Books

Globalizing solidarity: ethics and humanity in international politics.

“Globalizing Solidarity” proposes a humanistic approach to international politics, focusing on ethics, human dignity and cooperation in the face of global challenges.

Antonio Barnés-January 19, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

«Globalizing Solidarity. International political ethics» is the result of the author's personal experience and reflection after ten years as Head of Studies at the Diplomatic School of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Spain). Due to his philosophical and theological formation (he was, in addition, professor at the Ecclesiastical Univ. S. Dámaso of Philosophy and at the CEU S. Pablo of Social Doctrine of the Church), plus his studies and professional practice in International Relations, it is an interdisciplinary volume of humanistic thought very much inspired by the Catholic social vision. Although it is not really a theological study, but a theoretical reflection and history of International Politics. 

The result is a suggestive and stimulating volume to approach the analysis and study of the international panorama - and more so today - from keys such as ethics, solidarity, personal dignity and the unity of the human race, so dear to the Western and Christian tradition. To this is added a more hopeful and moderately optimistic vision than usual. In this sense, it always places the person and his or her intrinsic transcendent dimension at the center as the foundation of the possible joint approach to the challenges posed to the global human community, in continuity with the Hispanic tradition of the School of Salamanca and later milestones. 

Promoting peace

In this order, two ideas underlined by St. John Paul II (the globalization of solidarity) and by Pope Francis (the culture of encounter) are developed in some detail. The work pivots on these two axes. Let us say that inspired by them, I develop its foundations from the human and social sciences. A few weeks ago, Susana Tamaño, the successful Italian writer, urged intellectuals to support Leo XIV's intention to promote a “disarmed and disarming” peace, and this monograph is a good example.

If we stick to etymology, by solidarity we should understand that which is solid, that which is compact. And that is the direction in which globalization (mundialization in French) should point in order to build a more cohesive global human community in the face of the great challenges that lie ahead: AI, climate change, mass migrations, serious war tensions, etc. One cannot fail to mention the interesting opening chapter, in which the constant historical desire for the unity of the human race from classical antiquity to the present day (global governance, planetary democracy, etc.) is framed, together with the apt mention of the Hispanic tradition - which was a realization of the universal monarchy project dreamed of by Dante - and inspired by a more balanced anthropological vision than the Lutheran and Protestant one subsequently adopted by the Anglo-Saxon world.

Moral reason in the face of global challenges

The path proposed in this work is the exercise of moral reason as opposed to mere technical reason (a diagnosis already pointed out by the Frankfurt School) and, as opposed to a pessimistic conception resulting from the understanding of the world order as the realm of chaos, power, violence or amorality. An «idealism without illusions» (in the felicitous expression of G. Weygel, biographer of St. John Paul II) is proposed which offers a better reason for international politics than pure realism (Realpolitik) or the voluntarist utopian idealism.

The book does not remain merely illusory daydreams, but successfully argues and demonstrates with historical facts that this approach to understanding complex global politics is more correct, more accurate, and that, moreover, it allows us to face the future of humanity and the planet with moderate and cautious optimism. This is not a matter of wishful thinking, but of noting that the human community possesses ethical resources, already proven and brought into play in the recent past, that can enable it to act jointly in the face of certain disturbing challenges. In this context, the positive evolution of human development, now conceived as integral, the greater sensitivity to the need for peace and the necessary limitations of wars (ius ad/in bellum), the relevance of international solidarity or the pacifying role of different cultures, religions and worldviews -especially the Western one-. In short, there are compelling reasons to see some light in an international panorama that often appears too gloomy and convulsive.

Globalizing solidarity. International political ethics

AuthorGabriel Alonso-Carro y Garcia-Crespo
Editorial: Last Line
Pages: 236
Year: 2025
The authorAntonio Barnés

Professor of Spanish Literature at the Complutense University.

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Debate

Paolo Benanti: «the problem of AI is complexity».»

Artificial intelligence is changing the way we relate, inform ourselves and work. Theologian and expert on the ethics of AI Paolo Benanti warns of its risks in times of polarization and the power of algorithms.

Jose Maria Navalpotro-January 19, 2026-Reading time: 6 minutes

Digital technology has contributed to polarization. By reinforcing one's own ideas and discarding those of others, the algorithm contributes to a decrease in dialogue and, thus, less knowledge of what the other thinks. This is one of the theses of the Franciscan Paolo Benanti in his latest book, The collapse of Babel, published by Encuentro. But polarization is far from the only risk.

At the beginning of January, it was known that Grok, Elon Musk's AI model, facilitated the creation of sexual images from images uploaded by women on the social network “X”.

Friar Paolo Benanti (Rome, 1973), a moral theologian, is one of the world's leading experts on the ethics of Artificial Intelligence (AI). He chairs the Italian government's AI working group and the UN commission of experts on this issue. His point of view is particularly authoritative to speak on a topical issue, which is of concern to governments and society.

The last time he was heard in Spain was two months ago, at the Fundación Telefónica and at EncuentroMadrid, the annual event organized by Communion and Liberation, in Cuatro Vientos (Madrid). In this edition, Benanti spoke precisely on “Artificial intelligence and the fabrication of the eternal”. 

Who watches over the AI?

- When we talk about artificial intelligence, we are not talking about a single technology, but about a family of algorithms, very different from each other. Some of them are very explainable. It reminds us a little bit of the first GPS: how many times did the GPS tell you to exit on the right and then immediately re-enter on the left? It was intelligent, but we understood that it was intelligent because it was shorter. That artificial intelligence does a job, which is the same thing that a natural intelligence would do.

But they are a black box. Some of these algorithms may have much smarter results, but they are a black box.

The question is: Can we use all types of algorithms for all types of functions? 

This is one of the ethical problems of AI. Imagine you want to use AI to select coffee beans in a factory that produces coffee. This is something that used to be done by hand, selecting bean by bean because if a single coffee bean has mold, it gives a bad taste to all the others.

This process is done with an algorithm called Deep Learning. But it is not explainable.

The worst that can happen is that we throw away coffee beans that are worthwhile. But maybe that is more economical than hiring a person who picks bean by bean. 

But that same algorithm can be used in a hospital emergency room to choose which patient goes in first.

It can be understood that it is not a problem of the algorithm, but of where we put it working within the social structure. 

The problem of AI today is no longer a technical issue, but a problem of social justice that tells us what function a man or an algorithm has to develop. This requires multidisciplinarity. 

Now, the interesting thing about this is that it is the matrix of the social doctrine of the Church. And it is the reason why Pope Leo XIV, in his first public speech, affirmed that Catholics, as such, the only thing we can offer is the social doctrine of the Church, which are not answers, but questions. Questions that seek to protect the dignity of man and man's work.

We are not afraid of change, but we want to be on the side of man. 

The second element is that Pope Francis, when he wrote the guidelines for Catholic formation, especially for future priests, speaks of interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity. Therefore, again, the challenge is more than technical, it is cultural. This is the frontier on which today's debates are taking place. 

Behind the AI

But who is behind this technology?

- The first thing to understand is that this technology changes the way we approach the problem. The whole 19th century has seen a fracture in scientific rationality. We used to be convinced of a deterministic model.

But if one thinks about what has happened with subatomic physics, where thanks to Heisenberg's indeterminacy principle we do not know where an electron is, or how fast it is going, we have had to mutate to a probabilistic model. The same happens with astrophysics, where what Einstein said speaks of a relativity. From a model of certainty we have moved to a model of probability.

If the model is statistical, there is no mind determining the steps, but there is a machine extracting models from the data in front of it.

This model makes it very complex to answer whether there is someone behind it or not. We often speak of “bias”, which in English is expressed by the word “bias”. But bias can also be translated as “systematic preference”.

Suppose I want to create an autonomous car. I take all the data on how people drive in Madrid. And the machine sees that there is a systematic preference to stop at red lights (I'm talking about Madrid, not Rome...). I want that systematic preference to exist.

But, for example, the machine could see that the car does not stop in the same way when a child or an adult crosses. And it might decide not to brake when there are children. Why? Because the child is less visible and the driver sees it later. So here the machine has a bias, a prejudice, with children. It could be the same at night with, for example, dark-skinned people. Would anyone be bad for applying that “prejudice”?

There is so much data that no human mind can control it all. What's the problem? Silicon Valley tells us that we are changing the world. But we don't know, no one knows to the bottom line, what are the schemes that the machine (the computer) has found.

It is an epistemological problem. And ethical. And legal. Who is responsible if the car hits the child? The owner? He's not driving. The producer? The software engineer? It's very complex. 

The real problem with artificial intelligence is complexity. 

On the other hand, it can save us a lot of money. Therefore, there is a tension and somehow we must regulate this tension to prevent those who decide to do so only for economic interests or out of fear. 

AI and work

Could artificial intelligence end up making human labor superfluous?

- An artificial intelligence is not capable of doing all tasks in the same way. There is a paradox, which was developed by a computer scientist named Moravec, which says that it is much easier for a machine to perform a high intellectual task than a low one. That is, a solar calculator that does a square root you buy on the Internet for one euro. But a robotic hand that picks up a teaspoon and spins coffee costs 150,000 to 200,000 euros. Apply it to work. 

A banker works with a lot of numbers. A manual laborer, a metal worker, works with a lot of hammer. This means that the first jobs that are going to jump are the best paid ones. This could generate social tension that if not managed politically could damage the democratic system. 

And specifically in the field of, for example, journalism? 

- Is the journalist simply someone who transforms something into text? Can we replace it with replicating with a text machine. Or is it a social function that guarantees a democratic space? 

I am president of the Italian government's Commission for the study of the impact of AI on journalism and the publishing world. And we have concluded that the journalist has a fundamental role for democracy. But what makes it possible to have journalists is that there is a publishing industry that can pay them.

But then you have to recognize a problem, which is not born with AI, but with social networks. Why is it that if you journalists write something you can be taken in front of a judge, but if it is a social network nobody says anything to you?

Why can a director be taken to court? And an algorithm of a social network that chooses what I read, is free of everything. Today to this is added the computer's ability to write. But here again the problem is not the capacity of the machine. It is economic convenience. 

It is in the nature of the profession that it is essential for the survival of the democratic space. 

Years ago some scientists were calling for a moratorium on AI to see what to do with it.

- There is too much, too much money at stake. There are too many geopolitical interests. The competition between China and the United States is too high for either to trust the other in this so-called moratorium. 

The past year has changed a lot of the narrative about this. We used to talk about science and technology, activities where, if I discover something (I'm thinking for example of Nobel prizes), it's for everybody. Everybody benefits.

But today it's all about the race. If I win, you lose. This makes the approach impossible.

The Vatican

The Pope: 5 themes to pray these days

Pope Leo XIV encouraged us to pray in the Angelus this Sunday for 3 themes, to which 2 of these days are added. The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, until the 25th, and some African countries stand out.  

Francisco Otamendi-January 18, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

These are some of the issues Pope Leo XIV has encouraged us to pray about and consider in the coming days. 

1.- Week of Prayer for Christian Unity

In the Angelus Today, the Pope has paused for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, eight days until the feast of the Conversion of St. Paul on the 25th.

The origin of this initiative comes from Pope Leo XIII, he recalled. This year's theme is taken from the Letter to the Ephesians, “One body and one Spirit, as one is the hope to which we have been called”.

The prayers and prayers have been prepared by an ecumenical group coordinated by the Department of Interreligious Relations of the Armenian Apostolic Church. “Therefore, I invite all Catholic communities to strengthen in these days the prayer for the full unity of all Christians. This commitment to the unit must be consistently accompanied by peace and justice in the world”.”, he encouraged.

 2.- Africa

On Sunday, the Pope prayed for Africa, specifically for the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and for the flood victims in southern Africa. 

“The people of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, forced to flee their own country, especially to Burundi, because of the violence, who are facing a serious humanitarian crisis. Let us pray that between the parties to the conflict let dialogue, reconciliation and peace always prevail”.”, the Holy Father invited.

3.- Let us learn from St. John the Baptist.

Based on the Gospel This Sunday (cf. Jn 1:29-34), the Holy Father said that the Baptist was a man very much loved by the crowds, to the point of being feared by the authorities of Jerusalem (cf. Jn 1:19). 

“It would have been easy for him to take advantage of this fame; instead, does not yield at all to the temptation of success and popularity.”said Leo XIV. “Faced with Jesus, he recognizes his own littleness and gives space to his greatness. He knows that he was sent to prepare ‘the way of the Lord» (Mk 1:3; cf. Is 40:3), and when the Lord comes, he acknowledges his presence with joy and humility and withdraws from the scene.’.

“We don't need these ‘happiness substitutes’.’, Our joy and our greatness are not based on fleeting illusions of success and fame. “Our joy and our greatness are not based on fleeting illusions of success and fame, but on knowing that we are loved and desired by our Father in heaven”.

“Let us learn from John the Baptist to keep the spirit alert, loving simple things and sincere words, the Pontiff encouraged. “Living with sobriety and depth of mind and heart, making do with what is necessary and finding every day, as soon as possible, a special moment in which we can to pause in silence to pray, to reflect, to listen, to listen to. In short, to “go to the desert”, and there to meet the Lord and be with Him."

May the Virgin Mary, model of simplicity, wisdom and humility, help us in this, he concluded. 

Pope Leo XIV embraces a young man at the end of his weekly general audience in the Vatican's Paul VI Hall on Jan. 14, 2026. (Photo CNS/Vatican Media).

4.- To young people: “It's always better to see each other in person, not just on screens.”.

Pope Leo XIV embraced the youth of Rome - both literally and with his words - during a meeting a few days ago with the young people of the Diocese of Rome, telling them to choose real relationships over digital isolation, reported Paulina Guzik, from OSV News

«It is always better to see each other in person and not just on screens,» Pope Leo told the crowd, adding, “It is very important that we try to build human relationships, good friendships and, above all, friendship with Jesus.”.

Iran, Venezuela

These are countries to which Pope Leo XIV has recently referred, asking for prayers. On this occasion, Vatican News includes the "great concern" We ask ourselves “how is it possible to attack its own people? We ask ourselves ”how is it possible to attack one's own people“. And the commitment to a peaceful solution in Venezuela. 

These are two considerations expressed by the Vatican's Cardinal Secretary of State, Pietro Parolin, when answering questions from journalists on the sidelines of the Eucharistic celebration with the exposition of the relics of St. Pier Giorgio Frassati. This exposition took place on the afternoon of January 17, in the church of the Domus Mariae in Rome.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

ColumnistsArturo Lliteras

What I have learned from Cuba's precariousness

Manuel taught me that even those who are hungry can continue to share. In the humble parishes of Cuba I discovered that hope is born of small gestures, capable of transforming faith into concrete life.

January 18, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

On July 30, 2025, I boarded a plane to Havana, Cuba, to continue on to the diocese of Pinar del Río, where I would collaborate as pastor and administrator of two parishes. Although I had been in Cuba before, I did not really know what to expect, because the changes in the country are constant and take place day by day.

Small parishes, lively faith and few children

I arrived at my first destination: the Holy Family parish, located in the Mayka neighborhood. It is a small parish, located in a marginal neighborhood, with a mostly adult population and very few children.

In fact, to my surprise, it was necessary to go out into the street, pick up the children and ask them to take us to their homes to ask their parents if we could receive them in catechism. A very particular way of looking for catechumens. There I was welcomed by a married couple who had married in the Church the previous year: he was the administrator of the parish and she was the catechetical assistant, although on many occasions she was the one who taught the catechism classes directly.

The second parish I was assigned to accompany during this three-month experience was that of St. Francis of Assisi. It was very unique, since it was a house that had been bought to be converted into a church while waiting for the government's permission to build a church. As in the other community, most of the faithful were elderly and there were few children.

I was struck by the charitable work of both parishes, since they had a dining room that served people in even more precarious situations than usual three times a week.

Charity in the midst of precariousness

It was impressive for me to see how people who had to worry about whether water would come, whether there was electricity or whether they would find something to eat, were able to take time and resources to help others in greater need than themselves. This challenged me and demanded a greater commitment from me, because I had comforts and securities that they did not have.

I understood that my work there consisted, above all, in being present, listening, accompanying and bringing joy and hope. It was not always easy, since in many cases there was no way to escape from the precariousness in which they lived. However, when the time came to celebrate or to show solidarity, they gave their all, under the motto: “today for you, tomorrow for me”.

Manuel, the concrete face of hope

This thought, so detached, was embodied in a concrete person: Manuel, a simple and humble man, a participant in the Mayka dining room. He had been a teacher and was later sent as a soldier to Angola, an experience that marked him deeply and left him with a certain difficulty in speaking, as he was left somewhat stuttering. In spite of this, he retained a big and generous heart.

One Sunday, Manuel came to the parish and, in the middle of the consecration, he approached the altar and began to speak to me. As he could not be understood, the people asked him to sit down. At the end of the mass, he approached me to apologize and simply said: “Father, I am hungry”.

My immediate reaction was to look for something to feed him, which is quite normal when one feels compassion. However, the real teaching was given to me by him. The next day, Manuel returned to the parish with two fruits that had been given to him and wanted to give them to me, so that I would also have something to eat. Although I told him there was no need, he insisted. Then he turned around, shouted “Blessing, Father!” and left.

Manuel was always grateful and did not like to abuse the kindness of others, something that should be ordinary in our daily lives. So let us pray for our Cuban brothers and sisters who are going through difficult times, that their hearts may always remain open to compassion.

The authorArturo Lliteras

Priest.

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Books

Benedict XVI more intimate

Maria José Atienza-January 18, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

The figure of Joseph Ratzinger-Benedict XVI is called to mark a milestone in the history and Magisterium of the Church. Although a large part of his philosophical-theological production has already been published, there is still an important part of this work that remains unpublished. Opera Omnia to reach the general public. 

In the meantime, Ediciones Encuentro gives us The Lord takes us by the hand, a volume containing the private homilies of Benedict XVI, delivered at the Masses he celebrated in his chapel and which were attended only by the most important women in the world. Memores Domini who looked after him and his secretaries. 

The book does not collect the homilies chronologically, but in relation to the different liturgical seasons and feasts in the Church's calendar. In this way, the reader can immerse himself in prayer in a continuous and appropriate way to the readings of the different times of the Church. 

This is a Benedict XVI who is closer, more simply contemplative, who combines reflections on the Gospels of an impressive theological and moral height, with a trusting piety, with a filial, almost childlike tone. 

In the homilies collected in The Lord takes us by the hand, the Bavarian Pope confidently turns to the Lord, with a special emphasis on the prayer of petition and always placing Christ at the center and root of his homiletic reflection. As an example, these words that he addressed in the homily of the VII Sunday of Easter in 2013, just a few weeks after his resignation from the See of Peter: “It seems to me that these two things remain always important for us: the centrality of God - recognizing God as the reference point of our life, not losing sight of God as Creator, as Redeemer, as Judge - and creating space for God.”.

A wonderful book, more than recommendable for every Catholic and of great help for a deep contemplative and evangelical prayer, but which, at the same time, does not forget the problems of the Church and society today. 

A way to know and share the prayer from the heart of one of the great theologians of our time.

The Lord takes us by the hand

AuthorJoseph Ratzinger
Editorial: Encounter
Number of pages: 316
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    The Vatican

    Chris Pratt prepares a documentary on St. Peter's tomb

    In the heat of December, Christmas and Epiphany, perhaps it has gone unnoticed the Pope's audience with American actor Chris Pratt. “What an extraordinary honor, Pope Leo XIV! Thank you for inviting me,” wrote Chris Pratt, who is working on a documentary about the tomb of St. Peter, and premieres Mercy on January 23.

    Francisco Otamendi-January 17, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

    There are social media accounts that provide hardly any information. However, there are exceptions, such as that of U.S. actor Chris Pratt on X (@prattprattprattpratt, with more than 8 million followers).

    4 days ago, the iconic Pratt (Jurassic World, Guardians of the Galaxy), posted on X his Dec. 10 audience with Pope Leo XIV. “What an extraordinary honor, Pope Leo XIV! Thank you for inviting me,” wrote the actor, born in Virginia, USA.

    About the actor

    Chris Pratt appears in some photos with St. Peter's Basilica in the background, visiting St. Peter's with his wife, Catherine, with whom he has three children. Pratt also has an older son, born from his previous marriage in 2012. Three days later, on the 13th, the actor published a post of affectionate congratulations to his wife Catherine on the same X network.

    The American actor has publicly declared his Christian faith, and has frequently spoken about his relationship with God and Jesus in social networks and interviews.

    He was baptized in the Catholic Church, but does not formally identify himself as a practicing Catholic, according to his statements, although he attends Mass with his wife and participates in Catholic activities due to the family and education of his children.

    Projects and premieres

    Mercy‘, a sci-fi thriller starring Pratt, will be released in theaters on January 23rd. In it he plays a detective who must prove his innocence before a court ruled by artificial intelligence. He also has ’The Super Mario Galaxy Movie‘ in the role of Mario in the works for April 3.

    “Fundamental to the Christian faith.”

    A few days before his audience with the Pope, the Vatican agency reported a documentary on the tomb of St. Peter, guided by Chris Pratt.

    In fact, the American actor has been filming in the Vatican on those dates a documentary produced by Vatican Media, the Fabbrica di San Pietro and AF Films, which will be released in 2026, on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the inauguration and dedication of the present Basilica.

    The American actor will guide viewers on this journey between faith, history and archaeology, has written Vatican News. “It is an extraordinary honor,” Pratt declared, “to collaborate with Pope Leo and the Vatican on this project. The story of St. Peter is fundamental to the Christian faith and I am deeply grateful for the trust and access I have been granted to help bring his legacy to the screen.” The documentary was written by Andrea Tornielli in consultation with Pietro Zander.

    Center of devotion and worship

    «The history of the Basilica is intertwined with the life of St. Peter, the fisherman from Galilee to whom Jesus entrusted the guidance of the Church, martyred in Rome, on Vatican Mount, in 64 A.D.,» the Vatican agency reports. From the first centuries, the area of his tomb became a center of devotion and worship: many Christians wanted to be buried next to him. 

    In a journey through time and through exclusive images never seen before, the viewer will be involved in an exciting journey that will lead to the discovery of the tomb of Peter, which the Emperor Constantine wanted to preserve by clearing the Vatican Mount to build the first great Basilica, in which the area of the tomb was incorporated.

    The Pope, with actors and actresses

    A few days before, in mid-November, Pope Leo XIV received to well-known actors and actresses, and some directors. Among others, Gus Van Sant and Spike Lee, and actors Monica Bellucci, Cate Blanchett, Viggo Mortensen and Sergio Castellitto, reported Cindy Wooden of OSV News. 

    And still earlier, during the Jubilee, Leo XIV had received the actor Robert De Niro (82), two-time Oscar winner, American but with Italian roots. “Good morning! It's a pleasure to meet you,” the Pope said. “For me too,” replied De Niro, who was accompanied by several people, who received from Leo XIV a rosary.

    The authorFrancisco Otamendi

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    Education

    Marta Ripollés: “The inclusion of students with disabilities improves everyone”.”

    Fundación Tacumi Integración has been working in Madrid for 15 years for the inclusion of children and young people with intellectual disabilities in regular classrooms. Its motto, ‘Together and together’. Marta Ripollés, general director, explains to Omnes that “when everyone learns together, not only do they make better students... they make better people”.

    Francisco Otamendi-January 17, 2026-Reading time: 6 minutes

    Marta Ripollés, CEO of Fundación Tacumi, has a degree in law and is the mother of three children, the eldest of whom has Down syndrome. This explains why Ripollés has been working in the third sector for more than 15 years, and has worked in foundations that support people with intellectual disabilities and those at risk of severe exclusion. 

    In an interview with Omnes, this mother, a specialist, shows a personal conviction and a conviction of the Tacumi Foundation. “All children have the right to learn together and all parents have the right to choose the model of education they want for their children, regardless of each child's abilities.”.

    Tacumi seeks the full integration of children and young people with intellectual disabilities into the educational (and professional) environment. This is their bet: together and together” in the classrooms of regular schools, because they form “better students ... and better people”. Here is the conversation with Marta Ripollés.

    What is the objective of Fundación Tacumi?

    - With the slogan ‘Juntos y Revueltos’ (Together and Scrambled), the Foundation has been supporting the school inclusion of children and young people with intellectual disabilities and other specific educational needs for 15 years through the program “Aulas itinerantes” (Itinerant Classrooms).

    And what does ‘Aulas itinerantes’ consist of?

    - ‘Aulas itinerantes’ is a program in which specialized professionals enter the classrooms of regular schools to support students who need it most, helping them to progress alongside their peers, adapting materials, supporting teachers and creating inclusive environments.

    @Tacumi Foundation.

    Tell us what lies at the bottom...

    - For the past 15 years, at Fundación Tacumi we have worked in Madrid for a conviction as simple as it is powerful: all children have the right to learn together and all parents have the right to choose the model of education they want for their children, regardless of the abilities of each one. 

    It is perhaps interesting to note that the Tacumi Foundation was born more than 15 years ago thanks to the Talita Foundation in Barcelona. Some parents of children with intellectual disabilities were interested in what Talita was doing in Barcelona and implemented the same model in Madrid.

    How many schools are they in?

    - Today we are in 12 schools in the Community of Madrid, supporting 35 students in the classroom, but with a much greater multiplier effect: changing the culture of these schools, raising awareness among classmates, families and teachers.

    When a child with a disability enters a regular classroom, he or she is not only in the classroom, but also in the classroom.

    learning math or language. He is learning - and also teaching - something much more important: that we all have a place. That differences do not separate us... but enrich us.

    @Tacumi Foundation.

    How does this inclusion, or integration, of students with disabilities work? What are the consequences?

    - Inclusion doesn't just change the life of the child receiving support. It changes the lives of everyone around them. Peers discover that empathy is not taught in a book. It is learned by living together. They learn that helping, waiting, listening, valuing... are also forms of intelligence.

    Inclusion is not just a right. It is an opportunity. An opportunity to build more humane schools, where every child - with or without disabilities - feels that he or she belongs. Because when everyone learns together, they not only become better students...they become better people.

    What does ‘inclusion’ mean to you?

    - From what I have been telling you, when we talk about inclusion, we are not just talking about them. We talk about us. About the society we want to build. Of a future where every child, without exception, knows that his or her presence matters. That is why we need to be known, so that we can continue to grow. We want to reach more schools and more families so that no child is left without the opportunity to grow, advance and learn with their peers.

    Can you briefly describe the mechanics of the support you provide?

    - When a family, or a school, contacts us because they have a student with an intellectual disability or any specific educational need, support, that makes that lack of support makes them be excluded in the classroom, we intervene.

    What we do is to provide support in certain sessions throughout the week -we are not there all day, because that would not be inclusion, but something else-. What we do is an initial assessment by our coordinator, and we determine between 4 and 8, maybe more, sessions per week, in language, mathematics, history, physics, in which the child, the student, needs some support. 

    Because the student is from the school, we are an occasional support, and what we do is to favor that inclusion. If we were there all day long it would not be inclusion, it would be something else, it would not even be special education. 

    What we try to do is that through this weekly punctual support, establish guidelines, both for the teachers, who are with the student all day long, because the student is from the center, and follow up with the guidance departments, that is to say, we set objectives for that student.

    The educator, the person who intervenes in the classroom, is ours, a person hired by the Foundation, but the resource is paid by the families, the center pays nothing.

    From which centers do you call them, or to which centers do you most often contact them?

    - Mainly, we need to reach private schools. For example, we have an agreement with Fomento, and we are in many Fomento schools. There are many families who need it. It is true that we are a small foundation, but we are eager to continue growing, especially in Madrid. A lot of families call us. With children, with specific needs, who do not know what to do. As a result of the interview with Voz Pópuli, at the beginning of December, many families contacted us. 

    I have a daughter with Down syndrome who will now be 24 years old. I didn't know that integration existed in my time. My daughter Maria went to a special education school, and she has been happy, and I have been happy in special education. But now that I see the advantages of inclusion -I've been at the Foundation for a few years now-, especially up to a certain age, and up to secondary school, for example, I take a lot of advantage of it. Not only for the benefit of the child who has that need, but also for the benefit of the environment, of his peers, of awareness, how they change their outlook. This is, as they say, win-win, in the end it's a win-win situation. The person with a disability and the environment. How it changes the look, the empathy, the teamwork...

    Let's finish: Do children with disabilities have the right to be in regular education, or should they be referred to special education? What does the law say?

    - If a family wants their child to go to a regular school, the child has the right to be in that school. What happens? Unfortunately, when a child with an intellectual disability or with a behavioral problem, etc., comes to them, the centers do not have the means to provide support. But not because of their own fault, but because they do not provide them with those means, or because they do not have adequately trained staff. 

    What usually happens is that the centers invite those families to go to special education. But in fact, the law says that the child has the right to be in that school. And the center will have to provide the supports that the child needs. The reality is that there are no means for those supports, and the centers are overflowing. That is why Tacumi was born. Because to many families who opted for regular education, the centers told them, great, I'll take it, but I don't have the means, you put them there.

    And the last one, tell me for a moment about the cost.

