krakow I attended the Tišner Days festival, which was attended by local and foreign philosophers; at that time Robert Spaemann also attended. I was fascinated by the fact that many young people attended these conferences. I had never experienced anything like that in Slovakia, and I said to myself: "I wish we had something like that in my country!

And now we have it.

- We already have it.

The Ladislav Hanus Society also organizes the Hanus Days in Bratislava, a festival in which speakers and audience form a dynamic community. This year, in the framework of a discussion with Prof. Robert P. George, an older man who lived through communism in Slovakia raised the question of how it is possible that during the forty years of communism - when the Church was persecuted - we were able to transmit the faith to young people, and now, during the (almost) forty years of consumerism, we are not able to do so. Do you think that SLH is somehow a means to succeed in transmitting the faith?

- I will not speak for others, but for myself I can say that SLH has helped me to respond rationally to issues that the Church teaches, but which were not entirely clear to me at the time: abortion, sexual morality, the relationship between Church and State.

SLH helped me in many ways to find, or at least to seek, a rational basis for what the Church teaches. For me, SLH was life-changing in that sense, and I would like SLH to have that effect on all who come in contact with it.

Last year Scott Hahn came to BHD, and the presence of such a personality who has more than 10 titles published in Slovakia resonated with people. How was that possible?

- There is a nice story behind it. The auxiliary bishop of Bratislava, Jozef Haľko, often told us: "Invite Scott Hahn". We tried first officially through Scott's website. We got no response. Then we learned that a former student of ours had studied in Trumau at the theological school with Scott Hahn's son. It also turned out that there was a retired priest in Slovakia who had spent a long time in the United States, where he had been a military chaplain. He was excited about the idea of inviting Scott Hahn to Slovakia and helped us make it happen. All these things came together.

What was it like for you to have Scott Hahn here?

- Very nice. We wanted Scott not only to be at our festival that week, but also to meet with priests, bishops, and it all came together. Scott was enthusiastic and I think it bore a lot of fruit, especially for the priests.

Philosopher Juraj Šúst during a lecture.

This year Philip Neri Reese, O.P., came to BHD, and last year Thomas White, O.P.. This year we also had Matt Fradd, a layman known for his podcast "Pints with Aquinas." What is your relationship to Thomism? 

- Very fervent. I see Thomism as an intellectual tradition of the Catholic Church that did not come about by accident. It is a union of classical Greek philosophy with the Christian faith, which has been cultivated for centuries. It is true that in the 19th century it went through a crisis of reduction to manualism that provoked the resistance of two generations. But neither biblical criticism nor biblicism itself can stand on its own without a quality philosophy, and Thomism is making a strong comeback today. Today, Thomism is the only relevant theology that can both defend the faith and dialogue even with religious or secular cultures.

Some thinkers say that Thomism is simply out of fashion....

- Thomism today is much richer than before, because even the advances in biblical studies can be translated into that. And because of the emphasis placed in the twentieth century on other philosophies, such as phenomenology, contemporary Thomism can also be nourished by this. It need not be closed in strict syllogisms, but can be a very varied theology and philosophy. For my part, I am very glad that even today there are still quality Thomists who are worth inviting to our festival.

Ladislav Hanus, after whom SLH is named, was a Catholic priest; you are a layman, the father of a large family. Alfonso Aguiló, one of the guests at this year's BHD, also talked about how historically Catholic education was in the hands of priests and religious and now it is passing into the hands of the laity. Can we say that this change is also taking place in the field of intellectuals, and do you feel part of this change? 

- I am not sure if the time of the laity has not come because there is a crisis of priests and religious. I like it when in education there is a collaboration of laity and priests, and I also believe that the role of the priest as a teacher is in a certain way irreplaceable. It would be a big mistake if the laity started to reclaim that role. I think that, at least in Slovakia, this tendency is not so strong, and that seems to me appropriate. At the same time, it is true that in the Church during the last decades we have testimonies of different lay people in various countries who have launched many initiatives, and I think that this new era can also teach us something new about cooperation between priests and laity.

We have mentioned Alfonso Aguilar and education. Aguiló's opinion is that home education is a reaction to the fact that we have to defend ourselves from this world, and that it is not an ideal reaction. He thinks that we should not withdraw from the public space, but stay in it and be present in educational institutions. You are the father of six children, who are home-schooled, what is your experience and your opinion on this? Or is this a controversial question?

- That is an excellent question. I have an opinion on it. Let's see where to start... 

It is true that home schooling is a reaction. It is a reaction to the crisis of Catholic education. This crisis is deeper in the West, but it is already there in Slovakia as well. And the crisis consists in the fact that Catholic schools are Catholic in name, so to speak, but having ceased to emphasize the orthodoxy of the faith of the teachers and especially of the students, the culture in those schools is as it were indistinguishable from the secular culture in which religion and its manifestations are a kind of sticker. Today, even in Slovakia, I perceive that the Church understands Catholic schools as a space for the evangelization of pupils and children. In my opinion, this is regrettable.

So, do you think that the school is not the right ground for evangelization? 

- Certainly we need schools where there is space for evangelization, but we also need schools where there is space for catechesis, for growth in faith. For this space to open up, it is essential that there be children and teachers who share the Catholic faith, who love Jesus Christ and want to learn to love him even more, starting from the knowledge of the truth. And, knowing the truth, they will love Christ even more. And this must be clear, unequivocal, uncompromising and evident to all the actors involved in the school in question.

In your opinion, can evangelization and catechesis take place in the same institution, or do we need two different types of schools? 

- We need two types of schools. Schools according to Benedict, "ora et labora", where there is a "regula" or rule, where we can learn to live according to the Catholic source, without compromise. Schools that can be a beacon in the neighborhood, in the region in which they are located.

And we also need schools according to St. Dominic, as Father Philip-Neri Reese told me when he was in Bratislava for the BHD. Schools where there is a Catholic spirit, a Catholic mind, where the Catholic tradition is preserved in its fullness and where at the same time the teachers are able to communicate with the contemporary world. Schools where everyone can study.

Even non-Catholics?

- Even non-Catholics. In my opinion, Fr. Reese was referring primarily to universities, although I can imagine high schools of this type as well. But universities are best suited for this, in my opinion. In such schools, Catholic culture can make inroads into the contemporary secular world. And it can, in a certain way, show this world that it has the best presuppositions to be an arbiter capable of dialogue between cultures, between religions, between secularism and religion, because it has the enormous tradition of realistic Thomistic philosophy. What it did in the past with Arab and Jewish culture, it can achieve today with the current cultures that make up contemporary society. These are two types of schools that we need. And what we do not need are formal Catholic schools.

So, the reason you chose homeschooling is because we lack honest Catholic schools? 

- Yes. But there is yet another reason. Home education in the first years of life is very beautiful. Parents are the first educators, and education implies not only educating, but also forming. It is natural that children learn the basics of mathematics, language, religion, etc. at the kitchen table. And they learn it as an integral part of their lives. It is not that I have to learn something for exams and thanks to that I will get into some good school and start a successful career, but that I learn everything as an integral part of my daily life. And in this context, what is important is not the career, awards and diplomas, but living the Catholic faith in a beautiful way, in fullness, in unity with tradition and in full unity with everyday life. And where can you get it better than in the family circle? So home education is not just an escape from the world, or an option that remains when all else fails. At least in the first years of life, it is also a natural and attractive option.

Don't your children miss their friends? 

- Homeschooling does not have to be done in isolation. The families meet, coordinate, inspire and today, thanks to technology, connecting and communicating is easier than in the past. But it can become a challenge if you don't live in a community where there are other families interested in homeschooling.

What do you think about the content of education in today's schools? 

- There is a tendency today to teach children to think, but this is often no more than a fig leaf in the face of uncertainty about what to think. We don't tell children what to think because we ourselves don't know what to think. But, of course, critical thinking is good in itself. But we have to teach children to think in such a way that faith is not just a label for them, but that the light of faith illuminates their thinking in every area of their lives. This is something we have to rediscover and restore. Reconnect with something that was once there, and even improve it.

J.J. Rousseau is famous for his book "Emile or Education", but paradoxically he did not care for his son. You have six children, how do you manage, how do you balance your wonderful job with taking care of your family?

- I try not to separate work from family. I want my children to see what their father does and that they can like it. So that they don't see work as something that takes their father away from the family, but as something that they can also benefit from. My educational goal is for my children to see in their father that he loves Christ, that this is something he will never give up, that we celebrate Sunday together, that we dedicate it to God Our Lord, that we go to Holy Mass together, that we eat Sunday together.... and this takes precedence over everything else, over his friends, etc. They don't always receive it with enthusiasm, but I insist on it and I think that if I transmit something to my children, it is at least this: that dad not only talked about God, but lived his relationship with Him.

What world would you like to leave your children? Where do you place your hope for Western culture? 

- There must be more families who seek to live the radicality of faith, families whose children are then seeds of Christian life that will one day grow and flourish. While it may not bring about total change at the societal level, there will be many oases where people can be touched by the love of Christ.

I believe that this will demand this martyrdom from us Christians. Also in daily life, but perhaps also in other more difficult situations. I believe that, as secularism is more aggressive, there will be clashes with faith, and if one does not want to be lukewarm but unequivocal, one will have to rely on the chivalrous element in life. This is also something I try to guide my children towards.

The authorAndrej Matis

The Vatican

October synod outlines themes and challenges with Instrumentum Laboris

The presentation of the Instrumentum Laboris of the second part of the Synod concretizes themes and actions of the Church in this time.

Andrea Acali-July 9, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

A long document, consisting of 112 points divided into two sections, plus an introduction and conclusions. This is the outline of the Instrumentum Laboris which will serve as a guide for the second session of the synodal assembly next October "How to be a missionary synodal Church". 

New baptismal ministries, such as that of listening, the role of women in the Church's decision-making processes, including the question of the diaconate, new ways of exercising the Petrine ministry and the revitalization of the Pastoral Councils are some of the aspects that emerge from the document that will serve as the basis for the work of the Assembly.

Several listening levels

Cardinal Grech, Secretary General of the Synod, explained how "during the period between the First and Second Sessions, the Synod's journey continued to be characterized by a profound exercise of listening, a listening carried out at various levels. 

It was thus confirmed that the Synod is, above all, a formidable gymnasium of listening. A listening that involves "the sense of faith of the People of God, the voice of the pastors and the charism of theologians". Grech recalled that "after the celebration of the First Session, the Synod 'returned' - so to speak - to the local Churches". 

A second consultation that led, "despite time constraints", to the General Secretariat of the Synod receiving "no less than 108 National Syntheses prepared by the Episcopal Conferences (out of 114), to which must be added 9 Replies received from the Eastern Catholic Churches, 4 from the International Meetings of Episcopal Conferences and the Synthesis of the Union of Superiors General and the International Union of Superiors General representing Consecrated Life". 

This rich material, to which must be added the Observations freely sent by individuals and groups (including some Faculties of Theology and Canon Law), constitutes the framework for the document presented today, because its purpose is now to submit to the discernment of some - the Members of the Synod, who will meet again in October - what has been said by all - the local Churches in which the People of God live". 

The Maltese Cardinal also recalled the consultations and meetings held with theologians, which led to the "constitution of 5 Study Groups, made up of 33 experts of different formation and experience, called to deepen some of the fundamental questions that permeate the Synthesis Report": the missionary synodal face of the local Church (1), of the groupings of Churches (2) and of the universal Church (3), as well as the synodal method (4) and the question of "place", understood not only in a geographical sense, but in a cultural and inseparably theological sense (5). 

The contributions of these groups have also been incorporated into the Instrumentum Laboris and will form the basis of a theological aid to be published in the near future". 

These five groups have been joined by 10 others, announced by the Pope, called to examine in depth "themes on which the Synodal Assembly has already reached a significant consensus and which, therefore, seemed sufficiently mature to be able to move on to the phase of elaborating concrete proposals for reform to be submitted to the Holy Father". 

These Groups are already operational or, in some cases, will be operational shortly: they will present a first report of their activities at the Second Session, to offer their conclusions to the Bishop of Rome possibly in June 2025. 

In addition to this, the Commission of Canonists, called to study a project of reform of the canonical norms directly involved in the synodal process, has been operational since 2023. More recently, the SECAM (Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar) has initiated a path of theological and pastoral discernment on the accompaniment of persons in a situation of polygamy.

These two organizations will also provide an initial report on their activities in October.

The synthesis of listening

The synodal process then included listening to pastors, both bishops and pastors: "Their voices resonate also in the document that is published today," said Grech, who described the Insrtumentum Laboris as "a colorful concert of voices, a true polyphony, rich in timbres and accents."

For his part, the General Rapporteur, Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich, Archbishop of Luxembourg, illustrated the work of the local Churches carried out since the closing of the first session: "The reports received show a Church that is alive and on the move. In fact, what stands out most when reading not only the reports, but also the experiences and good practices that have reached the General Secretariat, is that the synod, the synodal process, has been and continues to be a time of grace that is already bearing numerous fruits in the life of the Church. From Kenya to Ireland, from Korea to Brazil, the reports underline this renewed dynamism that the listening offered and received is bringing to the communities". 

And not only: "They unanimously attest, without hiding the work and difficulties of the synodal conversion, also a feeling of joy and gratitude, as reported, for example, by the Episcopal Conference of the United States". 

Another particularly interesting element, Hollerich stressed, "was the widespread adoption of the 'Conversation in the Spirit': this synodal method was introduced into the meetings of various ecclesial structures."

The Cardinal also recalled the formation initiatives on synodality and some fruits that are already evident: a certain maturity in the synodal journey of the local Churches, the parochialism that is evident in the contributions, the capacity for re-reading and self-evaluation.

For their part, the two special secretaries of the Assembly, Father Giacomo Costa and Monsignor Riccardo Battocchio, were in charge of illustrating in greater detail the contents of the Instrumentum Laboris. "The introduction is fundamental for understanding the document," said Costa, recalling the affirmation of an African Church: "From now on, no one will be able to consider the local Churches as mere receivers of the proclamation of the Gospel without being able to make any contribution. The Church is harmonious, not homogeneous, and it is a harmony that cannot be taken for granted".

First section: The basics

Battocchio explained that the first section, the "Fundamentals" section, contains "elements that support and orient the journey of conversion and reform that the people of God is called to undertake". It gathers the fruits of the journey begun in October 2021, but which has more distant roots. It serves to verify the existence of a consensus on some decisive aspects: to be the People of God, to be a sign of unity in Christ, to be a Church that welcomes and is called to give".

Battocchio affirmed that starting from the "recognition of the differences between men and women, it will be necessary a greater recognition of the charisms, vocation and role of women in all areas of the life of the Church" and "new ministerial and pastoral forms will have to be explored". Reflection on women's access to the diaconate will be addressed in study group number 5, in collaboration with the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Second section: relationships, roads and places

The second section is divided into three parts. The first part speaks of "relationships", beginning with the "foundational relationship with God". Then, the relationships between the baptized, those that preserve communion with the ministers and those that exist between the Churches. It foresees the possibility of establishing other forms of baptismal ministry, such as the ministry of listening and accompaniment," distinct and differentiated from ordained ministries.

The following is the chapter "Pathways". A very strong need is that of "integral formation with shared common moments". Then the formation to discernment: to let oneself be guided by the Spirit". Then the "essential theme" of decisions: "How to develop ways of making decisions while respecting roles". Finally, transparency, not only in the area of sexual and financial abuse, but also, for example, in ways of respecting human dignity. 

The last part refers to "Places", that is, to the concrete contexts in which relationships are incarnated. Starting from the plurality of ecclesial experiences, the Instrumentum Laboris "invites us to go beyond a static vision of places. 

The experience of territorial rootedness has changed over the years". Great attention is given to the digital environment, as well as to "rethinking some aspects of the territorial articulation of the Church and enhancing the circularity of the ecclesial reality". 

In this perspective, a re-evaluation of the particular Councils is proposed. 

Finally, service to the unity of the Bishop of Rome, in order to study ways of exercising the Petrine ministry that are open to the new situation of the ecumenical journey and to Christian unity.

The authorAndrea Acali

-Rome

Newsroom

Bishop Argüello: "Integral reparation requires time, people and financial compensation".

The Spanish bishops approve a comprehensive reparation plan for victims of sexual abuse in the Church environment.

Maria José Atienza-July 9, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

The Spanish bishops gathered at a meeting of the extraordinary plenary meeting, the fifth in its history, they have approved three documents: the Integral Reparation Plan to minors and persons with equal rights, victims of sexual abuse, the lines of work including this remediation plan as well as the guiding criteria for comprehensive reparation for victims of sexual abuse of minors or adults in law.

At the conclusion of this Extraordinary Plenary Assembly, the President of the Spanish Episcopal Conference, Msgr. Luis Argüello has emphasized that this plan of Comprehensive Repair focuses especially on those cases that "have the doors closed" due to the civil statute of limitations, death of the perpetrator or other situations.

"This reparation plan wants to be subsidiary. When legal, civil, criminal, canonical or civil remedies have ended or the possible means of reparation have ended, the Church keeps its doors open to listen to any victim," stressed the president of the Spanish bishops. 

In addition to the documents, the bishops have approved the constitution of an advisory commission, made up of people from various fields, including the Church, psychology and people close to victims' associations. This commission will have its own rules of procedure to know how to act. 

At the press conference given by Argüello together with the president of CONFER, Jesús M. Díaz Sariego, the president of the Spanish bishops asked the public administrations and society to respect the rules of operation of the Church and explained that "it is not a decree-law, which obliges but rather, in the Church we provide ourselves with criteria of communion so that those people who decide they have the right to this reparation can go to a diocese, or to an advisory commission to address the path of reparation". 

The Church has affirmed Luis ArgüelloI know that nothing by itself can heal the pain suffered by so many victims of abuse, but we express our firm commitment to continue on this path of reparation and collaboration with the prosecution and the forces of the state when these crimes occur. 

This plan foresees that in the hypothetical case that a victim does not find shelter in one instance of the Church, diocese or congregation, he or she can always turn to "another door" to follow his or her path of reparation.

Comprehensive repair

This reparation plan will address the process from different areas and is born, to a large extent, from the listening done from different areas of the Church to victims of abuse in recent years.

The president of the bishops wanted to point out that "an integral reparation requires time, people and economic compensation. There is money, but also time and people. The Church responds with the resources of its communion of life and its communion of goods to whatever it has to deal with".

This means that, in addition to the work of accompaniment, prevention and formation that is already being carried out, the Church will have to assume possible financial compensation for victims of abuse.

Also in the subsequent press conference, the president of the EEC explained that he "is not the head of the bishops" and that what has been approved in this extraordinary assembly cannot be obliged to comply with it, but he stressed that the fact that it has been approved practically unanimously by the bishops, gives to understand the commitment of the Spanish Church in this case. 

A plan born out of commitment, not obligation

In relation to the qualification of unilaterality, that shortly before a member of the Government of Spain put on this reparation plan, the president of the bishops of Spain wanted to emphasize that "of course it is unilateral. It is our decision, which responds to a moral obligation, not a juridical one, on our own initiative". Argüello has turned this reproach of the government around, pointing out that for them it is "a recognition because when the legal way is closed, a non-legal door has to be opened".

Both Argüello and Díaz Sariego emphasized the Church's willingness to work together with other social and governmental bodies in the fight against abuse.

A work of years

"The Church's work of reparation does not begin or end today," Bishop Argüello stressed. In this sense, both the president of the bishops, together with the president of the Spanish Conference of Religious, recalled the path that the Church took "more than 20 years ago when these cases of people abused by members of our communities became known" and, especially, in the last six years.

The Vatican

10 questions on the Synod's 'Instrumentum Laboris' published today

The 'Instrumentum Laboris' (IL, Instrument of Work), for the members of the second session of the XVI Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, which will take place in October with the theme 'How to be a missionary synodal Church', was made public today. The conclusions of the Assembly, which is a consultative body, will be submitted to the Pope for a possible Apostolic Exhortation.   

Francisco Otamendi-July 9, 2024-Reading time: 10 minutes

The document is 32 pages long and consists of an introduction, foundations, three parts and a conclusion, entitled 'The Synodal Church in the World'. The IL articulates the syntheses received to animate the Assembly's reflection on the central question of October: 'How to be a synodal Church on mission'. 

In the conclusion, the text appeals to the encyclical Fratelli tuttiwhich "presents us with the call to recognize ourselves as sisters and brothers in the risen Christ, proposing him not as a status, but as a way of life. The Encyclical underlines the contrast between the times in which we live and the vision of living together prepared by God. The veil, the blanket and the tears of our time are the result of the growing isolation from one another, the increasing violence and polarization of our world and the uprooting of the sources of life". 

Synodal missionary Church: deep listening and dialogue

"This Instrumentum laboris," explains the General Secretariat of the Synod, whose titular is Cardinal Mario Grech, "questions and interrogates us on how to be a missionary synodal Church; how to engage in deep listening and dialogue; how to be co-responsible in light of the dynamism of our personal and communal baptismal vocation; how to transform structures and processes so that all can participate and share the charisms that the Spirit pours out on each one for the common good; how to exercise power and authority as service."

"Each of these questions is a service to the Church and, through her action, to the possibility of healing the deepest wounds of our time," the final part of the document adds.

The 'Instrumentum laboris' can be found in several languages on the official website of the General Secretariat of the Synodwhich contains a specific section for the work of the Second Session of the XVI Assembly. In addition to the IL, this section contains Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), Infographics and other useful documents not only for the preparation of the members of the assembly, but also for any other person or group wishing to deepen their knowledge of the Synodal Church.

In February of this year, Pope Francis ordered that a few study groups analyze ten issuesand will present their conclusions, if possible, before June 2025. One of the questions and answers in this outline, to clarify doubts, refers to this issue.

Questions and answers

The General Secretariat of the Synod has prepared some questions, ten to be precise, with their answers, which Omnes is transmitting here.

What is the 'Instrumentum laboris'? 

- As its Latin expression indicates, the 'Instrumentun Laboris' (IL) is first and foremost a working instrument for the members of the Second Session of the XVI Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. This also justifies its language and the use of theological notions and categories in some of its parts. A theological aid, soon to be published, will facilitate its reading and will allow for a deeper study of the theological notions and categories used. 

It is born from the reflections that the Episcopal Conferences, the Eastern Catholic Churches and other international ecclesial realities, as well as the reports presented by the pastors during the three-day working meeting of the Pastors for the Synod, have made around the Synthesis Report of the First Session (October 4-29, 2023) in light of the indications given by the General Secretariat of the Synod through the document Towards October 2024. 

The IL thus articulates the syntheses received in order to encourage the Assembly's reflection on the central issue of the october assembly How to be a synodal Church in mission. 

As a working instrument of the XVI Assembly, the IL is not a magisterial document, nor a catechism. Neither is it a text that offers prefabricated answers, nor a document that pretends to address all the questions related to the need to be more and more "synodal in mission". 

It is a document, fruit of listening, discernment and reflection on the synodality that has matured in the course of the synodal process. It is a basic text, articulated but essential, conceived above all as a support for the method with which the assembly will be called to work and to encourage prayer, dialogue, discernment, the maturation of a consensus starting from some convergences matured along the way in view of the delivery to the Holy Father of a Final Document of the XVI Assembly. 

The 'Instrumentum laboris' has its origin in the reports received by the General Secretariat of the Synod. Who sent these reports? 

- In December 2023, the General Secretariat, through the document 'Towards October 2024', invited the entire Christian community to reflect on the guiding question indicated for the Second Session of the XVI Assembly: How to be a Synodal Church in Mission, proposing a series of differentiated paths and activities based on the Synthesis Report, approved by the members of the XVI Assembly at the end of the work of the First Session, in October 2023. 

The aim was to keep the synodal dynamism alive by promoting at the local level a reflection on how to strengthen the differentiated co-responsibility in the mission on the part of all the faithful and, at the same time, to ask the Episcopal Conferences, the Eastern Catholic Churches and the groupings of Churches to reflect on how to articulate the dimension of the Church as a whole and its rootedness at the local level, thus gathering the fruits of the reflection around the Synthesis Report. 

Despite the short time available, by June 30, 2024, no less than 108 reports had been received from the Episcopal Conferences (out of 114), 9 from the Eastern Catholic Churches (out of 14), in addition to the contribution of the USG-UISG (respectively, the International Union of Major Superiors and the International Union of Superiors General). In addition to the contribution of some dicasteries of the Roman Curia, the General Secretariat also received more than 200 comments from international entities, university faculties, associations of the faithful or communities and individuals.

Obviously, in drafting the Instrumentum laboris, the General Secretariat also took into account the reports presented by the pastors during the three-day working session of the International Meeting of Pastors for the Synod, as well as those of some working groups: the five groups created by the General Secretariat of the Synod to deepen the theological study of five areas of reflection, in the wake of what was repeatedly requested by the Assembly (the face of the missionary synodal Church; the missionary synodal face of the groupings of Churches; the face of the universal Church; the synodal method; the "place" of the synodal Church in the mission), and a specific commission of canonical experts created to support the work of the theologians. 

In this sense, the Instrumentum Laboris can truly be considered a Church document that has been able to dialogue with diverse sensibilities and different pastoral fields.

Who drafted the 'Instrumentum laboris'? 

- Like any other document of the General Secretariat of the Synod concerning the synodal process, the Instrumentum Laboris (IL) is the fruit of a work in which a large number of people from various parts of the world and with different competencies have participated. 

First of all, a group of theologians (men and women, bishops, priests, consecrated men and women and lay people) from different continents, but also the members of the XV Ordinary Council of the General Secretariat of the Synod accompanied by some Consultors of the same Secretariat. 

A first version of the document was then sent to some seventy people, representatives of all the People of God (priests, consecrated men and women, lay people, representatives of ecclesial realities, theologians, pastoral agents and a significant number of pastors) from all over the world, from different ecclesial sensibilities and from different theological "schools". 

This broad consultation was carried out in order to maintain consistency with the principle of circularity (what comes from the base, goes back to the base) that animated the entire synodal process. This verification of the material prepared in the light of the reports received was also an exercise, on the part of the General Secretariat, of that accountability that characterizes the synodal Church. 

Finally, after due modifications, the IL returned to the hands of the Ordinary Council which, after a series of amendments, approved it and transmitted it to the Holy Father for final approval. 

How is it structured? 

- The Instrumentum Laboris consists of five sections. After the introduction, the IL opens with a section dedicated to the Fundamentals of the understanding of synodality, which re-proposes the awareness matured along the way and sanctioned by the First Session. 

There follow three intimately intertwined parts, which illuminate the missionary synodal life of the Church from different perspectives: (I) the perspective of Relationships - with the Lord, among brethren and among Churches - which sustain the vitality of the Church much more radically than its structures; (II) the perspective of Pathways which concretely sustain and nourish the dynamism of relationships; (III) the perspective of Places which, against the temptation of an abstract universalism, speak of the concreteness of the contexts in which relationships are incarnated, with their variety, plurality and interconnectedness, and with their rootedness in the nascent foundation of the profession of faith. 

Each of these Sections will be the subject of prayer, sharing and discernment in one of the modules that will mark the work of the Second Session. A summary of the IL is available at www.synod.va 

This 'Instrumentum laboris' seems, in its structure, somewhat different from the previous one, which contained many sheets with many questions, why was this structure chosen? 

- The Assembly is an evolving reality and the Instrumentum Laboris is at the service of the Assembly and not the other way around. If in the First Session it was necessary to bring about convergences in the face of the many questions that arose from the broad consultation of the People of God at the local, national and continental levels, now it is necessary that from these convergences it be possible to arrive at a consensus. Whereas in the First Session the members were asked to choose the thematic area in which they wished to make their contribution, in the Second Session all members will address the same text and discuss the same proposals. 

The 'Instrumentum Laboris' is for the members of the XVI Assembly, but how can local synodal groups and, in general, the faithful who will not participate in the October Assembly use it? How can they contribute to the work in October? 

- The 'Instrumentum laboris' is addressed primarily to the members of the Second Session of the XVI General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. However, it is also a valuable tool for individual groups at diocesan and national levels who wish to continue their journey of reflection and discernment on how to journey together as Church; and to carry out ecclesial initiatives. For example, the IL can offer a special opportunity for an encounter - even virtual - between members of the Assembly and at least the national team in the preparation phase of the October meeting, also through the synodal method of Conversation in the Spirit. 

In this way, the representative role of each of the members of the Assembly can become tangible. In any case, it is important that those who are interested in the synodal conversion of the Church in view of the mission continue their commitment so that the ecclesial dynamism initiated with the consultation of the People of God in 2021 does not fade away and that the exercise of co-responsibility in the mission of the Church continues to develop at the local level, as it is already doing. 

In addition, the IL will certainly help to understand how important it is for the faithful to accompany the work of the Assembly with prayer, asking the Holy Spirit - the true protagonist of the work of October - to sustain the great task entrusted to the members of the Assembly.

The 'Instrumentum Laboris' mentions a theological subsidy. What is it? 

- To accompany the relatively concise Instrumentum laboris, the General Secretariat of the Synod considered it appropriate to offer some theological and canonical insights on the themes contained in the IL, in order to help the members of the Assembly - without excluding a wider circle of recipients - to recognize and understand the roots and implications of what is contained in the IL. 

"Deepening" from a theological point of view means: underlining the reference of individual themes to Sacred Scripture, to the Tradition of the Church, to the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, to the recent Magisterium of the Bishop of Rome of the world episcopates. 

"Deepening" from the canonical point of view means: to show how discernment regarding individual issues can be translated into regulated and verified practices also through the normative instrument. 

Rather than an organic text, the Grant will be presented as a series of "glosses" to the IL. In fact, an updated version of the IL will contain some references to the Grant in the margins of individual chapters.

Some topics have been entrusted to the 10 working groups created by Pope Francis. How should this decision be interpreted? Is it a way of eliminating these topics from the Assembly debate? 

- From the beginning, Pope Francis insisted that this Synod is not about this or that topic, but about synodality, about how to be a missionary Church on the way. The October Assembly and all the theological questions and pastoral proposals for modification have this purpose. The Assembly should therefore be a time in which each participant, placing himself on a journey that began in 2021 and bringing the "voice" of the people of God from which he comes, invokes the help of the Holy Spirit and that of his brothers and sisters to discern God's will for his Church, and not an opportunity to impose his own vision of the Church. 

At the same time, Pope Francis welcomed the convergence that the members of the Assembly had expressed during the First Session around a number of relevant issues concerning the life and mission of the Church in synodal perspective, on which the Assembly had reached a consistent consensus, almost always higher than 90%, through the creation of 10 specific working groups. These are important issues, some of which require to be dealt with at the level of the whole Church and in collaboration with the Dicasteries of the Roman Curia. 

It is not, therefore, a matter of subtracting certain questions from the debate of the assembly, which has already expressed a convergence as to their importance, but of providing useful elements from the theological and canonistic point of view to offer to Peter's ministry. 

