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Seminarian Josh Brooks. / Credit: Courtesy of Catholic Philly, official newspaper of the Archdiocese of PhiladelphiaACI Prensa Staff, Jul 13, 2025 / 14:55 pm (CNA).Josh Brooks, a native of Delaware County in metro Philadelphia, dreamed of following in the footsteps of his idol LeBron James and becoming a professional basketball player. However, God had other plans for him.Today, Brooks is in his third year of university studies at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and is preparing for the priesthood."I don't want to just live for myself, but I want to bring the joy God gave me to other people," Brooks said in a recent interview with Catholic Philly, the official newspaper of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.Raised in the Baptist faith, Brooks had his first contact with Catholicism when his parents enrolled him at St. Ignatius Loyola Elementary School in West Philadelphia. Later, at Monsignor Bonner & Archbishop Prendergast High School, his inte...

Seminarian Josh Brooks. / Credit: Courtesy of Catholic Philly, official newspaper of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia

ACI Prensa Staff, Jul 13, 2025 / 14:55 pm (CNA).

Josh Brooks, a native of Delaware County in metro Philadelphia, dreamed of following in the footsteps of his idol LeBron James and becoming a professional basketball player. However, God had other plans for him.

Today, Brooks is in his third year of university studies at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and is preparing for the priesthood.

"I don't want to just live for myself, but I want to bring the joy God gave me to other people," Brooks said in a recent interview with Catholic Philly, the official newspaper of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Raised in the Baptist faith, Brooks had his first contact with Catholicism when his parents enrolled him at St. Ignatius Loyola Elementary School in West Philadelphia. Later, at Monsignor Bonner & Archbishop Prendergast High School, his interest in the Catholic faith grew.

"And really slowly, my attention was gravitating toward my Catholic theology classes, where I learned about the identity of the priest. What really attracted me was learning about how the Catholic Church is a universal family, 'cause I didn't have the best family growing up, so that just made me feel like I was called to be part of something special," Brooks shared.

Although during his teenage years he spent a lot of time practicing in order to make the high school basketball team, he ultimately failed to achieve that dream. "So this left me wondering with the question of what I was going to do with my life if basketball, which was my bid dream, was no longer an option," he recounted.

In his search for meaning, he tried to fill the void with a romantic relationship, but realized his heart longed for something deeper. Uncertain of his calling, he asked the young lady, 'Would you be able to wait for me?' She replied, 'I'm not going to wait for you.' So I looked up at the crucifix and I said to the Lord, 'If she will not wait for me, then who will?' And then I realized the whole time he was waiting for me, for me to accept his love. He said 'You idiot, I have the best love to give you.'"

That moment marked a turning point. "I think I just reacted without thinking, And look what that brought me. It brought me so much joy, this intense fire to just want to be for God and just be for others," Brooks reflected.

At St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, he found not only a vocation, but also brothers. "I never had any brothers, so I didn't know what having one would be like. So when I entered seminary, you have different guys with different interests, different personalities. At the heart of it all, these guys are trying to build off each other," he said.

Fellow seminarian Sean Barker highlighted Josh's fraternal spirit. At a "Come and See" retreat "I walked right in and the first person I saw was Josh sitting in his cassock," he recalled. "Just talking to him, getting to know him, I felt more at ease. He cares about and has a great respect and admiration for the deep historical spirituality of the Church."

"He wants me to be better, he wants me to spend more time in chapel, to take prayer life more seriously, to take academics more seriously...I think that's just him as a role model is what inspires me most," Baker added.

In the interview, Josh highlighted the "rich tradition and history" of the Catholic Church, but also that it's "one big family." He also invited others trying to rediscover their faith to come closer: "We are an imperfect people, but we are being governed by a God who transcends all things and knows us better than we know ourselves," he said.

What most defines this young seminarian is his deep prayer life and his desire to become a priest. Although his parents are not Catholic, they support his vocation, and he prays every day for their conversion.

"At the heart of our search for the highest form of love, we'll find it here, where we gather at the altar of God and we'll be able to make our dwelling in him," the young seminarian summed up.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.