    - It is true that it is a resource that is not cheap. We attend and make an initial assessment without any commitment, and we give you an estimate. And then there is the service check, which is very important. Families that have been granted the Dependency Law have an economic subsidy, which you can apply to domestic help, or you can apply it to a training service. And the families that have the service check, as they call it, pay part of the fee with what the public administration gives them through the Dependency Law.

    These aids do a lot, says Marta Ripollés in conclusion. We do not ask her for data, but she gives them. “To me, for example, they give me 300 euros a month, and the training of my daughter Maria is 600 euros. Well, that's half. In the end, whoever has a need, looks for the means to be able to solve that need”.

    The authorFrancisco Otamendi

    Culture

    The creation of man. The Garden of Earthly Delights, by Bosch.

    The Triptych of the Garden of Delights consists of three oak panels. The one on the left refers to El Paraíso.

    Eva Sierra and Antonio de la Torre-January 17, 2026-Reading time: 7 minutes

    ARTISTIC COMMENTARY

    The Triptych of the Garden of Delights is made up of three oak panels. The two wings are folded over the central panel, a continuation of the landscape of the Garden of Eden. The bright colors of this composition contrast markedly with the right panel depicting hell. When the triptych is closed, all we see is a grisaille representation of the creation of the world (analyzed previously).

    The scene shows God the Father making the presentation of Eve to Adam, an unusual subject (Bosch initially included the creation of Eve, as the technical analysis of infrared reflectography reveals). 

    Symbolism in Eden

    The high horizon line allows for a panoramic composition featuring three overlapping planes alternating bands of blue and green to create a sense of perspective. The sky is reduced to a cold mountainous band that gives depth to the landscape through the use of aerial perspective (a bluish haze in which objects fade due to distance). Bosch's interest is in the narrative and iconographic program. What seems a rather naive representation of paradise is, on the contrary, full of meaning. We can appreciate the aesthetic merit of the painting, the detailed depiction of a vast array of vegetation and different types of creatures inhabiting the newly created world, enhanced by the use of oil paint traditional at the time. The pink robe of God, the only clothed figure in the composition is modeled in the Flemish style. The other pink object is the fountain in the center of the panel, in a straight line above God: a probable allusion to the source of the water of life coming from God's throne. To its right, a palm tree with a coiled serpent is the only reference to the fall and sin in this panel. It is interesting to note that the tree of life to Adam's left is a copy of a dragon tree from the Canary Islands, known in Flanders from engravings (The Flight to Egypt, Martin Schongauer, c. 1470-75).

    Adam and Eve: Foreshadowing of Christ and the Church

    The scale and centrality of the three main figures underscores the importance given by Bosch. Many depictions of Adam and Eve usually show Adam sleeping during God's creation of Eve, but in this creation scene, the iconography has been modified. Adam's feet are crossed, touching God's foot, with his legs extended. For viewers in the Middle Ages, this was easily associated with depictions of Christ on the Cross. God holds Eve's hand as she kneels before Him, a scene that has parallels to the institution of marriage: God instituted marriage-human love-and instructed them to be fruitful and multiply (shown in the central panel, Paradise). Christ, here depicted as Adam, was seen as the bridegroom, who, together with his bride, the church (the “New Eve”), restored this institution through the reunion of humanity and God on the Cross. The medieval message was probably known to Bosch, here representing the future marriage of the bridegroom and bride as a restoration of the “image and likeness” to God in which Adam and Eve had originally been created.

    This interpretation of symbolism requires a certain level of education of the viewer. We do not know much about the commission of this triptych. The meaning is clearly moralizing, but the fact that it includes nude men and women, in groups or couples, having amorous relations in a clear allusion to sin, might not seem appropriate for display in a church. The panel is first mentioned in 1517, by Antonio de Beatis, who places it in the palace of Nassau in Brussels. We can think that the intended audience would be a scholarly audience, who would be able to read between the lines of this beautiful painting, designed thanks to Bosch's power of invention: his creativity was a distinctive feature, which made him stand out among other painters and which did not go unnoticed by Philip II.

    Left panel: Paradise.

    CATECHETICAL COMMENTARY

    The first chapter of Genesis presented God's creative work as the design and construction of a marvelous scenario in which the history of humanity could be represented. In this painting, Bosch presents us with the second part of this work, which in the terminology of the medieval theology that inspired the painting could be called opus ornatus (the fourth to sixth days of the Creation), the work of clothing a world already structured in the distinction (the first to third days of the Creation), which was represented in the closed panels of this painting.

    Bosch does not represent here the work of the fourth day, the celestial luminaries, but deploys all his artistic energy to give a complete image of the fifth day (when the sea gives rise to fish and birds) and the sixth (when the earth produces the animals that inhabit it), in which the visible creation culminates. The world painted here overflows with a diversity of species and shows a careful arrangement of living beings. The lower part of the painting, on the other hand, expresses in the artist's own enigmatic symbolism the complex interrelation that exists between them.

    The interesting balance achieved between the careful and orderly composition and the inexhaustible and unimaginable diversity of plants and animals, is expressing very well that the Creator wanted to endow his work with order and diversity, leaving in each of the creatures, and in the interdependence that exists between them, a reflection of his goodness and perfection; in short, a brief reflection of his infinite beauty.

    The use of a high horizon, which leaves plenty of space for the representation of the visible creation, is like an evocation of the immensity of the created world (reinforced by the distant aerial perspective) and of its diversity. This is manifested not only in the number, but also in the strange animals that swarm through the painting, which perhaps owe their fanciful forms to the news of the strange animals that the Castilian and Portuguese maritime expeditions were discovering at the end of the 15th century. This admirable scenery, thus painted, is destined in the first chapter of Genesis for humanity, which is its center and meaning.

    A custodian for a paradise

    However, to situate the creation of humanity, Bosch, like the vast majority of the Western pictorial tradition, resorts to the second chapter of Genesis. In it, a reverse order is followed: in a desert world, in which only God and a spring of water (both present in the painting sharing the color pink and the central situation that gives them presidency) the human being is modeled, and only then a paradise of plants and animals is planted for him to guard it.

    For those who contemplate the picture from this chapter that gives it meaning, it is clear that all the immense wealth of diversity and order that God has painted in the world is offered to humanity as a stage, as a gift, and also as a responsibility and a task. The human being is called to discover and value the order and goodness of creation, as well as to respect the correct interrelationship between creatures and their delicate balances. The human being is placed on center stage, not as an actor who is going to show off and take advantage of him; if a garden is planted for him, it is not for him to abuse and ruin it. In this scenario, man and woman must play their role as custodians of Creation in respect for it and in immediate relationship with its Creator.

    The relationship as an essential element of the human being, in his condition as a person created in the image of the Creator, is expressed in the significant look that Adam directs to God in response to the blessing he is receiving from his right hand. Humanity receives the gift of being created, therefore, in view of communion with God and his covenant with Him, a destiny that will be fully fulfilled in Jesus Christ, the New Adam, who will make it possible for this covenant in faith (by which the human being serves and loves God) to be fully realized.

    Equal and complementary

    It is also significant that, with his left hand, God takes Eve's hand to present it to Adam. In effect, it expresses that the relationship of the human being with the Creator must also be lived in the personal relationship with his fellow human beings. On the other hand, as the second chapter of Genesis teaches, the relationship between man and woman is not only one of communication, but of complementarity: none of the numerous creatures that inhabit the picture is sufficient to complete the desire and the personality of the human being. As the reader of Genesis already knows, only Eve is the adequate help for Adam. 

    God makes all creatures pass before Adam, but none completes him, but only the woman he has created for him in equality of value and dignity (both have the same size in the composition, and appear referred to each other, through the mediation of the Hand of the Creator). If male and female require each other with the diversity and complementarity willed by the Creator and carefully captured in this picture, it seems clear that protecting their union is fundamental not only for the biological survival of the human species, but also for each person to find the fullness of the human vocation in the free and sincere gift and surrender to another person.

    Hence the evocation of the sacrament of Matrimony, which remains as if drawn by the two divine Hands, which unite and bless. The same Hands of the Creator that molded humanity from the clay of the earth, according to the second chapter of Genesis, are those that in this picture build, bless and protect the union of the human couple, so that in their union the work of the Creator of humanity may be fulfilled. 

    Man and woman are thus in harmony with each other, with the Creator and with the whole of creation, living the state of original justice that the serene composition and the soft chromatic tones of the painting evoke. However, the presence of the serpent in the tree, still distant but already threatening, reminds the viewer of the fragility of this harmony, which the Hand of God must protect and will have to repair, once lost in the way that will be narrated in the next painting of this series.

    Technical data of the work

    TitleThe Garden of Earthly Delights. El Paraíso Panel
    Author: Bosch
    Date: 1500-1505
    Dimensions: 220 × 389 cm
    MaterialOil on panel
    The authorEva Sierra and Antonio de la Torre

    Art historian and Doctor of Theology

    The World

    What are Venezuela's priorities after Maduro's capture?

    Lorent Saleh, exiled to Spain, demands a “real democratic transition” and assures that “the center of the debate is not oil, it should be the people, the hostages”.

    Jose Maria Navalpotro-January 16, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    The world is debating with conflicting opinions after the intervention of the United States in Venezuela. Last January 9, in his speech to the Diplomatic Corps, Pope Leo XIV asked “that the will of the Venezuelan people be respected and that they work for the protection of the human and civil rights of all and for the construction of a future of stability and harmony”. A few days later, Lorent Saleh, winner of the European Parliament's Sakharov Prize, currently exiled in Spain, called for a “real democratic transition” and, as a priority, the release of political prisoners.

    According to The New York Times, official sources said that 166 people had been released so far, although as of Tuesday afternoon, the Penal Forum, Venezuela's main human rights organization, had only confirmed 56 releases.

    Lorent Saleh and his trajectory as an activist

    Lorent Saleh (Lorent Enrique Gómez Saleh, San CristobalTáchira, (Venezuela, 1988) spent four years in La Tumba and El Helicoide, the worst prisons of the Chavista regime. He began his activism for human rights as a university leader, in front of Chávez, in 2007. His activity earned him the Sakharov Prize, awarded by the European Parliament in 2017. This allowed him to leave Venezuela, where he had been detained since 2014.

    Now, after the intervention of the United States, he understands that “today more than ever, we must be mobilized, organized and coordinated to continue pressing for a real democratic transition”. 

    Demands for a democratic transition

    For the activist, this transition must have “concrete and humane objectives”. And, for this, he asks for a series of points: 

    -The release of all political prisoners and the definitive closure of torture centers.

    -The immediate cessation of all forms of persecution of dissidents.

    -The safe return of exiles, persecuted and released political prisoners to their homes.

    -The call for democratic, free and verifiable elections.

    Saleh assures in a statement to which Omnes has had access, that “today, when the country and its pain are at the center of global attention, what Venezuela needs is not to be explained from Eurocentrism and that petty intellectual arrogance (typical of the colonial thinking that so many have criticized), but to look at it head on, with truth and humanity, without ideological biases”.

    Appeal to the international community

    In this sense, Saleh has stated that “while in Europe narratives are discussed as if real life were a Cold War pamphlet, in Venezuela there are more than eight hundred people kidnapped by the regime, hostages in torture centers denounced by the International Criminal Court and the main human rights organizations in the world”. Among them are journalists, activists, social leaders, indigenous leaders, trade unionists, military, teachers, minors and senior citizens. “All imprisoned and tortured for the same thing: thinking differently,” he says.

    According to Saleh, “crimes against humanity in Venezuela have been documented, filed and prosecuted for years before international organizations. This process has cost the lives and freedom of many human rights defenders”. That is why he asks: “we cannot forget the essential: the only correct side is that of the victims. Never on the side of the perpetrators.

    For Saleh, it is necessary to focus the debate. “Enough of forcing us to look at the world from binary logics of left or right, as if human dignity and complexity could be included in the slogans. The center of the debate is not oil, it should be the people, the hostages, those who today have no voice.”.

    Therefore, he asks: “A direct message to those who preach from studies and ideological tribunes: Do you expect victims to feel guilt for seeing their executioner handcuffed in front of a court? Guilt for celebrating justice and dreaming of the possibility of returning home and being reunited with our families and friends? The human rights activist clarifies: ”Guilt is to remain silent in the face of torture. Guilt is to make up tyrants from the comfort of the free world. Guilt is abandoning those who cannot speak“.

    He ends his statements with a call: “On the side of the victims. Always. That is why I ask you to help me raise my voice for the release of the hostages in Venezuela. This must be our center of debate, our social mission, our task and responsibility”.

    Immediate priorities

    In a statement made to Albert Castillon's program on January 12, Lorent Saleh insisted on the priority of “the release of all political prisoners”. And then, “the complete cessation of persecution and the return of all those exiled and persecuted, and finally, the holding of free and democratic elections where everyone can participate”. 

    “The least that Venezuelans are worried about is oil. It is ridiculous when they mention that to us because we have never enjoyed that oil and the little that was done with the oil was precisely when Chavismo had not arrived and more US companies were there. So, our dream is to free the political prisoners. The day they close La Tumba and El Helicoide, I will be able to sleep peacefully. If Trump does that, which is not to my liking, I will be eternally grateful to him because he will have done what not even the entire international community did during all these years”.

    The Church's role in the Venezuelan crisis

    A few months ago, Saleh spoke about the role of the Church in his country, in an interview in Mundo Cristiano: “Pope Francis wanted to prevent the Church in Venezuela from ending up like in Nicaragua, expelled, completely persecuted. There were many expectations of what Pope Francis could have done. I am very respectful with the Church and I also believe that he has done very important things that are not very public, but he has contributed to help and protect many people in my country”. 

    Read more

    How much is it worth to get married?

    The average age of marriage is increasing: today it is 38.8 years in Spain and 37.8 in Chile. This data allows us to observe one of the factors affecting this delay: the cost and organization of the marriage celebration.

    January 16, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

    According to the report published this year by the World Population Review, the average age of marriage has risen to chilling levels. Spain leads the ranking with 38.8 years, and the next country on the list is Chile, with 37.8. What is happening? While a few are getting married young to start the crazy family adventure, thousands of young people prefer to look to the ground and postpone the decision. Why? In this column I want to look at the economic-play factor. In some cases couples are just saving up to follow the fashion of throwing a million-dollar party.

    According to a report in El Mercurio (8-11-2025), in Chile, a high standard wedding that hires a banquet hall for 300-400 guests, heating, lights, photographer, dance floor, DJ, instant photo booth, among other details that popularizes Instagram, can cost as much as 60 million pesos! (56.000 €).

    The organization begins almost a year in advance: long guest lists, exorbitant prices for each guest, abundance of alcohol. Little by little, the current account is bleeding to death. “I have four little daughters... four! -a friend said to me. When they want to get married, I hope this fashion has changed so they don't ruin me.”.

    Is it reasonable that the wedding party has become such a demanding event? The union between families has always been a source of joy. Not only for those clans, but for the whole city. It is a celebration of love and fertility. The bride and groom promise each other fidelity and respect for all the days of their lives. Those who were teenagers settle in life, mature, and aspire to sponsor the most important asset of the nation: children. The way to channel this overflow of joy is by sharing it. Hence, families organize a meal to share their joy with others.

    However, countless couples have lost focus. And the problem is not only the disproportionate expense, but also the abundance of time they waste on organization! The eagerness to spend causes the few people who get married to face the stress of incorporating practically a second job into their schedules. In addition to the daytime workday as teachers or executives somewhere, they take on an evening workday as producers of the event.

    Let's burst the bubble of opulence! Let's go back to the old simplicity! When partying has become a barrier to entry for marriage, it means that the time has come to stop and reflect: what does it mean to get married?

    The authorJuan Ignacio Izquierdo Hübner

    Lawyer from the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, Licentiate in Theology from the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross (Rome) and Doctorate in Theology from the University of Navarra (Spain).

    Why have you already skipped the diet?

    We have almost abandoned our New Year's resolutions: the diet, the gym, that promised book... And nothing happens. More than a failure, they are reminders of our fragility, that pointing fingers at others is easy and recognizing ourselves as weak is difficult.

    January 15, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

    By this time of the month, you have probably already had time to break some of the resolutions you had set at the end of the year: you have skipped your diet, you have stopped going to the gym, you have not read that book that was waiting for you on the shelf or you have started smoking again. It is of no concern except if you are one of those people who, even so, believe they are consistent with their actions and would swear, without hesitation, to be people of integrity.  

    Human weaknesses and unfulfilled purposes

    What can I say, I don't trust myself a bit. I skipped the diet the day after I started it with a formidable Three Kings cake; the book continues to stare at me from the shelf while I make scroll Although I haven't smoked for years, I know deep down that I'm still a smoker and at the slightest change... I haven't even joined the gym. I'm not proud of it, but I don't flagellate myself either. That's the way I am, that's the way I'll stay, I'll never change. 

    Following the famous song by Alaska and the human weakness, I am struck by this wave of supertañonismo led by the same people who turned the «Who Cares?» theme into an anthem. It seemed that they were singing against a morally oppressive society, but no, because now many of them are the ones pointing fingers and whispering behind their backs. And they do it not only with that minority who call themselves practicing Catholics, but even with those who dare to acknowledge that they believe in God, even if only in their own way.

    Artists of the most diverse nature, scientists, politicians or sportsmen who publicly manifest their beliefs are not to be trusted by the new censors in charge of preserving the new morals and good customs. In these four decades, puritanism has not disappeared, only who exercises it has changed. To prove it, look for the lyrics of this classic of the movida madrileña to see if it could not be sung now, verse by verse, by Hakuna in the very Puerta del Sol against the new censors. If Tierno Galván would raise his head!

    Hypocrisy

    Falling into the same fault we criticize others for is a great lesson of life that should help us to reduce polarization, to realize that the other is not an enemy, but a brother or sister, weak like me, and capable of screwing up. Pope Francis said to the prisoners: «Every time I enter a prison, I ask myself: «Why them and not me? We all have the possibility of making mistakes: all of us. In one way or another, we have made mistakes», and he affirmed that »pointing the finger at those who have made mistakes cannot be an excuse to hide one's own contradictions«.

    This is what the Pharisees have historically done, be they of whatever religion, ideology or political current they may be, hide their own contradictions. And then come the scandals: democrats who act with their backs to the people, defenders of feminism caught distributing women like cards, politicians with proletarian discourse turned into capitalists, pastors who act as wolves, experts in male violence denounced for abuses, champions of law and peace who use force without legitimacy... And so on and so forth. 

    Acknowledgment of sin, humility and need for God

    That is why I have little confidence in those who trust themselves too much, because either they do not know themselves or they are blatantly lying to us. Unfortunately, human beings are programmed to follow self-confident leaders and this is what populisms, sects and all messianisms live on, which, in the end, end up destroying their followers because they are based on a lie. 

    In the face of Truth, which is Christ, no human being, no matter how holy he may be, passes the test. We are all weak, inconsistent, capable of making mistakes in seeking the good or of seeking evil directly. St. Paul explains like no one else this typically human contradiction when he says: «I do not do the good that I desire, but I do the evil that I do not desire.

    And if what I do not desire is precisely what I do, it is not I who does it, but the sin that dwells in me». Believing in that sin that dwells in each one of us does not exculpate us nor does it mean throwing in the towel and not trying to get up after every fall, because God always offers us a new opportunity to straighten our course, but it should put us on alert so that we do not walk through the world blindly as do the ideologies that deny sin and believe that man has a solution on his own. We need God to be authentically free and not slaves of sin!

    So now you know why you have skipped the diet. Don't worry, it's normal. Maybe it's a sign for you to have mercy on those who fall from the top because, one day, you're going to take a big hit.

    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.

    Books

    Francisco de Vitoria and peace 

    Pope Leo XIV's Christmas message invites us to rediscover the legacy of Francisco de Vitoria and the School of Salamanca, whose thought on human dignity and peace is at the origin of modern international law.

    José Carlos Martín de la Hoz-January 15, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    The speech of the Holy Father Leo XIV on the first Christmas in the Chair of St. Peter followed the line of his predecessors with a clear and forceful content in favor of true peace in the world.

    Precisely, in this new year of 2026 we will celebrate the V Centenary of the beginning of the teaching of Francisco de Vitoria (1483-1546) at the University of Salamanca and, therefore, of the beginning of the fruitful School of Salamanca that promoted peace in the world and whose principles are behind the statement of the Declaration of Human Rights of 1948 that has marked the path of peace in the world since the end of the “Second World War”.

    It is a good time to reread, with the impulse of Pope Leo XIV, the great theological and juridical Relecciones that Francisco de Vitoria pronounced between 1528 and 1539 in Salamanca and that changed the course of the government of the empire of Charles V and of the Christian kingdoms and its principles ended up being collected in the new international law that enriched the law of nations.

    Francisco Vitoria and the birth of international law

    The professor, lecturer and researcher Luis Frayle Delgado (Salamanca 1931) collected in the volume published by Tecnos, which we will comment below, the three great relections of Francisco de Vitoria on the law of nations that originated the international law and marked a brake on the just war until trying to make it disappear: “so that one arrives at war by obligation only in case of necessity and against one's own will” (Sobre el derecho a la guerra n. 60, p. 212).

    These three relections, “The civil power”, “on the Indians” and “on the right to war” were delivered at the University of Salamanca before the cloister and the students of all the university faculties between 1528 and 1539 and are already included in the first edition of the Relecciones of Master Vitoria, published after his death in Lyon by Jacques Boyer in 1557.

    These relections deal with the new international order created by the Lutheran rupture and the beginning of the wars of religion and, therefore, the disappearance, de facto, of the concept of Christianity to enter fully into the system of balances between nations.

    The dignity of the person as the basis of the legal order

    Certainly, the great success of Francisco de Vitoria was to have contributed with his teaching and the plethora of disciples who took his ideas and the theological method promoted by him to all the European universities and to the incipient ones in America, Africa and Asia. 

    Vitoria and the School of Salamanca moved quite naturally from theology to law and from there to economics, simply because they had an anthropology based on the dignity of the person.

    Let us remember that both Roman law and the Christian faith that the Salamancan masters handled was based on the dignity of the human person and, especially, on the fact that man was considered as “the image and likeness of God” (cf. Gen 1:26). This conviction produced the shift from pagan humanism to Christian humanism that has lasted until the present day.

    Certainly, Francisco de Vitoria will be, centuries later, at the basis of the declaration of human rights of 1948, which has underpinned Western democratic society ever since and, especially, has provided the legal basis for global law. Human rights are based on the fact that man is a person and has been created in the image and likeness of God, otherwise we would be dealing with human rights that would be based on human rights themselves.

    Authority, just law and the common good

    In the first place, Master Vitoria recalls the importance of harmony between civil and ecclesiastical power and the concert of nations in the search for the common good and in the task of facilitating the path to eternal beatitude of the Christian faithful.

    Immediately, he will emphasize the importance of personal freedom and the responsibility to collaborate and obey just laws so that society may develop in the peace of the children of God. Logically, since the Indians were “in partibus infidelium” owners of their lands and possessions and governed by their legitimate lords, there was no place to deprive them of their dominion or to make war against them.

    God is the one who possesses the civil authority, who delivers it to the people, who, through the oath of fidelity, delivers it to the monarchs who must provide for the civil society to be governed in order to the peace of consciences and eternal bliss, as the book of the Partidas of Alfonso X the Wise points out in the first Partida, first title and first law.

    The civil laws in consonance with the natural law and the eternal law are of obligatory fulfillment and therefore the harmony between the natural and supernatural order must be observed. Vitoria will also point out the importance of a just fiscal order so as not to stifle families in their economic development and maintenance of their dignity.

    International equilibrium, freedom and peace among nations

    It is very interesting that Francisco de Vitoria has assumed the end of Christianity, both by the Lutheran rupture of the unity of the Christian faith and the atomization of the Reformed communities that will lead to a new world order in the Peace of Westphalia in 1648.

    Vitoria also stressed the impossibility of the constitution of a single empire or the rule of one nation over the others. Therefore, the new world order since Westphalia should be based on the balance between nations and international law.

    The principles of personal freedom and the dignity of the human person will be behind the need to respect free trade and freedom of movement, always respecting the legislative and administrative order of the various nations of the world. Vitoria will anticipate the Second Vatican Council by promoting the principle of religious freedom and the call to evangelical preaching under the respect for freedom and through evangelical persuasion and respect for consciences.

    About civil power. About the Indians. On the right to war.

    AuthorFrancisco de Vitoria
    Editorial: Tecnos
    Pages: 212
    Year: 2021
    Read more
    Evangelization

    Erik Varden: “I think the Catholic turn is real and needs to be taken seriously”.”

    In this interview with Omnes, the Bishop of Trondheim reflects on the experience of pain with a Christian perspective and the challenge of the Church to respond to the questions of today's youth.

    Maria José Atienza-January 15, 2026-Reading time: 5 minutes

    A few days ago, the Bishop of Trondheim, Erik Varden visited Madrid. In the hand of this media, of the Editorial Encuentro, where he has published his book Wounds that heal, and the Ángel Herrera Oria Cultural Foundation, Varden was the guest star of a Omnes Forum which brought together more than 250 people. 

    Shortly before, the Trappist monk and Norwegian bishop spoke with Omnes about the proposal of prayer and Christian reflection through the wounds of Christ that he makes in his latest publication in Spanish, as well as other current issues. 

    At once close and profound, Varden stresses that the universal experience of suffering and limitation changes, completely, under the prism of faith, through which “it takes on a totally different dimension and we begin to have the possibility of seeing our own wounds as potentially life-giving and life-enhancing.”.  

    At the beginning of Wounds that heal, You point out - as one of the characteristics of our society today - the number of people who identify with their wounds. As Christians, how do we balance the awareness of being wounded but also saved?

    -To some extent, I think that's where we need faith, or at least some high moral ideal; some perception of life that allows us to transcend ourselves to see meaning outside and beyond my own experience.

    Because, if I believe that I am the ultimate reality of my existence, if I suffer, that is the totality of my reality. Then, of course, I want to tell everybody about it and I shut myself up. But that's where we need something to aspire to that is outside of ourselves.

    I refer to transcendence in general terms because, obviously, there are people who are not Christians or non-believers and who sometimes live with great courage wounds, illnesses, losses.

    Obviously, if you are a Christian and you believe that God has entered into our human nature and has allowed himself to be wounded in our nature, in order to heal our wounds, then, of course, it takes on a whole different dimension and we begin to have the possibility of seeing our own wounds as potentially life-giving and life-enhancing, and potentially also as sources of healing. That is the fundamental paradox. 

    That is why I put, in the book, as an epigraph that phrase from Isaiah: “By his wounds we are healed”. To the extent that we allow our wounds to join their wounds, then our wounds can also be sources of healing for ourselves and for others. 

    As Christians, the Passion does not end in itself, but in the Resurrection. How can we live these two sides of the same coin - the Paschal faith and the way of the Passion - without excluding one or the other? 

    -What you point out there is the fundamental Christian challenge: Not to lose ourselves in a vague cloud of optimism, which would be a caricature of the resurrection, and not to lose ourselves in the depths of darkness and pain. 

    The best remedy is to enter deeply into the life of Christ as it is presented to us in the Scriptures and as it is presented to us in the liturgy of the Church. To live the liturgy fully.

    Ultimately, this is a tension that is resolved in every Mass, which is a living presence of the Passion and yet an absolutely resolute affirmation of the Resurrection. So I think the key would be to live deeply the Eucharistic life.

    Have we lost the Catholic reflection on the suffering of Christ out of fear, rejection or misunderstanding of this possibility that later, however, emerges in every life? 

    -There is some truth in that. One of the wonderful things about being Catholic is that we have a long experience to draw on, which, if we care to remember it, helps us to see ourselves in perspective. Most of the time, we don't bother to remember, so we become obsessed with our own reflection. 

    When you look at the history of the Church there have been times and periods when the mystery of the Passion has been at its highest expression and times when it has been partially eclipsed by other parts of the Mystery. That's natural, because it's extremely difficult to keep those extremes we talked about earlier in constant tension. And, you know what, I'm happy to reproduce it in the book in the image of the smiling Christ in the monastery of Lerins, in the south of France. Because that image is, to some extent, the crystallization of a collective perception. He has achieved gentleness, a gentleness in the midst of the Passion that is totally insensitive. He has managed to internalize this idea that the Passion is a source of joy, which is what we proclaim on Good Friday.

    That phrase hits me like a punch in the stomach every Good Friday. It is through the cross that joy enters the world. From the perspective of someone who has no faith, that seems like an absurd, even perverse statement, but we Christians believe it to be true. 

    After the Second World War - which was obviously an immense trauma, and more so in Spain, with the trauma of the Civil War - there was in Europe a very determined effort to rebuild, to move forward. And that will to rebuild and rebuild coincided, obviously, with the 50s and 60s, when industry and technology made great strides forward, when suddenly there was a new prosperity. And there was great faith in a new world, which was a healthy and necessary conviction at that time. 

    This thought, to some extent, is present in part of the thrust of the Second Vatican Council, perhaps especially in Gaudium et Spes, on the Church in the modern world. In a way that is not at all naive, but takes for granted that we are in the midst of this great process of moving forward and renewal, rebuilding relationships, reconciliation, so many things that seemed possible.