Therefore, these groups should already be considered a fruit of the synodal journey. Experts and bishops from different parts of the world are participating in these groups, identified on the basis of their experience and respecting the variety of geographical origins, disciplinary backgrounds, gender and ecclesial status necessary for an authentically synodal approach. 

They are collecting and enriching existing contributions on the topics assigned to them. The Groups should conclude their work, if possible, before the end of June 2025. 

What can we expect at the conclusion of the Synod? 

- The celebration of the Second Session of the XVI Assembly of the Synod of Bishops will not mean the end of the synodal process. The Apostolic Constitution Episcopalis Communio (EP), which governs the entire synodal process, recalls that the synod consists essentially of three phases: consultation of the faithful, discernment by the pastors and the implementation phase. 

These three phases should not be understood only in a chronological sense. In fact, with the celebration of the XVI Assembly, according to the EP, we would be in the phase of discernment of the pastors, which would be followed by the moment of reception of the work of the Assembly by the local communities. 

However, the discernment of pastors accompanied almost the entire synodal process (i.e., already in the consultation phase, which in fact already saw the discernment of pastors at the local, national and continental levels). 

Moreover, we can testify that the "implementation" phase has already begun immediately after the first meetings. The synodal "fruits" are already numerous: many are the testimonies of those ecclesial realities that have changed their ecclesial actions in a synodal sense with a greater co-responsibility of all the baptized faithful. 

Therefore, the conclusion of the Second Session will not be the end of the synodal process, but only an important moment in the discernment of the pastors. 

On the other hand, in previous synods a final document was approved and delivered to the Holy Father. This document contained some indications that the Assembly wished to give to the Pope. Normally, after a few months, the Pope would deliver to the whole Church a document called the Post-Synodal Exhortation, which contained some provisions related to the topic in question. 

It is expected that this Assembly will also produce a final document to be submitted to the Holy Father for a possible exhortation. The purpose of the Synodal Assembly is to offer guidance to the Pope. The Synod is consultative and not deliberative.

Where can IL be found? 

- The 'Instrumentum laboris' can be found in several languages on the official website of the General Secretariat of the Synod (www.synod.va), where a specific section has been created for the work of the Second Session of the XVI Assembly. In addition to the IL, this section also contains Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), Infographics and other useful documents not only for the preparation of the members of the assembly, but also for any other person or group wishing to deepen their knowledge of the synodal Church.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

The Vatican

On Viganó's schism, "the Church always hopes for conversion".

Carlo Maria Vigano, a former nuncio to the United States, has been found guilty of the crime of schism after repeatedly expressing unacceptable criticism of the Pope and ecclesial communion. Davide Cito, Professor of Canon Criminal Law at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, explains the canonical aspects of this issue.

Maria José Atienza-July 9, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

Last July 4, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, headed by Mons. Carlo Maria Viganò of the crime of schism and confirmed the latae sententiae excommunication he had incurred for the "public declarations, from which it follows his refusal to recognize and submit to the Supreme Pontiff, of communion with the members of the Church submitted to him and of the legitimacy and magisterial authority of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council".

Carlo Maria Vigano, a native of Varese, was ordained a priest in 1968. He soon joined the diplomatic corps of the Holy See. He held various positions within the Roman Curia, the last of which was as apostolic nuncio to the United States from 2011 to 2016. After resigning his post for reasons of age, he became a constant critic of Pope Francis. Criticisms that have been raising their tone in recent years to the point of denying the legitimacy of the Pope, asking for his resignation or not accepting the teachings of the Second Vatican Council.

What has happened for the former representative of the Holy See in the United States to sign his separation from the See of Peter? We spoke with Davide Cito, Professor of Canonical Criminal Law at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, who highlights the canonical juridical foundations that support this decision of the Holy See, but reminds us that the door of the Church is always open.

A few days ago we learned of the declaration of guilt of schism by Carlo M. Viganó, former nuncio to the United States. Why is the Church declaring him guilty? 

-As it appears in the press release issued by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith On July 4, a canonical penal process was carried out by the same Dicastery, which is the competent body to judge crimes against the faith committed by Bishops.

In the case of Monsignor Carlo Maria Viganò, he was "accused of the reserved crime of schism (canons 751 and 1364 CIC)" and art. 2 of the Norms on the crimes reserved to the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. 

He has been found guilty because the facts that make up the crime of schism have been proven, summarized in the words of the communiqué: "His public declarations are well known, resulting in his refusal to recognize and submit to the Supreme Pontiff, of communion with the members of the Church subject to him and of the legitimacy and magisterial authority of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council". 

At the same time, his guilt has been proven in the sense that he has committed these criminal acts, especially serious because they touch the very identity of the Church, being crimes against the faith, with freedom and will, aware of the consequences of his actions. For this reason, Msgr. Viganò "was declared guilty of the reserved crime of schism. The Dicastery declared excommunication. latae sententiae ex can. 1364 § 1 CIC". 

Do the reasons Viganó gives for his position have any canonical support?

-Considering the statements repeatedly made by Msgr. Viganò, who, on the other hand, has refused to appear before the judge, showing once again his contempt for the legitimate authority of the Church, do not seem to have any canonical support.

 To deny, among other things, the legitimacy and magisterial authority of an ecumenical council, such as the Second Vatican Council, is inadmissible on the part of a Catholic faithful. 

At the same time, as happens in the crime of heresy, in which the heretic thinks that he, and not the Church, has the true faith, in the crime of schism, the schismatic affirms that he represents and defends the true Church against the same Church considered false and illegitimate.

The schisms in the East, the West or the one that gave rise to the Anglican Church are well known. Are we talking about the same type of schisms? 

-I really don't think so. The schisms of East and West to which you refer have a complex origin with doctrinal, disciplinary and also political problems, which were later reflected in the conflict over the ecclesiastical authorities that had to preside over the Eastern Churches and then over the Anglican community. 

Moreover, the historical complexity of these schisms goes hand in hand with the ecumenical journey that the Catholic Church is undertaking with these Churches and Christian communities to travel the path of unity among Christians.

In this case, instead, there are no Churches or communities involved, but an individual Archbishop who, for personal reasons, although always with apparently very noble justifications, and without presiding over some kind of ecclesial community, (which he has never had), goes about simply rejecting the legitimate authority of the Church in all the fields in which the Church acts, trying to appear as a "victim" of the authority he does not recognize, and at the same time "defender" of a true Church that is really only in his mind.

Why do some give rise to other Churches and others do not? Are all Christian sects schismatic?

-To give rise to Churches in the strict sense it is not enough to try to "create" them, but it is necessary the presence of a true episcopate, in which apostolic succession is given, and it is also necessary to believe in the sacrament of Holy Orders. 

On the other hand, schism is a deviation from the Catholic Church, in the sense that a Christian community or sect is not schismatic for that reason. To be schismatic, one must first be a Catholic. In fact, as a canonical crime it affects only Catholics and not other baptized persons.

What is the canonical difference between schism and heresy? Do both entail excommunication?

-Although both offenses are included in the title ".Of offenses against the faith and unity of the Church." and therefore go against the good of the faith, and for this reason are so serious, and carry the penalty of excommunication that manifests in some way the loss of full communion with the Church, are differentiated by the object of the criminal act. 

In the case of heresy, the object of the crime is to deny a truth of faith, for example, the divinity of Jesus Christ or the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary. 

In schism, on the other hand, is the refusal to submit to the Supreme Pontiff or to maintain communion with the members of the Church subject to him. Since the Roman Pontiff "as successor of Peter, is the perpetual and visible principle and foundation of the unity both of the bishops and of the multitude of the faithful" (Lumen Gentium, 23), schism directly attacks the fundamental structure of the Church in its hierarchical constitution.

At the same time, since it is the Church and her Magisterium that teach the truths of faith and guard the faithful in the faith, by denying the authority of the Pope and communion with him, one places oneself outside the communion of the Church.

For legal and practical purposes, in what situation is Viganó now? What steps would he have to take to have this excommunication lifted?

-Since the penalty of excommunication has been declared, i.e., it has public effects, reference must be made to can. 1331 §2 of the Code of Canon Law which establishes the effects of the penalty of excommunication when it has been declared. For example, he is forbidden to celebrate Mass and if he attempts to do so, he must be rejected or the liturgical ceremony must cease. 

All acts of regimental power imposed by him are invalid; he may not receive ecclesiastical pensions and may not validly receive any type of commission or function in the Church. At the same time, if he acts contrary to the prohibitions established by the canon, other canonical penalties can be added, not excluding expulsion from the clerical state. 

Evidently, the Church always hopes for the conversion of the faithful who have committed crimes, which is why excommunication is such a medicinal penalty, in order for the subject who has committed a crime to repent. Repenting of his actions and manifesting his unity and obedience to the Successor of Peter is the path to the cessation of the penalty of excommunication and thus to return to full communion with the Church.

Conservative and progressive Christians

Christians are and must be conservative, in the sense that they receive God's gifts, make them their own and pass them on generously. At the same time, they are and must be progressive, because Christian revelation affirms the value of time as a space in which God acts and man responds freely and personally.

July 9, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

In an interesting essay by the Irish priest Paul O'Callaghan entitled "Challenges between faith and culture. Two blood brothers in the dynamics of modernity."(Rialp, 2023), includes a lucid chapter on the expansion of the notion of gratitude through an integration of conservatism and progressive liberalism. I will try to summarize the ideas that I found most relevant by using the word "progressive" instead of "liberal", as I believe it is better understood in the Hispanic context.

Modern culture is clearly marked by a choice between conservatism and progressivism. People are drawn in one direction or the other, but not both: two opposing cultural styles are offered that meet and clearly mark the kind of decisions people make, how they relate to each other and how they respond to ultimate questions. Which of the two best represents the profile of a Christian believer who tries to thank God for the gifts received or is it really possible and desirable to integrate them?

Conservatives

The designation of conservative and progressive is temperamental and personal. Some people want to hold on to what they have, to what has been handed down to them, to what comes from the past; they clearly prefer practical experience and wisdom. Perhaps they do so out of fear of losing what is good in exchange for acquiring what is promised to be better; or perhaps out of an attitude of recognition and gratitude for what is available to them through those who have gone before them. 

Conservatives are generally a bit fearful of losing what they have, perhaps lazy, not always generous with their possessions, although they tend to be satisfied and pleased with life as it is, are often nostalgic, more realistic than idealistic, inclined to lead others to adjust their priorities "for their own good", attached to the predictable, accepting and defending the collective, the status quo, the way things are. As a result, they can be perceived as authoritarian and, at times, pessimistic. On the other hand, most of the time they humbly thank God for what they have received and express their gratitude by using the created world as it was made and not abusing it. In brief terms, we could say that the conservative is a person of faith.

Progressives

Others, however, are convinced that what has been handed down to them, what they have received from the past and from others, is imperfect or even decadent and needs to be renewed or changed, not just received with unconditional gratitude. They feel free, entitled and able to challenge the status quo. "By definition," says Maurice Cranston, "a liberal is a man who believes in freedom. They are convinced that change and progress are possible and necessary, whether in law, structures or established ways of doing things. They are substantially pro-rights, impatient with the rigid and static, often willing to discard what they have received from others, from the past. They are often averse to tradition and sometimes give the impression of being ungrateful.

The progressive impulse is motivated by a sincere and generous desire to improve things and overcome evil in society or by an improper lack of appreciation for what has been received from others in the past. They may be overconfident in their ideas and projects, more idealistic and theoretical than realistic, less prepared to listen and learn from the past, to rectify or correct their ideas or vision as necessary, to be dissatisfied with their own identity; they may be impatient, restless and agitated, easily willing to allow "others" to change them, more individualistic than collectivist. They want to change things, they live for the future, impatiently dreaming of "the new heavens and the new earth" spoken of in Revelation (21:1-4). The progressive fundamentally waits.

Speaking of conservatives, Roger Scruton observes that "their position is correct but boring; that of their detractors, exciting, but false." For this reason, conservatives may have a kind of "rhetorical disadvantage" and as a result "conservatism has suffered philosophical neglect." As historian Robert Conquest used to say, "one is always right-wing on the issues one knows first hand" or Matthew Arnold who criticized progressivism by stating that "liberty is an excellent horse to ride, but to ride somewhere."

Religion, conservatives and progressives

Although many believers regard religion as a liberalizing force, for the most part religions are generally regarded as "conservative" elements within society: they help people hold on to things, to reality. However, the idea that religion is conservative cannot be applied univocally to all religions, and certainly not to Christianity. That is why we can ask ourselves: is true Christianity conservative or progressive? Christianity concerns all aspects of human life and society. Christian anthropology is essentially integrative, as is Christian life and spirituality. The only thing that Christians reject and flatly exclude in man is sin, which separates them from God, from others, from the world and from themselves, destroying life in the broadest sense of the word.

Christianity, affirmative synthesis

Since Christianity excludes nothing substantial from the human composite - neither body nor spirit, neither freedom nor determination, neither sociability nor individuality, neither the temporal nor the eternal, neither the feminine nor the masculine - it would seem that both the "conservative" and the "progressive" aspects of individual human life and of society as a whole should be held simultaneously, if possible, in an affirmative and overcoming synthesis. A Christian can be either conservative or progressive by temperament, but his true Christian identity must have something of both.

As Methodist (progressive) pastor Adam Hamilton once said, "When people ask me, 'Are you conservative or progressive,' my answer is always the same: Yes. But which? Both! Without a progressive spirit we become dull and stagnant. Without a conservative spirit, we are unanchored and adrift." What hinders this integration is precisely the divisive presence of sin in the heart of man.

Christians are and must be conservative, in the sense that they receive God's gifts through the Church of Jesus Christ, make them their own and transmit them with generosity and creativity to those who succeed them. At the same time, they are and must be progressive, because Christian revelation affirms the reality and value of time as a space in which God acts and man responds freely and personally to his grace and word. Fundamental concepts are time, freedom and the untouchable and irreplaceable dignity of every human person who lives with and for other people. In addition, Christianity gives particular weight to conversion (in Greek "metanoia") which literally implies "going beyond death" and evokes the need to overcome one's own conviction and present situation.

Christianity was originally an enormous novelty in the personal lives of millions of men and women who broke with their personal failures and sins, with the Judaism of their time, with the common lifestyle in society, with idolatry, establishing a profoundly renewed vision of the dignity of all people, especially women and children, of the value of marriage and sexuality, a new liturgy, a new approach. A new beginning, a progress, a projection into the future, into eternity. The power of God injected into the lives of sinful men produced an amazing transformation and liberation in personal and social life; it released previously unknown energies among men; it launched them out into a life of meaningful and passionate work and evangelization. It did it before, it does it now; it will continue to do so until the Lord comes in his glory.

The World

Five hundred thousand people flock to Marian pilgrimage in Levoča, Slovakia

During the first weekend of July 2024, thousands of people have flocked to a Marian pilgrimage to the Basilica of the Visitation in Levoča, Slovakia.

Jana Dunajská-July 8, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

On July 6 and 7, the town of Levoča in northern Slovakia witnessed one of the most well-attended Marian pilgrimages in Europa. More than five hundred thousand people have attended the religious ceremonies and activities of the pilgrimage. In a country with a population of five million, this influx highlights the deep devotion and spiritual significance that the pilgrimage has for Slovaks. During these days, the sacrament of confession has played a prominent role, with numerous priests available to offer this service to pilgrims both day and night.

The program of the pilgrimage was varied: on Saturday, in addition to the various Masses, including one in the Greek rite, there was a mini festival of Christian music that attracted many young people. On Sunday there were events such as the Stations of the Cross, the prayer of the Liturgy of the Hours, the recitation of the rosary and, at the end, a solemn Mass presided over by the Bishop of Spiš, Msgr. František Trstenský.

In his homily, Bishop Trstenský encouraged those present to be faithful to the Gospel and to proclaim it with joy; he stressed that this joyful attitude is a necessity of our times: "Let us not be afraid to live our faith with joy, to rejoice in it, because the Lord is with you. I wish you the joy of evangelization. Our Slovakia does not need sad proclaimers, but joyful ones, who have themselves experienced the joy of proclamation".

History of the Marian pilgrimage to Levoča.

The Marian pilgrimage to Levoča, which is held annually around the feast of St. Cyril and St. Methodius (celebrated in Slovakia on July 5), is one of the oldest and most significant pilgrimage events in Slovakia. Its roots go back to the Middle Ages, when in 1247 the first chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary was built in Levoča (in the north-eastern region of Spiš). This act was a response to the numerous miracles that allegedly occurred at this place. The pilgrimage quickly became an important spiritual event that attracted believers from all over the region and even from neighboring countries.

The Levoča pilgrimage continued even during the Turkish invasions, when believers sought refuge and spiritual support. In the 17th century, a Baroque basilica was built on Mariánska Hora hill, which still serves today as the main pilgrimage church. This basilica is a true architectural gem that offers its visitors not only a spiritual experience, but also an aesthetic delight with its magnificent architecture and decoration.

The significance of this pilgrimage site did not go unnoticed in Rome. Pope John Paul II elevated the church of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary to a minor basilica (basilica minor) on January 26, 1984. This title recognizes the importance and spiritual significance of this place. Eleven years later, on July 3, 1995, the largest pilgrimage in the history of Levoča was held, in which more than 650,000 people participated in the presence of the Pope himself.

Prominent personalities

The Marian pilgrimage to Levoča has attracted many prominent personalities from various areas of public life. Among the most important of these is Pope John Paul II, who visited Levoča during his. apostolic journey to Slovakia in 1995. His presence gave the pilgrimage a special significance and strengthened its international dimension. In addition, the pilgrimage is regularly attended by bishops, priests and other spiritual leaders who strengthen with their presence the spiritual significance of this event.

Among other prominent personalities who have visited Levoča during the Marian pilgrimage are various Slovak politicians, cultural personalities and artists, who come not only in search of spiritual inspiration, but also to support tradition and cultural heritage.

Pilgrimage during communism

The Marian pilgrimage to Levoča acquired special significance during the communist era, when the regime repressed and policed religious life. In these difficult times, the pilgrimage became a symbol of resistance and spiritual strength for many believers. People made pilgrimages to Levoča despite the risk of persecution or punishment.

The pilgrimage represented a refuge and a place where believers could freely express their faith and obtain spiritual support. This spiritual and moral strength that the pilgrimage represented helped to maintain hope and strengthen people's inner strength at a time when fundamental rights and freedoms were being systematically violated. Pilgrims met with clandestine priests and religious, who provided spiritual support and encouragement.

Pilgrimage today

Today, the Marian pilgrimage to Levoča is an event that annually attracts tens of thousands of believers. Preparations for the pilgrimage begin several months before the event, so that everything is perfectly organized. In addition to the main religious ceremonies, which include masses, prayers and processions, the pilgrimage is accompanied by various cultural and social events.

The Levoča pilgrimage is today a modern spiritual event that combines traditional values with new forms of spiritual expression. Many young people take the opportunity to go on pilgrimage to find inner peace and strengthen their faith. The organizers ensure that the program is rich and varied, offering various forms of spiritual and cultural enrichment.

One of the highlights of the pilgrimage is the night procession, which begins at the basilica and ends at the top of Mariánska Hora hill. This procession symbolizes spiritual pilgrimage and a deep inner experience for many pilgrims. Pilgrims carry candles, illuminating the way, which creates an unforgettable visual and spiritual experience.

Number of participants

Every year, a large number of believers participate in the Marian pilgrimage to Levoča. During the weekend when the main pilgrimage takes place, approximately 500,000 to 600,000 pilgrims flock there. This huge number of people, especially significant in a country with a population of five million, testifies to the importance and popularity of this spiritual event, which transcends the borders of Slovakia and attracts believers from various countries.

(TK KBS/ Martin Magda)

Importance for the region

The Marian pilgrimage is of great importance not only for believers, but also for the entire Spiš region. Annually, it attracts thousands of visitors, which has a positive impact on the local economy. Accommodations, restaurants and stores experience an increase in demand and footfall during the pilgrimage, bringing financial benefits to local residents.

In addition to the economic benefit, the pilgrimage also has cultural and social importance. It maintains and strengthens traditional values such as faith, family and community. For many people, the pilgrimage is an opportunity to reunite with old friends and family, which contributes to the strengthening of social ties.

Challenges and future of the pilgrimage

Like any major event, the Marian pilgrimage to Levoča faces challenges. One of the main ones is ensuring the safety and comfort of all participants. The organizers collaborate with local authorities to ensure sufficient possibilities for accommodation, parking and other services.

Another challenge is to maintain and develop the tradition in the context of the modern world. With the growing influence of digitalization and globalization, it is important to find ways to attract young people and maintain their interest in the pilgrimage. In this regard, the organizers are looking to use social networks and modern media to promote the pilgrimage and attract a wider audience.

The Marian pilgrimage to Levoča is a significant spiritual and cultural event that brings together believers from all over Slovakia and abroad. Its rich history, the presence of prominent personalities and its modern form make this pilgrimage a unique experience that attracts thousands of people annually. Despite the challenges posed by the contemporary world, the Marian pilgrimage to Levoča remains a strong symbol of faith, tradition and community.

The authorJana Dunajská

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Culture

Catholic Scientists: Guillermo Giménez Gallego, the Light of Faith in the Laboratory

Jesuit Guillermo Giménez Gallego focused his research on protein chemistry. Omnes offers this series of short biographies of Catholic scientists thanks to the collaboration of the Society of Catholic Scientists of Spain.

Josefa Zaldívar-July 8, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

Guillermo Giménez Gallego (March 31, 1945 - July 8, 2022) was a Jesuit priest and biologist. Born in Ceuta, at the age of 16 he entered the Jesuit Novitiate at the Colegio de San Francisco de Borja in Cordoba, where he studied Humanities.

In 1965 he moved to Alcalá de Henares, where he obtained his ecclesiastical degree in Philosophy.

In 1970 he resided in Granada where he worked as assistant director of the Colegio Mayor "Loyola" and studied Biological Sciences with an extraordinary prize at the University of Granada (1974). Later, he moved to Madrid where he did his doctoral thesis at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (UAM) also with extraordinary prize.

He began to work as an associate professor at the UAM, which he combined with his studies in Theology at the University of Comillas. In 1981 he was assigned as a Scientific Collaborator of the CSIC at the Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas (CIB).

He was ordained deacon in 1982 and priest in 1983, and then worked at the Merk Institute for Therapeutic Research. He then returned to Spain and joined the CIB, where he was appointed director in 1996-1999 and 2002-2004.

He retired in 2015 but remained associated with the IBC as a Research Professor. "ad honorem" until his death.

Guillermo knew how to choose a very fruitful research topic, which was protein chemistry, which allowed him to create a great school. He studied numerous proteins involved in various diseases, but the star protein of his career was undoubtedly the acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF).

During his stay at the Merk Institute, he isolated this factor from the human brain. He then sequenced the gene encoding it. This allowed him to synthesize aFGF in large quantities in order to study its three-dimensional structure and design specific inhibitors.

He has received numerous awards: National Research Award in the Biomedicine category in 1993, Basic Research Award of the Spanish Society of Cardiology in 1995 and president of the sixth section of the Royal National Academy of Pharmacy since 2007.

Guillermo was an exemplary Catholic scientist who knew how to bring the light of Christianity to research laboratories.

The authorJosefa Zaldívar

Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC) Society of Catholic Scientists of Spain

The Vatican

Pope encourages Catholics in Trieste to participate in political life

Pope Francis made a brief visit to Trieste, Italy, where he met with participants in the 50th Catholic Social Week. In his speeches, the Holy Father highlighted the need to engage in politics as Catholics seeking the common good.

Paloma López Campos-July 7, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

On July 7, Pope Francis traveled to TriesteItaly, during a brief apostolic visit on the occasion of the 50th Social Week of Catholics in Italy, celebrated from July 3-7 with the theme "At the Heart of Democracy. Participate between history and the future".

During the meeting, the Holy Father addressed the participants of the conference, thanking them for their activity, which is particularly relevant today because "it is evident that in today's world the democracyLet us tell the truth, it is not in good health. This is of interest and concern to us, because the good of man is at stake, and nothing that is human can be alien to us".

For this reason, Francis said, we must "assume the responsibility of building something good in our time," a mission that Catholic Social Week takes into account thanks to its promoter, Blessed Joseph (Giuseppe) Toniolo.

Christians cannot ignore this situation, the Pontiff explained. "Just as the crisis of democracy is transversal to different realities and nations, in the same way, the attitude of responsibility in the face of social transformations is a call addressed to all Christians, wherever they live and work, in all parts of the world."

The wounded heart of democracy

The Pope compared the crisis of democracy to "a wounded heart" marked by the social exclusion of the poor, the elderly and children. A "culture of waste" has been fostered, in which those in power have lost the ability "to listen to and serve the people". This goes against the true meaning of democracy, said the Pope, because what is important is not only to be able to vote, but "that everyone can express themselves and participate.

Faced with this, the Pontiff pointed to "the principles of solidarity and subsidiarity" as good bases for recovering democracy. "Indeed, a people is held together by the bonds that constitute it, and the bonds are strengthened when each one is valued," Francis affirmed.

The Pope then called for "a democracy with a healed heart" that continues to "cultivate dreams for the future" and promote "personal and community involvement." For this reason, the Holy Father encouraged Catholics to participate in political life to promote the common good and "to be a voice that denounces and proposes in a society that is often mute and where too many have no voice."

"This is the role of the Church," Francis concluded. A Church that must "engage in hope, because without it we manage the present but do not build the future. Without hope, we would be administrators, balancers of the present and not prophets and builders of the future".

Pope highlights the scandal of a human God

Following his presence at the closing day of Catholic Social Week, the Holy Father celebrated Holy Mass. During his homily, he asked those present to question what obstacles prevent them from believing in Jesus. Just as for his contemporaries, who could not understand "how God, the almighty, can reveal himself in the frailty of a man's flesh," for many today Christ is still a scandal.

For many it is difficult to understand "a faith founded on a human God, who is inclined towards humanity, who cares for it, who is moved by our wounds, who assumes our weariness". In short, it is a scandal for society to see "a weak God, a God who dies on the cross for love and asks me to overcome all selfishness and offer my life for the salvation of the world".

However, Francis affirmed that "we need the scandal of faith. We do not need a religiosity closed in on itself, which looks to heaven without concern for what is happening on earth." The Pope went on to say that "we need the scandal of faith, a faith rooted in the God who became man and, therefore, a human faith, a faith of flesh, which enters into history, which caresses people's lives, which heals broken hearts, which becomes the leaven of hope and the seed of a new world."

The Pope and the commitment to peace

Pope Francis took up this idea during his reflection at the Angelus prayer, where he affirmed that "charity is concrete, love is concrete", so it is not enough to remain with the idea of living for love and to serve others, but it must be manifested in concrete acts.

The Pontiff ended his trip to Trieste by asking Catholics to renew their "commitment to pray and work for peace."

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Culture

Priests "of novels", a literary tour

The figure of the priest in the history of literature is of great interest, because it allows us to realistically approach the worldview that today's society has about the person of the priest.

Juan Carlos Mateos González-July 7, 2024-Reading time: 9 minutes

As it appears in many literary works, the priest is derogatorily described as "clerical", and his person and mission are clearly negatively judged. In the history of literature the figure of the priest has always been very present, but in the current novel it has acquired a generalized critical tone: the behavior and attitudes of clerics are usually ridiculed, and a certain desire, somewhat implicit, to spread a great "social discredit" on the figure of the priest is perceived. The Christian and clerical heritage, especially if we refer to contemporary literature, is seen as a heavy burden from which society must free itself as soon as possible, in order to acquire its autonomy, maturity and emancipation.

The classics

In the Spanish Golden Age, Cervantes introduces us to the clergyman of the town where his knight of the sad figure was born. He is a clergyman who is a reader, although poorly enlightened. A cleric who was afraid of literature. He decides that the books of chivalry that had driven his good neighbor Don Quijano mad should be thrown on the stake. Cervantes does not judge, because he did not want to "make blood" with the clerical establishment. Cervantes tells things that happened to him, because he knows well that to those clerics nothing happens but what St. Teresa said: that "they knew no more and were not good enough for more".

Quevedo, in his immortal "Historia del Buscón llamado Pablos", presents a dirty clergyman "like a rat in a masonry, with a shabby cassock, almost green with discoloration and full of filth" (Quevedo, in his immortal "Historia del Buscón llamado Pablos").. Quevedo, who knew the clerical establishment well, because he was an assiduous visitor of convents and chapels, did not like the greed of many of the priests with whom he dealt. And to this aspect, we must add the personal disagreements with They were "priest-poets" of his contemporaries: Góngora and Lope de Vega. Those were times when many writers were priests and/or religious: Fray Luis de León, Tirso de Molina, Calderón de la Barca, San Juan de la Cruz... They used to be very well educated, very cultured, and because of the way they were treated and studied, they were very close to those who served as clergymen.

The first novels

We had to wait a few centuries for a priest to appear in the novel as a protagonist. He arrived in 1758 with the "Historia del famoso predicador Fray Gerundio de Campazas" (History of the famous preacher Fray Gerundio de Campazas)., by Jesuit Francisco José de Isla: an amusing satire against the high-flown and hollow preachers, "frightening priests of the pulpits of the region".. A book full of irony and mockery, because it was the way to point out one of the most common clerical defects.

In the first novels of the 19th century, when the writer imagined that the priest was a sufficiently rich vein not to be wasted, what was used were several "clichés" of the rural world and of the more or less public customs, by which the priest did not give an example in accordance with his status. The priest, for example, maintained an affair life or lived a "double life". We can recall what St. Teresa wrote in the "Book of Life" (chap. V) when, on her way through Becedas, she learned that the priest was living an "amancebado" with a woman.

It is usually a cliché that the priest who had a maid at home, his treatment usually drifts towards something too familiar, that "literary" goes beyond the possible service to the house. Normally, it is also a "literary cliché", to speak ill of the priest, it was resorted, to speak ill of his fondness for good food or his evening habit of drinking chocolate jícaras with croutons. In fact, there is a chocolate that was called "del canónigo" and that was advertised on the walls of the bars of the villages with a fat mosén that was leaning over the cup and on the way to his mouth the picatostes, already smeared with the thick and almost olfactory chocolate. Clarín composed "La Regenta" with similar "narrative elements". o Juan Valera "Pepita Jiménez" o Juan Valera "Pepita Jiménez" o Juan Valera "Pepita Jiménez". or Torrente Ballester's "Los gozos y las sombras". o Pérez Galdós "Fortunata y Jacinta"...

Bad habits, doubtful vocations

These bad habits, according to some, came about because in the seminaries the future priests were given a formation/deformation that only dealt with the defects to be avoided and the moral pitfalls against which they had to be forewarned, rather than the virtues with which the priest had to be adorned. Juan Valera, for example, takes it to almost dramatic consequences, within the general sentimentalism of the novel "Pepita Jiménez". (1874), the experience of the seminarian Luis de Vargas, from the moment he encounters Pepita Jiménez, a widowed woman of exquisite sensitivity, against whom the seminarian does not find many arguments. The seminarian realizes that the path God is calling him on is not the one that, perhaps a little "unconsciously", he had taken.

In the novels of Pérez Galdós there are also numerous clergymen "without vocation", a vocation, the priestly one, that the Canarian writer repeatedly questioned. The priests who parade through Galdós' novels are not too exemplary: neither those who appear as ordinary characters in the life of the people, nor those others whom Galdós paints with a critical and acerbic gaze. "Tormento" (1883) is, possibly, the first Spanish novel to deal with the "problem of the priestly celibacy"and its bad experience, especially when the priest's life is crossed by the love of a woman. Although, certainly, Galdós does not make "a thesis" with this theme.

This Galdosian vision of the clergyman who in the middle of the world does not live his celibacy joyfully, is picked up by Leopoldo Alas Clarín, in what is possibly one of the three best novels of Spanish literature, "La Regenta" (The Regent). (1885). Clarín plays with the feelings and temptation of the cathedral's Magistral canon, who has too much vanity and not enough sense. He is overcome by social and domestic circumstances, which endanger his fidelity to a vocation that he does not know how to orient it, so that it is not devoured by a city (Vetusta Oviedo) in which he lives daily.

In the 20th century, in 1943, Gonzalo Torrente Ballester published his first novel: "Javier Mariño"., where there is much that is autobiographical in this account of the Galician teacher: there are evident memories of his time in a seminary where, despite all his efforts, a supposed priestly vocation "did not take root". The author does not spend too much time clarifying some of his character's behavior; however, there is no doubt that, despite the accusations that have been made against this novel, the book has the honesty not to deceive anyone. In the end, if there is any vocation that should be examined with sincerity, it is that of one who believes himself called to the priestly life.

Realities and prejudices

But it is not all drama and conflict. The vision that some more recent novels have had on the priests, have manifested moments of "glorious exaltation". Santos Beguiristain, "Por esos pueblos de Dios". (1953) and José Luis Martín Descalzo, "Un cura se confiesa" (1953) and José Luis Martín Descalzo, "Un cura se confiesa" (1953). (1961), left some of those "laudatory" elements in the personal vision of themselves and their priesthood that they "came to novelize", because their personal history was what gave plot to their novels. The priests who appear in these books are real priests, without great virtues, with the defects that we all have, and, above all, with a great illusion to carry to the goal the priesthood that they received when they were still village boys, full of dreams and hopes.

In the second half of the twentieth century, two main accusations were leveled against the clergy: the introduction of the notion of sin and the greedy quest for power. It is recurrent to recall the "clerical horror" (Lourdes Ortiz), because "with so much sin, with so much demon" (Ray Loriga in "The worst of it all"), "with so much sin, with so much demon" (Ray Loriga in "The worst of it all")., 1992) aim to introduce men into the "labyrinth of guilt" (such as the character of Juan Mirón, by Luis Landero in "Caballeros de fortuna")., 1994).

In this way, writers create "psychological spaces" in which it is not possible to enjoy, "in a repressive, mediocre and hypocritical society" (Lourdes Ortiz), inhabited by a "herd of sweet and bovine creatures who still went to mass on Sundays" (Lucía Etxebarría, "Beatriz y los cuerpos celestes"...)., 1998). The priests seek to impose a "cemetery order" (Francisco Umbral, "Los helechos arborescentes")., 1979) and a "religion of slaves" (F. Umbral, "Las ninfas") and a "religion of slaves" (F. Umbral, "Las ninfas")., 1975).

This tension is the common thread of our most recent novel: the clerical figure of the priest is the antithesis of that which asks for and allows the enjoyment of the body and of life. "The Outskirts of God". by Antonio Gala clearly reflects the struggle and victory of Sister Nazareth, who becomes Clara Ribalta when she leaves the convent and is reunited with love and life in the "outskirts of God".. It is "irrefutable proof" of this hedonistic "thesis", because within the Church, even if there are some people (including priests) who try to open other perspectives, the denial of life ends up being imposed. So they say. That is why it is understandable that there are no vocations, because "young people try to make the most of their youth and their life without calculations or plans"., as the retired Luciano points out to his religious sister in "A Tent by the Water". (1991) by Gustavo Martín Garzo.

Through the imposition of their ideas and the control of consciences, the priests are presented as exponents of a subtle domination of society. Thus they configure these "petty" cities, "cemeteries of dry leaves", "cemeteries of dry leaves"., closed by a "classical and closed morality", in the manner of the "Levitical City"., Raúl del Pozo's native Cuenca, 2001, or the Valladolid of Umbral's adolescence, described in "El hijo de Greta Garbo" (Greta Garbo's son)., marked by "the clerical paisanaje"., superb and fatuous, far from the sensibility of the people, or the Oilea of "Where it is always October"., by Espido Freire (2001).

In a similar way, León Luis Mateo Díez describes in "La fuente de la edad" (The Fountain of the Ages) as a "cursed city", a "lost corpse", closed in its "petty memory", whose inhabitants are "children of ignominy" because they are governed by the most hypocritical and useless and by "the cassocks". Even a later generation of writers, such as Valdeón Blanco, defines the city of Valladolid as "theological, Augustinian and conventual"., opposed to the development of the modern, industrial and university city ("The Red Fires")., 1998).

The priestly figures appear, therefore, in a dark light, focused mainly on their behavior and intra-ecclesial relations. In "Mazurka for Two Dead Men", by Camilo José Cela, the ambivalence of the Galician priests is manifested, in line with the general production of the author.

Coordinates of a negative vision

Also authors who move more directly in a Christian environment do not hide their "anticlerical" attitude, including José Jiménez Lozano and Miguel Delibes. The former, already in his first work "Un cristiano en rebeldía" denounces the "hard mind" of the men of the Church, an attitude that has marked the inquisitorial attitude of the Church in Spain, as he wants to prove in his research on "Los cementerios civiles y la heterodoxia española" (Civil cemeteries and Spanish heterodoxy).. It is a theme that appears in novels such as "El sambenito." o "History of an Autumn"., but which continues today in works such as "A Man in the Line", "A Man in the Line", "A Man in the Line", "A Man in the Line" and "A Man in the Line". (2000).

Miguel Delibes, for his part, portrays the dark and sour character of a narrow and somber religiosity, which can border on hypocrisy ("La sombra del ciprés es alargada", "Mi idolatrado hijo Sissi", "Cinco horas con Mario")., In the face of which he wants to open up closer and more human religious perspectives in "Lady in Red on a Gray Background". or "Letters from a voluptuous sexagenarian".. His latest novel "The Heretic". The dedication itself contrasts an inquisitorial religiosity with the authentic free religion, proper to the spirit.

Completely autobiographical is Javier Villán's story "Sin pecado concebido" (Without conceived sin). (2000). The author's time in the Seminary of Palencia was not, precisely, a joyful and peaceful time, nor was it a time of harmony with himself. The author begins by saying that "the first night I spent in the Seminary was a sad night" (2000).. Many more would follow. And the fact is that "the days of those nights were not hymns of glory and tranquility". Javier Villán recounts, with evident detachment, some of the experiences he had to endure during the years he lived in the diocesan formation house. In the end, he ended up abandoning it because, possibly, says the author bitterly, "the future does not exist"..

The subtitle of the book already gave us a glimpse of the end to which he wanted to lead us: "Joys and tribulations of a seminarian". This rejection of clerical training is driven, above all, by the imposition of dogmas or irrational truths, and especially by the "dams it presents to the enjoyment of life", to the unfolding of instincts, to the play of desire... Therefore, he concludes: "God is not found in the worship presided over by priests, but outside the temples, in contact with the earth and nature".

We are seeing how two coordinates converge in the consideration of the figure of the priest, but which mutually feed each other, causing a negative view of the priest. On the one hand, we detect the historical weight that has passed into the collective imagination of Spanish society, and on the other, the emancipation of man, exalting his rational autonomy and his free will to be able to get what he wants, his cravings, desires and instincts, all under the banner of the claim of the "new freedoms". Thus, the priestly function seems to "embody" a repression that must be overcome. The figure of the priest focuses the role and meaning of the Church, as the institutionalization of a particular religion, and that of Christianity, in terms of its historical magnitude.

Conclusions

Faced with the postponement of the figure of the priest (and of what he represents), what is the panorama that is drawn in the light of Spanish literature? What is intended to be eliminated is the mediating role of individuals and of the institution.

On the one hand, the novel has opened up the perspective of a "religion of nothingness" (J. Bonilla, Javier Marías, J. A. Mañas, G. Martín Garzo and F. Umbral, who uses the expression), dominated by the experience of loneliness, anguish and meaninglessness. Umbral, who is the one who uses the expression), dominated by the experience of loneliness, of anguish, of meaninglessness... This option leaves man alone and abandoned, subjected to destiny or to the absurd, and therefore refers to the force of desire as the only path to life, the only way to escape from nothingness. Without access to a founding reality, or to a loving origin or a hoped-for goal, life is reduced to a game of masks that exhausts itself in its mere appearance.

On the other hand, the perspective of a "religion of the Whole" that aspires to the fusion with Life with all the range of possibilities of enjoyment and cruelty (A. Gala, T. Moix, L. A. de Villena, F. Sánchez Dragó, J. L. Sampedro) opens up. Neither in this form of religiosity (which can be considered paganism or syncretism) mediators are required. Each one has to look for the adequate means to enter into the "ecstasy" that certain experiences can bring, and can indistinctly assume the violence and/or disinterest that this life manifests, with respect to concrete individuals.

The protagonist of most Spanish novels is left alone before the Nothingness or the immoderation of the All. Against this background, the figure of the priest, acting "in persona Christi et in nomine Ecclesiae", can be outlined in a clearer way.. It must make perceptible the mission of a Church that lives from the permanent call of the Lord who, as sent by the Father in the power of the Spirit, communicates and testifies to a gift capable of rescuing man from his solitude, from the fatality of destiny or from a totality that ends up annulling the eternal value of the person.

The authorJuan Carlos Mateos González

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Integral ecology

Miguel Ángel Martínez: "Through science it is easy to reach God".

Miguel Ángel Martínez-González, physician and epidemiologist, is one of the most relevant scientists on the international scene. In this interview, he talks about the relationship between his scientific and Christian facets, and how research is also a way of serving others.

Loreto Rios-July 6, 2024-Reading time: 6 minutes

Miguel Ángel Martínez-González is a physician, researcher and epidemiologist, professor of Preventive Medicine and Health Public University of Navarra and Associate Professor of Nutrition at Harvard University. He has published the following books with Planeta Health for sure (2018), What do you eat? (2020), Healthcare in flames (2021) y Salmon, hormones and screens (2023). In 2021, he was included in the "Highly Cited Researchers 2021" list of Clarivatewhere he is among the 6,600 most cited scientists in the world. The Ministry of Science and Innovation awarded him the prestigious Gregorio Marañón National Research Award in Medicine in 2022 for his contributions on the importance of nutrition, Mediterranean diet and healthy lifestyle in the field of preventive medicine.

How does your scientific side enrich your faith, and vice versa?

I think that for a scientist, especially when one is in the first division in research, there are many dangers that can spoil all his work, related to ego, pride, vanity, the desire to appear, etc. And this has very bad consequences for the professional work of a researcher, because it often turns out that senior researchers want to be everywhere and do not allow young people to have sufficient relevance and prominence, or to be able to continue their work in the long term. Planting trees whose shade will benefit others is something that I am very committed to, precisely because of my faith, because it seems to me that the theme of Christianity is that he who gives is happier than he who receives. That attitude of generosity, of knowing how to hide at many times and give way to others, that others begin where you have finished, are values of faith that certainly make research much more productive in the long run. It is much more effective to make thirty people work than to work as thirty, but, when the ego takes over, one wants to be everywhere, to appear, and does not allow the people who are collaborating to show their heads. You have to know how to take steps back at the right time, especially when you are reaching the peak of your career and you are approaching retirement. That step back makes the research more productive, because more people get involved, take the lead and take the reins.

And, vice versa, professional work enriches faith. Delving into human biology always has a sense of fascination with how the human being functions, his control mechanisms, his organs, his physiology, etc. And it is very difficult for that not to lead to God. One discovers some really impressive wonders. That fascination seems to me to be a very powerful force for approaching faith and God.

Also, through the work, one acquires many relationships with other people and sees many opportunities to help them spiritually, to try to bring them closer to God with an apostolic zeal that is inherent in Christianity. I have been with several of the recipients of the National Youth Research Awards, which were given for the first time last year, and the conversations with them, in a natural way, ended up transmitting aspects of the faith, aspects that you have inside you because of your Christian belief. This helps, and the same when you have an important scientific work, which takes up a lot of your time. It gives you the opportunity, especially with your students, with the people to whom you are directing your thesis or who are training with you as young professors, to open their horizons to the supernatural and to see that through science it is easy to reach God. In all lifestyle and public health issues, which is the field in which I have developed my scientific career, you see that in the end what goes against human nature harms the human being. You see it with scientific data, not only from faith. Putting into the body a series of substances that are not typical of natural foods, or getting carried away by a series of behaviors that are fundamentally hedonistic, consumerist, ends up producing more physical and mental illnesses. Somehow, you say: "The Bible was right". In the end, science proves that humility, sobriety, the right use of reason and putting order in our concupiscibles appetites has an impact on health, and when you see it with the data of studies with tens of thousands of people, it strengthens your faith.

So you could say that believing is healthy?

Yes, in Boston, two of the people who work with me at Harvard are also collaborating with the Human Flourishing Center run by a very prestigious Harvard professor, a convert to Catholicism, named Tyler VanderWeele. One of the most powerful papers he has published, in one of the best medical journals, shows how religious practice prevents suicide. This is something that has been proven with empirical data, that having religious convictions and practicing them reduces the risk factors for suicide.

I remember that when I designed the large cohort study that we had in Navarra 25 years ago at Harvard, with the help of the professors there, one of them, who was not exactly a believer, said to me: "Look, if you are going to recruit former students from the University of Navarra, where there are so many Catholics, it will lower mortality rates, because they will die less, they will have fewer diseases". And he was an atheist, but he told me: "I already have a lot of experience having done epidemiological studies and I see that when people have more religious practice they have better health habits, they get drunk less, take drugs less, have less sexual promiscuity, go to the doctor when it is their turn and are more responsible for their own health". In the end, when a population has more Christian beliefs, they have better healthy habits, and that reduces mortality rates. So, logically, it is a health benefit.

Is your interest in research just scientific or also a way to help others?

Of course, helping is the driving force, it is an absolute priority. I repeat this a lot to my collaborators and I always try to keep it in mind. I recently met with a group of cardiologists in Madrid, because we are developing a very ambitious study that I have been funded by the European Research Council, and I said to them: "We are going to incorporate a lot of doctors into this study, and they may ask: 'And if I contribute patients to this study, are you going to give me a certificate of participation, are you going to put me in the articles as an investigator? And I said, 'Of course, we'll do all this, but that's not what's important.' You have to think about the service you are doing to a lot of patients who have a problem that we are going to give a solution to." I also explained to them that if a doctor examines a patient in the emergency room who comes in with chest pain, tells him that nothing is wrong, and the patient goes home and dies because he had a myocardial infarction and you had not detected it, this is a terrible medical failure. But in public health, if you tell the patient: "There is nothing wrong with this habit", and it turns out that this habit is increasing mortality by 10 %, but it is shared by 70 % of the population, millions of deaths are produced by not doing it properly. What we do in public health has immense repercussions. I was told the other day at Harvard at a conference I gave: it takes a great sense of responsibility and courage to carry out public health studies, because the lives and health of millions of people are at stake and, logically, we have to see Jesus Christ in each one of them, just as in clinical medicine. What happens is that, when it comes to epidemiology and public health, it is on a large scale. Maybe you don't see it as immediately as the patient who you haven't done the EKG and dies of a heart attack, but the reality is that, with the decisions we make in public health and with the research we do, we can be benefiting or harming millions of people. And in those people we have to see Jesus Christ, because, if not, we have lost the Christian meaning of life.

Do you think that in the scientific field there is a prejudice towards believers, or is it already overcome?

No, no, the prejudice exists, and it is absolutely unfair, because it is just that, a prejudice. The reality is that we must have the perspective that Catholics are not second-class beings, and that we have the same right to investigate as anyone else. We cannot be people who are marginalized. Here we must also exercise fortitude and courage and not allow ourselves to be cornered, not be timorous or self-conscious. I believe that we Catholics must have the conviction that faith provides a more global, complementary vision, and that it makes us raise our sights and be more rigorous, precisely because we have faith. Because we see that what we do here has repercussions beyond this life, and that gives us a great sense of responsibility. God is going to ask me to account for all of this. And the transcendence beyond life on this earth is something that helps us to do our professional work better, and above all with St. Josemaría's vision that this work is sanctifiable. So, logically, we look at that work with much more solidity than if we didn't have faith.

The Vatican

The 2023 St. Peter's Oblong, between generosity and financial challenges

Data from the St. Peter's Obligation for 2023 show that the Vatican's charitable works continue to be a priority, despite the existing difficulties in meeting the expenses required for this aid.

Giovanni Tridente-July 5, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

The Annual Report 2023 of the St. Peter's Obolus published in recent days delves as always into the financial and charitable activities of the Holy See, but reveals how the past year was marked by some economic challenges, while continuing to record the generous solidarity of the faithful around the world.

Overall, the document certifies income of 52 million euros, of which 48.4 million euros came from direct donations and 3.6 million euros from financial income. However, expenses far exceeded income, reaching 109.4 million euros. This resulted in a deficit of 57.4 million, forcing the fund to withdraw 51 million from its assets to meet its charitable commitments.

Donations to the Obole reflect the universal character of the Catholic Church. Dioceses remain the main source of contributions (64.4 %), followed by foundations (28.8 %). The United States tops the ranking of donor countries with 13.6 million euros, followed by Italy (3.1 million) and Brazil (1.9 million). Also significant are the contributions from GermanyThe presence of the Church's mission in the countries of South Korea and France demonstrates a truly global commitment to the Church's mission.

Charitable projects

Despite financial difficulties, the Óbolo has maintained its commitment to supporting charitable works. In 2023, €13 million went to 236 projects in 76 countries. Africa was the main beneficiary, receiving 41.6 % of the funds for direct aid projects, followed by Asia (21.4 %) and Europe (18.5 %).

Specifically, the projects focused on three main areas: extension of the evangelizing presence (43 % of the funds), with the construction of new churches and pastoral structures in countries such as Guatemala, Tanzania and Albania; social projects (33 %), including initiatives such as support for the "Open Hospitals" project in Syria and assistance programs for pregnant women in Mexico; and, finally, support for local Churches in difficulty (24 %), with the financing of activities such as the renovation of seminaries and religious houses in countries such as Congo, Angola and Sri Lanka.

Supporting the apostolic mission

A significant figure refers to the support of the Holy Father's apostolic mission: 90 million euros, that is, 24 % of the total expenses of the Vatican Dicasteries and entities (370.4 million), were covered by the Obligation.

These funds have contributed to several areas considered crucial: 35 million for the support of local Churches in difficulty; 12 million for worship and evangelization; 11 million for the diffusion of the message; 9 million for apostolic nunciatures and 8 million for the service of charity.

Humanitarian impact and future challenges

Through the Dicasteries of the Roman Curia, Pope Francis has donated a total of about 45 million euros for charitable works in 2023. However, this ongoing commitment to the most needy comes up against an increasingly complex financial reality. The deficit recorded also in 2023 raises doubts about the long-term sustainability of the current funding model.

In fact, the need to draw on assets to cover current expenses may force the Holy See to review its fundraising strategies and the way it distributes resources.

Transparency and trust

This does not detract from the fact that the detailed publication of this data confirms the desire for transparency, allowing believers and benefactors to know how resources are used. It is also a way of maintaining and reinforcing the trust of the donors themselves. With the understanding that as the Church continues to respond to growing humanitarian needs around the world, it will be crucial to balance generosity with prudent financial management to ensure the continuity of the evangelizing mission over the long term.

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Culture

Yemen. The homeland of the mythical Queen of Sheba.

Yemen, cradle of ancient civilizations, is today one of the poorest countries in the world, plagued for decades by famine and civil wars.

Gerardo Ferrara-July 5, 2024-Reading time: 6 minutes

In a previous articleWe recalled the other ancient name of Ethiopia, Abyssinia, from the Habeshat (Abyssinians), one of the first Semitic-speaking Ethiopian peoples of Sud-Arabic (Sabaean) origin, who had colonized the Ethiopian plateau as early as pre-Christian times. 

Well, this people, the Sabeans, are originally from Yemen, a nation located in the extreme south of the Arabian Peninsula, which has been the cradle of ancient civilizations, although today it is one of the poorest countries in the world, plagued for decades by famine and civil wars, in particular the one that today has as its protagonist the armed group of the Huthi (Shiite-Zaydi), supported by Iran, against the central government and other Sunni-inspired groups.

Some data

Yemen, land of natural wonders, such as the island of Socotra, and architectural wonders, such as Shibam (called the Manhattan of the desert), the ancient city of Sana'a or the city of Taiz (to name a few) is today a republic that, de juremanages the entire territory of the country.

However, de facto, due to destabilization following the civil war that started in 2015, there are two governments at loggerheads: one, the one recognized by the international community, is led by Prime Minister Ahmad Awad bin Mubarak (in power since February 2024); the other by Abdel-Aziz bin Habtour of the General People's Congress (party of Arab nationalist ideology founded by the first president and dictator of unified Yemen, 'Ali 'Abd Allah Saleh, later assassinated in 2017 by Houthi rebel militias as part of the Yemeni civil war).

The already complex political situation is aggravated by the presence of terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and the Islamic State (ISIS), which operate in parts of the country. The capital itself, Sana'a, is not controlled by the legitimate government, but by the Houthi rebels, so that Aden, the country's fourth largest city and main port, is considered the provisional capital.

 The total area of Yemen is about 528,000 km² (slightly larger than Spain). The country is bordered to the north by Saudi Arabia, to the east by Oman, to the south by the Gulf of Aden and to the west by the Red Sea. 

The population is around 30 million, with a high population growth and an average age of less than 25 years. The majority of Yemenis are of Arab ethnicity, and the official language is Arabic, although there are small communities that still speak South Arab languages (Soqotri, Mehri, etc.), descendants of the ancient South Arab language (other than Arabic) that was spoken in the region at the time of the Sabeans.

Islam is the predominant religion, with a Sunni majority (53%) and a sizeable Shia minority (47%), mainly Zaydis. Only 0.05% of the population does not practice Islam (there are small communities of Christians and Hindus), and the very ancient Yemeni Jewish community emigrated en masse to the newly founded Jewish state after the birth of Israel. The last handful of Jews remaining in the country, threatened by both Al Qaeda and Shiite rebels, fled to Israel or the United States in 2009.

Ancient history: Sabeans and Himyarites

As we said at the beginning, Yemen (from the Semitic root y-m-n, meaning both "right" and "south", "south": Ben-yamìn, or Benyamìn, the last son of Jacob, in Hebrew means "son of the right", or "of good fortune") has seen great cultures and civilizations flourish on its territory, also because of its territory characterized by a variety of landscapes, including mountains, deserts and coasts. The central mountainous regions are particularly fertile, while the coastal areas are warm and humid.

Between the 9th century BC and the 6th century AD, several kingdoms settled in the region. Among them, the kingdom of Sheba, famous for the legendary queen who visited King Solomon in Jerusalem (mentioned in both the Bible and the Koran). 

The Sabeans, who spoke southern Arabic, were skilled traders of incense and spices, for which the area was also famous among Greeks and Romans. They were also excellent builders, so much so that they created one of the wonders of the ancient world, the Ma'rib dam (of which some ruins can still be admired today), built in the 7th century BC, which was one of the most advanced hydraulic engineering works of antiquity. This dam allowed the irrigation of a large area of land and made the region one of the most fertile in Arabia, to the point of being known as Arabia felix.

The dam was rebuilt several times over the centuries, but its final collapse around 570 AD (just at the advent of Islam) contributed to the ultimate decline of the kingdom of Sheba.

Other great kingdoms were those of Ma'in and Qataban, but above all that of Himyar (the Himyarites), whose main city, Najràn, was known both for the products of its fertile fields and for its trade, to the extent that it was the starting point of the most important caravan route between Syria and Arabia (also traveled by Muhammad himself when he traded aromas with Syria) and was mentioned by Claudius Ptolemy, the Greco-Roman geographer, in his work Geography. 

It was precisely in Najràn that the infamous episode of the "Homerite martyrs" (i.e. Himyarites) took place, whose history is linked to the Himyarite king Yusuf As'ar Yath'ar, better known as Dhu Nuwas, who, converted to Judaism, carried out a policy of persecution against the Christians of his kingdom that culminated, in 523 AD, with the massacre of 20,000 Christians of the region, with the massacre of 20,000 Christians, men, women and children, burned alive, it is said, in a great burning pit. The most famous of these martyrs is Saint Areta of Najràn, who was the head of the local Christian community. The Catholic Church commemorates St. Areta and the Homerite martyrs on October 24.

It is said that even Muhammad, the founder of Islam, felt great admiration for these martyrs, whose story had become famous shortly before his birth (it is described and condemned by the Koran) due to the great indignation caused even far from the Himyarite kingdom, to the point that the Christian king of Axum (in Ethiopia), with the support of the Byzantine Empire, intervened to depose Dhu Nuwas and put an end to the Himyarite dynasty, establishing Axumite control over the region.

From the arrival of Islam to the present day

From the 7th century AD, the country underwent rapid Islamization. The new faith was accepted by the locals, who contributed to spreading it beyond the Arabian Peninsula, especially in East Africa and Southeast Asia. During the medieval period, the region was under the control of several Islamic dynasties, such as the Abbasids, Fatimids and Rasulids.

From the 16th century, Yemen also became part of the Ottoman Empire, which maintained control alternating with local dynasties, in particular the Zaydi Imams, a Shiite sect that ruled the northern mountainous regions. The power of the Zaydi Imams was consolidated in 1918, after the end of World War I and the Ottoman withdrawal, with the creation of the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen.

In the south, the port of Aden had become an important British trading base. The British presence then gradually extended to the so-called Aden Protectorate, which grouped together the numerous sultanates and sheikhdoms of the region. It was the beginning of a division, between the north and the south of the country, which would have long-lasting consequences in Yemeni politics.

In 1962, an Egyptian-backed military coup overthrew the Zaydi imam of the north and proclaimed the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen). Years of civil war followed between republican and royalist forces, supported by Saudi Arabia. The civil war ended in 1970 with the victory of the republicans and the establishment of a republic.

The south, on the other hand, became independent in 1967, after a long conflict against the British, as the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen, with a Marxist-Leninist government supported by the Soviet Union. This state was unique in the region for its communist ideology and remained practically isolated from the rest of the Arab world.

On May 22, 1990, North Yemen and South Yemen finally united, forming the Republic of Yemen, with Ali Abdullah Saleh, former founder of the Arab nationalist General People's Congress party and president of the North, as president (and dictator) of the new unified state.

However, the transition was not smooth and tensions between the north and south persisted, culminating in a civil war in 1994, in which the north, led by Saleh, managed to prevail over the south.

During the 2000s, Saleh's government faced numerous problems, including conflict with Houthi rebels in the north, secessionist movements in the south, and the presence of terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).

The Arab Springs of 2011 also produced massive protests in Yemen against corruption, unemployment and repression by Saleh's government. After months of protests and violence, Saleh was forced to step down in 2012, ceding power to his deputy, Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, in a transition plan brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council. A transition that, however, did not heal the deep political and social divisions.

In 2014, Houthi rebels took control of the capital, Sana'a, and forced Hadi to flee. This triggered a full-scale civil conflict in 2015, with the intervention of a military coalition led by Saudi Arabia (guilty of massacres against the civilian population) in support of Hadi's government.

The conflict has caused one of the world's worst humanitarian crises: according to UN estimates, at least 7,400 to 16,200 people have died in Yemen since the outbreak of the war, which has also displaced more than 3 million people and caused widespread famine.

To date, the country remains divided and unstable, with the north under the control of Houthi rebels, the internationally recognized government controlling parts of the south and the west coast, with Saudi coalition support, and the Southern Transitional Council (STC) claiming autonomy in the south.

Peace efforts, mediated by the UN and other international organizations, have led to ceasefires that, unfortunately, are only temporary, and a lasting resolution of the conflict still seems far off. The humanitarian crisis continues, and the civilian population suffers from hunger, disease and a lack of the most essential services.

Spain

Spanish bishops finalize plan for comprehensive reparations to abuse victims

Following the meeting of the Permanent Commission of the Spanish Episcopal Conference, the bishops will meet on July 9 in an Extraordinary Plenary Assembly to approve the new Plan of Integral Reparation for Victims of Sexual Abuse.

Paloma López Campos-July 4, 2024-Reading time: 4 minutes

The Standing Commission of the Spanish Episcopal Conference met at the beginning of July. After the sessions, the Secretary General of the Episcopal Conference, Francisco César García Magán, appeared before the media to report on the work carried out.

The first topic addressed by the Secretary General during the meeting was press conference was the approval by the Standing Commission of the "Plan of Integral Reparation for the Victims of Sexual Abuse of Minors and persons with similar rights (PRIVA)". This is, in the words of García Magán, "a plan of action in cases where it is not possible to follow the judicial route, neither civil nor canonical", but which also seeks "full reparation to the victims".

This plan, which will seek the approval of all the Spanish bishops in the Extraordinary Plenary Assembly convened for July 9, has been carried out in dialogue with the Secretary General of the Spanish Conference of Religious (CONFER). Likewise, the Secretary General of the Episcopal Conference assures that they have held meetings with the victims and have dialogued with the Government of Spain. However, when asked by the journalists, García Magán explained that they will not explain to what extent the contact with the victims has influenced PRIVA.

Response to victims of abuse

Although the PRIVA document has not yet been released, at the press conference they did say that it "establishes criteria for the evaluation and application of the plan". The cases to which it is mainly oriented are those "in which the victimizer has died or the case is time-barred, in order to offer an adequate reparation that responds to the demand that each particular case requires".

The objective, explained Monsignor García Magán, is to be able to carry out an authentic accompaniment, so that the victims have spiritual, medical and psychological assistance, and that they receive economic reparation.

In the same way, the Secretary General announced that the document does not indicate any number of victims, as they consider that "the important thing is to give an answer, not a number".

Seminaries, the Council of Nicaea and supernatural phenomena

Another of the topics dealt with by the Permanent Commission was "the draft of the Plan for the application of the criteria for the reform of the seminaries in Spain". After the contributions made in recent days, the document will be submitted for study during the Plenary Assembly to be held in November.

On the other hand, the President of the Episcopal Commission for the Doctrine of the Faith proposed to the Permanent Commission that "a Declaration be drawn up on the occasion of the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea. According to what was explained in the press conference, such a Declaration would take place during "an ecumenical celebration based on the Creed".

The same Episcopal Commission has also worked on the question of the role that the Episcopal Conference would have "in the process of discerning supernatural phenomena and apparitions in the light of the document"The Vatican on this issue.