    In the context of that sentimental cultural movement, it became natural to focus a lot on the resurrection. We can think of those banal and somehow now charming liturgical refrains of the 1970s, “we are a people of joy, alleluiaaaa”. We are not, but there is some truth to that.

    In terms of our collective sensibility, no one was very much inclined to obsess about wounds, because what we were concerned with was getting out of illness and into new health. So it is not a matter of reducing Theodicy to sociology, but Theodicy is conditioned by the moods, aspirations and challenges of the time. 

    I think we are in a totally different space now. That's why, Candem, Gracie Abrams' song that I've sometimes talked about, is so interesting, because many of our young people now are not hopeful, not optimistic at all. 

    We live in a world that is so exposed and endangered in so many ways, with so many things fragile; so many things collapsing; so many structures that used to be reliable that just disappear overnight. So all of a sudden, the whole iconography of the wound takes on a different form. 

    What we must avoid as Christians, and particularly those of us who preach, teach and write, is to make sure that we somehow connect this mood of our times with Christian mystery and wholeness, and not let it become merely sentimental.

    In Spain there is talk of a “Catholic turn”, perhaps due to an awareness of the futility of the empty answers of a society without God and the evidence of these wounds, especially in young people. Do you believe in this return to faith?

    -I think it's real and I think it needs to be taken seriously. Whether it will last is another question. 

    Within the Catholic world in Europe, we have been acutely aware for several decades that all the statistics were going down: Mass attendance, baptisms, vocations, the terrible legacy of abuse and financial scandals, and so on. Everything was going wrong.

    We have become accustomed to living in a state of emergency. We are desperate for reassurance and tell ourselves, “It was a little bump in the road! Now everything is back to normal.” I think, therefore, we have to be cautious but I also think there is a great authenticity in this turning of young people, particularly now, towards faith. 

    There is great authenticity and sincerity in the questions they ask, in their search. The question is: will they find in our parishes, our communities, our monasteries, our dioceses, a reality whose authenticity corresponds to their authentic search? 

    This is potentially a moment of great grace and, as always, a moment of grace is a moment of conversion. So the great challenge for the Church now is not to say: “We can relax again”, but: “We have to start living a good, coherent, Christ-centered and credible life”.

    Gospel

    John's testimony and our mission. Second Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

    Vitus Ntube comments on the readings for the feast of the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time (A) corresponding to January 18, 2026.

    Vitus Ntube-January 15, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

    We have entered Ordinary Time, and today's Gospel reading is a fitting continuation of the Baptism story. Last Sunday we celebrated the feast of the Baptism of Jesus-the first Sunday in Ordinary Time. Today we contemplate John the Baptist's witness to that event.

    The liturgical year, with its carefully ordered readings, progressively introduces us to the mysteries of Christ. Each cycle of the year is accompanied by a particular synoptic Gospel: Matthew for Year A, Mark for Year B, and Luke for Year C. Interestingly, although we are beginning Cycle A, today's reading comes from John. Although the four Gospels differ in their emphasis, were written for different audiences and reflect each sacred author's own personality, they all have one thing in common: Jesus is their center.

    In today's Gospel, John the Baptist declares twice that he bears witness. He testifies, first, that “behind me comes a man who is ahead of me, because he existed before me”, and further on: “I beheld the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove and alighting on him.”. The amazing thing about these testimonies is that John repeatedly states later: “I didn't know him.”.

    But what does John mean? Could he, who leaped in the womb at Mary's greeting, really say that he did not know Christ? Could he have lived more than thirty years without knowing his own cousin? John understood his mission; he knew that someone greater than himself was coming, someone who existed before him. He knew that he had been sent to baptize with water. However, Jesus“ full identity remained ”encrypted," so to speak, until the Spirit revealed it to him. John received the key to decipher this mystery and clearly point to Jesus: the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world, and ultimately, the Son of God.

    Like John, we too are called to bear witness to Jesus by our lives and actions. For many around us, Jesus remains a “cryptic message”, not yet fully understood. John picks up on Isaiah's prophecy -“I make you the light of the nations, that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth.”and brings it to its fullness by pointing directly to the Son of God. Witnessing to Christ requires deepening our own knowledge of Him, moving from the “I didn't know him” to a deeper confession of who He is.

    This becomes our mission at the beginning of the calendar year and the beginning of Ordinary Time: to be apostles. Today's second reading is simply the introduction to St. Paul's first letter to the Corinthians, where the apostle presents his identity and vocation. Curiously, we do not enter into the content of the letter, but only into its introduction. The Church invites us to do the same: to take Paul's model and insert our own name: “[Your Name], called to be an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God”.”. We are encouraged to be like John: to deepen our knowledge of Christ and then bear witness, so that others may better recognize and understand who Christ is.

    The Vatican

    “God speaks to us, he calls us to be his friends,” Pope invites

    At today's general audience, Leo XIV delved into the Constitution “Dei Verbum” of the Second Vatican Council. The Pope pointed out that “we are called to speak with God, to be his friends”.

    Francisco Otamendi-January 14, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

    Leo XIV dedicated this morning's Audience to deepening and commenting on the Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum of the Second Vatican Council on divine revelation. In his catechesis, he affirmed that “the conciliar document reminds us of a fundamental point of the Christian faith: Jesus Christ radically transforms the relationship of the human being with God. Our bond with him consists in a dialogical relationship of friendship, whose only condition is love.

    The Pope then recalled that this text “also reminds us of this: God speaks to us (...) God reveals himself to us as an Ally who invites us to friendship with him”.

    From this perspective, the first attitude to cultivate is listening, the Holy Father continued, “so that the divine Word can penetrate our minds and hearts. At the same time, we are called to speak with God, not to communicate to Him what He already knows, but to reveal ourselves to Him”.

    Need for prayer

    Hence “the need for prayer, in which we are called to live and cultivate friendship with the Lord. This is realized, first of all, in liturgical and community prayer, in which it is not we who decide what to listen to from the Word of God, but it is He Himself who speaks to us through the Church”. 

    Moreover, it is fulfilled in “personal prayer, which takes place in the interior of the heart and mind. During the Christian's day and week, time dedicated to prayer, meditation and reflection cannot be lacking. Only when we speak with God we can also talk about from Him.”.

    If Jesus calls us to be his friends, Leo XIV invited us to be his friends in the Audience, Let us try not to ignore his call. Let us accept it, let us take care of this relationship, and we will discover that friendship with God is our salvation“.

    St. Augustine: grace can make us friends of God

    Commenting on this passage from the fourth Gospel (“I no longer call you servants, because the servant does not know what his master is doing; I call you friends”), “St. Augustine insists on the perspective of grace, which alone can make us friends of God in his Son” (Commentary on the Gospel of John, Homily 86), the Pope added. “We are not equal to God, but God himself makes us similar to him in his Son.”.

    “With the coming of the Son in human flesh, the Covenant opens to its ultimate end: in Jesus, God makes us sons and calls us to become like him in spite of our fragile humanity. Our likeness to God, then, is not attained through transgression and sin, as the serpent suggested to Eve (cf. Gen 3:5), but in the relationship with the Son made man”.

    In the silence and intimacy of the heart

    In his greeting to the Romans and pilgrims, the Pope encouraged them “to cultivate friendship with the Lord, who is the source of joy and salvation, dedicating serene moments of prayer and meditation on the Word, to listen to him and speak with him in the silence and intimacy of the heart. May God bless you. Thank you very much.

    The authorFrancisco Otamendi

    Read more

    No extracurriculars, the best way to read and develop imagination

    In the face of the hegemony of constant activity and the obsession to fill every hour with extracurricular activities, I dare to make a defense of the domestic, of the house inhabited without a plan. Children and young people do not need to let off steam without rest; we adults have largely invented this need.

    January 14, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

    I love the arguments in defense of reading that encourage us to go back to reading a little more in the face of the hegemony of the audiovisual. However, I would like to broaden the argument and add another perspective, since people often talk about reading as if reading were something immediate and almost automatic: open a book, turn the pages and that's it, we are reading.

    We all know better. We often read without reading. Our eyes move forward, but the mind wanders. We go back, we repeat a phrase, we try to govern the imagination to capture the meaning of the words. Only when the mind manages to join the rhythm of the text does the magic of literature happen: a new world opens up before us. A 19th century English city, with its elegant way of speaking and dressing; a rural Spain where childhood was poor and simple; foreign lives that, mysteriously, become our own.

    For this to happen - to really read and, even more, to enjoy a good book - a teenager needs more than just books: he needs a context. A context of stillness, of passivity, even boredom. He needs to stay at home.

    In the face of the hegemony of constant activity and the obsession to fill every hour with extracurricular activities, I dare to make a defense of the domestic, of the house inhabited without a plan. Children and young people do not need to let off steam without rest; we adults have largely invented that need. We are terrified to see them bored. We fear conflict, noise, fights, disorder. And to avoid it, we take them out of the house, we exhaust them, we keep them busy. We want them to move around, to get tired, to sleep early and to make little disturbance. Without realizing it, we take away something essential: the context of a home where you can spend the whole afternoon without a specific goal.

    I still remember the first book that made me really enjoy it: one from the collection Kika Superbruja, in 5th grade. I also remember the comic books that accompanied me at home -The Trapisonda family, Carpanta, El botones saccharino, Rompetechos-. I lived their lives. My imagination was expanding. My intellectual activity was immense. I lived many lives without leaving the couch.

    Now, with my own children, I have understood more clearly something I already sensed: to read you need books, yes, but you need something more. You need a context. When I myself read a book -not a text from my cell phone- I am creating a climate at home, an atmosphere that encourages other types of activities: studying, painting, writing, looking out the window, reading, inventing, praying, reflecting. In this way, and without always approaching it as an academic or moral obligation, reading can become an adventure again.

    As I say, this context is not improvised. It is not created by books alone. What would a library be without readers? A simple warehouse. The same thing can happen to us at home. Our library furniture where we place our books can be just that: furniture. Or they can also be the door to another universe, inhabited by all kinds of creatures, full of stories and adventures, that tell us of wars, of love, and that widen the walls of our home and take us to impossible places and times. 

    The authorAlmudena Rivadulla Durán

    Married, mother of three children and Doctor of Philosophy.

    Books

    Medieval Europe in pictures: a fascinating journey along the routes of knowledge

    Traveling through medieval Europe has never been so fascinating: Franco Cardini combines images and knowledge to show how cities, artists and thinkers traced the routes of knowledge that shaped the Renaissance and our civilization.

    José Carlos Martín de la Hoz-January 14, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    If a picture is worth a thousand words, it is worth imagining what a book with pictures and words is: a true encyclopedia of wisdom and science. This is the work of Franco Cardini (1940), professor of Medieval History at the University of Florence.

    Images that speak

    Professor Cardini gathers in this work that we now present, a small part of his knowledge and images accumulated and selected throughout his academic life, to make a magnificent intellectual journey through Medieval Europe and to be able to explain what he simply calls: “the routes of knowledge”.

    It must be recognized that Professor Cardini is a tireless disseminator, capable of bringing to the public at large issues and details hitherto reserved for a minority of tireless researchers.

    Undoubtedly, this work has fallen short, very short, because to take advantage of the text would have required a full color edition of maps, engravings, images taken from museums, archives and libraries so that the reader could read this delicious text as an explanation and commentary of a history of art and culture from the great cities of the Middle Ages and their contribution to Western civilization.

    Cultural bridges in the Middle Ages

    Our author will begin by glossing in the introduction the concept of travel, of freedom, of the interconnection of cultures and cities of the Middle Ages, since the Christian faith was the bridge of unity of all of them and, therefore, there are many intellectual connections of the traveler in any place of Western civilization. 

    At the same time, diversity is seen as richness, as a broadening of the soul and the origin of wisdom and understanding. Unity is useful and necessary and uniformity is neither useful nor necessary.

    Artists, patrons and key cities

    I will now dwell briefly on the chapter dedicated to Renaissance humanism from the 14th-15th century onward, for simple reasons of academic urgency and to enjoy Professor Cardini's comments. In fact, we will not be disappointed but enriched by the comments, images and suggestive references to one of the artistic, cultural and philosophical movements of our already long history.

    The Renaissance would be characterized “by a more strictly elitist dynamic and a clearer commitment to the freedom of its protagonists in terms of literary and artistic production, but at the same time by a greater interest also with respect to the cultural dimensions in the technical and scientific fields and by a close relationship between the artist and the client” (245).

    Our author will be outlining the transformation of the small French city of Avignon into a place of world importance: “The court of Avignon also saw the presence of characters such as Francesco Petrarca and Simone Martini, who contributed to making it a center of attraction for prestigious cultural forces. The popes of the Avignon period were often shrewd politicians and generous patrons, as well as competent financiers; in fact, the French city became the destination of the greatest bankers of the time” (249).

    He will then focus on the triangle Avignon, Florence and Rome to delineate the great transformation of the decadent Europe of the fourteenth century, spectator of the fall of Constantinople in 1454, to become a movement of return to the Greek and Latin classics and permeate the European courts with a pagan humanism in just a few years.

    Humanism that changed the world

    With great skill Franco Cardini reconstructs the birth of humanism: “the prince expected celebrity and glory from the poet or the architect whom he protected and financed, and in fact most of the works of art of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, including the best ones, are celebratory works commissioned (...). In short, the freedom, independence of judgment and audacity of certain humanist cultural projects were born no longer in confrontation with power or behind its back, but, on the contrary, protected by its shadow” (251).

    He would then focus on the figure of Lorenzo Valla who in 1440 would publish his famous treatise “de falso credita et ementita Constantini donatione” which denied the historical veracity of the “Constantinian donation” that would produce an undoubted alteration in the Italian political chessboard. If the pontifical legates for the Papal States since Cola di Rienzo and Cardinal Albornoz between 1343 and 1354 had promoted the renewal of the Papal States (249), now they had to stand firm to avoid disintegration (257).

    The author's conclusion

    Our author's conclusion is that Renaissance and civic humanism became convergent: “times were rapidly moving towards a concentration of both wealth and power and, therefore, more and more towards elitist, oligarchic and autocratic political forms; on the other hand, the literati and artists needed the protection of noble lords or rich businessmen, of patron-fathers who would protect them and support their costly work” (258).

    He will also tell us about the close link between “humanist and Renaissance culture and the exercise of power, already emphasized, explains how in the course of the fifteenth century a series of inventions and discoveries were made that literally changed the face of what had been the known world until then” (259).

    The Renaissance world would change radically after the discovery of America and the entry of Holland and England into the naval world. Oceanic voyages would change humanism: “the great epoch of oceanic exploitations was the result of the advancement of practical techniques, technologies, graphic representation capabilities and theoretical reflections” (268).

    The routes of knowledge. An intellectual journey through medieval Europe

    AuthorFranco Cardini
    Editorial: Alianza editorial
    Pages: 291
    Year: 2025
    The World

    Gänswein on Benedict XVI: «an indelible mark».»

    Archbishop Georg Gänswein, nuncio to the Baltic countries and former secretary to Pope Benedict XVI, shared in Vilnius personal reflections on his mission, the experience of Christmas in Lithuania and the spiritual formation received with the German pontiff.

    Bryan Lawrence Gonsalves-January 14, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

    Archbishop Georg Gänswein, apostolic nuncio to the Baltic countries and longtime personal secretary to Pope Benedict XVI, shared his candid reflections on his diplomatic mission, his spiritual formation under Benedict XVI and the celebration of Christmas in Lithuania during a public event on January 7.

    The event

    The event was organized by Kelionė, a Lithuanian quarterly Catholic magazine dedicated to exploring faith, culture, society, family life and personal spiritual growth from a Christian perspective. It is published by the Sisters of the Holy Family.

    The event, titled “Encounters That Inspire: Testimonies of the Heroes of Kelionė,”, was held at the National Library of Lithuania and brought together contributors and readers to celebrate lived witness and testimony within the Catholic community.

    “I come from the most beautiful part of Germany, but I have lived in Rome for most of my life,” Gänswein said. “As a bonus and thanks for all my work, I received an assignment to work in the Baltic states” he said jokingly. 

    Asked about differences between Christmas in Rome and in the Baltic region, the archbishop answered with characteristic humor: “I celebrated Christmas in Rome for 28 years, and in Vilnius for two. The first difference is the cold.” He added that Lithuania’s seasonal displays left a strong impression, drawing attention to “very beautiful Christmas decorations,” and saying the Christmas trees “are very beautiful, maybe even more beautiful than in St. Peter’s Square, in the Vatican.”

    Gänswein also expressed gratitude that the celebration of Christ’s birth in Lithuania is not merely cultural or superficial. He said he has sensed a reverence in which “its depth is felt here,” pointing to a faith that remains attentive to the mystery at the heart of the season.

    An Act of Divine Providence

    The archbishop devoted much of his speech to recounting his decades-long collaboration with Joseph Ratzinger, who became Pope Benedict XVI. Gänswein described his years with Ratzinger not only as an academic or administrative cooperation, but as a formation of the whole person.

    “All the years of cooperation together have left an indelible experience,” he said. “It was not only intellectual and theological formation, but also the formation of the heart, soul, and everything that we can call life.”

    Gänswein's first contact with Ratzinger was through the future pope's writings during his years as a seminarian in Germany. He said he studied Ratzinger's articles and books carefully, recognizing in them a blend of brilliant intellect and genuine, lived faith.

    After his priestly ordination in 1984, Gänswein served as an assistant parish priest before pursuing doctoral studies. He eventually came to Rome, where he first met Cardinal Ratzinger during the latter’s tenure as prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. Gänswein said Ratzinger called him to collaborate, an invitation he regarded as a gift of divine Providence.

    “What did he call me for? I don’t know,” he admitted. “But I see it as a great gift of Providence.” In 2003, Gänswein became Ratzinger’s personal secretary.

    Prayer and canonization

    Reflecting on Benedict XVI's death in 2022, Archbishop Gänswein shared a deeply personal insight into his continuing spiritual relationship with the late pope. «Now, when Pope Benedict XVI has gone to be with the Lord, I realize that I pray not so much for him, but to him, asking for his help,» he said. He acknowledged that this prayer experience occurred even during his mission in the Baltic countries, when he sought Benedict's intercession.

    At the same time, Gänswein stressed the Church’s wisdom and prudence in advancing causes of canonization. “The Church is a very wise and very prudent mother,” he said, explaining that time is required to discern authentic holiness apart from worldly fame.

    Thus, for Archbishop Gänswein, the evening ultimately returned to a theme that has marked his priestly life, which is fidelity shaped by faith and gratitude. A reminder that authentic Christian witness is not forged in prominence or recognition, but in quiet perseverance, prayer, and a life steadily formed by truth.

    The authorBryan Lawrence Gonsalves

    Founder of "Catholicism Coffee".

    The World

    Missionary Childhood Day: «children also evangelize».»

    With the motto “Your life, a mission”, the Day of Missionary Childhood recalls that, with their prayer and generosity, the youngest children actively participate in evangelization and in helping children all over the world.

    Editorial Staff Omnes-January 13, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

    Children are also active and necessary agents of evangelization. ‘Your life, a mission’ is the motto of the day of missionary children, an international network of children who are trained in mission and share their contributions to help missionaries in their work with children.

    Although Missionary Childhood is a worldwide initiative, the celebration of its day is not simultaneous in all countries. In Spain it takes place this Second Sunday in Ordinary Time (January 18 in 2026).

    «Missionary is every baptized person, regardless of age,» says José María Calderón, national director of the Pontifical Mission Societies (PMS). The objective of this day is to enthuse children, ask them to pray and call them to give alms to missionaries in distant countries. In this way, OMP wants to remind the children that they too are missionaries.

    Spain, leader in generosity

    Worldwide, in 2025, 14 million euros were raised, with Spain being the country that contributed the most money (around 2 million euros). With all this, more than 2,600 projects in education (55 %), health and protection of life (25 %) and evangelization (20 %) have been supported.

    In 2025, Infancia Misionera España supported 473 projects, reaching 36 countries. The amounts sent to the missions come, to a large extent, from the collection carried out on Missionary Childhood Day in which accompaniment is offered to children from Advent and Christmas until the day, a video for the youngest children in which a child who wants to be a superhero finds in his missionary uncle a greater inspiration, a national drawing contest until February 6, catechetical materials and more resources.

    A common financial fund for all missions

    What Missionary Childhood raises around the world is made available to the Pope, in the Universal Solidarity Fund of Missionary Childhood.

    The Holy See analyzes all the requests for help received from the missions and distributes the money in an equitable manner. The money is used to support children's projects carried out in the 1,131 mission territories that depend on the Second Section of the Dicastery for Evangelization - the Pope's missionary «ministry». In this way, it supports the work that missionaries do with children all over the world.

    An adventurer in the Sahara

    The adventurer Telmo Aldaz de la Quadra-Salcedo has extensive experience in collaborating with missionaries in the many expeditions he organizes each year around the world. Invited by the Pontifical Mission Societies, he visited one of these projects supported each year by Infancia Misionera. Mario León Dorado, he visited the Center for the Disabled in Dakhla.

    In the Sahara, disability is often seen as a curse. In this center they try to remember that we are all loved by God, thus serving dozens of children with different disabilities. Telmo shared his experience there at the OMP press conference.

    «Food is as necessary as feeling welcomed in spirit», says Telmo after telling how he was welcomed with a mass in which hundreds of people from Africa participated. With enthusiasm, he affirms that all the missionaries he has met have hope and are positive in their work, despite the difficulties.

    Read more
    Evangelization

    Called 2026: Movistar Arena turned into an unusual cathedral

    Calls 2026 premiered on the Madrid stage with an afternoon of worship, praise, testimonies and prayer rarely seen in Spain.

    Maria José Atienza-January 13, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

    The Movistar arena did not welcome any pop stars on the night of January 12, 2026, but the more than 6,000 people gathered there, most of them young people and families, were more than thrilled by a concert.

    Calls 2026 premiered on the Madrid stage with an afternoon of worship, praise, testimonies and prayer rarely seen in Spain. 

    Mercy prayer, praise and testimonies. This is the summary of Llamados 2026, an initiative of Alpha Spain, next to the parish Santo Domingo de la Calzada de Algete and the diocese of Alcalá de Henares, The Movistar Arena in downtown Madrid was packed to capacity.

    A novel combination of prayer and worship, a path that seems to have settled in Spain as a privileged means of evangelization in an era marked by audiovisual language and the need for healing. 

    More than 6000 people from different parts of Madrid, such as Algete or Villaverde, but also from Colombia, Miami and Italy, were able to enjoy the testimonies of René ZZ, María Lorenzo and Quique Mira and Casilda Finat. 

    «Do not be afraid to talk about faith.”

    Content creator René ZZ was in charge of opening the meeting with a short speech in which he shared with those present his conversion experience through a dream: “I dreamed that God loved me, and only that, the love of God”. 

    René also stressed the importance of letting God mold us: ”When God gave me the gift of his love, I thought, “If God exists, he wants something from me. I have already tried for myself, now I am going to leave my will aside and allow his will to shape me. God works in a mysterious way, when you let his will be molded, you don't care about the rest”. And this, he concluded, “we cannot do it alone. You can be the light for many people. Do not be afraid to speak of faith.

     «There is an upsurge of the authentic Holy Spirit.»

    After his words, Casilda Finat, María Lorenzo and Quique Mira de Aute, and René himself shared a conversation in which they shared their experiences as “Catholic influencers”.

    Among other things, Mira, one of Aute's promoters, stressed that the “Catholic turn” or this return of young people to God “if it is something superficial, time will tell. A true faith is lived every day. I believe that there is a boom of the authentic Holy Spirit, but each one has to respond”. 

    Looking ahead to 2033

    Another highlight of the evening was the intervention of Nicky Gumbel, promoter of Alpha, a reality through which more than 30 million people in 175 countries and 100 languages have passed over the years.

    Gumbel shared his dream that in 2033 “everyone will be able to make themselves heard of Jesus and made a strong call for Christian unity.

    His intervention revolved around four considerations: a new vision, that of Christ, to be shared by all Christians; the motivation rooted in the love that God has for each of his children; the key of prayer and the immense potential of a “privileged” time: “The fields are ready for the harvest” encouraged the Anglican pastor who initiated Alpha, “there is a great interest of young people for Jesus”. 

    Eucharistic Adoration

    After the interventions and testimonies, Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and the Mercy Prayer took place.

    A few moments of impressive silence in a concert hall and in which several young people shared testimonies of healing to end with a Eucharistic procession inside the enclosure and the personal prayer of the thousands of attendees. 

    The afternoon of prayer culminated with a farewell to the organizers and the recitation of an Our Father, which was joined by the thousands of attendees of this first Called 2026 meeting.

    The Vatican

    How Pope Leo XIV’s First Consistory Revealed His Governing Style

    Leo XIV is no ordinary pope: a mathematician and Augustinian, he combines logic and spirituality to lead with order. His first consistory showed his method: prioritize the essential, put God first and let everything else take its course.

    Bryan Lawrence Gonsalves-January 13, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    The papacy has never been a single “type”. Some popes arrive as statesmen, others as scholars while others as missionaries. Some are forged by suffering, others by the long discipline of governance. The Church does not choose from a catalogue. Providence provides a pontiff with a history and that history tends to surface in the way he leads.

    If you want the quickest clue to Pope Leo XIV, it is not a slogan or a school of theology, rather it is a degree. He is a mathematician and that says a lot.

    He studied at the Augustinian run Villanova University and graduated with a degree in mathematics in 1977, before entering the Order of Saint Augustine later that year. That detail is not decorative; it is diagnostic since it tells you what kind of mind is now sitting on the Chair of Peter.

    Mathematics does not merely train you to be “good at sums”. It trains you to be relentless about structure. You learn to spot patterns, test assumptions and prove what you claim. Most importantly, you learn the order matters.

    Get the sequence wrong and even correct elements produce a false result. Get the sequence right and the problem clears. Slowly and cleanly, like the first rays of sunlight driving away the darkness of confusion.

    This is the mental habit that Pope Leo XIV brings into a Church that often feels pulled in four directions at once.

    When numbers meet Augustine

    Then comes the second formation, which is not academic but rather spiritual in nature.
    The Pope is an Augustinian. And one of St Augustine’s core insight is that spiritual disorder usually comes not from loving bad things, but from loving good things in the wrong order. The tradition calls it ordo amoris — the right ordering of love.

    It is also profoundly practical. Christ himself gives a sequence when asked for the greatest commandment: love God first, then love your neighbour. The point is not sentimental but rather proportional. Put God first and the rest finds its way and measure. Putting anything else first and even noble loves become burdens.

    Here the Pope’s two lenses begin to overlap. Mathematics insists on right sequence. Augustinian logic insists on right ordering. Together they form an instinct: to settle first things first, so that we may have the peace to do what must be done.

    The Leadership Implication

    Seen through that lens, Pope Leo XIV’s likely governing style comes into focus.
    He will not chase every urgent headline. He will not treat the Church like a machine to be optimised. He will return, again and again, to first principles. What is the Church for? What must be protected so that everything else remains Catholic? What must be simplified so that mission does not drown in motion?

    Because the modern Church does not suffer from a lack of good priorities. It suffers from an excess of them. Evangelisation concerns, safeguarding the needs of the poor, doctrinal formation and clarity, internal unity, external diplomacy and so on. All necessary. All good. But not all first. And not all at once.

    That is where a mathematician’s discipline becomes pastoral. It refuses the tyranny of “everything now”. It forces a harder question: what must come first so that everything else becomes possible?

    The Consistory that revealed the method

    That is why Leo XIV’s first extraordinary consistory, held 7–8 January 2026, mattered. Not because it produced instant headlines. But because it showed a method.
    “I am here to listen,” he told the cardinals at the opening. He asked them to speak succinctly so all could speak. Then he used an old Roman maxim — Non multa sed multum: not many things, but much.

    This was not the language of a man eager to dominate the room. It was the language of someone trying to bring order to the agenda before trying to “solve” it, with a focus of depth.
    And the first concrete result fits the narrative almost too neatly.

    From four proposed themes, the cardinals voted by a clear majority to focus future reflection on mission and synodality, leaving curial reform and the liturgy for later. Pope Leo XIV told them he needs “to be able to count on you” as the Church moves forward. He framed the consistory in Christological terms. Explaining that it is not the Church that attracts, but Christ; and division, he warned, scatters the faithful.

    What makes this approach unique is that Pope Leo XIV has already signaled that this consultative rhythm will continue. A second extraordinary consistory is scheduled for 27–28 June, and Vatican reporting indicates he wants these meetings to become regular, even annual. The Pope has also confirmed the October 2028 Ecclesial Assembly, pointing to a long horizon rather than quick fixes.

    In the grammar of a mathematician-Augustinian, this was the first bracket. The rest of the equation will follow. For now, the order is set: God first, then the work.

    The authorBryan Lawrence Gonsalves

    Founder of "Catholicism Coffee".

    Why do we have to suffer?

    In the face of pain, loss and fear, our faith invites us to look beyond the ephemeral: accepting and offering our suffering together with Christ can give it meaning and transform it into a path of grace and hope.

    January 13, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

    Thousands of painful scenes unfold before our eyes: injustices, abuses, wars, illnesses, abandonment....