Major events in 2025

Monsignor García Magán also pointed out during the press conference that the Episcopal Conference is working on two major events that will take place in 2025. On the one hand, there are the activities that the Spanish Church is preparing for the Jubilee; on the other hand, there is the National Vocations Congress that will take place next year in Madrid from February 7 to 9.

The Permanent Commission during a working session (Flickr / Spanish Episcopal Conference)

Other issues and a mistake in the press release

Finally, the Secretary General of the Episcopal Conference mentioned that the Permanent Commission has approved the calendar for 2025. As events to be highlighted, the bishops will hold their spiritual exercises from January 12 to 18; the Plenary Assemblies will be from March 31 to April 4 and from November 17 to 21; finally, the Permanent Commission will hold its working meetings on February 25 and 26, June 17 and 18, and on September 30 and October 1.

García Magán took advantage of his intervention to point out that there was an error in the press release sent to journalists. The bishops carried out an "internal reflection on the document 'Fiducia supplicans'", but it was not really foreseen "the publication of any document" in this regard, contrary to what the note indicated.

Belorado case and migratory crisis

In response to questions made after his intervention, the Secretary General has indicated that "officially there has been no talk of Belorado", in reference to the excommunication of the Poor Clare nuns of Burgos. In spite of this, García Magán has described the case as "a painful and very regrettable issue", while praising the performance of the Archbishop of Burgos, who is standing out for his "clarity, charity and patience".

In another order of things, the secretary spoke briefly about the migratory crisis in the Canary Islands and the note of the bishops of the islands, supported by the Episcopal Conference. In this sense, he declared that the episcopate rejects "the ideological and political use of the migratory crisis" and has described the work of helping immigrants as a defense of life in its totality.

Appointments and renewals

To conclude his speech, the Secretary General mentioned some of the appointments and renewals of positions that took place during the meeting of the Standing Committee.

Among the appointments are the national consiliary of the "Cursillos de Cristiandad" movement, the bishop of Alcalá de Henares, Monsignor Antonio Prieto, and the spiritual advisor of the "Catholic Charismatic Renewal of Spain" association, the priest Francisco Javier Ramírez de Nicolás.

On the other hand, among the renewals are José Gabriel Vera as director of the secretariat of the Episcopal Commission for Social Communications, and Manuel Bretón as president of Cáritas Española.

Latin America

Chilean Bishops' Conference warns against limiting conscientious objection to abortion

The bishops of Chile claim to the State that the new regulation for conscientious objection in the case of abortions is unconstitutional and will cause discrimination to health personnel because of their religious beliefs.

Pablo Aguilera-July 4, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

Last May, the Chilean Ministry of Health drafted a new regulation on "Conscientious objection in the health sector". abortion", which would replace the one in force since 2018, in which health professionals and institutions can declare themselves objectors through a simple procedure. In order to have legal value, it is required to be approved by the Comptroller General of the Republic.

On July 1, Bishop René Rebolledo, president of the Episcopal Conference of Chileon behalf of all the bishops, gave a detailed report on the presentation addressed to the Comptroller's Office pointing out that it is unconstitutional and illegal. In its document it recalls that conscientious objection is a fundamental human right rooted in freedom of conscience, so that restricting this right may affect other fundamental rights such as equality and non-discrimination. This is clearly established in the Chilean Constitution.

In addition, the Health Code explicitly mentions those who are authorized by law to be conscientious objectors: the surgeon and the rest of the personnel who perform their functions inside the surgical ward during the intervention.

Discrimination on the basis of beliefs

The new regulation would encourage arbitrary favoring of non-objectors in the distribution of shifts and in the hiring of medical personnel. Also, an important modification is made in view of the assignment of shifts to be performed by the chiefs of service linked to gynecology-obstetrics; it establishes that the lists of conscientious objector personnel will be kept in view in order to "favor the presence of non-objector personnel in the distribution of shifts". This is a discrimination based on the moral or religious beliefs of the medical personnel -which affect their availability- and not on their suitability.

The bishop emphasizes that the Regulation conditions the free exercise of conscientious objection in that it obliges institutions (public and private health facilities) and their medical teams and officials (natural persons) who are conscientious objectors, to adopt and follow bureaucratic and burdensome requirements that, although they do not impede the exercise of the right, make it disproportionately difficult in such a way that, as a whole, they constitute incentives designed to alter the objector's status as an objector.

This new regulation eliminates the current provision that states that those who have declared conscientious objection "will maintain that status in all healthcare centers where they perform their duties, regardless of whether they are public or private". The elimination of this provision obliges the objector who provides services in different establishments to go through the necessary procedures again to manifest his conscientious objection.

Detrimental to a fundamental right

Rebolledo, there are five measures that impose conditions that hinder and/or discourage the free exercise of the right to conscientious objection. The approval of the Regulation would mean the detriment of the fundamental right to conscience and to live according to one's religious convictions.

Other organizations, such as "Comunidad y Justicia", also present a similar request to the Comptroller's Office, which will resolve it in the following months.

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Pope's teachings

On the Bishop of Rome and Synodality

The document "The Bishop of Rome", published by the Dicastery for Christian Unity, allows us to look at the figure of the Pope from an ecumenical and synodal perspective.

Ramiro Pellitero-July 4, 2024-Reading time: 7 minutes

How should the Pope's ministry be understood and exercised? This is a central question for the Catholic Church, for its relations with other Churches and Christian communities, as well as for the development of its evangelizing mission. 

This is what the study paper published by the Dicastery for Christian Unity under the title "The Bishop of Rome. Primacy and Synodality in Ecumenical Dialogues and Responses to the Encyclical 'Ut unum sint'" (13-VI-2024).

In that encyclical, St. John Paul II invited in 1995 to rethink the ways in which the Pope can exercise his ministry, so that "he can fulfill a service of faith and love" recognized by all concerned (n. 95). Since then, the now Dicastery, formerly the Pontifical Council for Christian Unity, has been working to gather the responses to this invitation, especially those arising from the theological dialogues of ecumenism.  

In the subtitle, "primacy and synodality" indicates not only the circumstance of the synodal process currently underway as a reference, but, more profoundly, the fact that the figure of the primate and his ministry are to be expressed within the framework of the synodality of the Church. 

The text also responds to the findings of the Pope FrancisToday the Petrine ministry cannot be fully understood without this openness to dialogue with all believers in Christ" (Homily on the eve of the Conversion of St. Paul, January 25, 2014).

For reasons of space, we limit ourselves here to presenting the main theological issues involved and the final proposals of the Dicastery to the Catholic Church as a whole.

Fundamental theological issues

Francis has noted, "The path of ecumenism has enabled us to come to a deeper understanding of the ministry of the Successor of Peter, and we must trust that it will continue to do so in the future" (Homily on the eve of the Conversion of St. Paul, 25-I-2014). 

As fruits of the ecumenical dialogues, four issues have been identified where new approaches or nuances have emerged.

1) The biblical foundations of the Petrine ministry. There is a recognition of Peter's special place, as a believer and as an apostle, among the twelve apostles; and that, precisely because of his fragility, he makes the grace of God and the primordial capital of Christ in the Church shine more brightly. Thus "three fundamental dimensions emerge in the Church's confession of faith: a communitarian dimension, a collegial dimension and a personal dimension" (n. 37). On the other hand, a distinction is made between the "mother Church" (of Jerusalem), within the New Testament, and the later primacy of the Church of Rome.

In addition to recognizing the special place of Peter, the category of the episcopate is emphasized, with mutual interdependence of help and service among its members and at the service of the whole Church. In this framework, the meaning of authority in the Church and the "Petrine function" are understood, with the special task of caring for and expressing unity, facilitating communication, mutual help or correction and collaboration in the mission. As successor of Peter, the Bishop of Rome has primacy.   

2) "Divine right" was an argument used by Vatican Council I (1870) in its declaration on the Roman primacy (const. "Pastor aeternus"), while both the Orthodox and Protestants considered it simply a human or historical development. Today it is understood that this expression, ius divinum (as well as others such as "Petrine office"), is placed in the context of a universal primacy conceived within the collegiality of the bishops, the koinonia-communion and the historical dimension of the Church. The (doctrinal) essence of the primacy can be lived (and has been lived) in very different (historical) forms. 

3) and 4) With regard to Vatican I's definitions of the primacy of jurisdiction and papal infallibility, various theological-ecumenical dialogue groups have pointed out the need to deepen the interpretation of Vatican I's dogmatic definitions, "not in isolation, but in the light of the Gospel, of the whole tradition and in their historical context" (n. 59). 

Deepening Vatican I in the Light of Vatican II

As regards the latter, the historical context, we must remember: the risks of conciliarism; the interruption of the Council by the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war; the distinction between the statements of the Council and its intentions (to ensure the unity of the Church in faith and love, as well as its freedom to proclaim the Gospel and its independence in the appointment of ecclesial offices); the distinction between the text and its interpretation is also important (cf. the Letter of the German bishops of 1875, endorsed by Pope Pius IX, with the affirmation that the episcopate is as much a divine institution as the papacy; and that the infallibility of the Pope is placed within the framework of the infallibility of the Church under certain conditions, and not above, but at the service of the Word of God).

Overall, it is understood that "Vatican I can only be correctly received in the light of the teaching of the Second Vatican Council" (n. 66). This resituated the papal ministry in its relationship to the episcopate (episcopal collegiality). And it re-established the connection between the sacramental and juridical "powers" granted through episcopal ordination, maintaining that the exercise of the bishop's authority is ultimately controlled by the supreme authority of the Church. In our day - the document observes - "the conciliar concept of collegiality has been further developed within the broader principle of synodality, especially in the teaching of Pope Francis" (n. 66; cf. Francis, Address on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the Institution of the Synod of Bishops, 17-X-2015). 

Yet, despite these declarations, the ecumenical dialogues still point to some difficulties with regard to certain principles: ensuring the expressions of infallibility in the light of the revelation given in Sacred Scripture; placing infallibility at the service of the indefectibility of the whole Church (the certainty that the gates of hell will not prevail against it); facilitating the exercise of episcopal collegiality; valuing the "reception" of doctrine by the faithful (pertaining to the "sensus fidei et fidelium").

Proposals of the Dicastery for Unity 

In the Dicastery's proposals, a distinction is made between contributions, principles and suggestions for a renewed understanding and exercise of the Primacy. 

a) Contributions. The text underlines that we are facing an opportunity to move forward in some directions: a common reflection on the nature of the Church and its mission in the world; the interdependence between primacy and synodality at all levels of the Church; the understanding of synodality as a fundamental quality of the whole Church including the active participation of all the faithful; the distinction and interrelation between collegiality and synodality. 

As future steps in the theological dialogues, the following are proposed:

- Improve the connection and articulation between ecumenical dialogues, especially between Eastern and Western ones;

- Jointly address primacy and synodality as ecclesial dimensions. 

- Keep in mind that "the primatial ministry ('one') is an intrinsic element of the dynamics of synodality, as are the communitarian aspect that includes the whole People of God ('all') and the collegial dimension that is part of the exercise of the episcopal ministry ('some')" (Francis, Address to the Orthodox-Catholic working group St. Irenaeus, October 7, 2011).

- Articulate this tripartite reflection at the local, regional and universal levels.

- Clarify the vocabulary (more precise meaning of synodality/conciliarity, collegiality, primacy, authority, power, administration, government, jurisdiction; understand the meaning of "universal Church" not as power but as authority at the service of communion.

- Promote the reception ("ecumenical reception") of the results of these dialogues so that they become a common heritage among the People of God, facilitate access to the documents of the dialogue, organize academic events, encourage responses and the local application of some of them.

- To give due value to the "dialogue of life alongside doctrine". In the words of Francis, "the dialogue of doctrine must be theologically adapted to the dialogue of life that takes place in the local and daily relationships between our Churches; these constitute an authentic 'locus' or source of theology" (Address to the Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Churches, 23-VI-2022).

- Promote particular gestures and symbolic actions on the part of the Bishop of Rome, with creativity and generosity, encouraging theological reflection on them. 

b) Principles and suggestions for the renewed exercise of primacy

In order to assume and respond to the proposals of the ecumenical dialogues and other studies on the renewal of the exercise of the primacy, the following lines are suggested:

- The inspiration of the principle of subsidiarity to facilitate the participation of all the People of God in synodality.

- The Catholic re-reception or official commentary of Vatican I, in the light of Vatican II, the ecclesiology of communion and the framework of the "hierarchy of truths" (UR 11). The Roman primacy should be explained by underlining the ecumenical convergence on the biblical foundation, the historical evolution and the theological significance of primacy and synodality. This may facilitate the understanding of Vatican I terminology. 

- The clearest distinction between the different responsibilities of the Pope, highlighting his episcopal ministry at the local level (and in this sense the significance of the cathedral of the Diocese of Rome: St. John Lateran).

- Progress in the synodal configuration of the Church, with concrete reflections in institutions and practices, inspired by the Eastern Catholic Churches, and making use of the new means of communication, all according to the diversity of levels and cultural contexts.

- The deepening of the juridical status of the episcopal conferences, endowing them with the appropriate authority, taking the model of the ancient patriarchates (cfr. LG 23), as well as that of the continental episcopal bodies.

- The study of the possibility that the Synod of Bishops be a deliberative body, always with and under the successor of Peter.

- The possibility of constituting a permanent synod representing the episcopal college.

- The promotion of synodality ad extra through "conciliar communion" (meetings of church leaders to promote, through processes of joint discernment, the "practical ecumenism" of prayer, action and joint Christian witness). 

- The invitation to other Christian communions to participate in Catholic synodal processes.

Conclusion 

The conclusion of the document stresses that the primacy must be rooted in the mystery of the Cross, and that Christian unity is above all a gift of the Holy Spirit which we must implore in prayer, since "spiritual ecumenism" is the soul of the ecumenical movement. 

This is how Francis put it: "Unity will not emerge as a miracle in the end. Rather unity emerges on the way; the Holy Spirit does it on the way. If we do not walk together, if we do not pray for one another, if we do not collaborate in the many ways we can in this world for the People of God, then unity will not happen! But it will happen on this road, in every step we take. And it is not we who do it but the Holy Spirit, who sees our good will" (Homily on the Vespers of the Conversion of St. Paul, 25-I-2014).

Gospel

No one is a prophet in his own land. 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

Joseph Evans comments on the readings for Sunday 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time and Luis Herrera offers a short video homily.

Joseph Evans-July 4, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

One would think that when Jesus returned to his own town, Nazareth, where he had grown up, he would have been well received. Surely they knew him and would have liked him. Well, they knew him, or thought they knew him, and that was precisely the problem.

They had watched him grow up. He was the local carpenter. They knew his close relatives. They were surprised that he knew so much. In the 30 years before he left Nazareth, he had probably never preached in the synagogue. That is why, in today's Gospel, we hear his neighbors say: "Where does he get all this? What wisdom is this that has been given to him? And these miracles that his hands perform? [...] And they were scandalized because of him.".

Jesus left them as the carpenter of the people. He returned as the Savior of the world. He had not changed. He had always been the Savior of the world, but he had kept it hidden. Now he reveals the truth about himself. But these people were not willing to let their comfort be disturbed. They did not want to know more.

We can face the same danger. We have little knowledge of our faith and this prevents us from wanting to go deeper. That is the great tragedy: we become complacent. We do not want to know more.

One of the worst possible curses is to know a little and think that's enough. As the saying goes: "Knowing little is dangerous." Arguably the Church's greatest theologian, St. Thomas Aquinas, to whom God once said: "You have written well about me, Tomás"Later, he had a vision of God in heaven. This vision so shocked him that he put down his pen and never wrote again. Compared to what he had seen in that vision, he thought that everything he had written was "straw". He died a few months later.

God is always more. He is infinite. There is so much to learn about Him. The great mystic St. Catherine of Siena described getting to know God as diving into an infinite ocean where there is always more to discover. God will fulfill us to the extent that we allow ourselves to be fulfilled. If our desire is like a thimble, God will give us a thimble full of himself. If our desire is like a bucket, God will give us a bucket full of himself. If our desire is like a reservoir, God will fill us like a reservoir. And if our desire is like an ocean, God will fill us like an ocean. Ultimately, the question is: How much do I want to know God? 

Homily on the readings of Sunday 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

The priest Luis Herrera Campo offers its nanomiliaA short one-minute reflection for these Sunday readings.

Evangelization

Antonia, mother of Carlo Acutis: "My son is a sign of hope for young people".

Antonia Salzano, mother of Carlo Acutis, speaks in this interview with Omnes about her son, whom she considers "a great sign of hope for young people" because of the normal life he led. The young Italian, as his mother joyfully tells us, will be canonized during the next Jubilee.

Federico Piana-July 3, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

"A great and uncontainable joy". The mother of Carlo Acutis overflowed with emotion when she heard the news that Pope Francis, during the Ordinary Public Consistory The Pope had decided that his son would be canonized during the Jubilee of 2025 on a date yet to be determined.

In conversation with Omnes, Antonia Salzano explains that this news was awaited with anxiety and concern: "Charles has many devotees scattered all over the world and the canonization will now allow the cult to be universal: this will also give us the possibility to carry out other initiatives in honor of Charles such as, for example, the construction of a church or the dedication of some chapels".

Love without limits

The young man who would soon be elevated to the honors of the altars died at the age of 15 from fulminant leukemia. In the three days of agony that preceded his death, Charles declared to offer his painful sufferings for the Pope and the Church. Great was his love for the EucharistHe repeatedly called her "my highway to Heaven", and for Our Lady: a boundless love that led him to attend daily Mass and to pray the Holy Rosary.

Like many boys his age, he was passionate about web design. He is still famous for his online exhibition on the Eucharistic miracles, which has garnered millions of hits around the world, to the point that some hope he could be designated patron saint of the Internet.

Attention to the little ones

"Carlo is a great sign of hope for young people," his mother explains, "because he has lived what young people live: the joys, the fears, the hopes. And Carlo tells them: 'if I have succeeded, you can too'".

She is really sure that her son is a spur on the difficult but fascinating path to holiness, because Carlo "transmits values that can be shared by everyone, even by believers and non-believers. He has really looked very intensely at the existential peripheries that Pope Francis is so fond of today".

In Milan, recalls Antonia, "Carlo looked after the cloisters, he had a special care for the immigrants, he befriended them: at his funeral, the church was full, crowded, with many of them. They were doormen, service men, caretakers: he had befriended them. For him, each person was a world, he made no distinctions. He had a smile and a good word for everyone".

Balm for a wounded world

The new saint with the contagious smile can be a balm for a world wounded by wars, divisions, hatred and misunderstandings. As his mother says: "He was used to building bridges. He welcomed everyone. These wars arise from rivalry, envy, the lust for possession and power. Carlo, on the other hand, was a child who would give up even a pair of shoes because he was aware that there are so many people starving in the world. He would tell me: 'Mom, a pair of shoes is enough for me, instead of spending money on new shoes, let's help the sick. Let's do a good deed.

To be essential

When Carlo was still very young, about six years old, he used to scold his younger cousins for always leaving the water tap running. Antonia still remembers: "He would tell them: 'don't waste water, it's a precious commodity and one day it will run out. Carlo already had these feelings in his heart, he was used to living the essential. Seeing this world in which in many nations there is opulence and waste, my son used to say that the Earth, in a way, is a spinning garbage can, and perhaps he was not wrong. When he went to the beach in the summer, his favorite game was to go out to sea with his boat and pick up the garbage that came to the surface at high tides."

Growing devotion

Devotion to Carlo is growing in the world every day. His mother does not hide the fact that "even now we struggle to keep up with all the reports that come in. Every day we receive news of possible miracles of healings and conversions. Those who don't know him, now, with the upcoming canonization, will have the opportunity to know more about him and pray to him."

Carlo Acutis
Carlo Acutis (Image by OSV)

Antonia then recalls the extraordinary exposition on the Eucharistic miracles that took place when he was teaching catechism and whose aim was to make Christ known and loved. It reached every continent. For example, in the United States alone it has been welcomed in 10,000 parishes. "Often Carlo," the woman adds, "marveled at the miles-long lines to attend a concert or a ball game, lines he didn't see in church. He disliked it so much that he would say: 'If people realized the importance of the Eucharist, the churches would be so full that people would no longer be able to enter.

Frequent confession

Carlo's love for the Eucharist led him to go to confession once a week. "Carlo," his mother explains, "tried, through constant and assiduous examinations of conscience, to remove from his soul all those burdens that prevented him from flying high. He wanted to be a saint, but he jokingly said that he did not want to be like St. Francis, whom he loved and considered too sublime a mystic to achieve it. The Lord, in his goodness, pleased him". 

The two miracles

The first miracle related to Carlo's beatification, which took place in Assisi on October 10, 2020, concerns the healing of a Brazilian child suffering from a rare congenital anatomical anomaly of the pancreas. The second, which led to her sanctification, concerns a Costa Rican girl, a student in Italy, who underwent surgery for a head injury following an accident. When her daughter was struggling between life and death, the mother of this poor young woman went to pray at the tomb of Carlo, whose remains rest in the Sanctuary of Despojo in Assisi. "That woman knelt before my son's tomb," Antonia recalls with emotion, "and remained there all day: in the end she obtained this great grace. Many people in Costa Rica had also joined her prayers. Her faith was heroic.

Conversion instrument

The fact that Carlo will be canonized during the Great Jubilee of 2025 represents for Antonia a great opportunity for the whole Church: "My Carlo is an instrument of conversion. He can be a model for everyone, especially for young people. The Jubilee is a time of grace, a time in which the Lord calls us to change our lives and to adhere to the project of holiness that He has for each one of us". There is a phrase that the mother of this new saint likes to repeat and will never forget: "We are all born as originals, but many die as photocopies.

Two films about Carlo Acutis

On the occasion of the upcoming canonization of Carlo Acutis, Contractor+ makes available to its users the two films about "God's influencer" directed by José María Zavala: "El Cielo no puede esperar" and "El latido del Cielo".

In both tapes you can find various testimonies from friends and family members who talk about the young Acutis, his exposition of the Eucharistic miracles and the impact he has had on the lives of hundreds of people.

Resources

Building churches after Vatican Council II

How does an architect take on the task of erecting a building that is to be a bond of union between people and God and a sign of the Church that it welcomes? This is the reflection of the author, a specialist in sacred architecture.

Esteban Fernández-Cobián-July 3, 2024-Reading time: 7 minutes

I have been studying the foundations and history of contemporary religious architecture for some time, and I have noticed that the liturgy has been the subject of intense controversy among specialists since before the Second Vatican Council. But as an architect, I can do no more than observe the process from the outside, or, in other words, try to understand it from my own discipline.

Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini recalled that historically churches have been designed by clerics, not architects. This is not the case today, and so the reflections that follow will focus more on the architects who design churches than on the clerics who commission them. So, we might ask: how does an architect who has to build a Catholic church work? Where does he go? What does he think?

What is a church?

For the Code of Canon Law (1983), a Catholic church is nothing other than a space consecrated for the public celebration of divine worship. But when defining with a minimum of precision what architectural object is a church, we have to answer two questions: what it represents and how it is used.

A first significant reference appears in the passage narrated in the Gospel of Luke 22:12, which explains how Jesus Christ gives instructions to his disciples to prepare the Passover meal. He instructs them to go to the house of an acquaintance who will show them a large room where they can arrange everything. That room spacious and arranged can be presented as a spatial paradigm of the space of Christian worship. In fact, in the "Ritual of dedication of churches and altars".(1977), Paul VI only asked for a church to be adequate and decorous (II.I.3).

In reality, any church should be able to assume four basic uses: to welcome the faithful who congregate to pray, both communally and individually; to contextualize the proclamation of the Word of God and the celebration of the Eucharist; to favor the reservation and adoration of the Blessed Sacrament; and to allow the celebration of the other sacraments, especially in the case of parish churches. 

The order of these four functions is not fortuitous, but responds to a conceptual hierarchy that has been a frequent topic of discussion in recent decades.

It is also generally accepted that one of the proper functions of the church is its expressiveness, understanding as expressive or symbolic that building that possesses a qualified atmosphere that refers to other realities. This atmosphere must put the spirit in tension and educate in the sense of the sacred. Thus, the spiritual and pedagogical dimensions of every temple appear.

Much has been written about the symbolic in religious architecture, and sometimes in an abusive manner. We speak of symbolism when in order to understand a reality of a spiritual nature we need to resort to a material intermediary that refers us intuitively to it; this intermediary is the symbol. 

If a church is well adjusted to its liturgical use, it will already be in accordance with the intuitive, profound and simple symbolism contained in the Catholic liturgy. This is at the antipodes of the somewhat naive tendency that tends to identify spiritual space with empty or evocative space. A church is not that, because Christian worship is based on an objective fact: the paschal sacrifice of Jesus Christ.

How an architect works

Now, every architect knows that there comes a time when concepts, however suggestive, have to be translated into shapes and numbers. Every architect knows that there comes a time when concepts, however suggestive they may be, have to be translated into shapes and numbers. How big is an altar? What are the dimensions of a baptistery? What is the right amount of light for a liturgical celebration?

When an architect is faced with a religious architecture project, he usually performs some preliminary tasks. 

First, he will recall those churches that have impressed him most in his personal experience. Then he will turn to design manuals: what does Ernst Neufert say about churches? And Ching? If he's a bit more knowledgeable, he'll consult Cornoldi's book or Bergamo-Prete. And if he is Mexican, he will probably have heard of the schemes of Fray Gabriel Chávez de la Mora, recently deceased.

You will then review the most important architectural works that have been built in recent years, both in printed catalogs and on the Internet, or even international awards such as the Frate Sole. Perhaps - if the architect is really committed to the subject - he will read the documents of his ecclesiastical circumscription, which are difficult to translate into forms but which there is no choice but to justify. These documents always refer to a previous jurisprudence, in a continuous process of updating, for the analysis of which he is not usually qualified. He could even consult the original sources, that is, the documents of the Second Vatican Council. If he does so, his bewilderment will be absolute.

In the end, the architect will end up resorting to the story of the chalk circles told by Leo Rosten: "Once upon a time there was a lieutenant in the Czar's army who, in riding through a small shtelThe astonished lieutenant noticed a hundred chalk circles on one side of the barn, each with a bullet hole in the center. The astonished lieutenant stopped the first one he met and inquired about the targets. The man sighed, "Ah, that's Shepsel, the cobbler's son. He's a bit peculiar. -I don't mind. He's such a good shot... You don't understand me, the man interrupted. You see: Shepsel shoots first and then draws the chalk circle". 

On this subject, it is easier to come up with something and then try to justify it, than to do it the other way around.

Unexpected factors

Every temple can be considered as a great receiver - a transistor, an antenna, a router - which, in a certain way, has the mission of revealing those realities that we, with our senses, cannot perceive. That is why it is necessary that churches be temples, that is, that they be capable of summoning nature so that it too may participate in divine worship. This is not achieved by making the headwall transparent, for example, but by recovering the spatial archetypes that Jean Hani talks about in his book "The symbolism of the Christian temple". (1962): the door, the road, the grotto, the mountain, etc.

Religious architecture is a problem of total ambience. It is not a matter of arranging the faithful around the altar. The impression that the faithful receive - and which allows them to get in touch with the divine - is the sum of many factors, among which I would like to highlight three: the sense of welcome, the liturgical formation of the community and the ars celebrandi of the priest, that is, his way of celebrating Holy Mass. Any architect who wants to design a church should be aware of this.

From a spatial point of view, the sensation of welcome can be identified, at first, with the existence of an area preceding the worship space: the atrium. When entering a church, the atrium should act as a transitional space between the profane and the sacred. Our body and spirit need time to perceive the conceptual changes. That is why the atrium is the place of welcome par excellence, where community is created, experiences and even material goods are shared. The atrium is an essential space in churches, especially in urban churches.

Reception - and also dignity - can be threatened by poor upkeep of the building. I am not referring only to damage or dirt, but also to posters for announcements or church campaigns, to screens for projecting song lyrics, not to mention improvised adjustments to liturgical furnishings. Any of these objects has much more visual power than the architecture itself. 

Thus, space becomes inconsequential, sometimes almost ridiculous, and the ridiculous is incompatible with the sacred. This was condemned by the Second Vatican Council, when it called for noble simplicity for all objects destined for worship.

I dare to say that before inventing new forms for the churches it is necessary to recover the dignity of the celebration: to deepen every gesture and every word through study and prayer. 

Theologically speaking, the Church, as an institution, is the Temple of the Holy Spirit, but it is also the People of God and the Body of Christ. This last quality-the Body of Christ-was the central claim of the Liturgical Movement, on which the reform of the celebrative space was based for decades, following Pauline theology. But it remained hidden after the Council, when the charismatic and popular ecclesiology served as an excuse to generate spaces for the celebration of the Body of Christ. assembly members.

If the liturgy is cared for, if there is passion for the Word of God, if with the appropriate liturgical education the faithful understand, point by point, what happens in each celebration, if they try to live throughout the week what they celebrate on Sunday; if, in short, the Mass is the center and source of the whole life of the Christian faithful (which, let us not forget, is the capital node of the liturgical reform), then the church, as a building, will be able to contribute all that it has to contribute. 

To paraphrase Rudolf Schwarz, we could say that a well-celebrated mass in an inconsistent space is preferable to a poorly celebrated mass in a perfect space. This does not exempt the architect -quite the contrary- from applying all possible intensity to his project.

Some concluding remarks

I would like to say a word about the location of the tabernacle. For more than a thousand years the tabernacle was the center of the churches. 

Several studies point out that its displacement to a side chapel after the Second Vatican Council has influenced the drastic reduction of Eucharistic piety in recent decades. And although in some countries of the world there have been attempts to recover devotion to the Blessed Sacrament through the construction of perpetual adoration chapels, from an architectural point of view, I consider it necessary for the tabernacle to return to permanently preside over the ecclesial space, as suggested in the latest edition of the General Instruction of the Roman Missal (2002, numbers 314-315). Otherwise, we will build empty buildings, which will be neither Houses of God, nor Gates of Heaven, nor even Temples of the Holy Spirit.

So, how should a Catholic church be built after Vatican II? Summarizing all that has been said, we can affirm that religious architecture is a living phenomenon, in constant change; architects and clerics alike talk, discuss, periodically publish articles and books on these questions. So do the Pope and the bishops. 

On these bases, the Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship issues instructions, pastoral notes, recommendations, letters, etc. But it is not until all this material is incorporated into a new edition of the General Instruction of the Roman Missalcannot be considered binding. 

To date, Latin editions (editio typica) of the General Instruction of the Roman Missal There have been three: 1969/70, 1975 and 2002 (reprinted in 2008 with some modifications). 

In Spain, the 2002 version was implemented in 2016 (the previous ones had been implemented in 1978 and 1988, respectively).

Therefore, before starting to design a church, any architect should do two things: read chapter 5 of the latest edition of the General Instruction of the Roman Missalentitled "Arrangement and ornamentation of churches for the Eucharistic celebration", because that is where it all is. At the same time, we must not lose sight of the fact that each bishop is sovereign: he is the one who decides how things are done in his diocese. 

By following these guidelines, in half a century's time we will be able to build again a true architecture in conformity with the spirit and the letter of the Second Vatican Council. I think that this is, quite simply, what needs to be done.

The authorEsteban Fernández-Cobián

Spain

Spanish Bishops encourage integration of migrant minors

Dialogue between the different competent public administrations, and urgent inter-territorial solidarity accompanied by an integral welcome to favor the social integration of young migrants, is the message of the Spanish Episcopal sub-commission for migrations, and the bishops of the Canary Islands.  

Francisco Otamendi-July 2, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

The bishops of the two dioceses of the Canary Islands, Monsignors José Mazuelos and Bernardo Álvarez, and Auxiliary Bishop Cristóbal Deniz, have made a call not to forget the contributions that migrants make to our society, which are remarkable", and to "create a culture of encounter, overcome the phobia of foreigners, fight against mafias and promote the development of the countries of origin".

As Pope Francis' encyclical 'Fratelli tutti' affirms, and the bishops recall, "these are global realities that require global action, avoiding a 'culture of walls' that favors the proliferation of mafias, fed by fear and loneliness".

The bishops also point out that "many of our brothers and sisters would not embark on such an uncertain and dangerous journey if their people and countries were living in more just situations and if Spain and Europe were more effective in promoting ways for legal, orderly and safe migration".

Culture of encounter

Also the bishops of the Episcopal Subcommission for Migration and Human Mobility of the Spanish Episcopal Conference (CEE) have wished to endorse "the note 'A light of hope for migrant minorsToday, our confreres of the two dioceses of the Canary Islands have sent out a letter to the Holy Father". 

"Together with Church entities that work with and for migrant children, adolescents and young people," they add, "we emphasize that their protection and integration is a duty before Spanish and European laws and a moral good that every Catholic must promote.

With the bishops of the Canary Islands, they trust in the dialogue between the competent public administrations to establish a comprehensive model of reception that "favors the social integration of migrant children, adolescents and young people, as well as a positive interaction with the social environment where they are received".

Requirements to reduce migratory flows

The Spanish episcopate considers that "we need to foster a culture of encounter that helps us to grow as humanity. With Pope Francis we think that "we need, on the part of all, a change of attitude towards immigrants and refugees, the passage from a defensive and suspicious attitude, of disinterest or marginalization, to an attitude that places as a foundation the "culture of encounter", the only one capable of building a more just and fraternal world, a better world" (Message for the Day of Migrants and Refugees 2014). 

The prelates of the Canary Islands rejected "the ideological instrumentalization and alarmist speeches that may take place around migrant minors or the complex phenomenon of migration", and stressed that "without conditions of life, work and dignity for the populations of the countries of origin, it will not be easy to reduce migratory flows". They also showed their "joy at the news that our leaders and most of our politicians have opened a path of hope to help the people of the Canary Islands to find a solution to this reality".

The Canary Islands are in an "extreme" situation with migrant minors, said Candelaria Delgado, the Canarian government's Minister of Social Welfare, Equality, Youth, Children and Families, a few days ago.

Pope: migrants flee insecurity and oppression

In its message For the 110th World Day of Migrants and Refugees, which will take place on September 29 this year, Pope Francis has focused his words on the theme "God walks with his people".

The Pontiff states that "it is possible to see in the migrants of our time, as in those of every age, a living image of the people of God on the way to the eternal homeland"; and that, like the Jews in the Exodus, "migrants often flee from situations of oppression and abuse, insecurity and discrimination, lack of development projects". Along with these serious threats, "they encounter many obstacles on their way," such as lack of resources, dangerous and poorly paid jobs, and disease.

Archbishop Argüello: support for regularization of migrants

In early March, almost immediately after being elected president of the Episcopal Conference, Archbishop Luis Argüello of Valladolid publicly supported the Popular Legislative Initiative (ILP) for the regularization of almost 400,000 foreigners residing in Spain before November 2021, stressing that "it is time to overcome a polarization caused by political interests".

In this line, Argüello stated on the social network X, formerly Twitter, that "human dignity asks us to welcome, protect, promote and integrate these neighbors, many of them minors," and wrote a statement in this sense. In the same sense, the has stated the Archbishop of Madrid, Cardinal José Cobo.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

From St. Thomas to the culture of care

Together with the figure of St. Thomas, the review of Omnes focuses its gaze on the reality of the West in which the aging of the population is an unavoidable challenge that the Church must face with the deepest charity and justice.

July 2, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

St. Thomas Aquinas used to say that "mercy is in itself the greatest of virtues, since it belongs to it to turn to others and, even more, to help them in their deficiencies". This phrase fits with this double number The July and August 2024 issue of Omnes, in which the figure of Aquinas and the elderly in today's world will be the focus of the magazine's contents.

Triple anniversary

St. Thomas Aquinas, one of the names without which philosophy and theology cannot be understood today, is very much up to date.

2023 marked the 700th anniversary of his canonization, while 2024 marks the 750th anniversary of his death, and in 2025, the 800th anniversary of his birth.

In the letter that Pope Francis addressed to the bishops of the dioceses directly related to the Angelic Doctor, he pointed out that the main legacy of the distinguished Dominican is based "above all on holiness, characterized by a particular speculation which, nevertheless, has not renounced the challenge of allowing itself to be provoked and measured by experience, even by the unprecedented problems and paradoxes of History, a dramatic and at the same time magnificent place, in order to discern in it the traces and the direction towards the Kingdom to come". Indeed, the inspiration, method, teachings and reflections of one of the greatest Doctors of the Church are still fully relevant eight centuries after his death.

Our seniors

Along with the figure of St. Thomas, the special issue of Omnes focuses its gaze on the reality of the West, in which the aging of the population is an unavoidable challenge that the Church must face with the deepest charity and justice, as well as with the creativity necessary to avoid reductionism and take advantage of the great potential of the elderly in the life of society and of the Church.

There are many initiatives around the world that not only take care of the elderly, but also make them the main protagonists.

The challenge of the culture of integral care, of valuing and rediscovering an older but not an aging society, is undoubtedly one of the main tasks of politicians, pastors and the faithful in today's world.

This "turning to others" to which St. Thomas refers in the phrase we have recalled and which, for Christians, translates into the exercise of charity, the principal virtue among all the virtues and the central trunk of faith.

As I said Benedict XVIIt is beautiful to be old! In every age it is necessary to know how to discover the presence and blessing of the Lord and the riches it contains. We must never allow ourselves to be trapped by sadness! We have received the gift of a long life. To live is beautiful also at our age, in spite of some 'ailments' and limitations. May the joy of feeling loved by God, and not sadness, always be on our faces.

The authorOmnes

Newsroom

St. Thomas Aquinas is the protagonist of the July-August issue of the magazine

The July-August 2024 issue of Omnes magazine features St. Thomas Aquinas. The Church celebrates the triple anniversary of Aquinas: 2023 marks 700 years since his canonization; 2024 marks 750 years since his death; and 2025 will mark 800 years since his birth.

Paloma López Campos-July 2, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

The July-August 2024 print journal has St. Thomas Aquinas as its protagonist and features contributions from key authors for the current interpretation of Aquinas' thought. Taking advantage of the occasion of his triple anniversary, the new issue of Omnes aims to show the great influence of this doctor of the Church.

Among the names that sign the collaborations are Lluís ClavellThe event was attended by the following: Lorella Congiunti, former president of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas; Lorella Congiunti, president of the International Society of St. Thomas Aquinas; and Alan Joseph Adami, professor of Sacred Theology at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas.

The dossier is completed with articles on the axes of Aquinas' thought, his vision of man and his interpretation of Aristotelian thought.

Special for seniors

The summer special of Omnes magazine is dedicated to the elderly, care and the culture of integration. Through the analysis made by specialists such as María Teresa Bazo or Mario J. Paredes, this special sheds light on the situation of the elderly and tries to suggest ideas with which to improve their standard of living and inclusion in society.

Among the articles are also the stories of several elderly people who have decided to continue contributing all they can on a daily basis.

Papal primacy, the Synod and the apostolic journey

Giovanni Tridente, Federico Piana and Ramiro Pellitero write about current events at the Vatican. Among the topics they discuss this month are the new document "The Bishop of Rome" and the "Instrumentum Laboris" for the upcoming Synod session.

In addition, there is a report dedicated to the apostolic journey that Pope Francis will make in September 2024. In what will be his longest tour to date, the Holy Father will visit Indonesia, Singapore, East Timor and Papua New Guinea.

Reasons, Étienne Gilson and the Letter of Barnabas

This month Juan Luis Lorda talks in his article in Reasons about Étienne Gilson, author of one of the most panoramic books on Christian thought of the 20th century. As Lorda explains, Gilson relates in his book how the great themes of knowledge were transformed thanks to the interpretation of Christian authors.

In Reasons there is also an interesting report written by Jerónimo Leal on the "Letter of Barnabas". This article explains the prophecies and prefigurations that refer to Christ.

"Loving always more" and first Christians

As part of Experiences, this issue of Omnes presents the "Amar siempre más" project, a pastoral initiative based on three pillars or areas: family, spiritual and social.

On the other hand, this month's Initiatives correspond to ".Early Christians"The website, created by some university students, gathers information about the first communities of followers of Christ.

Culture, Gospel and books

As every month, the magazine also includes brief meditations on the Gospel; an approach to an important cultural figure, in this case Nobel laureate Adolfo Pérez Esquivel; and reviews of several books that may be ideal for this summer.

The July-August 2024 magazine is available in digital format for subscribers of the digital and digital and print versions. For those with a print subscription, a copy will be delivered to your home in the next few days.

Family

6 keys to better rest on vacation

Days of rest are coming, and it does not hurt to review what concept of rest we have. There are two biblical premises. Genesis 2:1-2 says: "So the heavens and the earth and the whole universe were finished. And when he (God) had finished his work on the seventh day, he rested on the seventh day". And Jesus said: "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest".  

Francisco Otamendi-July 2, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

The text of the Genesis He continues: "And God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it, because on it he rested from all the work that God had done when he created". Thus God sanctified rest, as Jesus would do with work (thirty years in Joseph's workshop), and also with rest, when he was weary from the road. 

The undersigned is a journalist, not an expert in Sacred Scripture, nor in vacation arts, nor in psychology. Here are just a few points that can help us to rest, in some of the meanings of the term that the Royal Spanish Academy. These are: 

1. To cease in work, to repair the forces with stillness.

2. To have some relief from worries.

3. To relieve oneself, to have relief or consolation by communicating to a friend or trusted person one's woes or hardships.

4. Rest, sleep.

5. Said of a person: to be calm and careless because he or she has confidence in something or someone.

6. To relieve someone at work, to help someone at work.

There are more meanings of the term "rest", but these are enough for a quick reflection from a Christian perspective, which anyone can do.

1. Ceasing to work, restoring strength through quietness.

This is the first meaning. It points out the Catechism of Catholic Doctrine that "just as God 'ceased on the seventh day from all the work that he had done' (Gn 2:2), so too human life follows a rhythm of work and rest. The institution of the Lord's Day helps everyone to enjoy sufficient time of rest and solace to enable them to cultivate their family, cultural, social and religious life" (n. 2184).

2. To have some relief from worries

St. Matthew writes: "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble of heart, and you will find your rest. For my yoke is easy to bear and my burden is light".

In the well-known fragment of abandonment to Providence, St. Luke records. "And he said to his disciples, 'Therefore I say to you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat; nor about the body, what you will put on; for life is more than food, and the body more than clothing. Look at the ravens: they neither sow nor reap, they have neither storehouse nor barn, and God feeds them; how much more valuable are you than the birds! Who among you, by dint of being overburdened, can add one hour to the time of his life? Therefore, if you cannot do the least, why fret about the rest?"

3. To relieve oneself, to communicate to a friend evils or hardships.

Pope Francis: "God, in the Decalogue, shows another light of what rest is, which is 'contemplation and praise'. "To rest as an escape from reality, the Decalogue opposes rest as a blessing of reality," he added in a General Audience in 2018.

"For us Christians, the Lord's Day is Sunday, and in the Eucharist, which means 'to give thanks,' we find the culmination of that day of contemplation and blessing, in which we welcome reality and praise the Lord for the gift of life, thanking him for his mercy and for all the good things he grants us." Resting in the Lord is a doctrine established by spiritual authors. Francisco on several occasions recalled the words of the Psalm: "My soul rests in God alone", and the need to cultivate silence and prayer.

In the same catechesis, the Pope said that "rest is also a propitious moment for reconciliation, to confront difficulties without escaping from them, to find the peace and serenity of those who know how to value the good things they have, even in the bed of pain or poverty".

4. Rest, sleep

Numerous physicians, psychiatrists and psychologists have argued the beneficial properties of sleep, in a society where the time needed for sleep is often cut back. They have also done so with the support of moderate exercise, according to age and with medical indication or supervision.

5. To be calm and careless because we trust something or someone.

This issue has been mentioned in points 2 and 3 above. Perhaps one can add the convenience of cultivating friendshipThis is the kind of love that is given "in two directions and that desires every good for the other person, love that produces union and happiness", as St. John Paul II wrote, and on which Pope Francis meditated in the Apostolic Exhortation Christus vivit and in their catechesis.

6. Relieving someone at work, helping another person

Caring for others, especially the most needy, the poor, the elderly and the sick, in addition to fulfilling the mandate of charity, is always beneficial to the spirit, and good proof of this are the testimonies of the many people who give themselves to others.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

Family

Lluís Clavell: "Family is the highest form of friendship".

In this interview, Lluís Clavell, former president of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas, answers Omnes' questions about the concept of the family in Aquinas' writings, the relevance of his thought and its influence today.

Loreto Rios-July 1, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

The family is one of the great issues of today. However, the fact that it is a topic of enormous relevance today is no reason to think that in the past it was not an issue of great importance. So much so, that as early as the twelfth century St. Thomas Aquinas He reflected on this and left for posterity certain thoughts that may be key for the 21st century.

This is something that Lluís Clavell, former chairman of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas. Aquinas' texts are well known to this priest, who was also a professor of philosophy at the University of Rome. University of Navarra and Ph. Pontifical Lateran University of Rome.

Lluís Clavell is also professor of Metaphysics at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, where he was rector from 1994 to 2008. He was also a consultant to the Pontifical Council for Culture and was a member of the board of directors of the International Society Thomas Aquinas.

In this interview, the former president of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas answers Omnes' questions about the concept of the family in Aquinas' writings, the relevance of his thought and its influence today.

How does St. Thomas Aquinas define the family?

- On these more theological topics I have to confess my limits. I have always dealt with this rather from the side of philosophy, for example from the side of friendship. Aristotle devotes to this subject no less than two books of the Nicomachean Ethics. The family is the highest form of friendship, and interpersonal love between spouses is the most educational thing there is. It is not that great things have to be invented: when children see how parents love each other, they learn almost everything. St. Thomas speaks of the family as a spiritual womb. It is the place where the child grows, is formed, learns what freedom is, many things, not only how to use language.

What other lesser-known aspects of St. Thomas' thought are currently resurfacing?

- Recently, for example, at the Academy of St. Thomas in Rome, a plenary session was held in which a volume dedicated to the emotions according to St. Thomas was presented. Theologians, too, have studied this quite a bit. Perhaps it was less frequent before, because a more purely intellectual vision, centered on dogma, was followed. But it can be seen that St. Thomas, who has a lot to say about the emotions, is now also more studied.

The same happens in other aspects. For example, now there is a Thomism that is called "biblical Thomism", more focused on commentaries on the writings of Sacred Scripture and on the Psalms. St. Thomas himself also composed poetry, liturgical hymns, which we still sing today and which we like.

What then, according to St. Thomas, is the importance of the family?

- The family, on the one hand, is a sign of destitution: we are born, we need to learn to speak, to be taught... The family is a necessity. But it is also greatness, which is an aspect that some do not see. I am referring to the greatness of the family as a life project, because life is not simply about succeeding in a job.

Reading St. Thomas, we see that he captures this very well: we need family, because we are children; but at the same time it is a great thing, because animals do not really have a family. Many people discover this when they have a family disaster: it is the hardest thing that can happen to you. The family is to be able to love, and to love with a love of donation, gratuitous, reciprocal, total. St. Thomas goes so far as to say that, from this point of view, the human race is superior to the angels. Angels help us, but angels do not have children, while human beings do.

It is important to see the family not only as a need, as indigence, but as something more, a life project. Now we are frightened by the decline in the birth rate, but this means that perhaps we have put in place modules of work and triumph that look at only one part of what the human person is.

How does the vision of St. Thomas influence today's world?

- St. Thomas lived in a very remarkable period. There was the birth of the universities, and he was well acquainted with Neoplatonism and St. Augustine, but Aristotelianism reached him, as an irruption, and it also reached him through people from Arab countries or countries conquered by the Arabs, as in the case of Spain. He is a person who, together with his training in Neoplatonism, knows Aristotle well, which was not only philosophy; it was also science, biology, physics, etc.

Therefore, he is in an ideal, incredible situation, which made it possible for him to offer us something that has continued to last through the ages. It amazes me that in these years we have reflections such as that of Alistair MacIntyre on the fragmentation of knowledge. It was one of the books that had the greatest impact on me, I was living in the fragmentation of knowledge, and I was a bit aware of it, but the university helped me a lot to try to unite, to make the different kinds of knowledge communicate. Tomás tried to do it, and that is why also when you cultivate this field, you feel his help, which is something from the past, but you feel it as something very current.

For example, we will soon have a world congress on Philosophy (1-8 August, in Rome), in which the Ibero-American Network of Philosophy is also participating. It is focused on a philosophy that crosses borders, and we have been invited to have a session on St. Thomas, along with others dedicated to other great philosophers of history.

And now a curious question, what influence do you think this resurgence of Aquinas' thought has on the recent European elections?

- The family has entered a somewhat more controversial phase since the anthropological revolution of 1968, and more recently with some measures taken by European governments, including the European Parliament. The results of the European elections show that the Philosophy and Theology of St. Thomas is of great interest. Speaking now of the recent elections, a young philosopher, trained at the Complutense, in Political Science studies, has commented that a Europe that ignores the truth of the person leads to frustration. One can see in the election results that there is also a rebellion against this.

This young philosopher comments that the denial of the truth of the person among the European elites leads to a change as a reaction. There are people who interpret it only from a political point of view, but this author, who is a politician but at the same time a philosopher, believes that it is not only a political question, but also an anthropological one, there is a certain awareness in young people that it is convenient to change, to highlight things that are important to be happy and to build a better Europe. The issue of the defense of the Christian roots of Europe is there: I think it is not dead and it is done in dialogue. A philosopher well equipped with the modern and the ancient has a lot to say.

Contactless church

In a disconnected, individualistic and inhuman world like ours, in the face of the popularization of the contactlessThe Church will be the sacrament of salvation as long as she is capable of being a visible sign of fraternity.

July 1, 2024-Reading time: 4 minutes

After the "Give each other fraternal peace" no one, absolutely no one, shook the hand of the neighbor on the bench. And the two people to whom I extended my hand rejected it by returning a gentle oriental greeting. I don't know about you, but I see the danger of a Christian life. contactless.

It was certainly not the Sunday parish Eucharist, but one of those Masses on a weekday, in a centrally located church, early in the morning, where the faithful do not usually know each other.

They arrive right at the start time, sit away from each other and then rush off to get to their jobs in nearby offices and stores on time, so it is understandable that there is no trust, but the popularization of bowing has become pandemic, never better said, since the Covid. Soon, instead of "peace with you", we will say "namaste".

The call to minimize contact during this world catastrophe was more than justified, but, after a while, the hygienic motivation becomes an excuse that hides, in my opinion, something deeper, a subtle form of individualistic faith that places those who practice it at the antipodes of Christian faith.

The mystery of the Incarnation broke the barrier between God and man. Jesus is God who touches and who allows himself to be touched. During his public life, he rebuked the scruples of the Pharisees and their fear of becoming impure through physical contact and, with his death on the cross and the consequent tearing of the veil of the temple, he also signaled the end of the cultic separation between men and "the holy".

Just a few weeks ago we took up the Sunday readings of Ordinary Time which, in the cycle B in which we are, correspond to the Evangelist Mark. This is a Gospel that presents us with a Jesus who, if you will allow me to use the expression, is rather "stumpy", if you will allow me to use the expression.

We see him take Peter's mother-in-law and Jairus' daughter by the hand, touch the sick skin of the leper and the atrophied tongue of the deaf-mute, embrace the children, take them in his arms, lay hands on them and ask them to let them come close to him.

We also see him squeezed in a crowd or in a crowded house, and he even let himself be kissed by Judas in Gethsemane, which indicated that this was a customary form of greeting.

The summit of Jesus' desire to enter into physical contact with his disciples of all times is found in the institution of the Eucharist, where he not only invited us to touch him, but to actually eat him (that is our faith).

We are not circumstantially corporeal spirits, but a unity of body and soul; and, in the Church, members of the one body of Christ, of which he is the head. Therefore, not only the Eucharist makes present this intimacy with the sense of touch, but also the other sacraments.

Thus, in Baptism, we see the sign on the forehead, the anointing on the chest and on the head, the laying on of hands or the rite of the "baptism of the mother", and so on.effetá"At ordination, the bishop imposes his hands on the future priest and anoints his hands with holy chrism; at Confirmation, we also see the imposition of hands and anointing, as well as signs such as the sponsor's hand on the shoulder of the confirmandi or the bishop's embrace or kiss of peace.

In confession, we can see the priest place one or two hands on the penitent's head during absolution; in the anointing of the sick, the minister applies oil on the forehead and hands of the faithful; and in marriage, the contracting parties shake hands, put the ring on each other and give each other the kiss of peace (and this is as far as I can read because then it has to be consummated).

In all these "visible signs of an invisible reality," as the word sacrament is defined, the action of God who washes, heals, nourishes, fortifies, unites, creates, blesses, forgives, transmits his power, welcomes... In short, he loves, because a faith without works, a spiritual action without corporal correspondence, is a dead faith.

We are not angels, but human beings made in the image and likeness of God, of flesh and blood, the same one that will be resurrected transformed and that will accompany us eternally. Why do we reject it, allowing ourselves to be carried away by traditions far removed from what Jesus Christ taught us?

When our disincarnated spiritualism becomes most painful is when we reject the Lord's favorites, the poor, the sick, the elderly, the migrants... With them, Pope Francis warns us, "we can have compassion, but generally we do not touch them.

We offer him the coin, but we avoid touching the hand and throw it away. And we forget that this is the body of Christ! Jesus teaches us not to be afraid to touch the poor and the excluded, because He is in them. Touching the poor can purify us of hypocrisy and make us care about their condition. Touch the excluded.

In a disconnected, individualistic and inhuman world like ours, in the face of the popularization of the contactlessThe Church will be the sacrament of salvation as long as she is able to be the visible sign of a community of true brothers and sisters who, as such, are not afraid to hold hands.

As believers in God the Trinity, a God who is a community of persons in intimate relationship, we must be clear that no one is saved alone, but by the hand of another. Yes, from the hand of the one next to him.

The authorAntonio Moreno

Journalist. Graduate in Communication Sciences and Bachelor in Religious Sciences. He works in the Diocesan Delegation of Media in Malaga. His numerous "threads" on Twitter about faith and daily life have a great popularity.

The Vatican

Pope encourages the Church and society to "exclude no one"

Pope Francis stressed during his Angelus meditation that "God does not keep us at a distance," so Catholics need to follow his example to welcome and love people "without labels."

Paloma López Campos-June 30, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

During the Angelus Pope Francis, on Sunday, June 30, on the basis of the Gospel of the dayThe fact that Jesus touched two women considered impure according to Jewish law was emphasized.

Christ, said the Pontiff, "challenges a mistaken religious conception, according to which God separates the pure on the one hand and the impure on the other". God, as our Father, does not make such a distinction, "because we are all his children, and impurity does not derive from food, sickness or even death, but impurity comes from an impure heart."

God does not keep us at a distance

This is the lesson we must learn from this Gospel passage, the Pope explained. "In the face of the sufferings of the body and spirit, in the face of the wounds of the soul, in the face of situations that overwhelm us and even in the face of sin, God does not keep us at a distance, God is not ashamed of us, God does not judge us." What the Lord does, Francis pointed out, is to draw near "to allow himself to be touched and to touch us," because in this way he saves us from death.

Christ, the Holy Father affirmed, looks at every Christian to say: "I suffered all the consequences of sin in order to save you. And with this, the believer is filled with hope.

Faced with this, the Pope encouraged everyone to ask themselves: "Do we believe that God is like this? Do we allow ourselves to be touched by the Lord, by his Word, by his love? Do we enter into relationship with our brothers and sisters, offering them a hand to lift them up, or do we keep our distance and label people based on our tastes and our preferences?"

Francis concluded his meditation by asking that "we look to the heart of God, so that the Church and society may not exclude, may not exclude anyone, may not treat anyone as 'impure', so that everyone, with their own history, may be welcomed and loved without labels, without prejudice, so that they may be loved without adjectives".

The Pope, the Protomartyrs and Peace

After praying the Angelus, the Pope wanted to greet "the children of the Missionary Circle 'Misyjna Jutrzenka'" from Poland, and pilgrims "from California and Costa Rica. He also mentioned "the Daughters of the Church" and "the boys of Gonzaga, in Mantua".

As usual, the Holy Father prayed for peace, placing this intention in the hands of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. He also recalled the Roman Protomartyrs and pointed out that "we too live in times of martyrdom, even more so than in the first centuries". He wanted to send a message of support to all Christians who suffer persecution and violence for living their faith, and asked all Catholics to support them and be "inspired by their witness of love for Christ".

The Vatican

A new horizon for the faithful with disabilities in the Church

The Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life has published "A Joy without Limits," a document that deepens reflection on the role in the Church of persons with disabilities.

Giovanni Tridente-June 30, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

The Church has taken another significant step toward greater inclusion of the faithful with disabilities. In recent days, in fact, the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life has published a document entitled "Unlimited joy"The report, available in several languages on its website, is the result of a consultation with more than thirty faithful with disabilities from all over the world, and was carried out in collaboration with the General Secretariat of the Synod.

It is no coincidence that the text is part of the Synod on Synodality and addresses the crucial question of how to strengthen the co-responsibility of the faithful with disability in a Church that seeks to be ever more inclusive and participatory. It was the same Assembly of Bishops last October that highlighted the need to recognize and value the apostolic capacities of persons with disabilities and their contribution to the evangelizing mission of the baptized.

"It is not, therefore, a mere theoretical exercise," say the drafters of the document, "but a profound reflection that arises from the direct experience of those who live the condition of disability in the heart of the ecclesial community on a daily basis."

Current challenges

However, "Joy without Limits" does not hide the challenges that remain. Indeed, despite the progress made in this area, there are still obstacles and prejudices that limit the full participation of people with disabilities in the life of the Church.

It is not by chance that the text emphasizes the experiences of paternalism and assistance that must necessarily be overcome. However, the tone is not one of complaint, but of constructive proposal.

Recommendations

The authors outline an articulated path that touches on various aspects of ecclesiastical life. They start from physical and communicative accessibility, through a more specific formation of clergy and pastoral agents, to a renewed theological reflection on disability. Here too, the objective is clear: to enable the faithful with disabilities to be not only recipients of pastoral care, but active protagonists in the Church's mission.

Access to ministries

Of particular interest is the proposal to rethink ecclesial ministry. The document suggests opening access to instituted ministries to persons with disabilities and enhancing their specific charisms. It imagines, for example, catechesis for the deaf by deaf catechists, or the presence of persons with disabilities in pastoral councils.

There is no lack of other suggestions, such as the creation of a specific body within the Roman Curia or the establishment of specific offices in the Episcopal Conferences. But what emerges strongly is the call for a change of mentality: from "acting for" to "acting with" persons with disabilities.

No obstacle to follow Christ

The final message of the document is disruptive even in its simplicity: the condition of disability is not an obstacle to following Christ. On the contrary, it can be a source of "joy without limits" when it is lived within a truly welcoming and inclusive ecclesial community.

It is a further step in the ongoing synodal process, therefore, but also a challenge for the whole Church to rethink concretely her way of living communion and the participation of all the baptized, regardless of their life situation. The road is certainly a long one, but here too the path is clearly marked.

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Culture

Two books on poverty and vulnerability for today's world 

Two books by the Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini and San Pedro Poveda Chairs of the Pontifical University of Salamanca delve into the themes of poverty and vulnerability.

Maria José Atienza-June 30, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

The chairs Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini and St. Pedro Poveda of the Pontifical University of Salamanca have brought together in two volumes the reflections and considerations of various experts on poverty and Christian life on the one hand, and vulnerability and care on the other.

The option of the poor

The first of them The option of the poorThe book, The Option for the Poor in the Pastoral Ministry of Cardinal Ruffini, brings together the conferences of a series of conferences held in 2022 under the title The Option for the Poor in the Pastoral Ministry of Cardinal Ruffini. The conference was attended, among others, by the President of the Italian Episcopal Conference, Bishop Matteo Maria Zuppi. 

The book focuses on the magisterium of Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini and his ministry in favor of the poor. In this regard, the director of the Ruffini Chair, José Antonio Calvo, recalled that Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini "tirelessly sowed the word of God in the hearts of many men and women who lacked almost everything". 

VulnerabilityPerspectives from theology, spirituality and education. 

On the other hand, the other volume, VulnerabilityPerspectives from theology, spirituality and education. The book gathers the reflections of several professors from philosophical, theological, spiritual and pedagogical perspectives. It also includes the last lecture of the French theologian Joseph Caillot, who said goodbye to his faculty, ill with ALS. 

A book, coordinated by the Chair of St. Pedro Poveda, which shows that "all Theology must have a pastoral character, that is, be born and live in the space of contact between the revelation of God and the concrete life of men to reflect on the salvific history of God with men that takes place at every moment, as the Dean of the Faculty of Theology pointed out in the presentation of both books, which "are situated in this space, specifically, "in the space that defines the poverty that weighs on certain sectors of humanity and on the vulnerability of the men and women who make it up".

The Vatican

"Open doors", Pope's wish on the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul

On the eve of the Jubilee Year 2025, on the Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul, Pope Francis called on "the Lord to open the doors of our hearts - sometimes blocked by fear, closed by selfishness, sealed in indifference or resignation - to open us to an encounter with Him". And also to "build a Church and a society with open doors," as he imposed the pallium on 42 new metropolitan archbishops.  

Francisco Otamendi-June 29, 2024-Reading time: 4 minutes

The Holy Father Francis today, on the Solemnity of the Feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary, encouraged holy apostles Peter and PaulWe should allow ourselves to be "inspired by their stories, by the apostolic zeal that marked the path of their lives. In their encounter with the Lord, they had a true paschal experience: they were liberated and the doors of a new life opened before them". 