    A good woman recently asked me how she could face the rehabilitation time she had to go through after her arm operation, she told me she was desperate, she really would not have wanted to live through all that her operation entailed. How many times have we denied the pain and repeated the question "Why me? We complain about our losses and even if we do not live our faith, we are moved to blame God for allowing suffering in our lives. 

    Why do we have to suffer? The following phrase of Chesterton gives me the guideline to wield a possible answer, he said: “Our time easily imposes the anguish of the ephemeral to the deserters of eternity”.

    A culture without eternity

    International organizations and institutions specialized in mental health present alarming figures of the increase of anguish, anxiety and depression around the world, worsening during and after the most recent pandemic (2020). All these symptoms are ways of experiencing fear. There is an inordinate fear of suffering, of not knowing what is coming, of not being in control of events. Our culture, which has abandoned God, does not know how to suffer. If we stop looking at eternity, we become slaves of the ephemeral. If we do not put our trust in God, we put it in ourselves, too small for the challenges of life.

    We need to retake the authentic meaning of our existence, we live in this world but we do not belong to it, we are “passing through” towards eternity in the presence of God. Our Creator exists and has spoken to us clearly, he became man, Jesus Christ came to give us the answers to the deepest questions of our being, he is the visible face of the invisible God. 

    Christ and the redemptive meaning of pain

    We will not get out of this loop of emotional weakness without faith, without reference to the divine. Man can only recognize himself by looking at himself in the mirror of Christ. The true antidote to anxiety and depression - to the underlying fear - is to know how to offer pain. 

    Christ modeled this reality for us. He could have eradicated pain with his coming, but instead he took it on and gave it redemptive meaning!. 

    Faced with the imminent moment of his free surrender, he lived through unspeakable moments of intense anguish, but, obedient to the extreme, Jesus Christ accepted the pain, embraced it and offered it up. 

    We pretend to eliminate pain at all costs and forget the Word of God that says: everything cooperates for our good (Rom. 8, 28). Everything, the good and the bad. We are free and we are living the consequences of freely choosing evil. The whole history of salvation unfolds between a disobedience to God's will and the total obedience of Christ; for the former, pain and death entered, for the latter, genuine joy and eternal life. 

    Accepting, offering and transforming suffering

    We are not in this world to have a good time, we have come to sanctify ourselves by doing good. 

    There is a phrase that points out: pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. It means that when we serenely accept setbacks, when we are humble and recognize that all things are not in our hands, when we say yes, like Mary, we are able to imitate Our Lord and accept, embrace and offer our pain in reparation for our faults and for the good of those we love. Pain does not come to make us unhappy but to sanctify us, to fill us with grace! It is not a matter of suffering in a masochistic way, but of giving to God what he asks of us and even of being grateful for what happens to us, even if it is contrary to our desires. It is not a matter of allowing injustice without further ado; what is asked of us is to face it with courage and charity; to put limits to evil in abundance of good, providing the means that help us all to grow.

    It is a fact that God does not want evil or suffering, He has placed before us good and evil so that we may freely choose the good and be happy in fullness. It is not by turning our backs on God that we will fight the evil of the world, it is by loving, by improving ourselves and offering our difficulties that we will build the civilization of love that we long for.

    The next time pain knocks at your door, remember Christ who gave all his blood for you. He wants you eternally happy! Join in his passion and death, be a good Cyrenean and offer your pain with total trust. He brings good out of evil. Embrace your cross, give the best of yourself and from the hand of God, wait for the good end. 

    The authorLupita Venegas

    Evangelization

    Rebeldes Podcast‘ is born with Fray Marcos (MasterChef) in the first episode

    This Thursday, the 15th, ‘Rebeldes Podcast” is launched, a new audiovisual evangelization project, led by Father Ignacio Amorós (Se Buscan Rebeldes) and Father Pablo López (Jóvenes Católicos), digital evangelizers. In the first episode participates Fray Marcos, a Dominican religious known for his time in MasterChef and very active in social networks.

    Editorial Staff Omnes-January 13, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

    Editorial Staff Omnes

    ‘Rebeldes Podcast’ proposes to rediscover authentic Christian rebellion through testimonial dialogues with people whose lives have been transformed by their encounter with Jesus Christ. Its launch is this Thursday 15th on YouTube, Spotify, Ivoox, Instagram and Facebook. The first episode features the participation of Friar Marcos Dominican religious who went through MasterChef.

    The one who said goodbye to Master Chef with the immunity pin, which allowed him to save himself from the test, but decided not to use it out of solidarity with his teammates? Yes, the same Fray Marcos.

    “The rebelliousness of living the Gospel today.”

    One of your drivers' star slogans -Ignacio Amorós (Se buscan Rebeldes) and Pablo López (Jóvenes Católicos), priests and digital evangelizers with extensive experience in faith communication and spiritual accompaniment, is “the rebelliousness of living the Gospel today”. As we will see below, they consider Jesus of Nazareth “the greatest rebel in history”.

    Real testimonies, faith incarnate

    Guests who have already participated in ‘Rebel Podcast’ include:

    ● Fray Marcos, Dominican friar and participant in MasterChef.

    ● Casilda Finat, entrepreneur, wife and mother, influencer and convert to Catholicism.

    ● Casto Domínguez, musician and businessman, testimony of faith after overcoming cancer.

    ● Carlota Valenzuela and Santiago, pilgrims from Finisterre to Jerusalem.

    ● Irene and Israel, married couple with 12 children, missionaries in China.

    ● Mother Olga, foundress of the Samaritan Carmelites of the Heart of Jesus.

    ● Bishop Raimo Goyarrola, Bishop of Helsinki.

    The project proposes to rediscover authentic Christian rebellion: to live against the tide by following Jesus Christ, the only Way, Truth and Life. You can watch the trailer here.

    Through testimonial dialogues, ‘Rebeldes Podcast’ gives voice to people whose lives have been transformed by an encounter with God: converts, married couples, large families, religious, Catholic influencers, priests and lay people. 

    The proposal is that faith should not be a distant discourse, but an experience that can be taken to the gym, walked down the street, listened to in the car or on the bus, entertaining and formative at the same time. 

    If you wish to contact us, please write to sebuscanrebeldes@gmail.com

    Ignacio Amorós answer four or five brief questions:

    What does it mean to be a Christian rebel today?

    - “In deciding on this revolution, we may find it difficult to carry it out. A friend once told me that he loved Jesus Christ and shared his message of love, but that he was ‘too much of a rebel. Then I reminded him of some words of St. Josemaría: ’Look, in today's world, a rebel is someone who doesn't want to go with the flow, who doesn't want to live like a selfish person, who can't bear to step on others, who decides not to live like a little animal... A rebel is someone who wants to do good, to give his life for God and for others. Yes, these are the rebels who follow the greatest rebel in history, Jesus of Nazareth‘’.

    What does ‘Rebel Podcast’ bring to evangelization today?

    - We want there to be a Catholic podcast where you can share your faith in everyday life. You can listen to it while playing sports, walking, driving or just being at home. That you like it, that it's entertaining and that it brings you Catholic formation. In addition, we invite very interesting and thought-provoking people to share their ideas and testimonies“.

    Guests break stereotypes of the “typical Catholic.” Is this intentional?

    - Yes, we want to show that holiness and rebelliousness do not have a mold. There are tattooed Catholics, exhausted mothers, businessmen, young pilgrims, religious, bishops... The Church is much more human and fascinating than is often thought.“.

    Who is this podcast for?

    - To anyone who has deep concerns: believers, those who are far away, people in search. Especially to those who feel that the world promises much and fills little. We want to be an honest companion on that path.“.

    If you had to sum up the message of the podcast in one sentence, what would it be?

    - “That it is worth risking one's life for Christ, because He alone makes truly free.”.

    The authorEditorial Staff Omnes

    Read more
    Culture

    Pope Leo XIV's Galician roots, discovered in Porriño (Galicia)

    The Pope has his maternal roots in San Salvador de Torneiros (Porriño, Pontevedra), according to the ‘Biography of Leo XIV. The Augustinian Pope, pilgrim towards God’, by the historian Rafael Lazcano, and the recent study carried out by Avelino Bouzón Gallego, canon archivist of the Cathedral of Tui, regarding the Galician ancestors of the Pope. 

    Francisco Otamendi-January 13, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    Avelino Bouzón Gallego, canon archivist of the cathedral of Tui, has just published in the parish leaf of San Bartolomeu de Rebordáns (Galicia), the maternal genealogy that links Pope Leo XIV with the diocese of Tui-Vigo. Specifically with the parish of S. Salvador de Torneiros, he has assured Omnes. 

    As was published after his election on May 8 of last year, the Pope Leo XIV, born Robert Francis Prevost, was born on September 14, 1955 in Chicago (Illinois, USA), the son of Louis Marius Prevost, of French and Italian descent, who died in 1997, and Mildred Agnes Prevost, née Mildred Martinez, of Spanish descent, who died in 1990. The Pope has two brothers, Louis Martin and John Joseph.

    The maternal grandparents of Leo XIV were, according to available data, Joseph Martinez and Louise Baquié. 

    Origins of the study of Avelino Bouzón

    The study Avelino's work arose from his reading of the biography of Pope Leo XIV entitled ‘.‘Biography of Leo XIV. The Augustinian Pope, pilgrim towards God’, written by the historian Rafael Lazcano, and edited by San Pablo.

    In the first pages appear some genealogical reviews, in which he affirms that the Pope has ancestors in Porriño and in Galicia. Specifically, the archival canon of Tui-Vigo, referring to an ancestor of the Pope through his mother's line, says Rafael Lazcano on page 25:

    “In said biography at the beginning, the author points out the Galician origins of the Pope on his mother's side: “Francisco's parents were Benito Lorenzo de Bastos, born in Porriño (Pontevedra), and Antonia González Vázquez, married on January 9, 1677 in the church of the Holy Spirit in Havana” (Page 25)”.

    Ascending genealogy from his mother, Mildred

    Avelino Bouzón has worked on an ascending genealogy, upwards, of Pope Prevost, through his mother's side. His role has been “to find the one who went to Cuba, and his ancestors”.

    With this data, D. Avelino and one of his collaborators, Luis Arias, investigated the parish books of Santa María de Porriño and S. Salvador de Torneiros. Immediately the parish of Santa María de Porriño was discarded since the first parish books date from the mid 1700s. And the search focused on the books of S. Salvador de Torneiros dating from the early 1600s.

    An ancestor of Pope Leo XIV through his mother's side, Benito Bastos Lorenzo, was baptized in this parish of San Salvador de Torneiros (Porriño), on December 1, 1639, according to the Book of the Baptized, as reported by the canonical archivist of the cathedral of Tui, Avelino Bouzón (@Diocese of TuiVigo).

    Galician ancestors

    Thus in Book I of the Baptized there is a record of Benito Bastos Lorenzo, baptized in this parish on December 1, 1639 (Book I of the Baptized [B], folio 17 recto [f 17r]).

    The parents of Benito Bastos Lorenzo, neighbors of San Miguel de Pereiras, were Benito de Bastos do Lago and María Lorenzo Pérez, the latter baptized in Torneiros on March 31, 1613 (book I of B, f. 1v.); they were married in Torneiros on September 8, 1635 (book I of Casados [C], f 166v).

    Benito de Bastos do Lago was a neighbor of Pereiras, where he married María do Lago. María Lorenzo Pérez, was daughter of Lorenzo de Riascos and Inés Pérez, both neighbors of Torneiros.

    Benito de Bastos Lorenzo, fifth great-great-grandfather 

    Therefore, says Avelino Bouzón, “Benito de Bastos Lorenzo is the fifth great-great-grandfather by maternal descent of Roberto Prevost (León XIV). 

    Benito de Bastos do Lago occupies the sixth position, and the father, Juan de Bastos, neighbor of Pereiras, the seventh of the ancestors by maternal line”.

    The archivist explains that “a great-great-grandparent is the father or mother of a person's great-great-grandfather or great-great-grandmother, that is, a direct lineal ancestor who stands one generation before the great-great-grandfather, being “the grandfather of the grandfather of the grandparents” of someone, sometimes also called chozno or chozna”.

    In ascending order

    That is, for the first generation formed by Louis Marius Prevost and his wife Mildred Agnes Martinez (”Millie”, in the family), the parents of Pope Leo XIV, we meet the grandparents, the second generation; then follow the great-grandparents, the third generation. From there begins the correlative succession of the great-great-grandparents. 

    The first ones form the fourth generation and continuing the ascending order we arrive to Benito Bastos Lorenzo, born in San Salvador de Torneiros (A Louriña), sixth great-great-grandfather and ninth generation.

    For the genealogical interest of these and other data, you can consult the baptismal certificate of the ancestor “Benito de Bastos”, signed by the priest Juan Fernandes Parada.

    Benito de Bastos married in Havana

    If Benito de Bastos married in Havana in 1677 at the age of 32, we can assume that he emigrated when he was about 25 years old, adds the diocesan note. “Then Cuba was a Spanish colony in full transition with an emerging sugar elite and with scarce population, that is why small contingents of emigration took place to replace in the sugar mill, sometimes in conditions of semi-slavery, blacks and indigenous people.”. 

    “After some time, many Galicians and other Iberians who had arrived on the island later moved to Mexico and the United States of America”.

    Descending Genealogy. Audience with the Pope

    Avelino Bouzón comments that “the mayor of Porriño is surnamed Lorenzo, and the parish priest, Bastos”, frequent surnames in the area. The archival canon is now working on a descending genealogy, based on the collaterals. Benito Bastos had 4 brothers, and we are following his descendants, up to the present relatives. 

    “Our goal is to find the Pope's current relatives, locate them, and when Leo XIV comes to Spain, the group can have a meeting with him,” he reveals.

    The authorFrancisco Otamendi

    Evangelization

    What every woman should know: How does a man perceive her?

    Alvaro Quesada (@talvezteayude on Instagram) is a 21-year-old evangelizer committed to St. John Paul II's Theology of the Body. In a new episode of the podcast Mantita y Fe he explores everything women should know about men.

    Editorial Staff Omnes-January 12, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

    In a cultural context where male identity and couple relationships are going through a deep crisis, Alvaro Quesada, a 21-year-old committed to spreading the Theology of the Body, offers a profound and refreshing look based on the teachings of St. John Paul II.

    “How a man looks at a woman according to the Theology of the Body” is the new episode published by the popular podcast of evangelization and human formation, Mantita y Fe, with the special participation of young Álvaro Quesada, from the project "Theology of the Body". Maybe it will help.

    Presenter Bárbara Bustamante talks with Quesada about topics rarely explored in the media: male desire, authentic male tenderness and the challenge of living chastity in the 21st century.

    A different view of women

    Alvaro Quesada explains that the Theology of the Body completely transformed his way of seeing women. He no longer perceives her as an ephemeral object of desire, but as a “sanctuary of life,” worthy of respect and admiration. This new view implies recognizing her intrinsic value and treating her with an attention that transcends the superficial, promoting authentic relationships based on dignity.

    The episode challenges the stigma that sensitivity and tenderness are signs of weakness in men. On the contrary, Quesada stresses that tenderness is an essential characteristic of true masculinity, which allows men to relate with respect, empathy and emotional depth, without losing their identity or strength.

    Chastity and pornography

    Chastity is not presented as a repression of desires, but as a state of the soul that helps free the heart. According to Quesada, living chastity in the 21st century allows man to love fully and authentically, directing his affections towards the good of the other and cultivating relationships based on self-giving and respect.

    The podcast also addresses the need to heal the wounds of masculinity, including the consequences of pornography consumption and experiences of self-focus or selfishness. Overcoming these difficulties is key to being able to step outside oneself, give oneself to others and build healthy and meaningful bonds, both in love and in everyday life.

    “St. John Paul II's theology of the body is like a ticking time bomb programmed to.
    explode in this third millennium, and it's exploding now,” Quesada said during the interview.

    The episode is now available on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcast and other podcast platforms through the official Gospa Arts channel. This content is aimed not only at young men, but also at married couples and parents looking to better understand male identity and the design of human love.

    About Mantita y Fe

    Mantita y Fe is a meeting and formation space that seeks to deepen in faith and the challenges of daily life from a close and spiritual perspective. The project is supported by its community on Patreon, offering exclusive content and meetings for its subscribers.

    Books

    When politics wanted to wipe out the Jesuits

    Pedro Miguel Lamet unveils the historical intrigue behind the suppression of the Jesuits: politics, religion and power in the 18th century.

    José Carlos Martín de la Hoz-January 12, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    One of the most explosive mixtures throughout history has always been that of politics and religion. Whichever way you approach it, you always come out burned and wrong.

    If you look at it from the point of view of religion, you do not understand the maneuvers lacking in supernatural sense, moved simply by the pettiest envy. If you look at it from the angle of politics, you are always amazed at how short Machiavelli came up short, thinking of government without limits or scruples.

    The Jesuit Pedro Miguel Lamet (Cádiz 1941), one of the best writers in the Spanish language, has just delivered a literary jewel of historical plot about the expulsion of the Jesuits from various European countries until their suppression by Pope Clement XIV, on July 21, 1773.

    As always, the strength of Lamet's novels lies in how extensively documented they are so that the gentlemen's agreement of the historical novel is fulfilled: everything that is narrated could have happened and surely did happen, albeit with some name or circumstance changed.

    The Intrigue of the Apostolic Brief and European Diplomacy

    The advantage of the historical novel in Lamet's hands is that it makes history much more attractive because it enhances the intelligent interpretation of historical data by the work and grace of a fine observer.

    For example, it is enough to read the masterful scene in which the future Count of Floridablanca teaches Mateo the Apostolic Brief “Dominus ac Redemptor” in which the Holy Father, as a result of the diplomatic pressure of the kings of Spain, France, Portugal and Austria to suppress the Society for the sake of the unity of the Church, at that moment of the maximum triumph of Charles III, of Caesaropapism, realizes that this suppression is “personal”, it is falsely torn, temporary, inadequate: “a brief is revoked with another brief” (21), it does not have the force of the juridical reason of the suppression by a pontifical bull that has the backing of the curia and the bishops (25).

    Indeed, Pope Clement XIV had won the game, he had removed the diplomatic pressure, retained the maximum spiritual power, got rid of his enemies and succeeded in safeguarding the Society of Jesus which, with a simple Brief, would return to existence purified and splendid a few years later with the unconditional support of the entire universal Church.

    The historical setting of the Jesuits

    Pedro Miguel Lamet has succeeded in explaining in an entertaining and simple way one of the most studied and commented historical enigmas of the last centuries, a demonstration that the Society is of divine origin and will remain until the end of time. The question has always been twofold and until now we had partial answers.

    First, Lamet gives us the historical setting, the successive attacks, meticulously designed by a force that has always been attributed to Freemasonry but which Lamet simply dismantles.

    Lamet solves the first part of the enigma by noting down the slanders and defamations to which they were subjected and which are passed from hand to hand, we will see in short how the atmosphere can deteriorate, create a climate of opinion, of slander accelerated by the simplest envy (121-122).

    Jesuit slander, conflicts and missions

    Let us simply note the explanations expressed by the various Jesuits who are presented throughout this magnificent historical novel. In the first place, the mixture of religion and politics of the “Reductions of Paraguay”. In order to understand this issue, it is necessary to go back to the various disputes over the limits of the influence of Spain and Portugal in America.

    The “Reductions”, commissioned by a mission area in a territory under Spanish influence, would pass to Portugal and the Portuguese government decided to put an end to the utopia of Thomas More that the Jesuits had set in motion and would hand over the missions to Brazil, which would want nothing to do with them and would destroy one of the most interesting proposals for the pedagogy of civilization in history. Therefore, the Jesuits would be free from the authorities: a political group (38).

    Other calumnies against the Jesuits are more simplistic, such as the attack that they preached a relaxed morality and therefore were to blame for the spiritual and moral deterioration of the European courts that had Jesuit chaplains. It is not to understand the probabilism that affirms that “doubtful law does not bind” (82). 

    Another commonplace was to attack the famous Jesuit missionary Ricci and affirm that in order to ingratiate himself with the Chinese authorities he would have changed the message of Jesus Christ for a mixture of Christian revelation and Chinese cultural traditions. History has shown that the Catholic Church in China is faithful to the doctrine of Jesus Christ (101).

    Let alone blaming them for having divided the Church because in France all those who did not think like them in moral matters were called Jansenists and heretics. They were self-referential and in their books they only quoted Jesuits. It is very interesting to study Pascal's “Letters to the Provincial” to see that if Pascal had succeeded we would all be scrupulous now. His criticisms are simply arithmetic as opposed to prudence.

    The motives of Charles III and the reform of the Church

    Finally, we must go to the heart of the matter, as Lamet does: the great unanswered question. Indeed, Charles III will say that the real reasons for the expulsion and suppression were left to his real conscience. 

    What could these “real” motives be? Lamet answers masterfully by explaining, without explaining it explicitly, that Charles III wished to carry out the reform of the Church in the world, as Henry Kamen has explained, with his hands free and he was hindered by the Holy See and the Society. 

    Indeed, Charles III and his successors imposed the Cortes of Cadiz, liberalism, the suppression of religious orders, “the religious question”, the disentailment of the “dead hands”, the quotas of seminarians and novitiates according to the needs of the dioceses, that is, the Church subjected to the State, dedicating itself to explaining the “constitution“ to the people and asking permission from the mayor of the town if it was going to leave on a trip. That is to say: the 19th century.

    Thank goodness for democracy, religious freedom, the respectful separation of Church and State, the social doctrine of the Church, the Second Vatican Council and the universal call to holiness.

    The last Jesuit. Expulsion and extinction of the Society of Jesus in the Age of Enlightenment.

    AuthorPedro Miguel Lamet
    Editorial: Messenger
    Pages: 646
    Year of publication: 2025
    Read more
    Evangelization

    Why we should not leave Mass early (nor arrive late)

    Have you ever noticed that people leave Mass before it is over? For the new convert, it is a great surprise to see someone receive Holy Communion and then leave the church. 

    OSV / Omnes-January 12, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    - DD Emmons, OSV News

    The convert has been repeatedly told that the Mass, and specifically receiving the Eucharist, is the center of Catholic life, the supreme act of worship, and that attending Mass is a fundamental obligation. How then can a Catholic deliberately miss any of it? Here is a brief reflection on leaving Mass before it is over, or arriving late on a regular basis.

    When you see someone leaving Holy Communion immediately, you wonder if he or she is sick. Is there an emergency? But no, after a while, you realize that the situation is not uncommon. Like being habitually late for Mass, it may be rude, impolite and irreverent, but it is not uncommon.

    A parishioner was overheard saying that her family attended the 11:15 Mass. There is no 11:15 Mass. She laughingly explained that her family was always 15 minutes late, every Sunday. Are these people also always 15 minutes late for a doctor's or dentist's appointment, or for the school bus stop?

    Organizing our lives

    In the course of events, it seems strange that we cannot organize our lives in such a way that we can attend Mass in its entirety. It is as if we were spectators at a play or a baseball game, and we decide to arrive at the end of the second inning or leave arbitrarily before the event is over. 

    In the theater or the game, neither the actors nor the players leave before the curtain comes down or the last out is made. Likewise, they are present when the curtain goes up or the first pitch is thrown. During Mass, we are the players; we are the participants.

    And before a president, a queen or a pope?

    If we were invited to the presence of a president, a queen or the Pope, wouldn't we arrive before the dignitary and stay until the ceremony was over? It is protocol, respect and good manners. Does God, who created us and gave his life for us, not deserve the same respect? What if Jesus asked us to attend the Last Supper? Would we arrive late or leave before it was over?

    When Mass begins and ends

    The Mass begins with the entrance procession and the hymn. It ends with the dismissal. Everything in between is the Mass.

    The story is told that one morning during Mass, a priest saw a lady receive Holy Communion and then go to the parking lot. The priest sent two servers with candles to walk beside her, for she was still a tabernacle of Christ. He stopped leaving early.

    There was a time in the history of the Church when people justified that their obligation to attend Mass was satisfied if they attended the offertory, consecration and Holy Communion. 

    Liturgy of the Word and Eucharistic Liturgy

    This idea was eliminated with the Second Vatican Council. The ‘Sacrosanctum Concilium’ (Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy) says: “The two parts which, in a certain sense, compose the Mass, namely, the liturgy of the word and the Eucharistic liturgy, are so closely united with each other that they form a single act of worship. 

    Therefore, this sacred Council earnestly exhorts pastors of souls, in instructing the faithful, to teach them insistently to participate in the whole Mass, especially on Sundays and holy days of obligation” (no. 56).

    Attend Mass on Sundays and Holy Days of Obligation.

    The Code of Canon Law also states: “On Sundays and other holy days of obligation, the faithful are bound to attend Mass” (no. 1247). And the Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 2180, repeats the same words of canon law about our obligation to attend Mass. The first precept of the Catholic Church also tells us that we are obliged to attend Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation.

    There is no ambiguity here. None of these documents even remotely hints or infers that we can arrive late or leave early, or that it is okay to miss part of the Mass. In the words of Yogi Berra, “It ain't over till it's over.”.

    Other reasons: preparation and thanksgiving

    Leaving aside the aforementioned Church documents and laws, there are other reasons to arrive punctually and remain until the end of Mass. Those moments before Mass, when we enter this sacred place, kneel before the throne of grace and reverence our merciful God, are moments to express our love. This is a time of personal preparation for meeting God in the Eucharist. 

    Risk of trivializing

    Likewise, the time after partaking of Holy Communion is a special time of reflection. We have just received the body and blood of Christ, and to simply walk away is a mockery of this glorious treasure.

    By arriving late or leaving early, we not only trivialize the real presence of Jesus, we not only trivialize the Eucharist, but we also lose the full richness of the Mass. It is also a sign of bad manners toward the celebrant, the servers, the ministers, all those who help orchestrate the Mass.

    What St. John Paul II wrote

    St. John Paul II, in a May 31, 1998 apostolic letter entitled «On the Sanctification of the Lord's Day,» wrote the following. “As the first witness of the Resurrection, Christians who gather each Sunday to experience and proclaim the presence of the Risen Lord are called to evangelize and bear witness in their daily lives.”. 

    “For this reason, the Prayer after Communion and the Concluding Rite-the Final Blessing and Farewell-need to be better valued and appreciated, so that all who have participated in the Eucharist may come to a deeper sense of the responsibility entrusted to them.”. 

    The disciples of Emmaus

    “Once the assembly disperses, Christ's disciples return to their daily surroundings with a commitment to make their whole life a gift, a spiritual sacrifice pleasing to God (cf. Rom 12:1). 

    They feel indebted to their brothers and sisters for what they have received in the celebration, similar to the disciples on the road to Emmaus who, once they recognized the Risen Christ ‘in the breaking of the bread’ (cf. Lk 24:30-32), felt the need to return immediately to share with their brothers and sisters the joy of their encounter with the Lord (cf. Lk 24:33-35).”.

    We know that we will encounter the Risen Christ in the holy sacrifice of the Mass. How could we miss any part of it?

    The authorOSV / Omnes

    Read more
    Culture

    Valuing the work of those who care for the elderly

    The aging population in Europe requires public policies to socially and economically value caregivers of the elderly, whose working conditions are precarious. The principles of the Social Doctrine of the Church can facilitate the cultural change for this to take place.

    Gregorio Guitián-January 12, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    One of the challenges of today's society is certainly the aging of the population and the consequent need for care for the elderly. The European Union estimates that, in twenty-five years' time, 38.1 million Europeans will need long-term care, compared to 30.8 million at present. In the case of Spain, the potentially dependent population will increase from 2 million in 2019 to 2.32 million in 2030 and 2.92 million in 2050.

    At the same time, the authorities also point to the increasing difficulty in attracting more workers to the long-term care sector. Caritas reports provide first-hand data on the harshness of working conditions in terms of wages, working hours, etc. In addition, many families cannot afford professional care, so that, according to available estimates, caregivers lack specific professional training and are mostly immigrants. This last factor can add to the experience of these workers (mainly women), making it more difficult for them to integrate their work into their life as a whole. Think, for example, of staff who live in the home of the person in need of care, sometimes with a greater psychological burden due to lack of independence. 

    For all these reasons, for some time now, several economists have been suggesting the need for public policies to attract companies and workers to the long-term care sector. In my opinion, in this matter it would be enriching to pay attention to the considerations of the Social Doctrine of the Church, because no one can deny that the experience of the Catholic Church in caring for the elderly and other vulnerable people is unparalleled. 

    The Social Doctrine of the Church

    As Pope Francis said, it must be recognized “first of all, and as a duty of justice, that the contribution of the Church in today's world is enormous. Our pain and our shame for the sins of some members of the Church, and for our own sins, should not make us forget how many Christians give their lives out of love: they help so many people to be cured or to die in peace in precarious hospitals, or accompany people enslaved by various addictions in the poorest places on earth, or they devote themselves to the education of children and young people, or care for the elderly abandoned by all, or try to communicate values in hostile environments, or give themselves in many other ways that show that immense love for humanity that God made man has inspired in us”.” (Evangelii gaudium 76). 

    The recent Apostolic Exhortation of Leo XIV, Dilexi te, reinforces the understanding of the Catholic Church's contribution in this area.