And he described them in this way: St. Peter, "the fisherman of Galilee whom Jesus made a fisher of men. St. Paul, "the Pharisee persecutor of the Church transformed by grace into an evangelizer of the Gentiles".

At the solemn Eucharistic celebration in the Vatican Basilica with the cardinals, the new metropolitan archbishops, to whom he presented the pallium, with the bishops, priests and faithful, and with a delegation from the Patriarchate of Constantinople present at the Holy Mass, the Pope referred in his homily to Peter's release from prison, and to the next Jubilee, which will begin in the Church on December 24.

God opens the doors

"The first reading describes the episode of Peter's release from captivity (...). What is narrated to us, then, is a new exodus; God frees his Church, his people, who are in chains, and shows himself once again as the God of mercy who sustains their journey. On that night of liberation it happened that, first of all, the prison doors were miraculously opened. Then of Peter and the angel accompanying him it is said that 'they came to the iron gate leading into the city. The gate opened by itself before them'. It was not they who opened the gate, but it opened by itself." 

"It is God who opens the doors," the Pontiff stressed. "It is He who frees and clears the way. To Peter - as we hear in the Gospel - Jesus had entrusted the keys of the Kingdom. But Peter experiences that it is the Lord who opens the doors first, because he always precedes us. 

The itinerary of the Apostle Paul is also, first of all, a paschal experience, the Pope pointed out. "He, in fact, was first transformed by the Risen One on the road to Damascus and then, in the unceasing contemplation of Christ crucified, he discovered the grace of weakness; when we are weak, he said, in reality, just then, we are strong because we no longer cling to ourselves, but to Christ. Clinging to the Lord and crucified with him, Paul wrote, 'I no longer live, but Christ lives in me.

The Jubilee and the doors of evangelization

"Let us pause to consider precisely the image of the door. The JubileeIndeed, it will be a time of grace during which we will open the Holy Doorso that all may have the opportunity to cross the threshold of the living sanctuary that is Jesus and, in him, experience the love of God that strengthens hope and renews joy. In the story of Peter and Paul, too, there are doors that open. Let us meditate on this.

"Brothers and sisters, the two Apostles Peter and Paul had this experience of grace," he continued. "They, in the first person, experienced the work of God, who opened to them the doors of their inner prison and also of the royal prisons, where they were imprisoned because of the Gospel. He also opened before them the doors of evangelization, so that they could experience the joy of meeting with the brothers and sisters of the newborn communities and bring the hope of the Gospel to all.

"Therefore, as we prepare to open the Holy Door, this message is also for us. We too need the Lord to open the doors of our hearts - sometimes blocked by fear, closed by selfishness, sealed in indifference or resignation - so that we can open ourselves to an encounter with him," the Pope said. "We too need a gaze capable of recognizing which doors the Lord opens for the proclamation of the Gospel, to rediscover the joy of evangelizing and to overcome the feelings of defeat and pessimism that contaminate pastoral action."

Message when imposing the pallium

In conclusion, Francis referred to the imposition of the pallium "on the metropolitan archbishops appointed during the past year. In communion with Peter and following the example of Christ, the door of the sheep, they are called to be diligent shepherds who open the doors of the Gospel and who, through their ministry, help to build a Church and a society with open doors".

The Pontiff also greeted "with fraternal affection the Delegation of the Ecumenical Patriarchate: thank you for having come to express the common desire for full communion between our Churches. May Saints Peter and Paul help us to open the door of our lives to the Lord Jesus; may they intercede for us, for the city of Rome and for the whole world. Amen.

Angelus: authority is service, release of prisoners

At noon, the Pope leaned out of the window of the Apostolic Palace and prayed the Angelus with the faithful. In his brief meditation, Francis recalled some ideas from his morning homily and emphasized, in considering Jesus' promise to give Peter the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven, that "authority is a service. Otherwise, it is a dictatorship".

He also pointed out that his mission was not to close the doors of the house, but to help everyone find the way in, "everyone, everyone", and that he did not entrust him with the keys because he was not a sinner, but "because he was humble and honest". 

Finally, he remembered the families, the elderly alone, the sick, and asked for prayers for those who suffer from wars, for peace in the world, and for the release of all prisoners, while rejoicing in the release of two Greek Catholic priests.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

The World

German "Synodal Council" must change its name

This emerged from a working session between a delegation of the German Bishops' Conference and various dicasteries of the Curia held on Friday in Rome.

José M. García Pelegrín-June 29, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

The main outcome of the meeting held on June 28 at the Vatican, which continued the talks initiated at the Vatican's General Assembly, was that visit ad limina of the German bishops in November 2022 and to be continued on March 22, 2024, as highlighted in a "new" report.Joint press release of the Holy See and the German Bishops' Conference (DBK)" is that, for the representatives of the Roman Curia, there are two "important aspects".

The first is that the name of the "Synodal Council" should be modified, and "several aspects of the proposal previously formulated for a possible national synodal body" should be changed.

Secondly, both the Curia and the DBK are "in agreement that it is neither above nor on the same level as the Bishops' Conference".

This is of particular relevance, since until now, the final "synodal body" being prepared in the "Synodal Committee" was intended to be a joint governing body between the bishops and the laity of the "Central Committee of German Catholics" ZdK that would ultimately oversee the work of the DBK at the national level and of the bishop in each diocese.

According to the communiqué, the German bishops reported on the last meeting of the "Synodal Committee," referred to in the communiqué as a "temporary working body."

Meeting participants

Participating in the meeting from the Roman Curia were Cardinals Victor Manuel Fernandéz, Kurt Koch, Pietro Parolin, Robert F. Prevost OSA and Arthur Roche, as well as Archbishop Filippo Iannone O.Carm.

On behalf of the German bishops were Msgr. Georg BätzingStephan Ackermann, Msgr. Bertram Meier and Msgr. Franz-Josef Overbeck, in the presence of DBK Secretary General Beate Gilles and DBK press spokesman Matthias Kopp.

The main theme of the meeting was the relationship between the exercise of episcopal ministry and the promotion of the co-responsibility of all believers.

According to the press release, "special emphasis was placed on the aspects of canon law for the establishment of a concrete form of synodality in the Church in Germany."

As can be deduced from the above, the Roman Curia once again stops a "Synodal Council". which sought the creation of a joint governing body between the bishops and the laity of the ZdK, which has been repeatedly forbidden by the Vatican: in two letters January 16, 2023 and of the February 16, 2024sent by the principal cardinals of the Holy See with the explicit approval of the Pope, recalled that a Synodal Council "is not foreseen by current canon law and, therefore, a resolution in this sense by the DBK would be invalid, with the corresponding juridical consequences".

By taking up at Friday's meeting the "aspects of canon law" in relation to the "concrete form of synodality" of the Church in Germany, it is clear that the Roman Curia expects the DBK to move forward in this area in agreement with the Vatican.

According to the communiqué, a commission of the "Synodal Committee", which will deal with "the structure of a synodal body" will do so "in close contact with the corresponding commission, made up of representatives of the dicasteries concerned"; the "project" of such a body will therefore be drawn up only in agreement with the Vatican.

Discussions between the Curia and the DBK will continue "after the conclusion of the World Synod, to deal with other topics of an anthropological, ecclesiological and liturgical nature."

Now, the bishops will have to convey to the lay members of the "Synodal Committee" these two fundamental points discussed in Rome: the change of name and the fact that the "synodal body at the national level" that they intend to prepare cannot be neither above nor at the same level as the DBK. The next meeting of this Committee is scheduled for December 13 and 14.

Culture

Scientists as well as believers. Reasons for their position of faith

This interesting volume brings together the contributions of 26 university authors who dismantle the idea, so widespread today, that science professionals cannot - or should not - have religious beliefs.

Manuel Alfonseca-June 29, 2024-Reading time: 4 minutes

In 2014, when this book was published, the idea that science and faith are compatible, that science, reason and faith should collaborate to broaden the scope of our knowledge, was quite new in the Spanish bibliophile market. Upon receiving a proposal from Editorial Stella Maris, Francisco José Soler Gil and I (Manuel Alfonseca) decided to tackle the enterprise of constructing a book that would bring together the contributions of a considerable number (26) of university authors who, through their participation, would disprove the idea, so widespread today, that science professionals cannot - or should not - have religious beliefs.

Throughout the twentieth century and so far in the twenty-first, the unstoppable rise of atheism has come to a halt. The nineteenth century predictions of the death of God and the imminent end of religion have not been fulfilled.

60 questions on science and faith answered by 26 university professors

Authors: Manuel Alfonseca (Coord)
EditorialStella Maris
Pages: 414
Year: 2016

The latest discoveries of science, especially in cosmology, have disproved the positivist prediction that religious thought would die at the hands of science. That prediction has not come true, because it was wrong.

Mainstream scientism starts from the assertion that only science can lead to valid knowledge. It is curious that those who think this way do not realize that this assertion must be false. Where does it come from? Has it been demonstrated by any science? Clearly it has not. Then, if it were true, it would have to be false, since that is precisely what it affirms, and we would arrive at a contradiction.

Therefore, the aim of this book is to contribute to the cleansing and rehabilitation of the part of thought on the borderline between science and faith, which has been devastated by scientism. 

The sixty questions contained in the book are grouped thematically into ten subdivisions:

  1. Key issuesThey take the form of ten questions that ask whether science has limits; what science owes to Christian culture; whether there is proof of the existence of God, or whether, on the contrary, as atheists claim, God is an unnecessary hypothesis; whether science is a more advanced stage that has surpassed the "infantile" stage of religious faith; whether there can be scientific knowledge of God.
  2. The clash between science and faith throughout the history of the history: main arguments of materialism: In these seven questions we review whether science can give answers to all of man's questions, marginalizing God; whether it is true that the Catholic Church has systematically opposed science; whether the debate is correctly raised in the media; whether everything is matter, as materialists claim; whether the notion of the soul has become obsolete; and the problem of evil, as approached by contemporary science.
  3. Evolution: Nine more questions, on the compatibility of concepts such as creation and evolution, chance and design; is Darwinism necessarily atheistic; what is Darwinism? intelligent designWhat is known about the origin of life and the origin of man? Is nature amoral?
  4. Neuroscience: Seven questions that raise the problems of mind and consciousness, human freedom, religious experience, moral judgments, without forgetting to review Libet's experiments on freedom.
  5. Quantum physics: Three questions address this difficult issue to ask whether quantum mechanics is relevant to the scientific understanding of the mind; whether we can still talk about reality; and whether this branch of physics can contribute something in the discussions between science and religion.
  6. Cosmology: These six questions raise the issue of the origin of the universe (the Big Bang), whether it really had a beginning, whether it could have created itself, and how multiverse theories affect the idea of creation.
  7. Fine adjustment: This section is sufficiently important to merit an independent study. In the four corresponding questions, this problem is approached from different points of view, one of the most thorny that atheists encounter today, and which in essence is a modern version of the fifth way of St. Thomas Aquinas.
  8. The mathematics and religionFour questions that raise the age-old problem of whether mathematics is a construct of the human mind or a reflection of an essential dimension of reality, as well as whether there is any relationship between statistics and game theory and the problem of freedom.
  9. Ethical aspects of science: Six increasingly topical questions: whether science should be subject to ethical controls; whether everything that is technically feasible should be ethically admissible; what are the ethical limits of embryo research, cloning, stem cell research, genetic manipulation, gene therapy and other interventions on incipient human life; and what are the ethical consequences of environmental pollution.
  10. Final considerations: The che last four questions ask how the scientific method is applied and what knowledge of reality it provides; is there any room for finality in a world described by science; can a Christian be a scientist; can a scientist be a Christian; can a scientist be a Christian; can a scientist be a scientist; can a scientist be a Christian; can a scientist be a Christian?

The 60 questions included in the book do not cover all the controversial points of the relationship between science and faith, but their reading may clarify some doubts to the reader and train him in the kind of reflections necessary to unravel the philosophical and scientific aspects of the controversies on the relationship between science and faith.

We believe that a work with these characteristics does more than bear witness to the role of the Christian faith as a driving force of philosophical and scientific thought and as a generator of reflection and culture.

The mere existence of a collective book of this magnitude, in which 26 physicists, chemists, engineers, mathematicians, physicians, biologists, philosophers, etc., from various Spanish and Latin American universities cooperate to clarify the relationship between science and faith, is something out of the ordinary.

In an era like ours, in which particular knowledge tends to be disconnected from each other and the overall vision is being lost, it is not easy for a large group of specialists in different areas of knowledge to make an effort to articulate a common perspective.

Therefore, this work is an exercise of the most genuine university spirit. A spirit that, as one might suspect at the end of the reading, has something to do with the Christian perspective.

List of authors: Miguel Acosta, Manuel Alcalde, Manuel Alfonseca, Juan Arana, Emilio Chuvieco, Santiago Collado, Ignacio García Jurado, Julio Gonzalo, David Jou, Nicolás Jouve, Javier Leach, Agustina Lombardi, Alfredo Marcos, Carlos Marmelada, Juan Carlos Nieto, Javier Pérez Castells, Miguel Pérez de Laborda, Aquilino Polaino, Francisco Rodríguez Valls, Javier Sánchez Cañizares, Francisco José Soler Gil, Fernando Sols, Ignacio Sols, Pedro Jesús Teruel, Claudia Vanney and Héctor Velázquez. 

The authors are from ten Spanish universities, one from Argentina, one from Mexico and one from Rome.

Since Editorial Stella Maris, which published this book, no longer exists, the book has been republished by Editorial Schedas with a similar title: Science and faith questions answered by university professors. The reason for the differences is that this new version does not include the same questions as the first one (one of the authors, Javier Leach, has died, and his answers were withdrawn).

The authorManuel Alfonseca

Society of Catholic Scientists of Spain

Culture

St. Peter and St. Paul still "cross paths" in Rome

The celebration of St. Peter and St. Paul commemorates two of the great pillars of the faith. In Rome, the place of the martyrdom of both apostles, this date is celebrated with several special initiatives.

Andrea Acali-June 29, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

Anyone who decides to visit St. Peter's Basilica at this time of year will come across the imposing scaffolding erected for the restoration of Bernini's baldachin. 

Down there, perpendicular to the altar, is the tomb of the apostle to whom Jesus gave the mandate to confirm his brothers in the faith. 

June 29 is the solemnity commemorating the two princes of the Church, Peter, the humble fisherman from Galilee who became the vicar of Christ, and Paul, the learned Pharisee, originally from Cilicia, who grew up in the school of Gamaliel and transformed himself from a fierce persecutor of the nascent Church into a tireless apostle of the Gentiles.

The two patron saints of the eternal city are remembered together and this year they will be celebrated with a series of initiatives promoted by the Vicariates of the dioceses of Rome and Vatican City, in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture and the Municipality of Rome and Panathlon International. 

In particular, on Saturday 29 is scheduled "Quo Vadis", a walk-event that touches on the historical stages of the presence of the two apostles in the capital of the empire; on Sunday, June 30, instead, is scheduled "Peter and Paul in Rome", a theatrical show by and with Michele La Ginestra.

The Quo Vadis walk

Particularly noteworthy is the Quo Vadis walk, which, according to the organizers' intentions, should become a fixed date every year. According to tradition, when Peter was leaving Rome fleeing the persecutions of Nero, Jesus appeared to him on the Appian Way. The apostle asked him where he was going ("Quo vadis Domine?") and Christ replied: "I am going to Rome, to be crucified again". At that point Peter returned, to be martyred in Nero's circus, crucified upside down and then buried in the nearby necropolis of the Ager Vaticanus. 

The tomb immediately became a place of pilgrimage, even before the construction of the primitive Constantinian basilica. But it was not until the twentieth century that the tomb of Peter was identified with certainty, with the excavations ordered by Pius XII between 1939 and 1958 and the research of the well-known archaeologist Margherita Guarducci. 

If the tomb has been identified with certainty where the famous trophy of Gaius and the red wall with graffiti, including the famous "Petros eni" (presumably "Peter is here", in Greek), some doubts remain as to the exact location of the bones. However, faith can amply compensate for the uncertainties of science.

The crossroads between Peter and Paul

Today, on the Via Appia - the 'Regina Viarum' of the ancient Romans - near the catacombs of St. Callistus, there is a small church commemorating the 'Quo vadis Domine?'The same road 'crosses' the path of Peter and Paul, who came from here to Rome, were imprisoned and then found martyrdom there, according to tradition. And that same road 'crosses' the path of Peter and Paul, who from here came to Rome, were imprisoned and then found martyrdom there, according to tradition, where today stands the abbey of Tre Fontane. 

Church of Santa Maria in Palmis or Church of the Quo Vadis on the Appian Way

Friar Agnello Stoia, pastor of St. Peter's, explains that the basic idea of the initiatives is "to give back to Rome the permanence of its patrons, who give a character of universality to this city". 

St. Peter's house arrest 

The human stories of Peter and Paul in Rome intersect, cross, separate and unite, in the streets of Rome and as the streets of Rome". The urban walk will touch on all the places linked to the two apostles.

Among others - in addition to the basilicas of St. Paul Outside the Walls and St. Peter in the Vatican - St. Sebastian Outside the Walls, where the relics of Peter and Paul were supposedly transferred in 258 before returning to the Vatican, and in the Ostiense, as well as one of the Seven Churches traditionally visited by pilgrims on the occasion of the Jubilee; Santa Prisca, the splendid basilica on the Aventine, dedicated to the martyred daughter of Aquila and Priscilla, Paul's friends who lived here; the Carcere Mamertino, where the two apostles were imprisoned; and again Santa Maria in Via Lata, where Paul is said to have spent the two years of "house arrest."

The route includes two paths, one longer and one shorter, at the end of which you will receive a "pietruzza", a small stone that symbolizes the road traveled. It is precisely the "sanpietrino", evoked in the logo "Quo Vadis", which links Peter, Rome and its streets. 

This is an opportunity for citizens, tourists, families and the faithful to rediscover or visit for the first time many places - including the Colosseum Archaeological Park, which is free to visit exclusively for participants - churches, art treasures and fascinating history. The program is available at https://sanpietroquovadis.it/

As far as St. Peter's is concerned, it is interesting to recall an ancient custom. In the central nave of the Vatican Basilica, on the right, before the transept, there is a large bronze statue of the first Pope. St. Peter at the Chair" is a work attributed to the 13th century sculptor Arnolfo di Cambio (although some scholars date it to the 5th century, commissioned by St. Leo the Great, who had a statue of Jupiter cast).

It was Paul V Borghese, pontiff between 1605 and 1621, who ordered the statue to be placed in the basilica, after having been in the cloister of St. Martin for a long time. The statue stands on a marble throne of the Renaissance period, while in 1871 Pius IX ordered the construction of the baldachin that covers it. 

The statue represents St. Peter on the episcopal chair. His right hand blesses in the Greek manner, that is, with two fingers, while in his left hand he holds the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven. The vestments are classic: a tunic down to the feet and, over the shoulder, the manly mantle. The particularity of the feast is that, on June 29, the statue is dressed with the tiara and the pontifical vestments, a long red and golden cloak, which also serves to underline the universal power of the Vicar of Christ.

The right foot of the statue is visibly worn by centuries of popular devotion. With the construction of the Constantinian basilica, in fact, the tomb of Peter had become inaccessible, so it is still a tradition for the faithful to kiss or caress the foot of the statue as an act of veneration.

Some curiosity

In 2020, during the pandemic, the celebrations in the Vatican Basilica on the occasion of the feast of Saints Peter and Paul were held behind closed doors, but Pope Francis went to venerate in person the statue of the first Pontiff.

Santa Maria in Via Lata

Another peculiarity, perhaps little known but that can be "discovered" through the "Quo Vadis" walk, is linked to the basilica of Santa Maria in via Lata. It stands on what is now the central Via del Corso and was once the first stretch of the Via Flaminia. In the crypt of the church, according to tradition, St. Paul would have lived during his imprisonment in Rome.

The house would have been that of St. Luke the Evangelist, who would have written the Acts of the Apostles here, and would also have housed Peter. Above the entrance to the crypt, a marble plaque bears the inscription, in Latin, "Oratory of St. Paul the Apostle, St. Luke the Evangelist and Martial Martyr, where the rediscovered image of the Blessed Virgin Mary was found, one of the seven painted by Blessed Luke," in memory of the presence in that place of some of the first and most important witnesses of the Christian faith.

The authorAndrea Acali

-Rome

The Vatican

What are the consistories of cardinals?

Rome Reports-June 28, 2024-Reading time: < 1 minute
rome reports88

The Pope can convoke two kinds of consistories: ordinary and extraordinary.

The former are normally attended by cardinals residing in Rome, while the extraordinary ones are convened to deal with matters of special importance.

In some cases, consistories may be public; that is, some persons other than cardinals are allowed to enter. 


Now you can enjoy a 20% discount on your subscription to Rome Reports Premiumthe international news agency specializing in the activities of the Pope and the Vatican.

Photo Gallery

Eucharistic procession along the river

Eucharistic procession on the Ohio River as part of the Seton Route of the National Eucharistic Pilgrimage. From the boat, Bishop Mark E. Brennan of Wheeling-Charleston, offers the Eucharistic blessing to the faithful gathered at the Wellsburg dock.

Maria José Atienza-June 28, 2024-Reading time: < 1 minute
Integral ecology

Artificial Intelligence, master of humanity

Artificial Intelligence not only raises questions in the ethical realm, but also opens before us profound questions about human beings and their innermost desires.

Javier Sánchez Cañizares-June 28, 2024-Reading time: 9 minutes

The title of this contribution may come as a surprise. The enormous advances in the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in recent years have made its presence a reality in almost all areas of human activity. From image recognition to text generation and the ability to identify hidden patterns in a multitude of data, AI is now an unavoidable tool for society. Its ability to find novel problem-solving strategies through deep learning and its increasing speed in information processing make it a safe companion for the humans of today and tomorrow.

However, despite its occasional successes, it does not seem that Artificial Intelligence can develop a general intelligence similar to the natural intelligence that we humans enjoy. At present, Artificial Intelligence is rather a set of "Artificial Intelligences" in plural: several algorithms supported by different artificial neural networks, each of them specialized in solving similar but specific problems.

Humanizing Artificial Intelligence

So, beyond finding ingenious solutions for certain tasks, does Artificial Intelligence have anything to say about what it means to be human? Can it be a teacher of humanity? At this point, the problems generated by an immoral use of this technology will surely come to mind. Shouldn't we rather focus on those human values that should be included, as far as possible, in the different artificial intelligences?

Certainly, the use of Artificial Intelligence must be humanized. Welcome are the directives and initiatives that, at a personal, social and political level, can be carried out to limit the consequences derived from the misuse of this powerful tool. We protect our personal data, we fight against piracy and we put filters on the Internet to prevent the most vulnerable from accessing harmful content. There is a growing sensitivity in this regard in practically all sectors and steps are being taken in the right direction. At the same time, establishing legal frameworks to address the potential risks of Artificial Intelligence, although necessary and essential, should not make us lose sight of what is at stake. However well-intentioned it may be, legality alone cannot prevent the misuse of Artificial Intelligence at any cost.

However, this is not directly the focus of the reflections. By affirming that Artificial Intelligence is a teacher of humanity, the considerations go into a deeper level: what does Artificial Intelligence teach us about our innermost human core? Can contemplating technological advances help us to rethink and revaluate what it means to be human? I think so, even if the practical consequences of all this are not immediately visible.

Artificial and natural

Artificial Intelligence is a product of human intelligence. Is there a frontal opposition between the natural and the artificial that allows us to better understand ourselves as opposed to machines? It is doubtful, because in a certain way it is natural for human beings to produce artifacts. The artificial is in many cases a development and completion of the natural. Moreover, the boundary between the two fields is not always clear: is a living being artificially conceived, genetically modified, cured or improved by prostheses or artificial products artificial? The boundaries can be blurred. However, the myth of Frankenstein's monster should remind us that biology does not seem to be accidental in human beings.

Moreover, and more radically, that man comes from a natural evolution that has been going on for millions of years may suggest why it is not so easy to "produce" people. The necessity of evolution for the appearance of intelligent beings on Earth (and we do not know if on other planets) is an evident sign that the biological character of human beings is not a mere support, as some radical transhumanists would like to think, but a necessary and defining condition.

To see if a produced Artificial Intelligence can aspire to come close to the human being, it would be necessary to "let it evolve" without hindrances or restrictions of any kind. But that does not seem to be what we want with Artificial Intelligence. The artificial is always something that is subtracted from the evolutionary flow of nature to carry out specific purposes. We ask them of our toaster and our smartphone, each at its own level. In this sense, the artificial is never natural.

The question of purpose

The above considerations lead us to a second point, often forgotten by the staunch supporters of an AI that can surpass the human being: the question of ends. What is an end? What does it mean to have ends? Although modern science has put the question of purpose in nature in parentheses, paradoxically, purposes reappear when we try to understand the behavior of living beings, who almost always act with a view to something.

In living beings, purposes arise naturally: they are inscribed in their nature, we could say. AI, on the other hand, always operates on the basis of an external purpose imposed by the programmers. Regardless of the fact that, through deep learning, new "ends" may apparently emerge in the different Artificial Intelligences, no product carries in itself the inclination towards any purpose.

In the case of the human being, the question of ends appears with greater clarity in relation to the capacity to channel the yearning that each one has to be completed. The person has natural desires that aim at ends that complete and complement him. Now, what is the ultimate end of man? The generic answer to that question is happiness (classical ethics perspective), holiness or communion with God (believing view) or generic help to others (philanthropic perspective). The key point here is that such an end is not predetermined in a concrete way. Rather, depending on the stages of life and the contexts in which a person lives, the way of conceiving the general end is interpreted and developed in different ways. There is therefore no teleological determinism.

Artificial intelligence, determinism and freedom

Someone might object that, in the future, if we have a quantum version of AI, perhaps such determinism will not be present in them either. But that would be to misunderstand the argument, which has to do not so much with the processes of determination as with life. Living means being able to establish new ends in new contexts, given by the environment, and to concatenate the new ends with the previous ends, in the singular and unrepeatable history of each living being.

This process occurs in a special way in the human being, because it entails the use of freedom as self-determination: the capacity to want in a way that is coherent with one's personal history what intelligence presents as good.

The teleological process in humans is maximally creative, because each person is capable of recognizing and desiring as a human good that which underlies and is hidden in each vital situation. It is the creative freedom of a spiritual being who, living in the "here and now", is capable of transcending it: he is capable of putting the "here and now" in relation to the whole of life, even if imperfectly. That is living humanly and that, ultimately, is growing as an individual of the human species. It does not appear that AI, regardless of its physical support, functions in this way. No AI lives, because to dedicate oneself to solving concrete problems, imposed from outside, is not the same as living and posing problems.

artificial intelligence
Robot equipped with Artificial Intelligence (OSV News photo/Yves Herman, Reuters)

The limits of knowledge

The question of ends and life is closely related to knowledge. In fact, many authors have defended a basic continuity in nature, a direct proportionality between life and knowledge. The way of perceiving the world is specific and particular to each living being, because it is an essential part of its way of living, of being in the world.

In the case of the human being, his being in the world reaches a practically unlimited extension. Although the external senses function within a certain range of stimuli, human beings are capable of going beyond this, thanks to their intelligence, and of knowing that there are more things than those immediately perceived. For example: we are able to "see" beyond the visible spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, or to "hear" beyond the spectrum of frequencies audible to a human being. Moreover, without possessing any sense of gravity, we can detect the ripples of space produced by interactions between black holes in the night of time.

Although every experiment must end up offering something sensible to the experimenter, the human being is capable of following the trail of physical correlations that occur in nature to unsuspected limits. A good part of this capacity is manifested in the advances provided by science, one of the most spiritual achievements of our species.

However, an essential component of human knowledge is our awareness of being limited. What may seem like a contradiction is not. Our desire to know is potentially unlimited, but we are aware of this because we usually experience knowledge as limited. A decisive consequence of this is what it entails to be a person of integrity: someone who does not confuse his or her knowledge of reality with reality itself.

Artificial Intelligence and mental illness

Knowledge refers to reality, but does not exhaust it. Along with other capacities, human knowledge is called to extend in an unlimited way, but it is never unlimited in the present. What you know, feel or experience is not reality, many psychologists tell their interlocutors. Not only to make them recognize their finitude, but to remind them that they are not the creators of truth, not even the truth about their own lives. This is the core of much of mental illness.

Can an Artificial Intelligence get sick like this? No. For the simple reason that no AI distinguishes between its "knowledge" and reality itself. Someone might object that there are Artificial Intelligences that "sense": they have sensors that receive information about reality and even "choose" which information to process and which not to process. But that is not the problem. The problem is that the "input-processing-output" scheme of an AI is always closed in itself. Even if the content of this scheme is made flexible so that it can change in successive iterations, at any given time only this triad exists for the AI (or for the hardware that carries out the algorithm, if you prefer to look at it that way).

Representation and reality

At no time can there be a differentiation between knowledge and reality, specific to human beings, for the simple reason that every human being is born with an interest in the whole of reality while AI is produced with a particularized purpose, even if it is to simulate a certain "concern" for unprocessed data, which ends up becoming a new entry in the iterations of algorithms.

To a large extent, the success of contemporary Artificial Intelligence comes from overcoming the limitations of an early AI that rigidly identified logical symbols and rules with physical hardware processes. It has been necessary to relax this identification for AI to improve dramatically. But Artificial Intelligences will never be able to be "sane", to have what Brian Cantwell Smith calls "good judgement" ("The Promise of Artificial Intelligence: Reckoning and Judgment"The systems that in themselves are not capable of understanding what their representations are about do not authentically relate to the world in the way their representations represent it. Systems that in themselves are not capable of understanding what their representations are about do not authentically relate to the world in the way their representations represent it. The latter is something that can occur only at the personal level.

artificial intelligence

The religious dimension

Finally, it is interesting to analyze the question of the limits of a potentially unlimited knowledge in the religious sphere. Classical thinkers considered that there is a natural desire in human beings to see God. This paradox caused many problems for the theology of the two orders: natural and supernatural. How to combine the two orders? How could there be a natural desire for a supernatural reality?

A theology more centered on the dynamics of personal relationships than on the conceptualization of orders has been shedding light on this classic problem. This problem reveals the curious combination of finitude and infinity that is present in the created person and, incidentally, reminds us that the religious dimension is an intrinsic component of human nature. The desire for infinity does not seem to be completely extinguished in man, of infinite dignity, despite the attempts of nihilistic philosophies.

Does Artificial Intelligence teach us something about our human religiosity? Today, Artificial Intelligences specialized in language processing can make great summaries on the content of religions, build magnificent homilies or search almost instantaneously for the passages of the Bible that best suit our state of mind. But they have no answer about their "own" religiosity beyond what is allowed, directly or indirectly, by their programmers.

In search of a full life

Although Artificial Intelligences do not directly instruct us on the relationship with God, human projections that aim to walk the path that would lead to the humanization of machines often pass through religion. How can we forget here the final scenes of the first Blade Runner, when the replicant Roy Batty begins to become aware of himself and seeks out his creator to ask for more life? Roy is understandably disappointed when he interrogates his programmer and finds that the human creator is not that powerful, he does not go that far. So he decides to put him to death.

Why does Roy seek immortality? Because he has lived and seen "things we wouldn't even believe": a life, his personal history, full of memories that stay with him. But if he has an expiration date, all those memories will not only "be lost like tears in the rain," but will become indistinguishable from any other natural processes. Roy seeks that full, abundant life in which all that he has lived is not lost, is not indifferent, and can acquire its ultimate meaning. It is no small teaching about what it means to live humanly.

The authorJavier Sánchez Cañizares

Researcher of the 'Mind-Brain' group of the Culture and Society Institute, University of Navarra.

The Vatican

Pope links man's salvation to care for creation

In his message for the Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, Pope Francis emphasized the relationship between the virtue of charity and respect for nature and all God's creatures.

Paloma López Campos-June 27, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

On September 1, 2024, the Church celebrates the Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation. This year, the theme chosen by Pope Francis is "Wait and act with creation". As the Pontiff explains in the message published for this occasion, the main motif "refers to the Letter of St. Paul to the Romans 8:19-25, where the apostle clarifies what it means to live according to the Spirit and focuses on the certain hope of salvation through faith, which is new life in Christ".

Taking these verses from the BibleThe Pope says, we can start "from a simple question": "How is it that we have faith? And he himself answers that "it is not so much because 'we believe' in something transcendent that our reason cannot understand", but "it is because the Holy Spirit dwells in us".

Francis further explains this statement by saying that "the Spirit is now truly 'the foretaste of our inheritance,' as a pro-vocation to live always oriented toward eternal goods." It is precisely for this reason that "the Spirit makes believers creative, proactive in charity". And, with this charity, Christians are introduced "on a great path of spiritual freedom" that makes them realize that "they are children of God and can address Him by calling Him 'Abba, that is, Father'".

This, says the Holy Father, should fill us with hope, because "the love of God has conquered, conquers and will always continue to conquer. Despite the prospect of physical death, for the new man who lives in the Spirit, the destiny of glory is already certain".

Faith as a task

Accordingly, the Pope affirms, "the Christian's existence is a life of faith, diligent in charity, and overflowing with hope". However, this is no reason for the disciple of Christ to become complacent. "Faith is a gift," the Pontiff explains, "but it is also a task, to be carried out in freedom, in obedience to Jesus' commandment of love."

This is realized "in the dramas of suffering human flesh," notes the Bishop of Rome. "Christian salvation enters into the depths of the world's pain, which affects not only human beings, but the whole universe."

Therefore, Francis continues, "the whole of creation is involved in this process of a new birth". In this way, the charity of the Christian "must also extend to creation, in a 'situated anthropocentrism', in the responsibility for a human and integral ecology, the path of salvation of our common home and of us who live in it".

Liberation of man, care for creation

The Holy Father emphasizes in his message that "the liberation of man also entails the liberation of all other creatures who, in solidarity with the human condition, have been subjected to the yoke of slavery". In this sense, "in Christ's redemption it is possible to contemplate with hope the bond of solidarity between human beings and all other creatures".

For this reason, continues the Pope, "the Holy Spirit keeps the believing community alert and continually instructs it, calling it to conversion of lifestyles, so that it may oppose human degradation of the environment".

It is important, therefore, that man be docile to the Holy Spirit, since obedience to him "radically changes man's attitude: from 'predator' to 'cultivator' of the garden". In this way, the human being manages to avoid that "form of idolatry" which consists in "pretending to possess and dominate nature, manipulating it at will".

"Therefore," says Francis, "the care of creation is not only an ethical question, but also an eminently theological one, since it concerns the intertwining of the mystery of man with the mystery of God." Likewise, "there is a transcendent (theological-ethical) motivation that commits the Christian to promote justice and peace in the world, also through the universal destination of goods: it is a question of the revelation of the children of God that creation awaits, groaning as if in labor pains".

With and for creation

The Pope concludes his message by clearly summarizing the motto of the Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation. "To hope and act with creation means, then, to live an incarnate faith, which knows how to enter into the suffering and hopeful flesh of people, sharing in the expectation of the bodily resurrection to which believers are predestined in Christ the Lord."

Catholics, the Holy Father concludes, must aspire to "a holy life", "a life that becomes a song of love for God, for humanity, with and for creation, and which finds its fullness in holiness".

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Jesus in the New Testament, in the light of the Old Testament.

The whole of Sacred Scripture looks to Christ and prepares the people for his coming and recognition. Therefore, knowing the books of the Old Testament is, for every Christian, a fundamental exercise to fully understand the life and message of Jesus.

Francisco Varo-June 27, 2024-Reading time: 8 minutes

Old and New Testaments complement each other. They are not two blocks of books in conflict, but a joint testimony of a single salvific plan that God has progressively unveiled.

These are not two successive and exclusive stages in which, once the goal is reached, the first steps would lose their interest. They are, instead, two moments of the same plan, where the first prepares the way for the second and definitive one. 

Even after the goal is achieved, preparation is still essential for the end result to work properly. The books of the Old Testament are not like cranes and scaffolding, which are necessary to construct a building but are removed once the work is completed.

They are rather like medical studies for a doctor: a moment prior in time to the practice of his profession, but once the degree is obtained, the medical practice is based on the knowledge acquired. Continuing education is always required, going back to study. Something similar happens with the relationship between the Old and New Testament.

The Old Testament is a preparation for the New, but once the fullness of revelation is reached in the New, its accurate understanding will require a thorough knowledge of the Old. At the same time, the Old Testament will continue to offer permanent references to which it will be convenient to return again and again, especially when it is necessary to face new challenges in the interpretation of the New Testament.

St. Augustine, in his commentary on Exodus 20:19 (PL 34, 623), expressed the relationship between the two with a concise phrase: "The New Testament is latent in the Old and the Old is patent in the New."

With his usual rhetorical brilliance, he expresses the conviction that the reading of the books of the Old Testament alone, although comprehensible, does not allow us to grasp their full meaning. This is only fully achieved when it is integrated with the reading of the New Testament. 

At the same time, it indicates that the New Testament is not alien to the Old Testament, since it is latent in it, within the wise plan of God in his revelation.

To explain in detail the quotations, allusions or echoes of the Old Testament that permeate the passages of the New Testament would require many pages, which would exceed the limited framework of this essay. Therefore, we will limit ourselves to pointing out some simple examples taken from the Gospel according to St. Matthew that will help us understand the importance of knowing in depth the stories and expressions of the Old Testament. These show us the way to recognize Christ in the reading of the Gospels.

The genealogy of Jesus

The Gospel according to Matthew begins by showing that Jesus is fully integrated into the history of his people: "Genealogy of Jesus Christ, son of David, son of Abraham." (Mt 1:1). From there, three groups of fourteen generations are listed, in which numerous points of contact with characters and texts from the history of Israel can be seen. 

Especially significant are his relationships with the two characters mentioned in the heading: David and Abraham. The fact that they are listed fourteen generations three times is significant since, in Hebrew, fourteen is the numerical value of the consonants of the word David (DaWiD: D is 4, W is 6 and the other D is 4 more). This indicates that Jesus is the Messiah, the expected descendant of David.

The Announcement to Joseph

At the end of the genealogy, an angel of the Lord explains to Joseph the virginal conception of Jesus and gives him precise instructions: "Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary your wife, for that which is conceived in her is the work of the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins." (Mt 1:20-21). 

The angel uses the same words that were used to announce to Abraham that Sarah "she shall bear a son, and thou shalt call his name Isaac." (Gen 17:19). In this way, the evangelist delineates the figure of Jesus with allusions to literary traits typical of the biblical literature on Isaac.

Bethlehem, the Magi, Herod, Egypt

As for David, it is important to note that Jesus was born in Bethlehem, the city of David: "After Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judah in the time of King Herod, Magi came from the East to Jerusalem, asking: -Where is the King of the Jews who has been born? For we saw his star in the East and have come to worship him. When King Herod heard this, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him. And he called together all the chief priests and the scribes of the people, and asked them where the Messiah was to be born. -In Bethlehem of Judah," they told him, "for so it is written by the prophet: And you, Bethlehem, land of Judah, are certainly not the least among the chief cities of Judah; for out of you shall come forth a leader who will shepherd my people Israel. Then Herod, calling secretly for the Magi, was carefully informed by them of the time when the star had appeared; and he sent them to Bethlehem, saying to them, "Go and inquire well about the child; and when you have found him, let me know, that I also may come and worship him." (Mt 2:1-8). 

The text is very expressive, since, on the occasion of the Magi's question, a quotation from Scripture is used to show that Jesus is the awaited Messiah, the descendant that the Lord had promised to David, and for this purpose the prophecy of Micah (Micah 5:1) is mentioned. 

Shortly thereafter, after the magi had worshipped the child, Joseph is said to have been warned in a dream of Herod's plans to kill him. Joseph immediately obeyedHe arose and took the child and his mother by night and fled to Egypt. There he remained until the death of Herod, so that what the Lord said through the Prophet might be fulfilled: From Egypt I called my son" (Mt 2:14-15).

Again, it is noted that what happened was already anticipated in the Old Testament, even if its readers had not noticed it before. Indeed, the phrase "out of Egypt I called my son" is in Hosea 11:1, although in the prophet's book this "son" is the people of Israel whom God brought out of Egypt to take them to the promised land.

This play of quotations and allusions, which can only be perceived by those who know the Old Testament in detail, is full of meaning. 

It is significant that Matthew presents Jesus persecuted at his birth by a king, Herod, who wants to put him to death, and that, once saved from that persecution after Herod's death, he goes to the land of Israel from Egypt. 

In this way, Jesus is being presented as a new Moses. In Herod's order to put to death all children under two years of age (Mt 2:16), the persecution that Pharaoh dictated against all Israelite children (Ex 1:16) is being made real again, and just as Moses prodigiously escaped certain death, Jesus also managed to escape Herod's sword. 

Afterwards, he would go to the Promised Land from Egypt.

The Baptism of Jesus in the Jordan

The idea of Jesus as the new Moses resonates in several aspects at the beginning of his public life. Jesus goes to the Jordan, near Jericho, where John the Baptist is, to be baptized by him. He begins his public life after coming out of the waters of the river (Mt 3:13-17). 

According to the book of Deuteronomy, Moses led the people of Israel from Egypt to the Jordan near Jericho (Deut 34:3) and, before crossing the river, he died after contemplating the promised land from Mount Nebo.

Jesus, as the new Joshua, successor of Moses, begins his preaching from the banks of the Jordan in the same place where Moses had arrived, in front of Jericho. It is Jesus who truly brings to fulfillment what Moses had begun.

In narrating the baptism of Jesus, it is said that "And after he was baptized, Jesus came up out of the water; and then the heavens were opened to him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending in the form of a dove and coming upon him. And a voice from the heavens said, "Jesus came out of the water. This is my Son, the Beloved, in whom I am well pleased." (Mt 3:16-17). This phrase "my son, the beloved", which is also heard in the transfiguration of Jesus (Mt 17:5), is an echo of the one in which God addresses Abraham to ask him to sacrifice his son Isaac to him: take "your son, the beloved" (Gen 22:2).

The parallel between Jesus and Isaac, which had already been delineated in the angel's announcement to Joseph (Mt 1:20-21; Gen 17:19), once again takes on a very expressive prominence. This way of presenting Jesus points out the parallel between the dramatic scene in Genesis in which Abraham is ready to sacrifice Isaac, who accompanies him without resistance, and the drama that was consummated on Calvary where God the Father offered his Son in sacrifice, voluntarily assumed for the redemption of the human race.

The Preaching of Jesus

Matthew also speaks of Jesus' preaching, presenting him as the new Moses, who goes on detailing the precepts of the Law in a long discourse from a mountain (Mt 5:1), alluding to Sinai.

There he mentions some of the Commandments transmitted by Moses, and makes some clarifications about their fulfillment, assuming an authority that did not leave those who listened to him indifferent. 

Jesus does not raise a conflict with respect to the acceptance of Moi's Law.On the contrary, he ratifies their value: "Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to give them their fullness. Truly I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or stroke shall pass from the Law until all is fulfilled." (Mt 5:17-18). But he explains in detail the meaning and the ways to put into practice the main commandments of the Torah. 

The "fullness" of which we speak is not that of a simple fulfillment of what is commanded, but a deepening of the teaching of the Law that goes far beyond the rigorous observance of what it expresses in its purest literalism.

The outline of Jesus' words (Mt 5:43-45) corresponds to an explanation of the commandments according to the ordinary procedures among the teachers of Israel at that time. First the text of the Law to be commented on is mentioned, and then the way to fulfill it according to the spirit of these divine commands is indicated. Jesus' listeners would thus hear a discourse structured in a way that is familiar to them.

In this case, the explanations are introduced in a peculiar, almost provocative way by the master of Nazareth. It is not just an ordinary contrast of opinions. He begins by saying: "You have heard that it was said...." and quotes words from the Law to which they all acknowledge a divine origin and authority, to add: "but I say unto you..."Who is this teacher who dares to correct with his interpretation what the Law of Moses says?

This way of presenting the explanation of the commandments is typical of Jesus' style. He claims for himself an authority by which he places himself beside Moses, and even rises above him.

On the one hand, Jesus accepts the Law of Israel, recognizes its authority and teaches that it has a perennial value. But at the same time, this perenniality goes hand in hand with the attainment of a fullness that he himself has come to give it, not by abrogating it in order to replace it with another, but by bringing to its culmination the teaching about God and man that it contains. He has not added new precepts to it, nor has he devalued its moral demands, but he has extracted from it all its hidden potentialities and has brought to light new demands of divine and human truth that were latent in it.

To ignore the Scriptures is to ignore Christ.

An attentive review of the pages of the Gospel, paying attention to the details that a good knowledge of the Old Testament contributes to its understanding, is a fascinating exercise, but one that would require time and space beyond the limits of a simple essay such as this one. However, the examples mentioned above can serve to discover what a reading of the New Testament in the light of the Hebrew Bible can contribute to the knowledge of Jesus Christ.

The conviction expressed in the apostolic preaching that the Old Testament is only fully understood in the light of the mystery of Christ, and, in turn, that the light of that Old Testament makes the words of the New Testament shine with all their splendor, remained unchanged in patristic theology.

St. Jerome's annotation in the prologue to his Commentary on Isaiah is well known: "if, as the apostle Paul says, Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God, and he who does not know the Scriptures does not know the power of God or his wisdom, it follows that to ignore the Scriptures is to ignore Christ."

A good knowledge of the Old Testament is necessary to know Christ in depth, since it is indispensable to grasp all the details that the New Testament points out about the person and mission of the Son of God made man.

The authorFrancisco Varo

Professor of Sacred Scripture, University of Navarra, Spain

Gospel

Doing good at God's pace. Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

Joseph Evans comments on the readings for Sunday 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time and Luis Herrera offers a short video homily.

Joseph Evans-June 27, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

Our Lord shows a remarkable blend of determination, flexibility and patience in his mission. This is especially evident in today's Gospel, in which we constantly see Jesus willing to go where he is asked, adapting his plans, without the slightest haste, but all inspired by a clear sense of following the Father's will. 

Jesus knows what he wants to do and he does it calmly, never fidgeting. And yet, the crowds are buzzing around him, people are demanding his attention or touching him, the disciples are responding nervously to him, people are weeping and wailing aloud, or laughing at him. 

Jesus has just cast thousands of demons out of a single person: a hard and exhausting battle. As he crosses by boat to the other side, a large crowd gathers around him. In the midst of that crowd, with Jesus no doubt ready to teach them, a certain Jairus begs him to come and cure his daughter. Jesus follows him without complaint. 

On the way, another interruption occurs. A woman who had been suffering from a painful hemorrhage for twelve years touches him. Feeling his strength ebbing away, Jesus stops: healing the woman is not enough, he wants to help her grow in faith. That is why he tests her before healing her; there is even time for a discussion with his disciples. We can imagine Jairus' impatience while all this was going on. And then his worst fears are confirmed. He is told that his daughter is dead.

Jesus says to him: "Fear not; it is enough that you have faith.". He delays even longer, preventing all the others from accompanying him and allowing only Peter, James and John to do so. After having expelled from the house all those who were weeping (he takes more time), Jesus finally heals the child with great patience and gentleness: "I'm talking to you, girl, get up.". She does so, and we are even told that it occurs to Jesus to tell them to give him something to eat.

This is a great lesson for us. To be determined to do good and not let anything deter us, but with calm, patience and flexibility. 

One of the reasons we lack mercy-and this may be a particular shortcoming of hard-working, motivated people-is that we have all kinds of things we want to do, perhaps very good things for the service of God, and we don't like to be interrupted. 

What we should learn is that those interruptions could be Our Lord telling us what He wants us to do.

Homily on the readings of Sunday 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time (B)

The priest Luis Herrera Campo offers its nanomiliaA short one-minute reflection for these Sunday readings.

Spain

Caritas supports 2.5 million people and social exclusion is on the rise

"The economic and social crises are leading 26% of citizens to increasingly complex situations of social exclusion," Caritas reported today, which last year served more than 2.5 million people inside and outside Spain, requiring an investment of 486.5 million euros, 6.4% more than the previous year. Half of them came to Caritas despite being employed.  

Francisco Otamendi-June 26, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

The succession of economic and social crises is leading citizens "to increasingly complex situations of social exclusion". The loss of the protective function of work, the rising cost of housing or the administrative irregularity suffered by many migrants prevents a large part of the population from achieving decent living conditions. 

This is confirmed in the Confederal Report of CaritasThe official confederation of charitable and social action entities of the Catholic Church, which was presented this Wednesday in Madrid by its president, Manuel Bretón, and the secretary general, Natalia Peirowho reported on the work carried out by Caritas in 2023.

Last year, Caritas invested a record 486.5 million euros - 29.3 million euros (6.4 %) more than the previous year - in its various resources and projects within Spain and in international cooperation actions in third countries. 

Return to pre-pandemic levels and applicant exhaustion

Thanks to these available resources, Caritas managed to support 2,567,680 people inside and outside our borders. Of these, 1,327,298 within Spain and 1,240,382 in International Cooperation. The data in the Report reflect that the number of people assisted in our country returned to similar levels of 2019, the year before the pandemic (1,403,299). 

"In 2023 we have found in our shelter services and other resources that the people who come to us have increasing difficulties in accessing their rights. They are people with an accumulation of needs, with a feeling of exhaustion and wear and tear due to the continuous effort in the search for how to resolve these basic needs," explained Natalia Peiro during the presentation of the balance of activities.

80 percent of the aid, for basic needs

Over the past year, one out of every three people served was in an irregular administrative situation, while 50 % were working poor or had serious difficulties in accessing or maintaining their housing. 

In the Shelter and Assistance programs, 80 percent of the aid requested by families was related to payments for supplies, rent, i.e. basic needs. "The improvement in the activity rate and the decrease in unemployment throughout 2023 has not translated into an increase in the quality of employment, especially for people in a situation of social exclusion. With a rate of 11.9%, Spain continues to be one of the EU countries with the highest in-work poverty rate due to partiality, low wages and temporality," said Natalia Peiro.

The reality of exclusion and poverty experienced by the people who come to Caritas, according to those responsible, is not cyclical or, therefore, associated with a specific crisis, "but structural and generated by social and economic developments, as well as by policies over decades". The complex situation of people requires longer periods of accompaniment. In the case of people in an irregular administrative situation, this process can last on average between one and two years. "These data show that we need more complex, longer and more expensive accompaniment processes," Peiro stressed.

More funds for employment

As employment is one of the main factors of integration, Caritas once again increased the funds invested in Solidarity Economy programs. With a total allocation of 136.8 million euros (21.3 million more than the previous year), the financial effort made on social and labor insertion itineraries and insertion companies once again exceeded the programs of Shelter and Assistance (96.7 million euros). With these resources, 4.9 % more job seekers were served than in 2022. 

"In our day-to-day lives we come across many people making great efforts to better themselves, to learn, to acquire new skills, to overcome the digital divide and to face their fears and the multitude of obstacles they encounter along the way. However, on many occasions, this is not enough to achieve a decent job. This is because our socioeconomic system, based on economic profitability, accumulation, individualism, competition and excessive consumption, continues to lead us to growing inequality, increasing job insecurity and environmental degradation, incompatible with social justice and equal access to rights," said Natalia Peiro.

The other programs that used the most resources last year were those for the elderly (42.9 million), the homeless (41.3 million), and family, children and youth (28.5 million), to name the most relevant. 

Humanitarian emergencies outside Spain

Responding to the humanitarian needs of thousands of people outside our borders has also been one of the main tasks of Caritas throughout 2023. The different International Cooperation projects had a total investment of 25.2 million euros and assisted 1,240,382 people. 

Within humanitarian action, the work carried out in Morocco, Turkey and Syria following the emergency caused by the earthquakes that affected the three countries, the support in the Holy Land, as well as the continuity of the work carried out in Ukraine, stand out above all. All this without forgetting the situation in other countries with forgotten crises such as Mozambique, Ethiopia or Lebanon. 

The significant financial effort (some 29.3 million more than in 2022) made by Caritas last year was possible thanks to the generous support of thousands of partners, donors and private collaborators, who contributed more than 327 million, 6.9% more than the previous year. "We value the commitment of more than 230,000 donors and partners who collaborate with us in the task of building a more just world," said the secretary general. 

In addition, the efforts of the various public administrations, which contributed a total of 159.4 million euros to Caritas programs, are also noteworthy. Our overall balance of income this year was 67.22% from private sources and 32.78% from public administrations.

Maximum austerity with less means

Even though in the last two years all the Caritas organizations have put into play a significant increase in economic resources due to the impact of the inflationary crisis, it has been possible to maintain the austerity objective in the area of Management and Administration. It has even dropped to 5.72 %. 

In other words, out of every 100 euros invested in actions to fight poverty, only 5.7 euros have been allocated to management costs. "We have been at this percentage of management expenses for 20 years," emphasized Natalia Peiro. The Report also includes data on the people behind all this confederal activity, sustained thanks to 71,437 volunteers and 5,871 contracted workers.

Adding wills 

During the presentation of the balance of activities, the president of Caritas Española called on the whole of society to "join forces to turn the work in favor of the invisible and discarded into a meeting place and a space for harmony, in these times of worrying social polarization and worsening living conditions for many people, who see how their access to basic rights continues to be very precarious". 

In his speech, Manuel Bretón took the opportunity to thank the "tireless support" of companies, individual donors, public administrations and thousands of volunteers "in the task of guaranteeing the dignity of all people, the protection of human rights and the commitment to social justice". "There are many hands that come together to advance this task. Therefore, I would like to thank, on my own behalf and on behalf of Caritas Española, this sum of commitments and solidarity that weave a network of support without which we would not have been able to accompany more than two and a half million people inside and outside our country in 2023."

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

The Vatican

Pope urges care for those suffering from drug abuse

Pope Francis has called on all Catholics to help fight the "plague" of drug dealing and addiction, on the occasion of the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking.

Paloma López Campos-June 26, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

During his audience Pope Francis spoke about the harm caused by drugs on the occasion of the International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking.

Quoting St. John Paul II, the Holy Father explained that "drug abuse impoverishes all the communities in which it occurs". However, after this affirmation one cannot forget "that each drug addict brings with him or her a different personal history, which must be listened to, understood, loved and, as far as possible, healed and purified".

In the face of the individual pain caused by the relationship with drugs, Francis said, "we cannot ignore the evil intentions and actions of drug dealers and drug traffickers".

The Pope then advised against the release of the consumption of these substances as a means to obtain "a reduction in drug dependence". For this reason, the Bishop of Rome affirmed that he is "convinced that it is morally right to put an end to the production and trafficking of these dangerous substances".

Drugs, a plague

With harsh words, Francis described those who manage the drug business as "traffickers of death", "moved by the logic of power and money at any price". He pointed to abuse and profit through toxic substances as a "plague that produces violence and sows suffering and death".

In the face of these facts, the Pope called for investment in "prevention, which is done by promoting greater justice, educating young people in the values that build personal and community life, accompanying those in need and giving hope for the future."

The Holy Father also praised the "communities of recovery inspired by the Gospel. These, he said, "are a strong and hopeful witness to the commitment of priests, consecrated and lay people to put into practice the parable of the Good Samaritan". On the other hand, he thanked "the efforts undertaken by various Episcopal Conferences to promote legislation and fair policies for the treatment of drug addicts and prevention to curb this scourge".

Action and prevention

Francis cited some examples of institutions or groups that work in an exceptional way to help drug addicts, such as "the network of the Latin American Pastoral de Acompañamiento y Prevención de Adicciones (PLAPA)" or "the bishops of Southern Africa, who in November 2023 convened a meeting on the theme 'Empowering Drug Addicts' to help drug addicts". young people as agents of peace and hope'".

In conclusion, Pope Francis exclaimed that, "in the face of the tragic situation of toxic dependence of millions of people throughout the world, in the face of the scandal of the illicit production and trafficking of these drugs, we cannot be indifferent". "We are called," the Pontiff insisted, "to act, to pause before situations of fragility and pain, to know how to listen to the cry of loneliness and anguish, to bend down to raise up and bring back to life those who fall into the slavery of drugs."

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Vocations

Judita Velziene: "In Opus Dei I rediscovered my personal relationship with God".

This young supernumerary of Opus Dei explains how she discovered her vocation of sanctification in the midst of the world in her native Lithuania.

Maria José Atienza-June 26, 2024-Reading time: 4 minutes

Married and mother of 4 children, Judita Velziene is a psychologist and lives in Kaunas, one of the main cities in the country. Lithuania. At present, most of the members of the Opus Dei is made up of supernumeraries like Judita, all over the world.

Judita stresses that "the essence of vocation is identity, not merit". It is not about doing things but about one's personal identity and unique relationship with God. A vocation that she lives in her day to day life in her family and in her professional work as a psychotherapist.

How did you discover your vocation to Opus Dei?

-I had already started a family, had children and was working successfully in a large business corporation when I felt that my faith lacked life. I was living under a lot of pressure, juggling family and work commitments, and my faith lacked any kind of support and nourishment. Then my brother introduced me to a person from the Opus Dei who became a very good friend. Shortly thereafter, she invited me to participate in a retreat course. There, the armor that I had built throughout my life, which should have protected and strengthened me, but instead enclosed and hardened my soul, slowly began to disintegrate. All the spiritual formation of the Opus Dei It reminded me a lot of the teachings I had received from my grandmother and my parents about God and the Church.

I rediscovered how great God's love is and how beautiful and personal his relationship with me is. This helped me to turn my eyes back to my family, avoiding excessive immersion in my professional career, thus restoring balance in my life. When I began to seriously consider whether God was calling me to Opus Dei, I realized that from the beginning I felt at home.

For me it is very important to have a constant relationship with God in my day-to-day life, as he is like an axis around which my family and professional life revolves. I realize very quickly when I stray from that axis and I know where I need to go to get back to where I belong.

What does it mean to have a vocation and not just "do good things"?

-It seems to me that the essence of vocation is identity, not merit. The question is not what you do, but who you are. When you answer that question of who you are, you do good things in a very different way. It becomes your signature and not a tiring duty. Also with limitations, you try to see yourself with God's eyes, with God's mercy and God's patient teaching, to be more in line with your true identity.

How does this vocation influence your work?

-I am a psychotherapist and in my work I deal daily with the psychological difficulties, pain and suffering of people. Once, in a meditation, a priest pointed out that where there is suffering, there is always Christ. This impressed me, and since then, every day at work, I remember that when I am with human suffering, I am very close to Christ, because He is always there. This amazes me and at the same time obliges me to do my work to the best of my ability.

I pray the Rosary on my way to work and always pray a mystery for the clients of the day and their intentions. The Work has helped me a lot to cure me of perfectionism, which was a big obstacle at the beginning of my career.

I often saw things in black and white, became overwhelmed and began to reject work in general. But Opus Dei has taught me, patiently and constantly, to sanctify my work, to try to do it in the best possible way little by little. This helps me a lot.

Today, most of the members of Opus Dei are supernumeraries, but it is still a little known vocation. How do you explain your vocation to your friends?

-I feel that I have been a supernumerary for too short a time to be able to explain my vocation well. But, since I live among the people, every time this question comes up, I can learn to answer it better, and at the same time I rethink my own understanding of it. I usually say that what it is all about is to keep looking for God in your daily life, wherever you are: in the people around you, in the work you do, at home and in your professional life.

Your day-to-day life takes place in your family and in your parish. Do you collaborate in the parish community to which you belong?  

-The parish to which my family and I belong is very strong and very much alive. In choosing a location for our home, among other practical things, we were also concerned about having a church nearby. When we moved, we found such a strong community that we never cease to rejoice and thank God for it. When we can, we also try to contribute to the life of the parish by helping engaged couples prepare for the sacrament of marriage.

As a supernumerary, what do you receive from Opus Dei?

-I receive many things: spiritual formation, human formation and friends. But I especially value unity in prayer.

A month ago, one of my sons had an accident and suffered a head injury, which was a shock to our entire family. Despite the stress and difficulties, everyone's prayers kept us hopeful and strong. This is truly a special bond among the faithful of Opus Dei.

Newsroom

50th anniversary of St. Josemaría Escrivá's visit to Cañete

On the occasion of the feast of St. Josemaría Escrivá (June 26) and the 50th anniversary of the saint's visit, a series of activities have been organized by the Prelature of Yauyos and the civil society of Cañete.

Jesus Colquepisco-June 26, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

The Prelature of Yauyos (Peru), an ecclesiastical jurisdiction located south of Lima and whose episcopal see is in the coastal city of San Vicente de Cañete, will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the visit that St. Josemaría Escrivá made to Cañete on July 13, 1974.

On the occasion of the feast of St. Josemaría Escrivá (June 26) and the 50th anniversary of the saint's visit, a series of activities have been organized by the Prelature of Yauyos and the civil society of Cañete.

Face of the statue of St. Josemaría

As usual, there will be a Novena in the Cathedral Church of San Vicente de Cañete offered by institutions and families; and a Solemn Mass on the 26th, presided by Monsignor Ricardo Garcia, Bishop Prelate of Yauyos. Also from July 26 to 13 there will be a photographic exhibition on "St. Josemaría and Cañete" in the Plaza de Armas of San Vicente.

On July 13, 2024, the 50th anniversary of the visit, a full-length image of St. Josemaría will be installed in the Plaza de Armas for the remembrance and devotion of all the people of Cañete.

The work of art, made by the artist Fredy Luque is a full life-size piece, bathed in bronze, which will be transported from the southern city of Arequipa and will be located in front of the Cathedral Church. The sculpture, offered by the bishopric, institutions and private citizens is a recognition of the Cañete society to the holy priest who had Yauyos and Cañete in his heart.