    The approach of the Social Doctrine of the Church maintains the attention to the dignity of each person united with a look at the whole, the common good, solidarity and subsidiarity. For example, subsidiarity would lead to the question of how to help families to cope with this care, since, as far as possible, the first and most appropriate environment for caring for the elderly is the family itself.

    The role of governments

    However, the public policies to come need to address in parallel a change of mentality, a cultural change that translates into the messages conveyed by public authorities, civil society and the media on two very sensitive points: the social and economic valuation of those who work in this sector and that of the elderly and the disabled. 

    Even the European Union itself, with all its contradictions, realizes what is at stake. In their own words, “the way we value care should reflect the way we want children, older people, people with disabilities and those who care for them to be valued” (European Commission, On the European Care Strategy. 7.9.2022. Brussels, 23). 

    Growth of euthanasia

    This is precisely the heart of the matter: how do we value children, the disabled, the elderly and their caregivers? 

    Societies facing the challenge of revaluing the long-term care sector are characterized by having made a fundamental choice to defend the autonomy and freedom of the individual and the maximum possible extension of his or her rights to self-determination. 

    Just one example: the decriminalization of euthanasia and the progressive expansion of the cases in which it can be used, to the point of making it a right that must be guaranteed by the State, is increasingly common in countries afflicted by the demographic situation we have described. Whether it is wanted or not, it conveys the message to dependent persons that for them, in the context of a loss of autonomy or a diminished quality of life, an option of freedom is open: assisted suicide. 

    With the demographic projections we have, it is very reasonable to conclude that the (covert and subtle) social pressure on the elderly to end their lives through euthanasia will grow. They themselves will come to the conclusion that it is the most reasonable option, considering their personal and national economic situation, the availability of health means and their family situation.

    This is to show that the individualistic approach characteristic of our societies finds it difficult to find coherent arguments to promote the long-term care sector, as well as a change in the way we value these workers.

    On the other hand, an important part of the problem lies in how to achieve a wage improvement that will make work in this sector more attractive. However, and with all the importance that the salary issue may have, it is necessary to address first the social revaluation of care professionals (and of the elderly). This would require a public effort similar to what the State and the media powers have done and are doing in many countries with gender issues. 

    Learning from the pandemic

    Professor Mary Hirschfeld has shown that at the root of the much-reported economic inequality in our societies lies the deep-rooted conviction that social success lies above all in the accumulation of wealth, which is considered the ultimate goal. People become visible or invisible according to their economic wealth. But the pandemic has made us see very clearly the value of these jobs for the common good: caregivers, delivery workers, cleaners, and a long etcetera. 

    I think that in the year of the pandemic and in view of the contribution to the common good as decisive as it is extreme and meritorious, the competent authority could have considered rewarding so much applause and social recognition with tax benefits in that year for professionals in certain sectors. 

    In short, the challenge of long-term care needs to be met with more than just the best economic policy and an emphasis on the autonomy of individuals. The Social Doctrine of the Church can help by underlining other equally crucial principles: the common good, solidarity and subsidiarity.

    The authorGregorio Guitián

    Professor of the Master's Degree in Christianity and Contemporary Culture at the University of Navarra.

    The Vatican

    Pope baptizes newborns and asks for prayers for Iran, Syria and Ukraine

    On the feast of the Baptism of Jesus, on which the Pope baptized several newborn babies, Leo XIV renewed our Baptism, the sacrament that makes us Christians, freeing us from sin and transforming us into children of God. He also asked for prayers for Iran and Syria, and for Ukraine.  

    Editorial Staff Omnes-January 11, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

    According to the custom of the feast of the Baptism of Jesus, Pope Leo XIV baptized this Sunday some newborns, children of employees of the Holy See.

    Then, in the Angelus, He extended his blessing to all the children who have received or will receive Baptism in these days, in Rome and throughout the world, entrusting them to the maternal protection of the Virgin Mary. 

    In a particular way, he added, I pray for children born in the most difficult conditions, both in terms of health and external dangers. May the grace of Baptism, which unites them to the paschal mystery of Christ, work effectively in them and in their families.

    Baptism transforms us into children of God

    Before the recitation of the Marian prayer, he briefly gave a basic catechesis on what is the Baptism, that is, “the sacrament that makes us Christians, freeing us from sin and transforming us into children of God, by the power of his Spirit of life”. 

    In the homily of the Mass, had said: “This is the sacrament that we celebrate today for your children; that God loves them, and they become Christians, our brothers and sisters”.

    And at the Angelus, he also reflected on the love of God, who “does not look at the world from afar, on the sidelines of our lives, our afflictions and our hopes. He comes among us with the wisdom of his Word made flesh, making us part of a surprising plan of love for all humanity.

    Sacrament that introduces us into the Church

    The sacrament of Baptism introduces “each of us into the Church, which is the people of God, made up of men and women of every nation and culture, regenerated by his Spirit”.

    “Let us dedicate this day to remembering the great gift we have received, committing ourselves to bear witness to it with joy and consistency. Just today I baptized some children, who have become our new brothers and sisters in the faith,” he said. 

    And expanding his heart before the families present, he referred to the beauty of the sacrament: “How beautiful it is to celebrate as one family the love of God, who calls us by name and frees us from evil. The first sacrament is a sacred sign that accompanies us forever. In the dark hours, Baptism is light; in the conflicts of life, Baptism is reconciliation; at the hour of death, Baptism is the gateway to heaven”.

    Let us pray together to the Virgin Mary, asking her to sustain our faith and the mission of the Church every day, he encouraged before praying the Angelus.

    To mothers and fathers: after life, after faith

    At Mass, addressing the fathers and mothers, he stressed the importance of faith. “The children you now hold in your arms become new creatures. Just as from you, their parents, they have received life, now they also receive the meaning for living it: faith. Dear brothers and sisters, if food and clothing are necessary for life, faith is more than necessary, because with God life finds salvation”.

    The provident love of God is manifested on earth through you, mothers and fathers, who ask for faith for your children, the Pope said. “May Baptism, which unites us in the one family of the Church, sanctify all your families at all times, giving strength and constancy to the affection that unites you.”.

    After the Angelus: dialogue and peace for the Middle East and Ukraine

    After the recitation of the prayer to the Virgin Mary, the Pope turned his thoughts “to what is happening in these days in the Middle East, in particular in Iran and Syria, where persistent tensions are causing the death of many people. I hope and pray that dialogue and peace will be patiently cultivated, seeking the common good of the whole of society”.

    He then referred to “Ukraine, where new attacks, particularly serious, directed especially against energy infrastructures, precisely when the cold is becoming more intense, are hitting the civilian population hard. I pray for those who are suffering and I renew the appeal to cease violence and to intensify efforts to achieve peace”.

    Finally, he greeted Romans and pilgrims, and wished everyone a happy Sunday.

    The authorEditorial Staff Omnes

    The Vatican

    The Holy Shroud of Turin, on cell phones all over the world, with “Avvolti”.”

    The Holy Shroud as never seen before. Pope Leo XIV was the first, on January 9, to participate in the experience of reading, digital vision and tour of the Shroud of Turin (Italy), created by “Avvolti” (wrapped). The program was presented to him by the pontifical custodian of the Shroud, Cardinal Roberto Repole, Archbishop of Turin. Everybody can do it now.  

    Editorial Staff Omnes-January 11, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

    The digital reading and viewing of the image of the Holy Shroud of Turin is an absolute novelty. In fact, it is possible to connect on Internet to the program from the website avvolti.org as from the official website sindone.org with any device: smartphone, tablet, computer, with access from all over the world. Pope Leo XIV was the first to access this tour of the image of the Shroud, on the 9th at the Apostolic Palace.

    Path explained by the image

    Thanks to the program, it is possible to “scroll” the syndonic image on the screen, enlarging the most significant details (the face, the crown of thorns...), in an explained and structured path. They are the following: 1. Deposition 2. Face/Face 3. Crowning 4. Flagellation 5. Transport 6. Crucifixion 7.

    Each enlargement is accompanied by explanations and links to the Gospel passages describing the passion of Jesus.

    File photo of the Shroud, during a preview for journalists at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Turin, Italy (CNS photo/Paul Haring).

    Bringing the Shroud of Turin to the general public

    The digital reading aims to bring the image of the Shroud and its meanings closer to the general public throughout the world. Despite the scientific rigor of the texts and images, the aim was to create a product accessible to everyone, rather than an initiative intended for specialists, explains the Archbishopric of Turin, in a note also released by the Vatican Agency official.

    The “global” digital experience, accessible through the Internet anywhere in the world, is part of “Avvolti”, the initiative that the Diocese of Turin has implemented for the Jubilee 2025. 

    In 2025, a tent visited in Turin in 8 days by more than 30,000 people from 79 countries

    Last spring, an “Avvolti” tent was set up in Piazza Castello in Turin. The tent presented, among other proposals, the digital reading experience that reproduced the image of the Shroud on a 1:1 scale, on a specially designed table, 5 meters long. The tent was visited by more than 30,000 people from 79 countries during the 8 days it was open (April 28 to May 5). 

    Now, the program presented at the “Mesa”, duly adapted, is available to everyone on the web. The images and texts of the experience can be found on the website www.avvolti.org and on social networks (Facebook and Instagram).

    The Cardinal Archbishop of Turin is received by Pope Leo XIV on January 9, 2026 (Photo @Archdiocese of Turin).

    Cardinal Repole: Syndonic pastoral care

    Cardinal Repole recalled that the publication of the global digital experience is part of the “pastoral syndonica” program that the Diocese of Turin launched in 2024 and of which “Avvolti” was the central axis for the Jubilee Year 2025.

    In the coming months, other initiatives will be programmed and elaborated, with the aim of realizing a path of accompaniment towards the Jubilee of 2033, says the note.

    What is the Holy Shroud

    The Shroud of Turin is one of the relics of Our Lord that arouses most interest in the scientific community. It is a linen cloth, woven in herringbone, which shows the image, front and back, of a beaten and tortured man, which presents marks and bodily traumas such as those that may be present in a crucifixion. It measures 436 cm long, and 113 cm wide, as has been explained in Omnes.

    It is kept in Turin, in its own chapel built in the seventeenth century, within the complex composed of the cathedral, the royal palace and the so-called palazzo Chiablese.

    Origins and Gospel text

    Many argue that it is the clothing that covered the body of Jesus Christ when he was buried, and that the figure that was engraved on the cloth is his.

    The Gospel account (Mk, 15, 46), says: “Joseph of Arimathea bought a sheet, took the body of Jesus down from the cross, wrapped it in the sheet, and placed it in a tomb hewn out of the rock. Then he rolled a stone to the entrance of the tomb”.

    Writer and researcher William West presented in Sydney in March of last year several pieces of evidence supporting the historical and scientific importance of the shroud. 

    Some evidence from West

    In 2024, West published the book ‘The Shroud Rises, As the Carbon Date is Buried’, in which he suggests that the 1988 carbon date for the shroud “has finally been shown to be seriously flawed”. More recent dating tests have indicated that the shroud is 2,000 years old.

    “It's covered in blood. It's one of the first things you notice on the shroud,” he explained. Not only are obvious wounds - such as the large flow of blood from the side - evident, but every scourge mark on both the front and back of the cloth is accompanied by bloodstains. “Research has shown very clearly that those blood flows and clots are 100 % accurate and intact,” he said among other things.

    The authorEditorial Staff Omnes

    The World

    Beyond emotions: learning how to live mercy

    Vilnius will host the Apostolic Congress of Mercy in 2026, an appointment that, from the cradle of this devotion, wants to promote not only meetings and celebrations, but a concrete experience of mercy in prayer, the sacraments and daily life.

    Bryan Lawrence Gonsalves-January 11, 2026-Reading time: 6 minutes

    On a narrow cobblestone street in Vilnius’ Old Town, pilgrims and locals alike slip into a shrine that rarely closes its doors. Many kneel before the exposed Blessed Sacrament; others stand in awe before the original painting of Divine Mercy Jesus held inside the shrine.

    In June 2026, Vilnius will host the Apostolic Congress of Mercy, drawing Catholics to the city where, through St. Faustina Kowalska and her confessor, Blessed Michał Sopoćko, the devotion took visible form and began to spread. 

    For many Catholics, it will be a chance to travel to a city closely linked to the Divine Mercy devotion, and to pray in the place where the message took visible form before spreading across continents. 

    However, if you ask the people who live closest to this devotion what the congress is really for, they speak of conversions, confessions and constructing the foundations of mercy in our changing societies. 

    Two voices in Vilnius offer a window into that deeper reality: Fr Povilas Narijauskas, who oversees as rector the Divine Mercy Sanctuary of Vilnius that stays open so pilgrims can do more than pass through and Sister Marcelina Weber, the mother superior of the Vilnius convent of the Sisters of Merciful Jesus, whose community safeguards and promotes the devotion through prayer, service, and daily acts of mercy. They both spoke to Omnes, talking about how they view mercy.

    A shrine for staying

    Fr. Povilas has watched how quickly pilgrimage can become a checklist. During Mass, groups sometimes enter, glance at the image, take photographs, and leave. “They can say, ‘Oh, I was in the shrine. I saw the original image,’” he says. “But it’s not just to see Him. We must also spend time with Him.” 

    He returns to a sentence that functions like a guardrail for the devotion: “The image is not just for show.” The shrine stays open 24 hours a day so that people can return anytime to pray whenever they feel God’s impulse to do so.

    In conversation, Fr. Povilas does not treat mercy as an abstract theme for conferences. He keeps returning to the practices the shrine makes possible: constant prayer before the Blessed Sacrament, time for confession and daily masses throughout the day. He worries that large gatherings can leave people impressed but unchanged and he hopes the congress will teach pilgrims to stay with the Lord after the schedule ends and the emotions fade. 

    Mercy in the sacraments

    When Fr. Povilas speaks about Divine Mercy, he leads with the Eucharist. “What gives me the most joy is still Holy Mass,” he says. “For me, the bread is becoming His Body. I am not merely just giving bread. I am giving the real, living Jesus to people. It is still a miracle.” 

    That “miracle,” he says, draws people toward reconciliation. “Every day, morning, afternoon and evening,” he says, “there are people coming for confession.” 

    Asked whether the message of Divine Mercy has been fully received in the world, he refuses to draw a neat conclusion. “Not enough, it can still be received more strongly,” he says. In his view, mercy does not reach a finish line; it must be received repeatedly, so mercy becomes a practiced interior and exterior reflex, not a rare spiritual highlight alone.

    The chaplet and the crisis of the world

    Fr. Povilas is careful to affirm the breadth of Catholic prayer. “All the prayers are inspired, and all the prayers are good,” he notes. Nevertheless, he insists the Divine Mercy Chaplet holds a distinctive place because of how it was given. “It was dictated to St. Faustina the same way Christ dictated the ‘Our Father’ to his disciples” he explains. 

    That claim leads to a practical conclusion about priorities. “Before we focused on the ‘Our Father’ and all other prayers,” he elaborates. “Now it must be our father, then the chaplet of Divine Mercy and then all other prayers.” 

    He describes the chaplet as a kind of spiritual “medicine” and urges people to stop bargaining with it. His advice is blunt yet impactful. “Take this prayer and pray it without hesitation.”

    He then connects the devotion to the wider world. “When we look at a world at war, where so many terrible things are happening, why is this so? Is this because there is no God? or is this because there is not enough mercy?" he ponders. "If we want more mercy, we first need to call upon God for that mercy. We cannot give mercy to others, if we do not first have enough mercy within us.”

    That final line is a theological claim and a psychological one. Mercy is not simply a social virtue to be cultivated; it is grace to be received. In Fr. Povilas’ framing, the chaplet is not a slogan for the world’s problems but a daily posture of dependence: a way of admitting need, asking for mercy, and letting Christ reshape what a person can give to others. 

    For pilgrims tempted to treat the congress as the beginning of their journey towards mercy, he presses the point: “Start now. Not tomorrow, not the day after tomorrow, now.” 

    The mercy of interruptions

    Sister Marcelina illustrates the practical aspects of mercy, with an example from her community’s daily life.

    Each day at three o’clock, the nuns gather for prayer in their convent. Yet it is often interrupted by pilgrims ringing the convent doorbell, hoping to pray in the same chapel where St. Faustina once prayed. The interruption matters. It breaks silence, disrupts recollection and asks the sisters to choose between protecting their own personal prayer and responding to another’s longing. Mercy, then, becomes a decision that costs something. “What is more important,” she asks, “to stay with Jesus or to be merciful to this person who rings the bell?”. The nuns always respond to the bell.

    Her point is not that prayer should be abandoned, but that prayer should produce a heart capable of being merciful by the unpredictability of life. Mercy, she explained, is often practiced in choosing gentle patience and quiet kindness over irritation and rudeness. “It’s really easy, but very important”, she said, because these choices happen “during the whole day”.

    She clarified that such mercy is not the result of personal effort alone. “We are able to do this by praying, ‘Jesus, I trust in you,’” she explained, pointing to the central prayer of the devotion as the source of grace. She encourages others to do the same.

    Silence that makes mercy possible

    Sister Marcelina also speaks about modern conditions that can make mercy harder, namely distractions from the world that make it hard to hear God’s voice. Her congregation actively takes care of the Divine Mercy Sanctuary. There, she explains, silence is constant. “Silence in this time is very important,” she says, because “our heart and soul needs time to hear God.”

    Her observation has practical implications for the congress. A pilgrim can attend every talk and still leave unchanged if they never learn to listen to God’s voice. In Sister Marcelina’s view, mercy begins before the doorbell rings and before difficult conversation happens; it begins when a person allows God to speak and allows that voice to soften their hearts.

    After the Pilgrims leave

    Both voices keep bringing the focus of Divine Mercy back to a formation that cannot be outsourced to any event. Fr. Povilas wants the devotion to become a routine of daily prayer and a part of sacramental life; Sister Marcelina wants mercy to influence our daily decisions and how we treat others. She tells pilgrims to “open their heart” and come ready to receive. 

    If those habits take root, the congress will not be remembered only for what happened in Vilnius, but for what happened afterwards: whether people returned home more capable of staying with Christ and more willing to meet their neighbor with the mercy they have received freely.

    The authorBryan Lawrence Gonsalves

    Founder of "Catholicism Coffee".

    ColumnistsVictor Torre de Silva

    The behind-the-scenes of an ordination

    The ordination last November 22 in Rome taught me, in a profound and sensitive way, that silent service sustains every Christian vocation.

    January 11, 2026-Reading time: < 1 minute

    In my life I have had the good fortune to attend several ordinations in Rome, but none has been as special as the one that took place on November 22. On that day, together with seventeen companions from twelve different countries, I was ordained a deacon. The ceremony was a visible manifestation of the catholicity of the Church and an indelible lesson on the core of our new mission.

    In the preceding months, the theological and spiritual formation insists on a central idea: the deacon identifies himself with Christ the Servant. We speak of the service of the altar, of the Word and of charity towards all. It is a profound truth that is assimilated with the head, but that day I learned in a new way: through the senses.

    In the moments immediately preceding and during the liturgy, I was able to experience firsthand the beauty of the hidden service. It was a lesson in humility to receive the care of so many hands: the people who delicately prepared the sacred vestments to facilitate the task for the nervous ordinands; those who composed the floral decorations that gave light to the presbytery; or the choir, whose voices lifted up the prayer of all. The whole ordination was sustained by a hidden, discreet and effective service, which is the source of true life.

    But that perception is only the beginning of a broader view. Looking back, one discovers that one's vocation is sustained by the silent service of so many others. Parents, siblings, friends, colleagues, companions..., who, perhaps without knowing it, have been teachers of service and instruments of God to mold, despite our obvious limitations, those whom He has chosen.

    In view of this, we can only be grateful and ask for prayers that we may be faithful to what we have received, and that the Lord of the harvest may continue to send workers ready to serve.

    The authorVictor Torre de Silva

    The Vatican

    11 behind-the-scenes features of the first consistory of Pope Leo XIV

    After an intense day of round tables, the cardinals, with their batteries low but very satisfied, concluded the first historical extraordinary consistory convoked by Pope Leo XIV in a spirit of fraternity, with the feeling of knowing each other better and affirming that they had “discovered” the Pope. See here a behind-the-scenes summary of the consistory.

    OSV / Omnes-January 10, 2026-Reading time: 5 minutes

    - Pâulina Guzik, Vatican City, OSV News

    The two days of the first extraordinary Consistory convoked by Leo XIV, on January 7 and 8, gave the cardinals a clear vision of the new Pontiff for a Church that cares for others.

    The Pope intends to continue the discussions with the cardinals once a year. The next consistory is scheduled for the end of June and the following ones are planned once a year, lasting 3-4 days, confirmed Matteo Bruni, director of the Holy See Press Office, during the evening press conference.

    The Pope, according to Bruni, told the cardinals on Jan. 8 that the consistory is designed as a “continuity with what was requested during the meetings of the cardinals before the conclave and also after the conclave.” And that the synodal methodology used “was chosen to help them meet and get to know each other better.”.

    1. The College of Cardinals has been strengthened.

    Salesian Cardinal Cristóbal López Romero, from Rabat (Morocco), told journalists waiting for the cardinals in front of the Paul VI Hall that, with the level of fraternity reached during the 15 hours of consistory debates, “the College of Cardinals has been strengthened”.

    He said he was “very happy” because the meeting “has allowed us to get to know each other a little better, to share and also because it will continue”.

    I think it has been a way of reaffirming that there is continuity, not so much with Pope Francis, but with the Gospel, with the Second Vatican Council and with all the magisterium that has emerged as a result of it. In that sense, I am very satisfied with the results, he said. 

    2. Get to know each other better, and help Pope Leo

    Cardinal Stephen Brislin of Johannesburg, present at the afternoon press conference at the Vatican Press Office, told reporters, “The importance of this consistory was not only in the discussion that took place,” but in the possibility “to listen to each other and get to know each other,” since the prelates “did not know each other very well.”.

    He stressed that the meeting “has been a help” to Pope Leo “as successor of St. Peter” and that it has shown that synodality is “a way of being Church” - and a “disposition” of the Church. 

    3. Synodality, striving to achieve harmony

    The second day of the consistory reminded the cardinals of the Synod on synodality, with three-minute interventions by the participants in group discussions, sharing meals and reflections. From “the treasure that the Gospel is for mission,” to the need to approach the “broken lives of people with humility,” to synodality as “a tool for growing relationships,” Bruni said.

    Cardinal Luis José Rueda Aparicio, Archbishop of Bogota, Colombia, also present during the press conference, added that “sometimes there are criticisms or different positions, but we try to reach harmony, which does not mean uniformity, but to return to the roots”, which he referred to as the Second Vatican Council.

    4. “The Pope wants to be a schoolboy”.”

    When asked if there were tensions, especially in removing liturgy and Church governance from the list of topics to be discussed, and leaving ‘Evangelii Gaudium’ and synodality on the table, South African Cardinal Brislin said it was a “pleasant experience, a friendly experience.” “The Pope wants to be collegial” and learn from “the richness that comes from people's experiences” coming from different parts of the world.

    The topics for the June consistory have not yet been defined and were not specified when OSV News asked during the press conference if the liturgy or other pressing issues that have arisen will be addressed at the next consistory.

    Cardinals who left the Paul VI Hall confirmed to OSV News that during the consistory on January 7-8 there was no time to discuss the liturgy.

    5. ‘We are with you and we feel close to you’.’

    The list of cardinals who participated in the extraordinary consistory has not been released, only the number: 170. But the Vatican said the Pope met with Cardinal Joseph Zen, 93, on Jan. 7. And on Jan. 8, the Pontiff specifically thanked the senior cardinals for making the effort to attend.

    Cardinal Zen, bishop emeritus of Hong Kong, had to obtain permission from the Hong Kong judicial authorities to attend the consistory.

    Passing on the Pope's words to journalists, Bruni said the Pope emphasized, “’Your witness is truly precious,’ reaffirming his closeness to the cardinals from around the world who could not come.”. 

    6. The Pope listened and took notes

    “We are with you and we feel close to you,” he said, repeating the Pope's words, as some cardinals, such as Cardinal Baltazar Porras of Venezuela, whose diplomatic passport was confiscated by the regime, were unable to come.

    Cardinal Paul David of Kalookan, Philippines, present at the press conference, said, “It was really refreshing to see that the Holy Father was more listening than talking” during the consistory and added that while no concrete decisions have been made, “he was taking notes very, very seriously, so he must be up to something.”.

    7. A moment to discover the personality of Leo XIV.

    Dominican Cardinal Jean-Paul Vesco of Algiers (Algeria), speaking to journalists outside the Paul VI Hall, said the consistory was “a wonderful moment,” emphasizing that it was not only an occasion for the cardinals to get to know each other, but also to discover the personality of Pope Leo.

    “This pope is... a pope one wants to love. He is... deeply caring. He loves. He was there, present, with simplicity. It was beautiful,” the cardinal, who could see the Pope coming to his country in the footsteps of St. Augustine, told the press. 

    8. A pope who wants to love, and the cardinals want to love him.

    He described the pontiff as “coherent” and “direct” in his “simplicity.” He said he leaves the consistory with the feeling that the cardinals “feel loved” by their boss and “want to love him.” A clear fruit of the meeting is the level of fraternity.

    “He completely nailed it from the get-go,” said Cardinal Vesco, who spent the longest time in conversation with journalists, including OSV News.

    9. Missionary Church, Church that cares

    Emphasizing the need for teamwork in the Church, the Pope told the cardinals in his impromptu Jan. 7 address, “I feel the need to be able to count on you: you are the ones who called this servant to this mission!” adding in his Speech introduces that the consistory “will point the way forward”.

    Cardinal Vesco said that, even in such a brief meeting, it is clear that Pope Leo “wants a Church [...] that is both a missionary Church that proclaims the Gospel, but also a Church that cares,” and “that is precisely what is reflected in this form of communion and fraternity.”.

    “First of all, instead of merely talking about things, he does them. And that seems to me to be very solid,” Cardinal Vesco said, stressing that “we can clearly feel that this reserve of trust” that the Pope places in the College of Cardinals “is a value, a value that will stand the test of time.”.

    10. Emphasis is more on the relationship, as a leader.

    “The emphasis is more on relationship than content,” Father Jordi Pujol, associate professor at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome, told OSV News. While a day and a half is too short a time to deal in depth with any topic, let alone the four planned at the start of the meeting, Father Pujol emphasized that the Pope “wanted to show that he begins his pontificate as a good leader, and a good leader is to get the cardinals to know each other.”. 

    11. Don't expect everything from me, the team will push things forward.

    A good leader, Father Pujol added, is one who says: “Don't expect everything from me; it is the team that will drive things forward. This shows that he is not personalistic and defines his style of listening first,” said the professor of ethics and media law at the Church's School of Communication.

    Cardinal Claudio Gugerotti, prefect of the Dicastery for the Oriental Churches, echoed this sentiment in his brief comments to journalists, including OSV News, saying that the Pope “was also very eager to exchange a few words, to connect with others in a very simple and informal way, and that was very nice.”. 

    Joking about the Italian character of the Vatican consistory, he added: “The lunch was excellent. Unfortunately, we missed the siesta.”.

    ———————–

    Paulina Guzik is international editor of OSV News. Follow her on X @Guzik_Paulina.

    This information was originally published in OSV News, and can be found at here.

    —————

    The authorOSV / Omnes

    Focus

    How to regulate AI by learning from the U.S.

    Artificial intelligence is already part of everyday life and poses ethical and legal challenges that require multilevel regulation.

    Gonzalo Meza-January 10, 2026-Reading time: 5 minutes

    Artificial intelligence conjures up diverse images: from robotic humanoids to scenes from Chaplin's ‘Modern Times’ to tools like ChatGPT that we use every day. But AI is already an everyday reality in the United States, present in multiple aspects of our lives. Andrew Ng pointed out that artificial intelligence is “the new electricity”, a tool that will permeate all human areas. This promise has captured the attention of investors: it is estimated that by 2026 investment in AI will exceed $500 billion. This raises ethical challenges and the urgency of establishing appropriate legal frameworks by sector and from the grassroots: local, state, national and international.

    I will mention four areas where AI is integrated into everyday life in the United States and then point out the regulations specific to those sectors.

    Transportation: Autonomous vehicles

      In several Californian cities, robotaxis, autonomous vehicles that transport passengers without a driver, are operating. Equipped with cameras, radar and learning systems, these vehicles are becoming increasingly common in Los Angeles and other areas of the country.

      Trade: Cashier-less markets, “Just Walk Out” (take it and go)

        In cities such as Washington DC and Los Angeles, there are markets managed by Amazon under the “Just Walk Out” concept. Users enter by identifying themselves with the palm of their hand, take their products (bread, milk, rice, etc.) directly by putting them in their bags or baskets and a system of multi-cameras and sensors automatically registers the purchases. At checkout, the customer receives the invoice by e-mail. There are no checkouts and no lines. Naturally, this requires pre-registration in the system with personal and financial data.

        Logistics: Distribution centers

          Amazon's mega-distribution centers represent perhaps the most spectacular interaction between AI and humans. The largest, located in Ontario, California, spans more than 400,000 square meters. These warehouses function as “living organisms” with thousands of mobile robots moving on highways to go back and forth between shelves bringing products to and from operators (humans). This AI system in distribution centers predicts traffic, optimizes inventories and collaborates with staff. I find this interesting and not to be lost sight of: an Amazon executive pointed out that the goal of AI is not to replace human labor but to facilitate it and create new jobs integrated into the system. 

          Education

            AI has deeply penetrated U.S. educational practices. A large part of the faculty, from elementary to higher education, uses artificial intelligence tools for class design, administrative management, didactic planning, performance analysis and the development of pedagogical resources. In the university context, 90% of students incorporate it in their learning processes.

            Health and wellness

              In the North American healthcare system, institutions use AI to support diagnostics -especially imaging-, refine analysis, process massive data and automate administrative tasks. For patients, there are everyday applications: health chatbots, online triage systems and wearables to monitor physical activities or vital signs.

              The challenges

              While these applications are positive, there are also dangerous uses of AI: development of autonomous lethal weapons, cyber-attacks, manipulation of information and violation of privacy.

              The need for ethical and legal regulations

              Given these realities, it is necessary to establish legal regulations and ethical guidelines for the use of artificial intelligence, from the local to the international level. Although it would be ideal to have binding international legislation, for countries such as the United States - the main developer and user of AI - a treaty of such scope is not very plausible. In any case, it would be just one piece of the regulatory machinery emanating from the local and national level.

              Examples of current regulation in the United States

              Regulation of autonomous vehicles

              There are specific rules for robotaxis. When one of these vehicles is involved in an accident, the National Traffic Safety Administration and the Department of Transportation require immediate notification in a nationwide registry, and in states such as California, Arizona, Texas or New York there are legal frameworks that regulate permits, terms of service and liability for robotaxi accidents. Also, in states such as California, Arizona, Texas or New York there are legal frameworks that regulate permits, terms of service and responsibilities in accidents involving robotaxis. Who is responsible in case of an accident? The company that manages the vehicles. In California there is a protocol for reporting incidents directly to the agency. These rules also extend to insurers. The costs of policies for autonomous vehicles are high, which forces companies to avoid violations. As it is AI, the machines are recording what is allowed and what is prohibited.

              Education

              Guidance and state regulations exist in the U.S. education arena. The Department of Education issued guidance on AI use in 2025 that calls for respecting privacy, civil rights, and academic integrity standards. Many states have issued official guidance. It is worth mentioning that, unlike in many countries, school districts are independent entities that develop their own policies in coordination with state and federal laws.

              California universities operate on the same principle: each defines its own regulatory framework. However, there is a national consensus: regulations against plagiarism extend to the use of AI. Institutions have adopted advanced tools that detect texts generated entirely by artificial intelligence. Their use is widespread.

              Health

              Although there is no single legal standard specific to AI in healthcare, there is a regulatory patchwork involving AI, for example, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which protects patients' medical data and requires entities that handle it (hospitals, insurers, clinics) to comply with strict privacy and security rules.

              The regulatory path of AI is just beginning. But I believe that this should be done in each sector (education, health, finance) and from the bottom up: local, state, national and international. To think of a universal supranational law regulating AI is unthinkable, since many legal frameworks -particularly the US, which is one of the biggest investors and developers of AI. The US controls the models, the hardware (chips from companies such as NVIDIA) and the infrastructure (Google Cloud, AWS) that make AI possible, therefore, possible AI regulatory frameworks must come from the US and then, at another level, mesh with non-binding agreements at the international level. In that sense, what role can the Church play in such a regulatory effort? 

              Towards the creation, development and application of an ethical framework for the use of AI in the Church.

              The Church has been a pioneer in the development, promotion and use of an ethical framework for the use of artificial intelligence. This has been the case for at least two years. Some documents stand out, such as “Antiqua et Nova”, a note on the relationship between artificial intelligence and human intelligence from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Dicastery for Culture and Education of January 14, 2025.

              Also noteworthy are the interventions of the pontiffs Pope Francis and Pope Leo XIV on AI, such as Pope Francis' 2024 World Day of Peace message and Pope Leo XIV's various speeches on the subject, notably his message at the Second Conference on Artificial Intelligence on June 17, 2025.

              These recent interventions are based on the principles of the Social Doctrine of the Church which should be applied to the use of artificial intelligence, especially on issues of human dignity, common good and solidarity. These ethical norms on the use of AI could also be developed and applied at the level of each ecclesiastical jurisdiction especially in sectors where the Church exercises its functions such as Catholic schools or hospitals, seminaries, formation centers, etc. There are some dioceses that already have guidelines in this regard, for example, the dioceses of Biloxi (Mississippi), Orange (California), and the bishops of the Maryland Catholic Conference covering Baltimore, Washington and Wilmington.

              Towards the creation of multisectoral and multilevel legal frameworks

              At the international level, the Holy See can contribute decisively to the construction of a normative framework on artificial intelligence at the United Nations level. It is important to note that this framework should be a non-binding agreement since a binding treaty would face significant obstacles-both because of incompatibility with legal systems such as the U.S., and because of the need for differentiated responses according to sectors and jurisdictional levels. Thus, it seems to me more viable and effective to promote one or several non-binding agreements within the UN to guide the regulation of AI on a global scale, thus respecting the regulatory autonomy of each country.

              The World

              Cardinal Koovakad: “We must overcome hatred in the name of religion”.”

              Cardinal George Jacob Koovakad, prefect of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue, reflects on the state of interfaith relations in light of the Jubilee that has just concluded, Pope Leo XIV's recent trip to Turkey, and the 60th anniversary of the declaration Nostra Aetate.

              Giovanni Tridente-January 10, 2026-Reading time: 7 minutes

              Created a cardinal by Pope Francis exactly one year ago and prefect of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue, George Jacob Koovakad is today one of the key figures in the Catholic Church's commitment to promoting interreligious encounter and cooperation. In this interview with Omnes, he reviews the most significant stages of this journey, examines the challenges posed by conflicts and violence, speaks of the value of the encounter between believers of different religions and recalls the common responsibility of religions in promoting peace, fraternity and the common good, with an attentive eye on the new generations.

              Your creation as a cardinal by Pope Francis and your subsequent appointment as prefect have quickly placed you at the center of interreligious dialogue. What aspects of your life trajectory do you consider important in facing this responsibility?

              -First and foremost, I consider it decisive to have been born and raised in Kerala, India, in a multicultural and multireligious society, where all religions are respected and guarantee social harmony. Differences are a richness: one could say that I carry in my DNA the theme of coexistence between religions that are very different from one another. I then served in various apostolic nunciatures: in Algeria, South Korea, Iran, Costa Rica and Venezuela. This allowed me to get to know both the predominant religions in countries where Christianity is a minority, as well as countries with a Christian majority, but belonging to very different cultures. 

              This “panorama” was further broadened when, in September 2021, Pope Francis appointed me organizer of apostolic journeys: the more than ten visits made have been new opportunities for meeting and collaborating with people from different continents and very different social contexts. I recently accompanied Pope Leo XIV to Turkey and Lebanon, a trip with numerous factors related to interreligious dialogue.

              I would like to highlight two aspects of these experiences in particular: on the one hand, being able to witness firsthand the countless gestures of friendship, closeness and sincere relations, at the most diverse levels, of the pontiffs towards people of other religious traditions. Secondly, the possibility of getting to know different cultures: this is an important element to be able to establish relationships, which in turn are the indispensable basis for establishing a dialogue.

              The Jubilee that is now concluding has also involved the Dicastery in various moments of encounter with other religious traditions. Among the initiatives carried out, which one seems to you particularly revealing of the current state of interreligious dialogue?

              -In this regard, I would like to highlight an important event that took place in the Paul VI Hall, in the presence of the Holy Father, on October 28, 2025. Those present found themselves immersed in a room full of variety: religions, languages, origins, ages, cultural and artistic expressions. What was the purpose of this celebration? To celebrate a round anniversary: the 60th anniversary of the declaration. Nostra Aetate, a conciliar document that marked a transcendental turning point for the Catholic Church, a concrete expression of a Church that “becomes a colloquy”, in dialogue, as St. Paul VI affirmed in the encyclical Ecclesiam suam (1964). 

              By openly acknowledging the presence of positive values not only in the lives of the faithful of other religions, but also in the religious traditions to which they belong, we have moved from an attitude of monologue to one of dialogue and listening, without renouncing the traditional foundations of Catholic identity. The presence of elements of truth and holiness in other religions, which are “the elements of truth and sanctity", has become an important element of the Catholic identity.“rays of that truth that illuminates all men”as stated in Nostra Aetate, It urges us to pay attention to others, to listen to them, to be interested in them, to take them seriously. 

              So, if we were looking for a confirmation of the current state of the dialogue, it would be enough to observe this “multicolored” hall, to enjoy the harmonies of the peculiar rhythms of the different cultures, to listen to the strong testimonies of a dialogue that becomes life, welcome, mutual respect and trust. Obviously, it is difficult to condense in a single evening the progress made in the interreligious journey, but seeing the more than two thousand attendees leave at the end of the day carrying with them a bag of seeds with the intention of “spreading” these seeds of dialogue and peace even more where each one lives, in their daily lives, was a confirmation that the journey continues.

              “The Christian faith is capable of inculturation: Christians are called to be a seed of fraternity for all”.

              Cardinal KovakaadPrefect of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue

              The Document on Human FraternityWhat still shows, even today, the vitality of this initiative?

              -Through this historic document, signed by Pope Francis and the Grand Imam of al-Azhar, Ahmed al Tayeb, the two religious leaders expressed a strong message in favor of inclusion rather than exclusion and discrimination of minorities, especially in countries where Islam or Christianity is the majority religion. The document stresses that we are all children of the same God, we are all brothers and sisters; we all need to have our rights recognized and respected and, moreover, to move from tolerance to citizenship. Furthermore, the two leaders jointly condemn violence. The signing of this document, which took place in the presence of seven hundred religious leaders, is not an isolated case, but the result of a prophetic path, traveled by the whole Church, and represents an excellent example of how religions can inspire the diplomatic and political action of states to promote more courageously those values and traditions that exalt universal human dignity.

              Having made many trips following the Pope, how does the perception of interreligious dialogue change when observed from countries marked by conflict, religious minorities or cultural tensions?

              -After the pandemic we thought that life would be more peaceful, calmer, but it has not been so. Every day we face new challenges: ethnic conflicts, wars... Humanity seems to be heading towards an abyss... There are countries where internal conflicts causing violence and death have been going on for years, unfortunately far from the media spotlight, lengthening the list of “forgotten” wars. There are others, multi-ethnic and multi-religious societies, characterized by a climate of peaceful coexistence, where suddenly the horror of terrorism is unleashed, as we have seen in the recent tragic events in Sydney. 

              Since interreligious dialogue cannot replace the role of diplomacy and institutions in conflict resolution, as believers, we all have a duty to be witnesses of peace and communion. I would like to launch here a heartfelt appeal: hatred in the name of religion must be overcome. All war, all violence in the name of God is a religious perversion. Hatred, brutality and discrimination are incompatible with any authentic religious experience. Every human being is the holder of inalienable rights and freedoms and, in this context, the role of religion is, by its nature, a role of peace and can never be a motive for destruction. 

              On the other hand, if we look at the recent trip of Pope Leo XIV, in his speech with the authorities and representatives of civil society, the Pontiff quoted precisely the invitation of his predecessor St. John XXIII - who was Administrator of the Latin Vicariate of Istanbul and Apostolic Delegate in Turkey and Greece from 1935 to 1945 - to Catholics, so that they would not distance themselves from the civil life of the country. Those words, explained Pope Leo XIV, continue to radiate much light and continue to inspire an evangelical and more authentic logic, which Pope Francis has defined as “culture of encounter”.”

              We can therefore say that this latest visit was also an opportunity to break down prejudices and accelerate the process of growing mutual trust, as well as to deepen the long-standing relations between the Holy See and both the Shiites and the Sunnis.

              Earlier I quoted Nostra Aetate. What remains to be done, after sixty years, to fully appreciate this Declaration?

              -Undoubtedly, there are opportunities for growth, such as the deepening of relations with the followers of religions not yet mentioned in the document, such as the Sikhs, Jains, Confucians and Taoists; the development and implementation of the spirituality of dialogue, and the emergence of new religious movements. Undoubtedly, the theme of fraternity, of universal brotherhood, is the fruit of the seed sown by this magnificent document. The Christian faith is capable of inculturation: Christians are called to be the seed of fraternity for all. All this does not mean renouncing one's own identity, but rather being aware that identity is not and must never be a reason to build walls or discriminate against others, but always an opportunity to build bridges. 

              Interreligious dialogue is not simply a dialogue between religions, but between believers called to witness in the world to the beauty of believing in God and practicing fraternal charity and mutual respect. As believers, we are the majority in the world, but we are often silent or divided. However, it is increasingly important to unite and bear witness, working together for the common good. All of us in this field have a responsibility to continue to contemplate God's mysterious ways: it is he who opens the way.

              “Interreligious dialogue is not simply a dialogue between religions, but between believers called to bear witness in the world to the beauty of believing in God and practicing fraternal charity and mutual respect.”.

              Cardinal Kovakaad Prefect of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue

              What criteria should be used to overcome situations in which dialogue is hindered by radicalization, discrimination or violence?

              -Ours is a time of conversion and renewal, an occasion to leave behind disputes and begin a new journey: working together, each with his or her own responsibilities, we can build a world in which everyone can realize his or her humanity in truth, justice and peace. Hope illuminates the path and, at the same time, is renewed and nourished each time, both in daily life, - with simple and concrete gestures of welcome, solidarity, mutual listening and sincere dialogue - and in official contexts, with the signing of a memorandum or a joint document. Both aspects are important. It is essential to always walk between realism and hope.

              Interreligious dialogue is increasingly recognized as a component of diplomacy, peace building and development. There is also more talk of “religious diplomacy”. Those working in these fields should include religious actors and faith-based organizations in their strategies. Religious institutions need to move from dialogue based on specific events to dialogue as an ongoing relational practice, involving training, education and collaboration on social justice issues.

              The new generations show a different sensitivity than in the past. Are there questions you see arising from them towards the Catholic Church?

              -Regarding the different sensitivities of the new generations, some important aspects must be taken into account. Young people are often born and grow up in multi-ethnic and therefore multi-cultural and multi-religious societies. It is an experience that influences their concept of “different”. They share spaces, friendships and school careers. Or they are children of immigrants who often experience firsthand the contrast between the cultural and religious traditions of their family and the reality they encounter in society outside the home, with their peers and friends.

              Welcoming and openness towards what is different are genuine needs and, in this, the Catholic Church can bear witness. We know of more and more frequent situations, just to give an example, of welcoming young people of other religions in oratories, who find in them a safe environment outside their family. The adult world should be more open and sensitive to understand the needs of the new generations.

              You are an alumnus of the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, what memories do you have of your years of study?

              -I have excellent memories of my years of study at the University of the Holy Cross, a very important formation both then and later for my future. First of all, it was an experience of internationality, of universality (also an important basis for my present service), and above all I remember the opportunity to exchange ideas with students from other countries of Asia, a continent very well represented at that time. I remember the importance given to the formation of the laity. The personalized attention given to each student, the priority given to assimilation and formation, respecting individual learning rhythms, was very valuable. In short, it was a time of both human and intellectual growth.

              Evangelization

              Erik Varden on suffering: God does not eliminate pain, he carries it with us.

              The Bishop of Trondheim and writer Erik Varden offered at the Omnes Forum a reflection on human suffering from the Christian faith, stressing that the response of Christianity is not a theoretical explanation of pain, but the presence of God who assumes it and redeems it.

              Editorial Staff Omnes-January 9, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

              More than 250 people gathered in the Aula Magna of the CEU San Pablo University in Madrid to attend the Omnes Forum with Erik Varden. The Bishop of Trondheim and writer reflected this Friday on human suffering and its Christian meaning.

              The Forum, organized by Omnes together with Ediciones Encuentro and the Ángel Herrera Oria Cultural Foundation, was also sponsored by CARF Foundation y Banco Sabadell.

              Author of works such as Chastity, On Christian conversion o Wounds that heal, Varden addressed one of the most scandalous questions in contemporary faith: how can one conceive of a God who suffers?.

              The reason for suffering

              The Norwegian bishop stressed that the reason for human suffering does not have a simple answer. “Many leave the Church because of the scandal of suffering,” he said, adding that Christianity does not offer explanations that cancel out pain, but rather a profound reverence for its mystery. The human condition," he recalled, "is a painful condition, but not a definitive one.

              In this context, Varden explained that the core of the Christian mystery is in the incarnation: God, being absolute transcendence, enters the human condition to heal it from within. “The incarnation takes place in view of redemption,” he pointed out, insisting that suffering is not the end of history.

              Partial view of attendees at the Omnes Forum with Erik Varden

              Erik Varden reflects in a simple example the Christian's position in the face of suffering. At Crime and punishment, The brothers talk about the unjust pain and one of them ends up crying out in anger at this reality, shouting «there can be no answer to this». One of them does not try to correct his brother's anger or refute his words, but when the other stops speaking, he remains silent and fixes his gaze on the image of the cross. That is the Christian response: not an explanation that cancels out the pain, but a silent presence in the face of suffering.

              Two current responses to suffering

              Varden points out two tendencies in the face of suffering. On the one hand, he mentioned the “Instagram trend”, which pushes to project an ideal, invulnerable and perfect existence. On the other, he pointed to the growing inclination towards victimization and self-victimization, in which personal wounds are publicly exposed, demanding recognition and reparation. Although he acknowledged that sometimes it is necessary to show the wounds, he warned of the risk of turning them into identity: “when we say ‘my wound is me’”.

              According to Varden, being caught between these two dynamics - the denial of pain and its absolutization - destroys the Christian perspective. In this sense, he invited us to reflect on the historical place of Christian symbols in public life. For centuries, he recalled, processes of teaching, justice and social life have taken place under the image of the suffering Christ. That image is honored not because of the pain itself, but because Christians know what happened on the third day: suffering does not have the last word.

              The cross and your freedom

              The contemporary aspiration for perfection, he added, reveals a profound truth: the human being was created for fullness and beauty. The problem arises when one tries to reach this perfection by one's own strength, which easily leads to frustration. In the face of this, Varden defended that not being self-sufficient does not imply not being free. “For freedom, Christ has set us free,” he said.

              When contemplating the cross - with the nails piercing the flesh and mobility annulled - it may seem that we are before the absolute negation of freedom. However, read in faith, the cross reveals an extreme freedom: “If it is possible, let this cup pass from me, but your will be done”. For Varden, this scene shows that even when physical freedom is severely limited, a fully free inner response is still possible.

              The Christian position is that the fact that we are not self-sufficient or autonomous does not mean that we are not free. For freedom, Christ has set us free. Faith teaches us that we can respond with perfect freedom even when things happen to us that restrict our physical freedom. The very idea of nails piercing flesh and a person who makes sure to take away mobility is a perverse image and at the same time read in the light of faith the cross speaks to us of extreme freedom. If it is possible, let this cup pass from me, but let your will be done. The cross teaches us that we can respond with maximum inner freedom to events that would paralyze us.

              Varden talks about healing wounds

              The bishop also insisted that the healing of wounds is not instantaneous. Conversion does not automatically eliminate pain or make everything end well. Some fractures, he said, will not disappear, but that does not place them beyond the reach of grace. The Christian faith does not proclaim only an omnipotent God capable of eliminating suffering, but a God who carries it with us and transforms it into a source of healing and, at times, salvation. “By his wounds we have been healed,” he recalled, stressing that Christians, as members of the Body of Christ, participate in this redemptive reality.

              Redemption,“ he said, ‘is a historical fact that has already taken place, the effects of which continue to unfold in time until the end of time. In this sense, he cited the image of Christ who remains on the cross, not as an episode to be discarded, but as the certainty that all suffering can be entrusted to an omnipotent love. ’Saying, ”Lord, this is yours,“” he explained, can turn wounds into bridges of healing. "I have seen this," he added.

              “We live in this world as in a valley of tears,” he concluded, “but it is a valley illuminated by the light of Christ.” For the bishop, each person is called to discover and interpret his or her own “song,” the one for which he or she was created. Although there are admirable examples of people-with or without faith-who face suffering with courage, when suffering is illuminated by Christian faith it is lived with the conviction that God is with us and that we are made to live in Him. Thus, every human experience, even the most painful, can become a path of communion with God.

              Read more
              The Vatican

              15 thoughts on the restriction of human rights and freedoms denounced by the Pope

              In a dense speech to the Diplomatic Corps, which we summarize in 15 points, Pope Leo XIV today denounced the “short-circuiting of human rights” in the world, against the freedoms of expression, conscience, religion, and the persecution and discrimination of Christians. And he firmly rejected the “so-called right to safe abortion”, surrogacy and euthanasia, in order to defend the family.

              Francisco Otamendi-January 9, 2026-Reading time: 7 minutes

              The restriction and “short-circuiting” of human rights in the world, the violation of fundamental freedoms, especially freedom of expression and religious freedom, with conscientious objection, the defense of human life and the family, with the rejection of the “so-called right to safe abortion”, surrogate motherhood and euthanasia, have been core aspects of the wide-ranging Speech of Pope Leo XIV to the Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Holy See, which are summarized here.

              Force-based diplomacy

              Along with this, the Pontiff denounced that “diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being replaced by a diplomacy based on force, whether by individuals or by groups of allies.”. 

              “War is back in fashion and war enthusiasm is spreading,” he noted at the beginning of his speech. “The principle established after World War II, which forbade countries to use force to violate each other's borders, has been broken.”. 

              “Peace remains a difficult but possible good.”

              In the Pope's view, “peace is no longer sought as a gift and as a desirable good in itself (...). Instead, it is sought through arms as a condition for asserting one's dominion. This seriously compromises the rule of law, which is the basis of all peaceful civil coexistence”, and he stressed the importance of respecting “international humanitarian law”.

              However, after analyzing some of the best-known conflicts shaking the world, such as those in Ukraine, Israel and Palestine in the Middle East, Haiti, the African Great Lakes region, Myanmar, or Venezuela, the Pope concluded by pointing out that “despite the tragic situation before our eyes, peace remains a difficult but possible good”.

              As St. Augustine reminds us, he stressed, “our supreme good consists in peace, because it is the very goal of the city of God, to which we aspire, even unconsciously, and of which we can enjoy a foretaste even in the earthly city”.

              Venezuela: seeking peaceful political solutions

              Referring to Venezuela, Leo XIV renewed his “vehement appeal for peaceful political solutions to the present situation, bearing in mind the common good of peoples and not the defense of partisan interests. This is especially valid for Venezuela after recent events”. 

              I renew my appeal, he said, “to respect the will of the Venezuelan people and to work for the protection of the human and civil rights of all and for the construction of a future of stability and harmony, finding inspiration in the example of two of their children, whom I had the joy of canonizing last October, José Gregorio Hernández and Sister Carmen Rendiles”. 

              In this way, “it will be possible to build a society based on justice, truth, freedom and fraternity, and thus overcome the serious crisis that has afflicted the country for many years”. 

              Drug trafficking, a scourge for humanity

              “Among the causes of this crisis is undoubtedly drug trafficking, which is a scourge for humanity and requires the joint commitment of all countries to eradicate it and prevent millions of young people around the world from becoming victims of drug use,” the Pope said. 

              “Alongside these efforts, there must be greater investment in human development, education and the creation of employment opportunities for people who, in many cases, are unknowingly drawn into the world of drugs.”. 

              Other central themes of his speech: fundamental rights and freedoms

              As mentioned above, the profound criticism of threats to human rights and the defense of fundamental rights such as religious freedom and life have been central to his discourse. 

              “We are witnessing a real “short-circuiting” of human rights,” the Pope diagnosed. “The right to freedom of expression, freedom of conscience, religious freedom and even the right to life are being restricted in the name of other so-called new rights, with the result that the very framework of human rights is losing its vitality and leaving room for force and oppression. This happens when every right becomes self-referential and, especially, when it becomes disconnected from reality, nature and truth.”.

              Conscientious objection is not rebellion

              In his reflection to the Diplomatic Corps, the Pope sharply criticized the restriction of fundamental human rights, “beginning with freedom of conscience. In this sense, conscientious objection allows people to refuse legal or professional obligations that conflict with moral, ethical or religious principles deeply rooted in their personal lives.”. 

              Conscientious objection is not rebellion, but an act of fidelity to oneself, he said. “At this moment in history, freedom of conscience seems to be increasingly questioned by states, even by those who claim to base themselves on democracy and human rights.”. 

              A truly free society does not impose uniformity, but protects the diversity of consciences, preventing authoritarian tendencies and promoting an ethical dialogue that enriches the social fabric, he stressed.

              Restricted religious freedom: an appeal to nations

              Similarly, religious freedom risks being restricted, he said later. As Benedict XVI recalled, this is “the first of all human rights, because it expresses the most fundamental reality of the person”.

              The most recent data show that violations of religious freedom are increasing and that 64 % of the world's population suffer serious violations of this right. “In calling for full respect for the religious freedom and worship of Christians, the Holy See calls for the same for all other religious communities.”. 

              In this section, the Pope did not want to overlook that “the persecution of Christians continues to be one of the most widespread human rights crises today, affecting more than 380 million believers around the world.”.

              Discrimination against Christians

              At the same time, the Pope did not forget “a subtle form of religious discrimination against Christians, which is spreading even in countries where they are a majority, such as in Europe or America. 

              There, they are sometimes restricted in their ability to proclaim the truths of the Gospel for political or ideological reasons, especially when they defend the dignity of the weakest, the unborn, refugees and migrants, or promote the family.”. 

              Defense of the family 

              An important part of the Pope's speech focused on the family. From a Christian perspective, human beings are created in the image and likeness of God, who, “in calling them into existence out of love, called them at the same time to love,” he recalled, quoting St. John Paul II. 

              “This vocation is manifested in a privileged and unique way within the family. It is in this context that we learn to love and develop the capacity to serve life, thus contributing to the development of society and the mission of the Church. Despite its importance, the institution of the family today faces two crucial challenges,” the Holy Father noted.

              Its fundamental social role is underestimated

              On the one hand, there is a worrying trend in the international system to neglect and underestimate their fundamental social role, leading to their progressive institutional marginalization. On the other hand, we cannot ignore the growing and painful reality of fragile, broken and suffering families, affected by internal difficulties and disturbing phenomena such as domestic violence.

              The vocation to love and to life, which is manifested in an important way in the exclusive and indissoluble union between a woman and a man, implies, according to Pope Leo XIV, “a fundamental ethical imperative for families to be able to fully welcome and care for unborn life. This is increasingly a priority, especially in those countries that are experiencing a dramatic decline in the birth rate.”. 

              “Life, a priceless gift”.” 

              “Life, in fact, is a priceless gift that develops within a committed relationship based on mutual self-giving and service. In the light of this profound vision of life as a gift to be cherished, and of the family as its responsible guardian,” “we categorically reject any practice that denies or exploits the origin of life and its development,” the Pope said.

              “Among them is abortion, which interrupts a growing life and refuses to welcome the gift of life. In this regard, the Holy See expresses its deep concern about projects aimed at financing cross-border mobility for the purpose of accessing the so-called “right to safe abortion”.". 

              It also “considers it deplorable that public resources are allocated to suppress life, instead of investing them in supporting mothers and families. The main objective must remain the protection of all unborn children and the effective and concrete support to all women so that they can welcome life”.

              Surrogacy: the dignity of both parties is violated.

              Similarly, there is the practice of surrogacy. “By turning gestation into a negotiable service, it violates the dignity of both the child, who is reduced to a “product,” and the mother, by exploiting her body and the generative process and altering the original relational vocation of the family.”. 

              Euthanasia: false compassion

              Similar considerations also apply to the sick and to the elderly and lonely, who sometimes find it difficult to find a reason to go on living. “Civil society and States also have a responsibility to respond concretely to situations of vulnerability, offering solutions to human suffering, such as palliative care, and promoting policies of genuine solidarity, rather than encouraging false forms of compassion such as euthanasia.”. 

              A similar reflection can be applied to so many young people who face numerous difficulties, including drug addiction. A joint effort by all is needed to eradicate this scourge of humanity and the drug trafficking that feeds it, the Pope reiterated, in order to prevent millions of young people around the world from falling victim to drug abuse.

              Reaffirming the protection of the right to life

              In conclusion, Leo XIV said: “It is necessary to reaffirm forcefully that the protection of the right to life constitutes the indispensable foundation of every other human right. A society is healthy and developed only when it protects the sacredness of human life and actively strives to promote it”. 

              Supporting signs of hope for peace

              After recalling signs of courageous hope for peace in our time (the Dayton Accords that ended the bloody war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, or the joint declaration of peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan), and the need to constantly support them, the Pope recalled the celebration in October of the eighth centenary of the death of St. Francis of Assisi, «a man of peace and dialogue, universally recognized even by those who do not belong to the Catholic Church». 

              “A humble heart and artisan of peace is what I wish for each of us and for all the inhabitants of our countries at the beginning of this new year,” he concluded.

              The authorFrancisco Otamendi

              Family

              Carlota and Santi, a marriage focused on doing God's will

              There are many ways to seek personal holiness in marriage. Carlota and Santi are building theirs trying to discover and correspond to what God is asking of them at every moment.