Saint Josemaría Escrivá and Cañete

The saintly Spanish priest had a special relationship with the Prelature of Yauyos from its beginnings, since it was Pope Pius XII who in 1957 created the Prelature and asked the founder of Opus Dei that his institution take charge of one of the new ecclesiastical jurisdictions that were being created in Peru. Monsignor Escrivá received the prelature that the others did not want, the Prelature of Yauyos.

Yauyos is a city nestled in the Andes at 2874 meters above sea level and was the first prelatic seat; the Andean province of Huarochirí was also part of the Prelature.

On October 2, 1957, he was sworn in Bishop Ignacio María de OrbegozoEscrivá de Balaguer, as well as five other Spanish priests, members of the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross. Later, in 1962, the province of Cañete was also annexed.

In July 1974, Monsignor Josemaría Escrivá was in Peru, and on the 13th he visited Cañete, where he had an unforgettable meeting with many parishioners of the Province of Cañete, which the saint "baptized" at that time with the nickname "Valle Bendito de Cañete" (Blessed Valley of Cañete), due to its fruitful land and wide coastline of profitable fishing activity; an expression that continues to be popular today to refer to the province of Cañete.

St. Josemaría lived very closely the evangelizing work in the Prelature of Yauyos, manifesting through his letters and prayer his closeness to the first priests and the Prelate of Yauyos, as well as encouraging them to form families and the search for native vocations.

In 1964 he started the Minor Seminary with the first students being the acolytes of the parishes; and in 1971 he started the Major Seminary "St. Joseph" with the first native vocations.

Mother of Fair Love
Mother of Fair Love donated by St. Josemaria

St. Josemaría was very fond of the people of Cañete, as a sign of this, in 1964 he gave the image of "Holy Mary, Mother of Fair Love", located in her Sanctuary in San Vicente, as a gift.

In the same way, St. Josemaría was very interested in the human, economic, social and cultural development of the Prelature of Yauyos. This was made possible through two projects in San Vicente de Cañete, the "Valle Grande" and "Condoray" institutes, run from the beginning by professional laymen of Opus Dei. Today these two institutes are referents in Cañete.

St. Josemaría continues to intercede from heaven for his many faithful devotees in the Prelature of Yauyos, some of whom still have the vivid memory of that visit on July 13, 1974.

The authorJesus Colquepisco

Gospel

The true strength of the Church. Saints Peter and Paul (B)

Joseph Evans comments on the readings proper to the Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul

Joseph Evans-June 26, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

Saints Peter and Paul are especially united by their martyrdom in Rome. Both gave their lives for Christ in this city and the Church of Rome is considered to be founded on their blood. "O Roma felix, quae tantorum principum es purpurata pretioso sanguine", sings a liturgical hymn: "O happy Rome, reddened by the precious blood of such great chiefs."

The Church celebrates today the death of these great apostles; in human terms, their failure. In fact, the first two readings of our Mass today focus on the apostles' weakness rather than their strength. 

The first reading shows Peter imprisoned, held by King Herod with the intention of beheading him. But in his imprisonment and chains, expressions of his weakness, God acts to save him, sending an angel who leads him out of captivity by passing, we are told, "two guard posts one after the other"

Then he takes him back to the city, leaving him to find his own way to a Christian community, the house of Mary, mother of St. Mark, where everyone had been praying for him. 

However, a few decades later, Nero would do what Herod could not accomplish: he would not only behead the apostle, but crucify him.

What is striking is the effort with which the Gospels seem to show the weakness of St. Peter. How could they be forgeries when they deliberately show the first Pope in such a poor light? A man who often makes mistakes, who has great insight into Christ, but who is then called "Satan" by him, and who denies the Lord three times at the moment when Christ needs him. This is the Pope. And even after the Resurrection he will still need public correction by St. Paul (see Gal 2:11-14).

The second reading shows St. Paul in his weakness: "For I am about to be poured out in libation and the time of my departure is imminent.". He is no longer the dynamic and energetic apostle, but an old man in chains awaiting death. In both Peter and Paul we see weakness turned into strength. 

St. Paul was right when he wrote: "For when I am weak, then I am strong" (2 Cor 12:10). 

The "strength" of the Church is not based on human power. Rather, it is strong when its members realize their weakness and let God act through them. As today's Gospel teaches us, Peter was right about Christ's divine status not because of "flesh and blood," that is, not because of his own powers of observation, but because the heavenly Father revealed it to him. 

The feast of Saints Peter and Paul teaches us where to find strength: not in ourselves or in visible structures, but in God, who acts through the weak when they are humble.

Culture

Marcela Duque: "Poetry is a way of being attentive".

Marcela Duque made a name for herself in 2018 with. Beautiful is the riska collection of poems that won him the prestigious Adonáis Prize, with which he stood out as one of the most emotionally intense young voices in the Spanish language. Six years later he published his second work, An enigma before your eyeswhich reaffirms its literary quality.  

Carmelo Guillén-June 25, 2024-Reading time: 5 minutes

As Arnord Bennett wrote about William Butler Yeats: "He is one of the great poets of our age because half a dozen readers know he is.". From that lineage is Marcela Duque, a woman to whom the gift of poetry has not been denied.

Unlike our most famous Spanish author, Cervantes, poetic creation is for this Colombian the grace given to her by heaven, as can be seen in the two collections of poems she has published to date: Beautiful is the risk y An enigma before your eyes, both of them book-based.

The first one, resolved as a tribute to Socrates, master of existence, whose last days are reflected in the Platonic dialogue PhaedoThe first one, where the poet is inspired to give the title to her book and to sing the joy and encouragement of knowing she is alive; the second, motivated by the Confessions of St. Augustine, a well-deserved tribute to the African writer and theologian, in whom he recreates himself to refer to specific autobiographical episodes.

Learning to love

In her brief poetic trajectory, Marcela Duque is very clear about what drives her to philosophy and poetry: "I am a poet.In both activities, by different paths, I wish nothing more than to sharpen my gaze and welcome the joy and beauty -which are not alien to the pain- of ordinary life and encounters with circumstances and people. Poetry is a way of being attentive, of knowing how to look and, to this extent, of learning to love: 'Ubi amor, ibi oculus', wrote a medieval philosopher and mystic centuries ago: 'Where there is love, there is vision'. It is not only the expression of a true fact, but a program for life: learning to see and learning to love, with poetry as a radiant companion on the way.".

As a result of this way of understanding literary creation, the reader notices that her lyrical work is dazzlingly moving, at times with cultural and classical roots, linked to philosophical readings and to some contemporary poets for whom she feels a certain preference, but, above all, of great intimist power, which gives her that fresh air, of clear, sweeping line, very prone to music. It is marked by a search for meaning, hence it is full of concerns, the desire for beauty, lyricism and, as she herself expresses, attention to reality, both external and internal.

Beautiful is the risk

The jury of the Adonáis in its 72nd edition unanimously awarded him the prize for his first collection of poems, Beautiful is the risk, "for the apparent ease of converting a solid classical philosophical training into exciting and fresh poetry, thanks to a constant instinct for language and an unerring poetic ear."This makes it very clear that his is a poetry where tradition and personal voice come together, giving rise, in the first of the three sections of the book, to various considerations on the amazement and enjoyment of nature, marked by the passage of time, and to relationships, full of gratitude, with the grandmother, parents or teachers; in the second, as a link between the other two sections, to God, giver of meaning to existence and creation; and in the third, to movements or longings of the soul, such as the discovery of love, poetry, or the joy of being able to remember the paradise of childhood. In this thematic intertwining, the poet is aware that her poetic activity is a "in the meantime"It is also a search, that is, a way of facing existence until the longed-for and crucial passage to their definitive homeland, whatever it may be, takes place.

His poem And also (poetic) poetry excellently expresses this reasoning, very much in the orbit of Plato's allegorical myth of the cave, where the interweaving between the sensible world, grasped through the senses, and that of ideas, experienced through knowledge, reality and the meaning of life, is perceived: "And I find myself in a strange land, again, / It's not home anywhere, it's always a search, / I don't know what home is, but it's not this, / But I know it's true because I miss it, / And that it's not here yet, because it still hurts, / I want to go home someday, / That's why - in the meantime - poetry." 

An enigma before your eyes 

As I pointed out above, his second collection of poems has the Confessions of St. Augustine as a backdrop. In fact, Marcela Duque has stated in an interview: "Augustine is something of a first love and a Master. Even my approach to Plato is very Augustinian, and my 'home' in the history of philosophy is the Augustinian tradition of the restless heart: Plato, Pascal, Kierkegaard, Simone Weil.". That said, it is easy to discover quite often a lively dialogue between the poet and the saint. Augustinian paragraphs such as the well-known one: "Late I loved you, beauty so ancient and so new, late I loved you! And behold, you were within me, and I was outside, and outside I sought you, and on those beauties that you created, I threw myself deformed." (cfr. Confessions10, 27, 38) are easily seen in the Colombian author through these white hendecasyllables: "...".I was looking for you outside and I lost you, / I couldn't find you and I couldn't find me / Empty of beauty I threw myself / To all other beauty, only an echo / Of that ancient and always new beauty / That has conquered all my senses [...]. And I have loved you late! Come, let's run!" (cf. the poem My late joy). 

However, to present An enigma before your eyes from this slight consideration it would be as much as to affirm, for example, that the Waste land by T. S. Eliot is a disjointed list of quotations from various authors.

In the case of our poet, the lyrical and tensional richness of her compositions, beyond a witty approach to the different episodes of life that reveal the Confessionsare a starting point for her to give free rein to deep reflections focused, first, on the knowledge of divine Love and, from that perspective, on herself and her environment. From there on, the volume is worth discovering as a scrutinizing, inquiring poem, very much in the line of those in which the literary resource of distancing is used and in which a specific poetic character is used as a starting point on which, this time, the poet, seduced by the discovery and encounter with God - taking into account, I insist, the life of St. Augustine as a source of inspiration - pours her own experience. 

Attention, the gateway to amazement

As a young author who should not be lost sight of, Marcela Duque invites, then, with her poetry to give course to transcendence, to the ultimate meaning of the human being. To this end, she reminds us that to reach "to the intimate / of the soul". (cf. the poem The port of Ostiain An enigma before your eyes), "attention is the gateway to wonder". (cf. the poem Conversation with mystery, ibidem) and that this one, the attention, encloses: "A question / to which beauty answers." (cf. the poem Conversation with mystery, ibidem), thus making it progressively clear that his poetic work, still in the starting line from which much more is expected, constitutes a fascinating introspective adventure in the face of the exciting risk involved in the enigma of beauty.

Any reader who delves into his poetry will easily verify it, while appreciating his lyrical expertise, reflected in the look of amazement that unfolds in each of his compositions, so full of liveliness and literary successes.

Communion and co-responsibility

Communion and the way of living it among adult Christians, which is co-responsibility, demands a constant attitude of personal conversion and ongoing formation for all.

June 24, 2024-Reading time: 3 minutes

Next October, the second phase of the Synod of Bishops on Synodality. The work should focus primarily on ecclesial co-responsibility, which is differentiated in the Church. 

This implies insisting on the Christian responsibility of each baptized person and on the ongoing formation derived from baptism and confirmation. The Synod should provide a theological basis for the need, in today's Church, for this co-responsibility and formation. 

Stewardship is based on the principles of the Old and New Testaments, on Tradition, on the Magisterium, especially the Second Vatican Council and subsequent Magisterium. 

The Church is born of Christ's will to evangelize. Evangelization is the fundamental task of the Church: "...".The Church received from the Apostles the solemn mandate of Christ to proclaim the truth that saves us and to carry it out to the ends of the earth." (LG, 17).

But evangelization is unthinkable without ecclesial communion. A divided community falls on its own: "Every kingdom divided against itself is laid waste, and every city or house divided against itself will not stand." (Mt 12:25). 

Co-responsibility is linked to communion; it is the way of living communion among adult Christians. Therefore, communion, co-responsibility and evangelization are intimately linked.

Communion and the way of living it among adult Christians, which is co-responsibility, demands a constant attitude of personal conversion and ongoing formation for all (bishops, priests, religious and laity), since we all find it difficult to share and to expose our opinions and way of seeing things to the opinions and consensus of others.

The theological and pastoral foundation of co-responsibility should insist on these two basic aspects. 

Co-responsibility for evangelization entails having clear in one's mind the structure of the Church as willed by Christ and handed down by Tradition, Sacred Scripture and the Magisterium.

It is not a question of turning the Church into a democracy in the manner of modern States, where the majority vote is what counts.

Christ has willed for his Church a structure of communion, of equal dignity of the baptized, but with pastors and faithful: "All Christ's disciples have received the task of spreading the faith according to their possibilities. But... it is proper to the priest to consummate the building up of the Body with the sacrifice of the Eucharist." (LG,17).

Everyone must be clear that such a structure cannot be changed, but this does not take anything away from co-responsibility. It is a different way of living an authentic and sincere co-responsibility. 

Co-responsibility thus demands openness to the Holy Spirit, Who guides the Church and evangelization, as is clearly shown in the Acts of the Apostles.

It demands constant dialogue and listening, respect and consideration for all opinions, even minority ones, insofar as they do not contradict the truths of faith and morals contained in Sacred Scripture and expounded by the Magisterium, distinguishing their different degrees of certainty and their constant updating and fidelity.

Co-responsibility demands discernment, being aware at all ecclesial levels that the ultimate instance of discernment in matters that refer to the universal Church and its mission corresponds to the authentic Magisterium. 

We already have co-responsibility structures. It is urgent that, at all levels, they work and work well.

The various parish, presbyteral and episcopal councils cannot be mere bodies that are on paper but at the moment of truth do not operate as intended. There we have a whole task ahead of us.

We cannot forget, even if it is more difficult, that the formation of the lay faithful must seek their involvement in all areas of civil society.

The Church in its fundamental structure is a combination of lay faithful and priests. In order for this combination to work well for sanctification and evangelization, each member of the faithful must know how to be in his or her place, without clericalizing the laity and without laicizing the priest.

The authorCelso Morga

Archbishop emeritus of the Diocese of Mérida Badajoz

Integral ecology

Anne Schaub: "Every embryo naturally attaches itself to the mother who carries it". 

"A child can never be the subject of a transaction paid to satisfy adult desires, even if medical technology makes them possible."says Belgian psychologist Anne Schaub. In this interview, she reviews some of the serious psychological and emotional consequences that surrogacy inflicts on pregnant women and, above all, on the children whose rights are violated. 

Maria José Atienza-June 24, 2024-Reading time: 12 minutes

With more than 25 years of practice, the Belgian psychologist Anne Schaub-Thomas has accompanied and treated hundreds of women and couples who have not been able to fulfill their desire to have a child naturally.

For Schaub-Thomas, the debate over the surrogacy has completely forgotten the right of the "created" child and the psychological, affective and physical keys that mother and child develop in the prenatal period. 

Is there a right to motherhood above all else? Are there really those who cannot live without "fulfilling themselves" as a mother or father?

-In the case of a woman, her body and heart are naturally constituted and prepared for childbirth. The call to motherhood is strong for a woman. Faced with infertility or sterility (personal or conjugal), the woman is often plunged into a feeling of essential lack that can be difficult to bear. Not being able to realize it is something to listen to, to accompany, to be able to collect all the depth of the feelings of sorrow, frustration and suffering. In the end, and without a solution to restore natural fertility, it is precious for the woman and the couple to find help to give meaning to the situation of sterility, until, if possible, to be able to move on to other modes of donation and "maternity/paternity".

Adoption remains for the woman (and the couple) a form of parental fulfillment that not only fills the "cradle of the heart" but also gives back to a child what he or she has lost through life's misfortunes: a mother and a father.

– Supernatural surrogate motherhood The possibility of conceiving the desired child, for oneself, outside oneself and without oneself, leaves the woman psychologically unscathed? What does it mean for her to resort to a surrogate mother?

First of all, the technique profoundly modifies the woman's relationship with motherhood, because the child is no longer the result of an intimate encounter between two beings who love each other, but of recourse to a medical-technical act. It is revealing, to say the least, to hear one of the first doctors to practice fertilization in vitro to call himself Amandine's "father".

In fertilization in vitro maternity for the woman does not consist simply in welcoming an embryo from the outside into her body. The prior intervention of the technique intrudes into and intensely modifies the woman's body as well as the couple's private space. The technical action induces in the woman a strong psychic resonance that is not experienced in natural motherhood. Great stress surrounds the woman who finally "succeeds" in satisfying her need for motherhood.

What is being modified, therefore, is mainly the entire intimate relational, carnal and private space. The latter disappears in favor of a "disaffected" (affectionless) medical context, in which genetic material - a human being in the making, it should be recalled - is extracted and manipulated in the aseptic hands of anonymous geneticists and laboratory technicians. The use of technology deprives the woman (and the couple) of the warmth of the living, of the intimate embrace with a view to conceiving, in the secret of their bond, the flesh of their flesh.

We go on to look extrinsically at the process: the sorting of quality gametes, the culture medium and Petri dish, the incubation tubes, the "ideal" embryo to "choose" and the surrogate mother. By taking the living (gametes) out of the body, the woman's relationship with motherhood changes profoundly. Let us make no mistake: a woman who leaves the waiting for "her" baby in the hands of another woman is depriving herself of a part of herself, and she knows it, she feels it in her whole being. But the subject remains taboo and sometimes, in the end, it is revealed in psychotherapeutic practices.

The woman has to face a series of feelings of impotence and humiliation, of inability to conceive and give birth naturally, suffering restrictive and eminently invasive, risky and painful treatments; feelings of guilt, fear of no longer loving the child she so much desires but who makes her suffer so much, etc. Not to mention the partner, who rarely emerges unscathed from such an ordeal.

What happens with the attachment during the gestational period? What is the relationship between the pregnant mother and the child?

-A woman carrying a baby in her womb that she knows she will have to give to someone else at birth is very likely to develop mechanisms comparable to those that occur in situations of pregnancy denial.

The denial of the pregnancy distances the woman from the awareness that she is carrying in her womb a new being to protect and love. If the surrogate mother is perfectly aware that she is pregnant, choosing to gestate someone else's child, and destined for someone else, forces her to divide and strip herself of the most emotionally and psychically intimate part of her being. 

What mother is going to join the baby that she has never wanted for herself, that she knows she is carrying in her womb with the intention of separating from it at birth? Even more so when it is a child who is not genetically related to her.

In the surrogacy the pregnant woman carries in her womb a contract to fulfill more than a baby to love. The surrogate mother exercises a "job", with the requirement to respect the contract she has to fulfill: that of delivering a baby, whole and healthy.

Rare are the surrogate mothers who decide at all costs to keep the child they are carrying. When this happens, it is always a source of legal disputes and tragic human tragedies. Nowadays, a surrogate mother cannot gestate a child for another person with her own gametes, precisely to avoid this type of reversal.

Attachment, which is a natural biological process, more easily takes hold of all mental constructs and resolutions around a remunerated contract, when the expected baby is that of the woman who gestated it, that is, when it is conceived from her ovum. 

The gestations organized by the agencies are ordered to guarantee the lowest risk of mother-child attachment, despite the fact that the main psychological problem for the future development of the child is precisely that of favoring a quality attachment with the biological mother. 

This is, in fact, extreme violence, on the one hand, against the woman, who is forced to work against her natural maternal instinct, and on the other hand, against the child, who is subjected from the beginning of his or her life to emotional conditions that are the antithesis of his or her primordial needs.

What are the psychological and physical consequences of a child being separated from its mother at birth?

-The human being is a relational being. The need for connection is one of the earliest and deepest human characteristics; it is an ontological, vital expectation with which every human being is "genetically" endowed.

Like the water table common to our humanity, every embryo, every fetus will naturally attach to the mother who carries it. If attachment is a physiologically programmed biological process, it is important to consider the nine months of pregnancy as much more than just the growth of organs to make a small body viable. The beginnings of relational and emotional life are already established during the prenatal period, and the emotional content of the intrauterine and birth experience will leave a lasting imprint on each person.

The fetus possesses a very fine and highly developed sensitive and affective competence. Naturally curious about relationships, it picks up on the relational impulses, desires, thoughts and psychological state of the mother carrying it. The context and atmosphere of pregnancy are far from indifferent to him. Birth, the first experience of separation of the baby from the body of the mother who has nurtured, wrapped and loved it for nine months, is the first natural test of life that projects the baby into a new environment.

The baby crosses this path from the inside to the outside of his mother's body, so it is best if he is kept close to her. It is important that the newborn baby finds at birth the sensory markers with which his memory is completely impregnated, and which link him to the one who represents life for him: the mother's voice, smell, touch, the taste of mother's milk, etc., all milestones that maintain the somatic and psychic balance of the little one, and provide him with his basic security.

Numerous demonstrations of neuroscience highlight the biopsychological importance of the prenatal period for the child. These early stages of life represent the basic soil in which the first unconscious sensory, relational and emotional experiences are sown, either with connotations of unity, tenderness, joy and serenity, or with distance and detachment, tenacious ambivalence or emotional confusion.

The extreme stress generated in the newborn in case of maternal separation leaves a lasting imprint linked to separation anxiety. The baby's need for continuity and stability of the bond with its biological mother is deeply affected. 

In fact, any situation that imposes on the newborn, even involuntarily, the separation from the mother who has carried him/her for nine months, provokes, depending on the context and to varying degrees, a wound of abandonment that can go as far as the anguish of death. 

It is true that the baby feels it exists from the presence in quality and quantity of its mother, whom it knows with all its senses and to whom it has been attached for several months.

Let's say that the embryo is grafted into the body and heart of the mother who carries it, in a very intimate relational mesh. This time in the womb is essential for the baby, it will have a lasting influence on their lives. Sometimes without us even realizing it.

Thus, organizing a motherhood, a split kinship from conception until after birth, burdens the child with a psycho-affective baggage marked by ruptures, losses and affective confusion, and plunges him/her into a situation of blurred filiation.

If a woman, a mother, for whatever reason, can decide not to bond with the baby she is expecting, the child cannot. The process that creates this attachment bond between the baby and the mother is a programmed survival "reflex". It is a biophysiological and psychological mechanism that cannot be ignored. 

No contract between intended parents and a surrogate mother, no adult thought, even if it desires wholeheartedly the expected child, but from a distance, has the power to diminish or erase, on the one hand, this human experience of gestational attachment, fundamental for the child's future and which is woven with great subtlety in the fetus for nine months, and, on the other hand, the distressing experience of the baby's estrangement from its biological mother.

Thus, the procreative process of GPAs exposes the young child to de facto physical and psychological harm. Physical medical risks are associated with fertilization. in vitroLow birth weight and prematurity. More deeply, the child is exposed to a somato-psychic memory of imposed dissociation between the genetic, bodily and educational dimensions. 

For most child psychologists and psychiatrists, it is indeed a context of origin likely to cause sensory and intrapsychic disorders in the child, with the risk of altering its future emotional life and its identity anchoring.

The deepest wound that the child born from surrogacy - and which does not exist in the adopted child - will undoubtedly have to resolve is the realization, one day, that it is his or her parents who have themselves created the situation of dissociation and rupture with the birth mother. 

This intrapsychic conflict is likely to remain with the child throughout his or her life, with overwhelming identity and existential questions. All the more so since society as a whole will have allowed this to happen, will have supported and avoided recognizing at the state level the various risks and sufferings that GPA entails for the most vulnerable: the child.

In the debate surrounding surrogacy, it is urgent to put the young child back at the center of the debate. By its very nature, every embryo, fetus and newborn is vulnerable. I call it "the voiceless child". Let us bring the child out of the shadows, to denounce the potential scars that, in GPA, are imposed on it at the beginning of its life.

Indeed, "manufacturing" a child for someone else means running the risk of generating all kinds of suffering, such as emotional conflicts, relational pathology, various somatic and cognitive disorders, as well as social sequelae.

In general, the risk of an uneasy, even tortured, relationship with life for those who will be confronted with questions about filiation, with no possible answers.

How will the child manage his or her right to know his or her ancestry?

-Legally, I don't know. As a psychologist, I find that every human being needs to feel part of a family history, which is not limited to the immediate family circle. Close and extended family members, as well as ancestors who are still living or have passed away, often represent important points of reference for everyone.

The biological family "lives" in a certain way within us and allows us to forge an identity, to rely, consciously or unconsciously, on the similarities or, on the contrary, on the differences felt or observed.

Every human being has the vital need to feel linked to a family, to a double genealogy, maternal and paternal. Knowing where we come from allows us, in general, to know/understand/choose better where we are going.

The absence and anonymity of all those who make up the family and who have preceded us in the double maternal and paternal line, and who form the soil of our identity roots, can become problematic for the development of the identity of certain children, to the point of becoming the source of a series of negative behaviors.

The psychological wounds caused by the unforeseeable separations at birth or caused by the miseries and misfortunes of life are situations of suffering that are well known today.

Working on prevention to avoid them and then attending to these life situations that have caused various losses and human uprooting in early childhood, is a work of humanity that every State has the duty to implement and support in its country. 

On the contrary, any state that allows wealthy and influential promoters of the human reproduction market to work tirelessly to promote and legalize the sale of children through surrogate mothers is complicit in the medical, psychological and economic violence inflicted on women and children.

There is an urgent need to enshrine in international law the GPA banThe aim is to protect future generations from a disastrous evil that is currently affecting the reproductive sector. It should not be left to the children who have grown up to ensure that their rights are respected. 

The deep deficiencies that life sometimes imposes on us, the painful losses suffered and the sorrows, however great they may be, of adults should never serve as a pretext to "use" the life of a child as an object of consolation and reparation. The life of a child is received. It is not taken or artificially manufactured to satisfy the needs of adults.

A child's life is fundamentally a gift. A child can never be the subject of a paid transaction to satisfy adult desires, even if medical technology makes them possible.

The realization of adult projects, desires and fantasies now takes place without moral guidelines or ethical limits. Human common sense has also left the individual and collective scene.

The child, a vulnerable little being, malleable at will and without a voice of his own, seems to have become an easy prey at the disposal of all parental desires.

One of the arguments often used is that these children "will be more loved". Do you think that this supposed "maximum love" can be considered an argument in favor of this practice?

-This is, in fact, the "standard" argument that no one seems to be able to refute. Let's be clear: any single person, any couple, whether heterosexual or homosexual, is capable of loving a child to the fullest and raising it with heart, pedagogy and intelligence.

The child born of a GPA who ends up in the arms of his or her parent(s) will most often benefit from a quality emotional bond, in the image of the strength of the desire that allowed him or her to be born.

But what about the affective niche that every child needs during its life in the womb and that is the foundation of its basic security, of its future affective life and of its trust in others, in life?

What happens to this "gap" of loving, mother-child attachment, which is built throughout the nine months of prenatal life and needs to be prolonged in a lasting way beyond birth? What happens to the wound of separation, the trauma of abandonment felt by babies who are separated from their biological mothers? 

Is it possible to intentionally create situations of filial rupture and human loss at the beginning of a child's life, to deliberately blur the bonds of filiation and thus create programmed risks of suffering of all kinds?

Who can believe that the planning of such situations of arrival in life will remain "neutral", without creating zones of vulnerability in the area of psychological, somatic and spiritual balance of these little ones? Are researchers and early childhood specialists who, for more than a century, have been examining the extreme sensitivity of the infant world not sufficiently explicit and convincing about the basic needs of human beings which, when satisfied, allow them to feel authentically loved and offer them better possibilities of fulfillment in life?

The media blinds us with sappy stories of love, smiles and laughter of children born through surrogacy. 

In psychology, we know that childhood is the age of adaptation. In order to survive and, above all, to live, the child, whatever the possible misfortunes of life, difficulties or particularities that may have affected him since birth, generally displays an extraordinary strength of adaptation and resilience, especially if he is loved. However, if the waters of the unconscious remain silent during childhood adaptation, they can become psychic tsunamis at the age of awakening.

A situation of loss or bereavement, adolescence, marriage, the first sexual experience, the expectation of a baby, a major life change... all these situations can see emerge, like a geyser contained for too long, very early wounds that have remained repressed and unconscious, denied or unvisited. Psychiatric decompensations are quite rare during childhood. On the other hand, they are more frequent in adolescence and early adulthood.

The far-fetched and complex situations created by the technique of procreation herald real emotional chaos and fragmented psychological states in the lives of some of these children, even though they are loved. Society as a whole will suffer.

Although customs and culture change, the basic needs of children have not changed for thousands of years. Their extremely vulnerable situation requires special care and protection from the earliest development of their cells.

It is we, the adults, who must take care of them and remain adapted to their needs, not the other way around. Not the other way around. Isn't that what it means to truly love a child... even if it means accepting to give up having one at all costs if nature prevents it?

The Vatican

Pope Francis: "Jesus 'asleep' strengthens the faith of the Apostles".

The Angelus prayer on June 23 was marked by the teaching of the Gospel passage in which Jesus "sleeps" in Peter's boat.

Maria José Atienza-June 23, 2024-Reading time: 2 minutes

Pope Francis presided over the address prior to the Angelus prayer on this 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time. In a cloudy and windy Rome where summer is resisting a little, thousands of people accompanied Francis on this day.

Referring to the Gospel passage from Mark, proper to today's readings, which shows Jesus "asleep in the boat" while the Apostles fear for their lives due to a storm.

Francis explained that "it seems that Jesus wants to put them to the test. However, he does not leave them alone, he stays with them in the boat, calmly, even sleeping. And when the storm breaks, with his presence he reassures them, encourages them, incites them to have more faith and accompanies them beyond the danger".

We can ask ourselves, the Pope continued, the reason for Jesus' behavior and the answer is clear: "To strengthen the faith of the disciples and make them more courageous". They come out of this experience more aware of the power of Jesus and of his presence in their midst". An experience that will give them the basis to face, for the cause of Christ, "even to the cross and martyrdom".

The pontiff stressed that "Jesus does the same with us, particularly in the Eucharist: He gathers us around Himself, gives us His Word, feeds us with His Body and Blood, and then invites us to go out to sea, to pass on what we have heard and to share with everyone what we have received, in everyday life, even when it is difficult."

Christian life is not an easy or comfortable life, but a life of trust in Christ, explained the pontiff, who encouraged the faithful to ask themselves "in times of trial, can I remember the moments in my life in which I have experienced the presence and help of the Lord?"

Petition for peace and a remembrance of his confessor

As every Sunday, the Pope's remembrance and prayers were directed to the nations and places on earth where conflicts and wars are taking place. Francis has prayed for peace in Ukraine, Palestine and Israel. "Let us pray for peace! Palestine, Gaza, northern Congo... Let us pray for peace! And peace in Ukraine, which suffers so much, let there be peace! May the Holy Spirit enlighten the minds of the rulers, infuse them with wisdom and a sense of responsibility, to avoid any action or word that feeds confrontation and, instead, resolutely aim at a peaceful solution to conflicts" the Pope concluded.

Just before saying goodbye and praying the Angelus, the Pope addressed an emotional remembrance to his confessor for many years, the Franciscan Manuel Blanco, who died a few days ago. Taking the example of this priest, the Pope thanked the work of "so many Franciscan brothers, confessors, preachers, who honored and honor the Church of Rome".