              Javier García Herrería-January 9, 2026-Reading time: 6 minutes

              Carlota Valenzuela and Santi Roldán met in November 2024 and married in September 2025. She is from Granada and he is from Buenos Aires. They had a brief but conscious courtship, which put mutual knowledge and prayer at the core of their relationship. Their love was not the fruit of a hasty infatuation, but of a discernment lived seriously. 

              Carlota, known by thousands of people since she made a pilgrimage on foot from Finisterre to Jerusalem three years ago and for sharing on social networks her life of faith with more than 120,000 followers, explains today how he and her husband, an Argentinean, build with their marriage a shared vocation.

              Formation during their engagement has been key: Married Love retreat, teenstar, pre-marriage course and regular talks with a priest to understand the real value of the sacrament. They insist on the need to change the story that believers often have about marriage: it is necessary to speak of its beauty, to show happy marriages and to restore hope.

              When asked what marriage means to them in terms of imitating God and doing his will, they were surprised by the naturalness with which they spoke of something unusual for newlyweds: having explicitly decided to live seeking God's will. This decision does not remain an abstract idea, but is embodied in a very concrete daily practice: praying together. 

              Prayer routine

              Their day always begins in the same way. They light a candle, place themselves in front of an image of the Virgin and pray the lauds. Carlota explains that already in that first moment of the day what each one carries inside is transparent, because “in the prayers of the lauds, besides the proposals of the Church, we ask for what we have in our hearts, and then I start to see what Santi has in his heart and Santi sees what I have in mine”. Then they read the readings of the day and comment on them, trying to see “how the readings of the day resonate in our concrete reality”. This, she says, is how she begins her day.

              The day also ends in prayer, with a practice they learned at the Married Love Project retreat and which has become one of the pillars of their married life. It is a marital prayer in which each one speaks personally to Jesus out loud in front of the other. Carlota describes it as “a neutral ground” in which Santi can pour out “the things that weigh on him, the things that generate illusions, the things he regrets, the things that have hurt him that I have done throughout the day,” while the other is simply a witness. Then she does the same, always in the light of the Gospel of the day and of their concrete life as spouses.

              Santi stresses that this prayer with Jesus is neither uniform nor predictable. “The relationship with Jesus is not always the same,” he explains; there are days when he speaks to him about a sin against which he is struggling more, on others he shares a concern or a fear, and on others he simply thanks him “because the day was very nice.” The decisive thing, he insists, is that “my wife listens to what I have in my heart, without interrupting and without intervening”, which allows me to show what I have inside “in a very honest and open way, without the need to negotiate anything”.

              Lack of time

              In the morning they dedicate between half an hour and forty minutes to prayer, and in the evening about ten minutes. Is this too much or too little time? It depends on what you compare it to. On many occasions lack of time - work, children, rushing around - make married prayer life difficult but Carlota advises those who think they have no time to “check the metrics on their cell phone and see how much time they have spent on social networks or reading the press.”. 

              Carlota clarifies that when there are days when they are tired, the prayer is brief, but “we never go to bed without having prayed. Even in more uncomfortable circumstances, for example if one is sick, ”the prayer can last a minute, but we never go to sleep without praying“.

              Prayer and conflict management

              For Carlota and Santi, praying together is not a pious addition, but something structural: “A united marriage is the basis of everything in life”, and that is why “prioritizing joint prayer is very important”. 

              They have seen marriages in which one of the spouses has a great faith life and the other does not, and how this generates a silent wear and tear, because “no matter how much one rows, if the two do not row in the same direction, everything is more difficult,” adds Carlota. Personal prayer is necessary, but conjugal prayer is “like the glue of marriage” and “the boiler that fuels the home.

              This prayer space has very concrete effects on the management of daily conflicts. Santi explains that in marriage there is always the temptation to avoid certain topics out of laziness or fear of arguing. “You have the option of not talking about things,” he acknowledges, but clarifies that what is kept “does not magically disappear.” Prayer forces them to talk, to have those difficult conversations that one would try to avoid, and helps them “build something together.”. 

              Carlota, far from idealizing coexistence, recognizes with humor that, although they get along very well, “there are times when the armchairs fly”, especially in her emotional cycles, when she goes from thinking that Santi is wonderful to being bothered even by the way he breathes. In those moments, she explains, prayer helps her to “suspect myself”, because by placing herself before God she understands “who God is and who you are”, she remembers that the perfect one is Him and not her, and she recognizes herself as a “beloved, forgiven and redeemed daughter”. From there she can accept that, if there is conflict, she probably also has responsibility, even if it is in small daily gestures. Recalling a phrase of her grandfather - “two do not quarrel if one does not want to”- she insists that when there are problems “it is the movement of both” and that prayer places her in a realistic humility from which she can forgive and ask for forgiveness.

              Santi completes this idea by explaining that the life of prayer helps them not to live from the claim. “If I live in the claim I stop seeing Carlota as a gift, as a gift from God, and I start seeing her as something that is owed to me.”. 

              On the other hand, when the other is lived as a gift, “things change a lot”. Recognizing one's own mistakes allows the other to become a help and not an enemy, and avoids falling into constant accusation, which he clearly identifies: “The devil is the accuser, and we spouses are not exempt from that”. To get out of this dynamic, he insists, one needs the humility to recognize that one has done something wrong and to accept help.

              At the beginning of their marriage, they have discovered something that they consider to be an authentic life strategy: to prioritize the other person. Carlota expresses it clearly when she affirms that “your priority is the other not only as a life option, but as a vital strategy”, because work changes, children leave and circumstances vary, but marriage is “your way to heaven and your daily happiness”. Taking care of it, he concludes, is not an add-on, but the great investment of life.

              Fear of the future

              When asked about their fears, none of them mentions major future crises, but rather a more subtle danger. Carlota is afraid of “normalizing miracles” and thinking that what is going well is only the fruit of one's own effort. She worries that, little by little, “we are taking God out of the equation” and that unavoidable matters, such as paying a mortgage, will become the axis that determines all decisions. Santi agrees completely and expresses it from another angle: he is afraid that “we are doing well and we think we are doing well because of our strength and then we leave God aside”.

              Observing other Christian marriages, Carlota confesses that she is sometimes sad to see God relegated to Sunday mornings, “if the children are not sick. She also worries about the attachment to material things, often justified by the care of children. He recalls that Jesus” parents did not provide him with “life insurance, a pension plan or a private university”. He only had “parents who cared for him and loved him”. 

              He explains that many times, with the excuse of giving stability or a good school, family life and marriage are sacrificed, when in reality “what they are giving their son is not what he really needs”, because “he will probably be a good professional, but he needs much more to be a true saint to get to heaven”.

              The best of dating

              Looking back and evaluating their courtship, both agree on the great successes. Santi does not hesitate to say that “chastity was our number one success”, because it allows us to maintain clarity in discernment. Living chastity makes it easier for the engagement to be a time to talk, to walk, to really get to know each other and to be able to make a free decision, because it is clear that “the engagement has two possible endings: to get married or to leave”. 

              He explains that part of discernment is to accept that there will be no absolute certainty that confirms that one chooses the right person and that one does not marry with all the answers, but with enough peace and joy to take the step.

              Contraceptives

              In these first months of marriage and in conversations with couple friends, Carlota and Santi see how selfishness often creeps into marriage through small plots that one does not want to give away. One of them are artificial contraceptive methods, which make it possible to “make sure” that everything goes at the pace you want. 

              She admits that she has always been rebellious in the face of the Church's proposals and that she has only learned to trust them by seeing them incarnated in her life. One of those points was precisely the issue of contraceptives, but after only a few months of marriage, she is convinced that it is not an arbitrary prohibition, but a protection against some dynamics that slowly erode self-giving.

              Read more
              The Vatican

              Pope to reconvene cardinals in June, and there will be an annual meeting

              Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni revealed this yesterday in a briefing at the end of the extraordinary consistory of cardinals. Around the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul in June, there will be another “meeting similar to this one”, a two-day Consistory, and the Pope wants to hold at least an annual meeting of 3 or 4 days with the cardinals.

              Francisco Otamendi-January 9, 2026-Reading time: 2 minutes

              The extraordinary consistories of cardinals will cease to be extraordinary, and will be periodic consultative meetings or gatherings. This follows from the information offered last night by the Vatican spokesman, Matteo Bruni, coming from the Pope himself. Leo XIV wishes to hold “a meeting similar” to the one that took place on January 7 and 8, in which 170 cardinals participated out of the total of 245 of the College of Cardinals, including electors and non-electors who have already reached the age of 80.

              Around St. Peter and St. Paul

              In response to questions from journalists, Matteo Bruni said at the press conference, which was delayed by more than half an hour, that the data are “a meeting similar to this one”, of two days, and in the proximity of the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul, on June 29. With this date, it seems that this meeting, or consistory, could be held on the weekend of June 26-28.

              In addition, the Pontiff plans to convene an annual meeting or consistory, this time lasting 3 or 4 days. Although some journalists have insisted, the spokesman did not elaborate further. Vatican News, however, reports that the Pope himself has confirmed the Ecclesial Assembly of October 2028, announced last March.

              Continuity with the path of Vatican II

              The Pope is very grateful to the cardinals for their participation in this consistory, in particular “to the older ones,” according to Bruni, and has expressed his closeness to those who could not come to Rome. 

              As Omnes has been reporting, Leo XIV referred to the continuity with the path of the Second Vatican Council, and “synodality is an important part of this path”.

              Three cardinals participated in the briefing: Archbishop Stephen Brislin of Johannesburg, Philippine Bishop Pablo Virgilio Siongco David, and Archbishop Luis José Rueda of Bogota. “We have worked in unity, which is not uniformity.”.

              Cardinal Rueda said that the consistory is part of the process of continuing the missionary journey of the College of Cardinals, and “the Pope intends to continue to summon us”. He also highlighted some of the Pope's ideas in his homily at Mass on the 8th. We are not a group of experts, but “a community of faith”, and “we come to walk together as missionary disciples, with humility”.

              “A great act of love”

              At the morning Mass, the Holy Father said that our “pausing” (in the work of the Consistory) is “above all, a great act of love - for God, for the Church and for men and women throughout the world - with which we allow ourselves to be molded by the Spirit, first in prayer and silence, but also by looking each other in the eye, listening to one another and making ourselves heard, through the sharing of all those whom the Lord has entrusted to our care as pastors, in the most diverse parts of the world”.

              @Vatican Media.
              The authorFrancisco Otamendi

              TribuneMonsignor Raimo Goyarrola

              The joy of evangelizing

              At the beginning of this year I invite you - and I invite myself - to live the joy of evangelization not as a forced effort, but as a way of life. Wherever we are, every day, may we sow peace, hope and joy. May our presence be a small window through which others can glimpse the light of Christ.

              January 9, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

              Sometimes we think that evangelization consists of great speeches, audacious projects or distant missions. However, Christian experience - that of the saints, that of so many anonymous faithful, that of the Church throughout the centuries - shows that the proclamation of the Gospel springs, above all, from the concrete place where we are. Where Providence has sown us, there we are called to bear the fruits of salvation.

              Sometimes that place is the village of origin, known and familiar; other times, as in my case, it is a Nordic country, silent and frozen for long months, where the language of daily testimony becomes more eloquent than any speech. Because evangelizing does not begin with speaking: it begins with living.

              Evangelizing through life: the universal language

              In Finland, where the word is restrained and the spaces are wide, I have discovered that the Christian is invited to evangelize with a new style: that of joyful simplicity, the serenity that disarms, the smile that opens doors, the service that makes the invisible visible. And I think that wherever you are - in a city neighborhood, in an office, in a university classroom, in a factory or in a crowded subway - you share exactly the same mission.

              It is not about making noise, but about radiating. Not to conquer, but to accompany. Not to impose, but to propose with tenderness, with peace, with the kind firmness of those who know they have found a treasure they cannot keep to themselves.

              Authentic evangelization always springs from joy. Not from a superficial optimism, but from the certainty of knowing that we are loved by God. When the Christian lives from this joy, the mission ceases to be a duty and becomes a natural overflow. Like someone who cannot avoid sharing the good news.

              This is how the Gospel is making its way today: from heart to heart, from gesture to gesture. A new evangelization, yes, but profoundly ancient in its essence: that of the personal witness that makes Christ transparent.

              The Pope's impulse and the world's clamor

              In this time of the New Evangelization - to which recent Popes, including Pope Leo XIV, have given renewed impetus - we are reminded that the world does not need sad, fearful or hidden Christians. It needs confident witnesses who know how to look at every reality with the eyes of Christ and respond with his mercy.

              Humanity, even the most secularized, continues to thirst. A thirst for goodness, a thirst for meaning, a thirst for hope that does not disappoint. And you and I, each in our own corner of the world, hold the Source in our hands.

              To evangelize is to sow peace

              When you live far from your country, you learn to appreciate the power of small gestures: a kind greeting, an unexpected help, a quiet conversation in an environment accustomed to silence. There I have discovered that evangelizing is, above all, sowing peace, the peace of Christ. And this sowing knows no frontiers, because it is Christ himself - the only Savior - who makes it fruitful and who offers salvation to all. We are only his open hands in the midst of the world.

              Evangelization is not a strategic project, but a way of life. It is allowing Christ to speak through our looks, our words and, often, our silences. It is to walk through life leaving behind us a trail of serenity that invites us to ask ourselves where it comes from. And when someone discovers that this peace comes from Christ, we understand that he himself invites us to collaborate with him in the salvation of many, being humble witnesses of his love.

              The Christian as a shining beacon

              Not all of us have the vocation of preachers, but all of us -without exception- have the vocation of witnesses. The lighthouse does not shout: it is simply there, firm and luminous. The presence of the Christian in the midst of the world should also be like that: a reference that does not force, but orients; that does not pressure, but accompanies; that does not impose, but enlightens.

              Evangelization begins in everyday life: in the family, at work, in our dealings with those who cross our path. At times a kind word will suffice; at others, heroic patience; at still others, the silent witness of fidelity, even when no one seems to see it.

              Evangelization is not a burden, but a grace. It is not a burden, but a gift. And when we understand that our mission is simply to let Christ reach others through us, then everything changes.

              Wherever you are, Jesus wants to reach you. He wants to embrace the people you see every day. But He wants to do it with your hands, with your smile, with your attitude. Evangelizing means allowing the closeness of Christ to become visible in you.

              The authorMonsignor Raimo Goyarrola

              Bishop of Helsinki.

              The Vatican

              Pope: “There is life in our Church; let us seek together what the Holy Spirit wants”.”

              In impromptu remarks last night, at the conclusion of the first day of the Consistory, Pope Leo XIV responded to a question circulating in some media. “There is life in our Church, no doubt,” he said, but “there is a road ahead.” And he thanked the cardinals for “being able to seek together what the Holy Spirit wants for the Church today and tomorrow.”.

              Francisco Otamendi-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

              At the time of writing, the Pope's lunch with the 170 cardinals present at the Consistory, who are preparing to face the third and final working session in the Aula, has concluded. 

              But the Vatican has leaked some words from last night, in which, in three minutes, Leo XIV comes out against a pessimistic view of the life of the Church, and responds to the question “if there is life in our Church. I am convinced that there is, without a doubt. But not everything is done. There is a way, and we are walking together”.

              The exact words of the Holy Father's reflection were as follows: “Let us ask ourselves: is there life in our Church? I am convinced that there is, without a doubt. In these months, if I have not lived it before, I have certainly had many beautiful experiences of the life of the Church”.

              “There is life, but not everything is already done.”

              “But the question is there,” he continued: "Is there life in our Church? Is there room for what is being born? Do we love and proclaim a God who sets us on the way? We cannot close ourselves and say: Everything is already done, finished, do as we have always done. There is truly a way and with the work of these days we are walking together".

              The second issue, or in chronological order, perhaps the first, was thanking the cardinals for helping him.

              “I think it's very important the participation of all of you in this experience as the College of Cardinals of the Church,” said the Holy Father.

              Searching for what the Holy Spirit wants for the Church

              An experience that offers the Church and the world a certain witness of the will, of the desire, “recognizing the value of meeting together, of making the sacrifice of a journey - for some of you a very long one - to come to be together and to be able to seek together what the Holy Spirit wants for the Church today and tomorrow”.

              A moment of Pope Leo XIV's morning Mass on January 8, 2026, with the cardinals attending the Extraordinary Consistory (Photo OSV News/Simone Risoluti, Vatican Media).

              The raison d'être of the Church: to proclaim the Gospel.

              “We want to be a Church that does not look only to itself, that is missionary, that looks beyond, to others. The raison d'être of the Church is not for the cardinals, nor for the bishops, nor for the clergy. The raison d'être is to proclaim the Gospel,” said Leo XIV.

              “Synod and synodality, as an expression of the search for how to be a missionary Church in today's world, and Evangelii Gaudium, to announce the kerygma, the Gospel with Christ at the center. This is our mission,” he added.

              “I experience the need to be able to count on you."

              The Successor of Peter considers that this accompaniment is very important for everyone, but in a special way for himself. He said:

              “I think it is really important, even if it is a very short time, but it is a very important time also for me, because I feel, I experience the need to be able to count on you: it is you who have called this servant to this mission!”

              “I would like to say that I think it is important that we work together, that we discern together, that we seek what the Spirit is asking of us.”.

              He then advanced some reflections expressed in the homily of the Mass for the Church this Thursday morning, which has been reported early in the morning here".

              “The Holy Spirit is alive and present also among us.”

              For example, “the joy of the Gospel liberates. It makes us prudent, yes, but also audacious, attentive and creative; it suggests different paths from those we have already traveled”.

              Opening his heart, Pope Prevost confided yesterday: “This meeting is for me one of the many expressions in which we can truly live an experience of the newness of the Church. The Holy Spirit is alive and present among us too; how beautiful it is to meet together in the boat!”.

              Trust in the Lord

              He then praised Cardinal Radcliffe's reflection, when he said, “Let us be together.” “There may be something that scares us; there are doubts: where are we going, how will we end up? But if we put our trust in the Lord, in his presence, we can do much,” the Pope concluded.

              The authorFrancisco Otamendi

              Family

              Young people prioritize careers and travel over starting a family

              The XV Barómetro de las Familias en España, carried out by the pollster Análisis e Investigación for The Family Watch Foundation, shows that most young people do not have among their priorities to start a family.

              Editorial Staff Omnes-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

              Starting a family is not a priority for many young people. Most of them believe that it is more difficult to start a family now than in previous generations. According to the survey conducted by the polling firm Análisis e Investigación for Family Watch, less than half of 18-44 year olds believe they will start a family in the next 5 years.

              This decision is significantly influenced by the fact that the economic situation in Spain is currently perceived as «fair» or «bad». Young people and women are increasingly critical of the country's politics and economy.

              María José Olesti, general director of The Family Watch Foundation, emphasizes that «these 15 years of barometer give us a perspective to take into account when it comes to seeing what the real situation of Spanish families is. It is especially significant that almost 80% of those surveyed consider that today there are greater difficulties in forming a family than in previous generations and that more than half consider that today older people suffer discrimination because of their age».

              How to improve the well-being of families

              The majority of young people are in favor of promoting work/life balance (work/measure/personal life). The measure that resonates the most is to facilitate access to housing. They also propose fiscal aid, aid to vulnerable families and child and dependent child benefits.

              The main priorities of the population are to travel and to prosper in their professional life. The younger profile is the most intense with these priorities in the next 5 years. For many, starting a family is not a current priority.

              First cell phone at age 12

              In half of the families, the youngest children have a cell phone. The most common age for giving them one (in 62% of the families) is 12 years old. A positive fact to note is that people are becoming increasingly aware of the dangers involved, and families are thinking of giving the cell phone later. Young people are increasingly aware of the risks of social networks and cyberbullying.

              The main factor that helps young people to reduce the impact of social networks is the family. In this way, they see the family as a support to detach themselves from how enslaved they can become by social networks.

              When faced with a mental health problem, who do young people turn to?

              The main triggers of mental health deterioration in young people are social networks (65.3 %), bullying in schools (61.5%) and low self-esteem (52.9%). On the other hand, in adults, the main factors are economic difficulties (80.7%) and loneliness (49.1%).

              Mental health is being discussed more and more freely. Over the last few years, awareness has increased in terms of dealing with this issue. Thus, respondents recognize that when faced with a problem related to mental health, they would first turn to professionals (40.8%) and then to their partner (32.2%) and family (16.3%). The survey notes that the older the respondent is, the more he/she relies on professionals. Young people tend to rely less on them.

              What about the elderly?

              More than half of those surveyed believe that the elderly suffer discrimination because of their age; this percentage rises to 62.8 % if there is an elderly dependent in the household or environment.

              Is the culture of caring for the elderly promoted in Spain? 40% believe that it is not encouraged. And the majority of the other 60% believe that it is, but not enough.

              Read more
              Spain

              Spain: Compensation to victims of abuse in the Church to be set by the State and paid by the Church

              The text establishes that the Ombudsman will have the last word in case of failure to reach an agreement for the reparation of victims of abuse in the Church.

              Maria José Atienza-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

              The Spanish Minister of the Presidency, Justice and Relations with the Courts, Félix Bolaños, held a press conference at the headquarters of the Ministry of Justice. The purpose of this appearance was to explain the agreement between Government - Church in Spain on a new avenue for redress of child sexual abuse through the Ombudsman.

              Bolaños explained that the agreement reached, after two years of «arduous and complicated negotiations» and in which in difficult moments «the Vatican advocated for an agreement», establishes that reparations will be made to all victims of abuse in the Church, provided that they cannot resort to legal proceedings, because most of them are time-barred. 

              How will these repairs work?

              As explained by the Minister, the State will create a processing unit in the Ministry where support will be given to these victims, respecting their privacy, to present their request for reparation, which can be economic, moral, psychological, restorative or all four simultaneously.

              This request will be transferred to a victims' unit, under the guardianship of the Ombudsman who will present it to the victim and to the Church; if they have the approval of both, the Church will pay (in the case of financial reparation, the amount fixed).

              If any of the parties is not in agreement, it will go to a second instance in which the Church, the State and victims will meet again, and there, in a joint work, an attempt will be made to reach an agreement. If there is no agreement either, the Ombudsman's criteria will prevail.

              The Minister has reiterated on several occasions that, in this agreement, it is established that the compensation is fixed by the Spanish State and paid by the Church.

              The agreement, which is limited only to victims of abuse within the Catholic Church in Spain, has been signed for one year, extendable for one more year.

              Luis Argüello: «A new way to repair».»

              After the appearance of the Minister of the Presidency, Justice and Relations with the Courts, the President of the Spanish Episcopal Conference explained the role of the Church in this agreement, which joins «the steps that the Church is taking in this sense in its dioceses and congregations».

              Argüello wanted to highlight the fact that, in the work of the diocesan offices and religious congregations, «we have found some important circumstances to incorporate into this agreement: people who have suffered abuse in other areas: sports, state education, centers for the protection of minors, etc. For this reason, it has seemed important to us the commitment that in the development of the law for the protection of children and adolescents, a proposal similar to the one made by the Church with the PRIVA commission should be made, so that other sectors can offer reparation to the victims in spite of being prescribed cases». 

              Likewise, the president of the Spanish bishops emphasized his interest in tax exemptions for the indemnities.

              Jesús Díaz Sariego: «society must support the victims, including those who have not been abused in the Church».»

              In this appearance, the president of CONFER, Jesús Díaz Sariego, highlighted the moral commitment of the Church that assumes the reparation of cases that are already prescribed and that «a new way is opened for those people who do not want to access the PRIVA commission, but we must recognize the work that this commission is doing».

              Díaz Sariego highlighted the value of the compensation already paid, the work of prevention and the work of the Church and its religious congregations in this area and emphasized that «we are in a position to demand that society as a whole support the victims, including those who have not been abused in the Church».»



              Vocations

              Brazilian José Gabriel Silva Kafa: “truly loving the priesthood” for evangelization

              José Gabriel Silva Kafa, a seminarian from Brazil in the Diocese of Rio de Janeiro, is studying third year theology at the Ecclesiastical Faculties of the University of Navarra, thanks to the CARF Foundation, and resides at the Bidasoa International Seminary, in Pamplona.

              Sponsored space-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

              José Gabriel Silva Kafa (23 years old) was born in a neighborhood on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where families struggle as best they can. A young Brazilian who was born into a family coherent with his Catholic faith, who lived the closeness of a living parish, and who in a slow process learned to listen to God in the midst of the noise of everyday life.

              At present, José Gabriel is studying third year of Theology at the Ecclesiastical Faculties of the University of Navarra, and is receiving an integral formation in the Bidasoa international seminar, in Pamplona, thanks to the CARF Foundation. The purpose of Bidasoa is “the vocational accompaniment of future priests”, offering help to correspond to the call, and the preparation to receive the sacrament of Holy Orders.

              The evangelizing mission, according to José Gabriel Silva Kafa, consists of “living in a way that makes credible what is preached,” he said in an interview granted to CARF Foundation. The Brazilian seminarian does not refer to moral exploits, but to coherence: a dedicated life that is visible in daily gestures. The simplicity of evangelizing by example without seeking to apply marketing techniques.

              Coherence and faith life in your family

              He learned coherence in his family. At home, faith was not explained: it was lived. His father, a commerce worker, and his mother, a graduate in administration but dedicated to the home, transmitted religion and faith naturally without pretension or fuss.

              They were not and did not consider themselves a model family. Simply believing in God and faith was part of daily life. It was this stable environment that allowed Joseph Gabriel to take God seriously without the need for dramatic events.

              José Gabriel Silva Kafa, next to an image of the Virgin Mary in Rio de Janeiro, which accompanied the beginning of his priestly vocation.

              Parish, soccer, diocesan meetings

              At the age of 14, young José Gabriel began to work as an altar boy in the parish. The daily contact with his parish priest and the altar were the environment and the place where he began to realize that the priestly vocation was not something abstract.

              Her days as a teenager moved, therefore, between the parish, soccer - being from Rio de Janeiro it is difficult to avoid this sport - and the diocesan meetings: activities that she remembers as the space where she discovered that faith could be a concrete way of being in the world.

              In the course to receive the sacrament of Confirmation he met young people who were seeking God without complexes. This allowed him to ask himself what he wanted to do with his own life. At the age of eighteen, after beginning his studies in philosophy, he entered the seminary.

              Archdiocese of Rio: close pastoral style 

              The archdiocese of Rio de Janeiro, one of the largest in the country, has about 750 priests in 298 parishes. Of the more than six million inhabitants, 43.6 % declare themselves Catholic. For years, the number of agnostics has been growing, living side by side with Protestants, Umbanda spiritualists, Candomblé syncretists...

              According to the Brazilian seminarian, evangelizing in Brazil means speaking of God to a population that distrusts, also in the affective area. “Many do not believe in love, because they have seen how it breaks,” he explains. That is why he admires the work of his archbishop, present in very different neighborhoods and communities. A pastoral style - close, constant, without artifice - is the model on which he himself looks to learn and improve as a future servant of God.

              In his opinion, the trivialization of love and family fragility have left deep wounds in many young people. For this reason, he insists that the Christian proclamation can only be understood if it shows a love that is stable and capable of rebuilding.

              The priest required by the Church 

              José Gabriel discovered in Spain another way of living the faith. He values the beauty of the liturgy and the intellectual seriousness of the environment in which he now finds himself, but he perceives less community involvement than in Brazil. “Here everything is well cared for and well celebrated, but sometimes the closeness that moves us to participate and serve is missing,” he said.

              When asked about the priest the Church needs today, he answers clearly: “Someone who truly loves his vocation, who studies seriously and who prays without negotiating. In a secularized context, people quickly distinguish if a priest believes what he says or if he only fulfills his role”, affirms José Gabriel Silva Kafa.

              Today, this seminarian, far from his country, continues to strengthen his vocation in a seminary that, as he acknowledges, is also molding him. A vocation can grow in silence and become more solid with the passage of time.

              Letter of Pope Leo XIV

              It is hard not to think of Joseph Gabriel, and seminarians like him, when reading what Pope Leo XIV has just written in the month of December. The Apostolic letter “A fidelity that generates future”, on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the decrees of the Second Vatican Council ‘Optatam totius’ and ‘Presbyterorum ordinis’.

              The authorSponsored space

              Photo Gallery

              Venezuelan people react to the arrest of Maduro

              Venezuela reacts with emotion upon learning that Donald Trump had captured its president, Nicolás Maduro.

              Editorial Staff Omnes-January 8, 2026-Reading time: < 1 minute
              Spain

              Spanish Church and Government reach agreement on reparations for sexual abuse victims 

              The agreement, which will be signed today by the Ministry of Justice, the Spanish Episcopal Conference and the Spanish Conference of Religious (CONFER), focuses on the victims of sexual abuse whose cases have not been pursued through the Ombudsman.

              Maria José Atienza-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

              A “new avenue” for “those victims of sexual abuse who do not wish to go directly to the PRIVA Commission established by the Church” and whose cases may not have a judicial route. This is how the note sent by the Spanish Episcopal Conference describes the object of the agreement that will be signed by Felix Bolaños, Minister of the Presidency, Justice and Relations with the Courts; Mons. Luis Argüello, president of the EEC, and Jesus Diaz Sariego, president of the CONFER. 

              Comprehensive redress for all minors abused in any area of public life.

              The agreement has achieved the approval of all parties once “the Government has committed itself, as requested by the Church, to address the integral reparation of all minors who are victims of sexual abuse in any area of public life”. The agreement determines that it will be the Ombudsman who will fix, in the case of economic reparation, the amount that the victim will receive and it will be the Church who will pay it.

              According to the note issued by the Spanish bishops, the system “will have the technical criterion of the Ombudsman's Office, the evaluation of the PRIVA Commission, The agreement is based on the consensus between the Catholic Church and the State and the participation of the victims”. For the time being, the agreement is limited to one year (extendable for another year), “for those cases that have not had and cannot have a judicial course either due to the statute of limitations of the crime or due to the death of the victimizer”.

              Unity of criteria

              Based on this new agreement, “the Ombudsman's Office will study the cases presented” -those that do not wish to be dealt with by the PRIVA commission directly- “and will propose a channel of redress that will be studied and evaluated by the PRIVA Commission established by the Church”. 

              One of the key points of this agreement is the unity of criteria for the “evaluation of the cases and the assessment of the reparation of the Ombudsman's Office and the PRIVA Commission. In case of discrepancy in the evaluation, a mixed commission will study the case which, in the last instance, will be established by the Ombudsman after listening to the president of the EEC or of the CONFER, as the case may be”.

              Another key point is that financial compensation will be exempt from taxation, especially income tax.

              First joint agreement

              This is the first step of joint collaboration between the Government and the Church in Spain in this field, since the Government has systematically defended that the reparation to the victims must be guaranteed by a public, mandatory, effective and supervised system by the State, while the Church implemented its own reparation system through the PRIVA commission.

              In its first year of operation, this commission has handled a total of 89 requests for integral reparations (as of September 2025), of which 32 belong to cases in dioceses and 57 to cases within religious congregations.

              Of these, “almost half were resolved with a proposal for comprehensive reparations of between 3,000 and 100,000 euros, in addition to a series of other in-kind reparation concepts and commitments on the part of the institutions”.

              Minister Bolaños himself had warned the EEC that the government would not accept a reparation formula for the Church without state control.

              The successive conversations between the Government and the Church have been marked at various times by the difference of criteria until reaching today's agreement which, according to the EEC note, is not based on “the imposition of a legal obligation, but on the moral commitment of the Church and the mutual agreement of the parties”.

              The Vatican

              “We do not promote ‘agendas,’ we trust in the Lord,” Pope says at Consistory

              Pope Leo XIV told the 170 cardinals present at the Extraordinary Consistory this morning that we are not here to promote personal or group agendas, but to entrust our projects to the discernment that comes from the Lord. Moreover, “we are not a team of experts but a community of faith”. The cardinals will study today synodality and the mission of the Church.

              Editorial Staff Omnes-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 4 minutes

              By a large majority, the 170 cardinals voted to study synodality and the mission of the Church as topics to be studied today, Thursday, at the Extraordinary Consistory. The other two, Praedicate evangelium and liturgy, will be addressed directly in Rome by the Pope and the cardinals of the Curia. Yesterday's session was coordinated by Cardinal Angel Fernandez Artime, pro-prefect of the Dicastery for Consecrated Life. 

              Earlier this morning, Pope Leo XIV pointed out in the homily of the Mass for the Church to the 170 Cardinals present (out of the total of 245 in the College of Cardinals), that “we are not here to promote “agendas” - personal or group agendas - but to entrust our projects and inspirations to the scrutiny of a discernment that surpasses us «as heaven rises above the earth» (Is 55:9) and that can only come from the Lord”.

              Nor is our College “a team of experts” but “a community of faith”, “in which the gifts that each one brings, offered to the Lord and returned by Him, produce the maximum fruit, according to His Providence”.

              To place all thoughts and desires in the Eucharist

              With the Gospel text of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes as a reference point, the Pontiff invited us to place “all our desires and thoughts on the altar, together with the gift of our life, offering them to the Father in union with the sacrifice of Christ, so as to recover them purified, illuminated, fused and transformed, by grace, into a single loaf. Only in this way, in fact, will we truly know how to listen to his voice, welcoming it in the gift that we are to one another, which is the reason for which we have come together.”.

              “Our stopping, a great act of love”.”

              The Pope then referred to the “moment of grace in which we express our union in the service of the Church,” which is the Extraordinary Consistory. 

              Our “stopping”, he said, is “above all, a great act of love - for God, for the Church and for men and women throughout the world - with which to allow ourselves to be molded by the Spirit, first in prayer and silence, but also by looking each other in the eye, listening to one another and making ourselves the voice, through sharing, of all those whom the Lord has entrusted to our care as pastors, in the most diverse parts of the world”. 

              An act that must be lived with a humble and generous heart, aware that it is by grace that we are here and there is nothing we have that we have not received as a gift and talent that should not be wasted, but used with prudence and courage”.

              Saint Leo the Great

              If earlier he had quoted St. John Paul II, a habitual reference in his words in the Consistory, at this point he mentioned St. Leo the Great, who taught that “It is something great and very precious in the eyes of the Lord when all the people of Christ are dedicated together to the same duties, and all the degrees and all the orders, [...] collaborate in the same spirit [...] (Sermon 88,4)” (Sermon 88,4). 

              This is the spirit in which we want to work together, Leo XIV stressed. “It is the spirit of those who desire that, in the Mystical Body of Christ, each member cooperate in an orderly way for the good of all (cf. Eph 4:11-13)”.

              Inadequate and without means, but “we can help each other and the Pope”.”

              Of course, we too, in the face of the “great multitude” of a humanity hungry for good and peace, continued the Successor of Peter, “in a world where satiety and hunger, abundance and misery, the struggle for survival and the desperate existential void continue to divide and wound individuals, nations and communities, in the face of the Master's words: ‘Give them something to eat yourselves’ (Mk 6:37), can feel like the disciples: inadequate and without means”.

              However, Jesus repeats to us again: ‘How many loaves do you have? Go and see’ (Mk 6:38), and we can do this together. 

              We will not always succeed in finding immediate solutions to the problems we have to face, Leo XIV considered. “However, we will always, in every place and circumstance, be able to help one another - and in particular to help the Pope - to find the “five loaves and two fish” which Providence never makes lacking when her children ask for help; and to welcome them, give them, receive them and distribute them, enriched with God's blessing, the faith and love of all, so that no one lacks what is necessary (cf. Mk 6:42)”

              Praise to the cardinals, and gratitude 

              At the conclusion of the homily of the Mass, celebrated at the Altar of the Chair of St. Peter, Leo XIV praised the work of the cardinals.  

              “Dear brothers, what you offer to the Church with your service, at all levels, is something great and extremely personal and profound, unique for each one and precious for all; and the responsibility you share with the Successor of Peter is grave and onerous. For this I thank you with all my heart”.

              Finally, he entrusted our work and our mission to the Lord, saying, in the words of St. Augustine: “Remember, O Lord, that we are dust, and out of dust you made man” (Confessions, 10, 31, 45). Therefore we say to you: ‘Give what you command and command what you will’ (ibid.)”.

              There will be no final document

              It has been reported that there will be no final document of the work of the 170 cardinals who have attended this first extraordinary Consistory convoked by Pope Leo XIV. Morning and afternoon sessions and a lunch with the Pope will take place today. At the end of the day, the Vatican plans to provide some additional information.

              The authorEditorial Staff Omnes

              The Vatican

              Pope to Cardinals: the Church's mission demands unity and love

              “I am here to listen,” Pope Leo XIV told the cardinals in the Consistory, as he laid the foundations for the Church's mission, as defined in Vatican II's Lumen Gentium and by the pontiffs St. Paul VI and St. John Paul II first, and Benedict XVI and Francis later. “Unity attracts, division disperses”, and “the commandment of love”, have been nuclear themes.

              Francisco Otamendi-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 5 minutes

              The day after the Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord - the Pope considers it very significant that it was on this date - Leo XIV has given the starting signal for his first Consistory extraordinary meeting with the cardinals. In the session, he laid the groundwork for what these two days of work are about, and what he intends: to strengthen and amplify the mission of the Church as described in the Constitution Lumen Gentium of the Second Vatican Council.

              “I read the first paragraph in its entirety,” Leo XIV introduced: “Christ is the light of the peoples. Therefore this sacred Synod, gathered together in the Holy Spirit, ardently desires to enlighten all men, proclaiming the Gospel to every creature (cf. Mk 16:15) with the brightness of Christ, who shines on the face of the Church” (LG). 

              Urgent duty of the Church

              This, evangelization, the proclamation of the Gospel to every creature, is the duty of the Church. And the Pope has put it this way. “And because the Church is in Christ as a sacrament, that is, a sign and instrument of intimate union with God and of the unity of the whole human race, she intends to present to her faithful and to the whole world with greater precision her nature and her universal mission, abounding in the teaching of the preceding councils.”. 

              The conditions of our time, he immediately pointed out, “make this duty of the Church all the more urgent, namely, that all people, who today are more closely united by many social, technical and cultural bonds, may also attain full unity in Christ” (Lumen gentium, 1). 

              The evangelizing mission of recent Popes

              Next, Leo XIV detailed how "the pontificates of St. Paul VI and St. John Paul II can be interpreted globally from this conciliar perspective, which contemplates the mystery of the Church fully included in that of Christ and thus understands the evangelizing mission as an irradiation of the inexhaustible energy that emanates from the central event of salvation history”. 

              Benedict XVI and Francis: “attraction”.”

              He then summarized that “Popes Benedict XVI and Francis summed up this vision in a single word: attraction”. Pope Benedict pointed out that “the force that presides over this movement of attraction is Agape, it is the Love of God who became incarnate in Jesus Christ and who in the Holy Spirit gives himself to the Church and sanctifies all her actions,” said Leo XIV.

              Beginning of the work of the Consistory of Cardinals, presided over by Pope Leo XIV, on January 7, 2026 (@Vatican Media).

              Pope Leo's invitations: unity and love

              In the course of his speech, the Pope seemed to require two conditions for the effectiveness of the mission: unity, as he has been reiterating since his speech just elected Pope on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica, and the commandment of love.

              “Unity attracts, division disperses.. It seems to me that this is also reflected in physics, both in the microcosm and in the macrocosm,” he said. 

              Therefore, “in order to be a truly missionary Church, that is, capable of bearing witness to the attractive power of Christ's charity, we must first and foremost to put his commandment into practice, The only one he gave us after washing the feet of his disciples: “Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another”. 

              And he added the following words of Jesus: “By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another” (Jn 13:34-35). 

              Cardinals, “growing in our communion”.”

              The Pope then referred to the variety of the College of Cardinals and the need to grow in communion: “We are a very varied group, enriched by multiple origins, cultures, ecclesial and social traditions, formative and academic trajectories, pastoral experiences and, naturally, personal characters and traits. 

              “We are called, above all, to get to know each other and to dialogue so that we can work together in the service of the Church. I hope that we can grow in our communion to offer a model of collegiality,” he invited.

              Working session of the Consistory of Cardinals on January 7-8, 2026, presided over by Pope Leo XIV (@Vatican Media).

              4 themes: Mission of the Church, Praedicate Evangelium, Synod and Synodality, and Liturgy.

              During these days we will have the opportunity to experience a communitarian reflection on four themes, as described by Pope Leo XIV, which have been spreading these days. Evangelii gaudium, or the mission of the Church in today's world; Praedicate Evangelium, that is, the service of the Holy See, especially to the particular Churches; Synod and synodality, instrument and style of collaboration; and liturgy, source and summit of Christian life. 

              Only two, for the moment

              For reasons of time and in order to favor a more in-depth analysis, only two of them will be the subject of a specific exhibition, the Pope specified, which will take place this Thursday, the 8th.

              The 21 groups created will contribute to the decisions to be made, but the groups that will present their reports will be the 9 groups coming from the local Churches. The rest will be consulted in Rome as they work in the Curia and live in Rome.

              “I'm here to listen.” 

              “I am here to listen,” the Holy Father added. “As we learned during the two Assemblies of the Synod of Bishops of 2023 and 2024, the synodal dynamic involves listening par excellence,” and precisely “the path of synodality is the path that God expects of the Church of the third millennium» (Francis, Address on the 50th anniversary of the institution of the Synod of Bishops, 17 October 2015). 

              This day and a half that we will spend together will be a prefiguration of our future journey, he said. “We must not arrive at a text, but have a conversation that will help me in my service to the mission of the whole Church.”. 

              A key question to the cardinals

              The Pope then posed a question to the cardinals: “Looking ahead to the next one or two years, what aspects and priorities could guide the action of the Holy Father and the Curia on this issue?”. 

              On this he will listen to them. “To listen to each other's mind, heart and spirit; to listen to each other; to express only the main point and very briefly, so that everyone can speak: this will be our way of proceeding. The ancient Roman sages used to say: Non multa sed multum”. 

              “And in the future, this way of listening to one another, seeking the guidance of the Holy Spirit and walking together, will continue to be of great help to the Petrine ministry entrusted to me,” he said.

              The day of Thursday 8 begins with Holy Mass at 7:30 a.m. in St. Peter's Basilica.

              The authorFrancisco Otamendi

              Family

              The shortage of grandparents

              Much has been written about the falling birth rate in the United States. However, less has been addressed about the simultaneous decline in grandparenting.   

              Greg Erlandson-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 3 minutes

              Grandparents, our friends tell us, are an endangered species. Virtually every demographic group of childbearing age, except women over 40, are having fewer children, if any at all. And let's face it: potential grandparents with children over 40 are probably rapidly aging from “fun grandparents” to “grandparents who live in a room.”.

              According to the latest government statistics, our birth rate is now 1.6, below replacement level and falling to where countries like Italy used to be. Italy's birth rate has fallen even further, to 1.18, making ‘nonno’ and ‘nonna’ even more endangered than grandfathers and grandmothers.

              How to address the issue

              Aspiring grandparents are approaching this issue in a variety of ways. Frequently asking their children when they plan to have children is probably one of the least effective strategies. 

              Putting a good face on your children's decision to “breed” a pair of labradoodles (N. of ed.: dogs originating in Australia in the 1980s, the result of crossbreeding), doesn't help either, even if you put a bumper sticker on your car bragging that “my grandson has four legs”.

              Politicians' measures

              Politicians want to invest money in this issue, of course. After all, grandparents-to-be vote. For the last hundred years, governments have been trying to bribe prospective parents to have children. 

              In reality, this does not work, whether in China, France or South Korea, because an experience as transformative as parenthood is not so easily incentivized with a few thousand dollars and a tax break. 

              Disincentives are important. The most commonly cited are cost-of-living issues, such as childcare and education costs, but everything from school shootings to the global situation can also be cited.

              Living to see your children's children

              Grandparents-to-be understand this, of course. But the desire to “live to see your children's children,” as Psalm 128 says, is deeply rooted in the human heart. 

              We want to see the children we have so painstakingly raised give birth in turn to the next generation. It is a sign of hope and resilience that outweighs the headlines, crises and endless worries we have for our planet and our species.

              I am fortunate to have a son who is now a father. My friends who are not grandparents listen to my stories with a touch of envy. We don't know when our children will have children, they say wistfully.

              What it means to be a grandparent: sincerity

              I'm honest with them about what it's like to be a grandparent. There are good reasons why parenting should be left to the young. Taking care of kids is exhausting! It takes us two or three days to recover from a weekend of reading books, changing diapers and negotiating meals.

              At the same time, being grandparents is a kind of time-travel experience, as it reminds us of what is usually a fuzzy memory: what we did and how hard we worked when we were younger parents.

              Crying in the middle of the night...

              Recently, in the middle of the night, a crying one-year-old woke my son and me. I stayed in the darkened room while my son rocked the baby and fed him a bottle. It reminded me of so many nights when I did the same for him. I felt a great surge of parental affection for my son. The love I had shown him long before he could remember, he was now passing on to his son as he gently rocked him back to sleep. It is a circle of life that I am fortunate to be a part of.

              Being a parent, the most rewarding job

              Being a parent isn't easy, but it's the most rewarding job there is. There is probably never a perfect time to decide to have children. But, in general, we rise to the occasion and become better people for it.

              Perfect time to be a grandparent: now

              As for the perfect time to be a grandparent, I think it's now. For the grandparents-to-be who are still waiting for that privilege, perhaps they can pray to St. Anne and St. Joachim, who according to tradition were the grandparents of Jesus. I bet they could tell a lot of stories.

              ———————

              Greg Erlandson is an award-winning Catholic editor and journalist. His column is published monthly in OSV News.

              ———————-

              The authorGreg Erlandson

              Read more
              Articles

              A universe without God

              Stephen Hawking defended the idea of a universe “without God”; however, this is a thesis with limitations both from physics and philosophy. In the face of this, the argument of the First Cause of St. Thomas seems to solve these objections.

              Rubén Herce-January 8, 2026-Reading time: 9 minutes

              If we were to ask which author and which book have most shaped our current view of the cosmos, the answer would be almost unanimous: Stephen Hawking and his celebrated History of time. Without being the first to talk about cosmology, more than 25 million copies sold support this publishing phenomenon and the physicist who wrote it. The stated goal from the beginning is to unravel the mysteries of the universe with those who dare to look beyond: “where did the universe come from, how and why did it begin, will it have an end, and, if so, what will it be like?”.

              From Aristotle to contemporary cosmology, from the immensity of the universe to the minuscule scale of quarks, Hawking guides us on a fascinating journey from the initial singularity to black holes, trying to glimpse what the God who created everything might be like. Along the way, the book addresses topics as diverse as space-time, creation, relativity, indeterminacy, origin, destiny, causality, divine freedom, belief, the anthropic principle, fine-tuning, the “boundaryless” universe and imaginary time. All of them, impregnated with philosophical and theological reflections, require a contextualized reading, such as the one proposed by Stephen Hawking (1942-2018). Critical study of “History of time: from the big bang to black holes”. This work seeks to complement from philosophy the journey that Hawking undertakes from classical physics to glimpse the thought of God.

              Confirmed hypotheses and discarded hypotheses

              Hawking's explanation of the picture of the universe according to 20th century physics is captivating. Big bang, The cosmic expansion, cosmic expansion, initial and boundary conditions, singularity, space-time curvature, quantum indeterminacy, subparticles, fundamental forces, black holes and even the famous Hawking radiation are clearly exposed. Although highly speculative hypotheses that time has left behind are also presented.

              This is how science works: it launches new hypotheses based on what is scientifically known. However, most of these hypotheses do not survive when contrasted with reality. Only a privileged few prevail. For this reason, the ideas that Hawking puts forward in the last chapters of his book have been discarded. All except the one that refers to the need to search for a unifying theory for the two great theories of physics: general relativity and quantum mechanics. 

              However, it is important not to confuse this unification of theories with a “theory of everything”. Hawking, however, aspires to a physical theory that explains everything. In this framework, and if this were possible, God would cease to be necessary to justify a universe as ordered and singular as ours. 

              Hawking's proposal 

              Hence Hawking's bold proposal of a self-contained universe “without boundary”. This hypothesis has been rejected from physics because there is no continuity between models with imaginary time and models with real time; but it can also be refuted from philosophy, since a model can never explain reality itself. It would be like saying that a hologram of a person gives a reason for the person.

              Scientific activity is much richer than the simplification to which Hawking subjects it, who reduces it to finding laws in nature and fixing the initial conditions for these laws. Even so, this starting point serves him, first, to relegate God to the role of provider of initial conditions, and then, having reduced divine action to that moment, to formulate his “boundaryless” universe. How? Let us say “rounding off the fine point of the beginning of the universe” so that mathematically there is no beginning; and thus concluding that, if his hypothesis were true, God would not be necessary.

              This conclusion that “it is not necessary to invoke God as the one who lit the fuse and created the universe.”, is without foundation. Indeed, by failing to demonstrate that the universe is self-contained, the question of God as Creator is revived. Hawking's intention to replace the classical argument of God as First Cause with a theory of everything should rather lead us to rediscover the soundness of that classical argument.

              Fine adjustment

              Perhaps the time has come to look again at the universe with wonder, as Hawking does, and note how finely tuned are many physical constants essential for it to exist. Among them, the density of the universe (Ω), the acceleration of the expansion (Λ), the three spatial dimensions; fundamental constants such as the strong nuclear interaction (ε), the ratio of electromagnetic to gravitational forces, the masses of the neutron and proton; or the fine-tuning of the mass-energy distribution in the big bang.

              But not only that. Also deeply striking is the order we see in biology, where complexity and nonlinearity of interactions reign harmoniously and where embryology reveals that the order of nature, not only spatial but also temporal, is a true symphony that unfolds in time. 

              That from something as poor, minimal and seemingly chaotic as the big bang, The only way for something as richly complex as conscious beings to emerge is if, in that “poor “The seed of the “..." was already present at the beginning.“wealth”. Something that refers us, not to a shapeless chaos, but to a Logos Creator, a Subsistent Being by himself, from whom all created beings participate in his being and to whom all created beings have as their foundation. This relationship of dependence, this participation in Being, seems to be a very appropriate way to understand the richness of the concept of creation, without remaining only with the two most common meanings: to understand creation as divine action or to understand creation as created reality.

              The deserved credit

              In addition to restoring God to the place that by common sense and philosophical reasoning He seems to occupy as Creator, we should recognize that belief and trust are part of our way of knowing. We all have belief systems, even scientists; and many times they are deeply rational. Believing and reasoning are not opposites, as Hawking suggests, but complementary. That is why it is also fair to value what “believed” thinkers such as Aristotle, whose knowledge, well contextualized, allows us to appreciate the truth of his ideas and reasoning, despite the difficulties of his time. 

              In this Critical Study The ideas presented so far are developed in more detail and some of Hawking's contributions, little or not at all recognized, are also vindicated. 

              The First Cause

              Among the arguments that Hawking examines in his book, it is striking that he barely dwells on one of the most relevant: that of the necessity of a First Cause, not only in a chronological sense -as a beginning-, but in an ontological sense, that is, as a necessary foundation of the contingent. In his formulation, Hawking affirms: “One argument in favor of an origin (...) was the feeling that it was necessary to have a ‘First Cause’ to explain the existence of the universe.” (p. 28).

              Some terms, such as origin, may be misleading if their analogical use is not considered. In fact, origin can allude both to the beginning of something and to its foundation. For this reason, the quoted phrase gains in precision if it is substituted for origin by basis. Likewise, the use of sensation in this context seems inappropriate, as it suggests a subjective impression rather than an argumentative reasoning. Finally, the verb have introduces the idea that certain individuals need an explanation, but not necessarily all, which weakens the universal character of the argument.

              Taken together, the sentence could be rephrased as follows: An argument for a foundation [of the universe] was the reasoning that it was necessary for a ‘First Cause’ to exist to explain the existence of the universe.

              This reconstruction reflects more faithfully the position of those who sustained this argument: it was not simply a sensation, but a rational reflection on the necessity of a First Cause. Let us see what this argument consists of in order to better understand the philosophical perspective that many thinkers have defended over the centuries in affirming that God can be the ultimate foundation of the universe. 

              Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas

              The expression First Cause comes from Aristotelian thought, in particular from his conception of the First Motor, which in the scholastic tradition was applied exclusively to God. The other causes, that is, those created or belonging to the intramundane realm, are called second causes, inasmuch as they depend on the first and are subordinated to it. In Aristotle's philosophy, the first cause is that which gives the reason for the existence of a thing. Thus he expresses it: “We do not believe we know something if we have not first established in each case the ‘why’, which means to grasp the first cause.”(Aristotle 1995, II-3, 194b). This statement, applied to the universe, suggests that understanding it implies intuiting or recognizing that its First Cause is God.

              The argument for the existence of God as First Cause is of the following type a posteriori, The most well-known formulations of this reasoning are the five ways of St. Thomas Aquinas, which constitute a philosophical approach, not based on revealed theology. The best known formulations of this reasoning are the five ways of St. Thomas Aquinas, which constitute a philosophical approach, not based on revealed theology.

              Context of the argument

              To establish the framework of the argument, we could reflect on how we know people through their manifestations, and transfer this principle, by analogy, to the philosophical question of the knowledge of the existence of God. We can ascertain the presence of an individual through the traces he leaves in the world, such as tilling a field, beautifying a space or composing a verse. We do not gain access to the person in his essence, but we do affirm his existence through his effects on reality; and, indirectly, we could infer his need for nourishment, his sense of beauty or his desire to communicate. This mechanism is the one we apply when trying to decipher our ancestors through the fossil and cultural remains that survived. By extension, one could reasonably sustain the existence of a God with a personal character by observing with wonder and awe the complexities of our universe, and in particular human nature.

              A further step would be to get to know the person through direct sensory perception. However, this initial contact would be insufficient without observing his behavior. The deepest way to know him would be, in fact, through the manifestation of his external works and especially if he reveals to us his inner universe. That is to say, when she confides to us what she harbors in her spirit, the motivations for her actions, her ideas and her feelings. But this intimate dimension remains hidden, unless the person decides to reveal it. This is where the idea that God is not only accessible through his external works, but that he also longs to reveal himself personally, makes full sense. This second type of knowledge constitutes the object of theology, which is not limited to the reality that human reason can attain through the observation of all its dimensions, but embraces the possibility of a personal self-revelation of God.

              In the Christian perspective, this revelation is consummated in the incarnation of a God who becomes man and manifests himself to concrete individuals through his words and actions. However, this is not the God of whom Hawking speaks, nor is it the focus of our present reflection. Ours is an enterprise of philosophical argumentation. Therefore, let us examine more rigorously the argument of St. Thomas associated with the concept of First Cause.

              Difficulties in demonstrating the existence of God

              In approaching this argument, Thomas Aquinas begins his exposition by resolving certain logical objections concerning the divine existence. The first difficulty resides in the fact that all demonstration requires knowledge of the nature of the subject about which one reasons, and of God, precisely, we do not know his essence. Of God we cannot really know what he is, but rather what he is not. The question then arises: how can we prove his existence? Or, formulated in another way, what do we mean when we affirm that he exists?

              For Aquinas, our knowledge of things is based on sensible experience, and this is the starting point for accessing the existence of God. It is possible for us to know the effects that God produces and the way in which these effects are related to the Cause that originates them. The argumentation starts, therefore, with the definition of God that is constructed from the effects that we perceive. This definition is not God Himself, but in some particular way expresses and manifests the divine essence. The initial definition taken is: “God is something that exists above all things, that is the principle of all things, and that is separate from all things.” (Twetten, On Which ‘God’ Should Be the Target of a ‘Proof of God's Existence).

              What it means to be First Cause

              In this formulation, the crucial element is to determine the nature of God as a cause. To achieve this, St. Thomas first establishes its distinction from other causes by means of negation, pointing out that it is a cause essentially different from the others; secondly, he makes clear its relation to other realities: it is the first cause and is separate from them. That is to say, the point to investigate is the existence of the First Cause, understood not in a temporal sense of origin or beginning, but in a sense of fundamental perfection, transcendent and distinct from all subsequent causes.

              A First Cause is postulated which is, necessarily, unique. A cause that is not located among the realities of the universe, which are all contingent (including parallel or sequential multiverses, if they exist). A cause that is transcendent to the universe and superior to it. This is what is required for the unfolding of the five ways: a singular First Cause, distinct from the second causes and separate from them...“and we call this God”, as each of the five ways concludes. 

              Other difficulties

              The second logical objection states that we can only demonstrate the existence of God from His effects, but these effects do not maintain a proportion with Him, since they are finite in nature. Nevertheless, a single effect of sufficient universality (such as motion or causality) is sufficient to infer the existence of its cause. Such an effect would be sufficient to prove the existence of God, even if it fails to express or faithfully represent His essence, much less His complete essence.

              Finally, the third logical difficulty lies in the fact that these paths are not demonstrations of a mathematical or experimental nature, but their starting point is clearly metaphysical. They begin with observable phenomena, but considered from a metaphysical perspective, which makes them inaccessible to those philosophies that reject abstraction. They are therefore ineffective in persuading agnostics who also adopt a skeptical stance, since they do not accept the validity of abstraction. In order to accept the path of these ways, it is essential to admit the existence of an external world, to validate the objectivity and reliability of knowledge, and to accept that human reason can go beyond the merely sensible.

              The purpose of Thomas Aquinas in formulating these five ways is to provide metaphysical thinkers with five rational ways to demonstrate the soundness of Theology, insofar as the existence of the God who, according to the theologian, reveals himself can be affirmed. That is, from a philosophical perspective, one can conclude the reasonableness of God's existence, which legitimizes theological practice based on Revelation.

              With this exposition, I believe that it strengthens the idea that the First Cause argument is much more than a mere sensation. We could even venture that, by means of an investigation whose starting point is no longer the senses, but scientific knowledge that goes beyond our ordinary experience, these five ways of St. Thomas could be the object of a contemporary reformulation. For example, the first in the light of what is known about inertia, the second considering the findings about physical causality, and the fifth based on current knowledge about the fine-tuning of universal constants.

              The authorRubén Herce

              Professor of Anthropology and Ethics at the University of Navarra.