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Bishop Scott McCaig of the Roman Catholic Military Ordinariate of Canada celebrates Divine Liturgy as part of the spiritual retreat for military chaplains in Lviv, Ukraine. / Credit: Photo courtesy of Bishop Scott McCaigOttawa, Canada, Jul 13, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).Bishop Scott McCaig of the Roman Catholic Military Ordinariate of Canada returned home recently after leading a spiritual retreat for military chaplains in Ukraine, saying that the weight of what he witnessed during his week in Lviv still looms large in his mind. "?I'm still processing it, to be honest," McCaig told Canada's Catholic Register. "On the Eastern equivalent of ?All Souls' Day, I visited the graves of thousands upon thousands of fallen soldiers and prayed with their families, little children, people all grieving their fathers, children, brothers and sisters. The grief and senselessness of it all were heart-wrenching and made vivid how the destruction is so unnecessary. It was a trip that truly l...

Bishop Scott McCaig of the Roman Catholic Military Ordinariate of Canada celebrates Divine Liturgy as part of the spiritual retreat for military chaplains in Lviv, Ukraine. / Credit: Photo courtesy of Bishop Scott McCaig

Ottawa, Canada, Jul 13, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).

Bishop Scott McCaig of the Roman Catholic Military Ordinariate of Canada returned home recently after leading a spiritual retreat for military chaplains in Ukraine, saying that the weight of what he witnessed during his week in Lviv still looms large in his mind. 

"?I'm still processing it, to be honest," McCaig told Canada's Catholic Register. "On the Eastern equivalent of ?All Souls' Day, I visited the graves of thousands upon thousands of fallen soldiers and prayed with their families, little children, people all grieving their fathers, children, brothers and sisters. The grief and senselessness of it all were heart-wrenching and made vivid how the destruction is so unnecessary. It was a trip that truly left its mark."

He added: "?These are people who just want to live in peace but have been illegally invaded by a foreign nation, regardless of the complexities of the history and the politics of the situation. Their houses are being bombed, and they are losing their children to a war they don't want to fight."

During a unique spiritual retreat from June 13–20, McCaig and Father Terry Cherwick, lieutenant colonel of the 3rd Canadian Division, walked alongside Ukrainian chaplains who have endured over three years of frontline service since Russia's full-scale attack on Ukraine, offering them spiritual tools to navigate the "unseen warfare" of faith, hope, and charity while serving a nation under siege.

Supported by Bishop Wieslaw Lechowicz, the military bishop of Poland, the weeklong mission saw the two meet with roughly 40 military chaplains, many of whom have been dealing with constant frontline service and funerals.

Due to the reality many of them are facing, McCaig addressed the chaplains' exposure to the horrible reality of war, offering a multitude of spiritual tools to combat growing despair while maintaining resiliency. 

"I spoke to them about this battle of faith in dealing with all of the death and how they can recognize the Lord Jesus as the one who triumphs over death. The Book of Revelation, which we took as a theme, talks about Jesus as dead, but now alive, as the Alpha and the Omega, the living one, and him holding the keys of death and Hades," McCaig said. 

"We wanted them to truly grasp that there is something bigger going on here and to keep their eyes focused on the Lord, who is ultimately the one who has the last word. It is never death that has the last word, but Our Lord Jesus. That reminder alone was felt deeply."

Through ?a mixture of preaching at conferences, Divine Liturgy, times of personal reflection and plenty of table sharing, McCaig and Cherwick ?explored the difference between optimism and theological hope, citing God working even amid a broken, fallen world that is all too full of sin, suffering, and death. 

McCaig also emphasized the importance of forgiveness and overcoming evil through good, with the bishop alluding to St. Augustine's notion — "A Catholic soldier fights to secure a just and lasting peace." 

"The goal is always peace and charity, and so even when the temptation to hate is so strong, we have to continue to remind ourselves of this. One can justly defend the country while at the same time forgiving our enemies," he clarified during the trip.

"?Author G.K. Chesterton put it very succinctly when he said that a Christian soldier does not fight because they hate what is in front of them, they fight because they love what is behind them."

While there wasn't a lot of spare time to reflect himself, having been woken up on multiple occasions by air raid sirens signaling drone and missile attacks, McCaig said the journey reinforced the critical importance of Catholic chaplains and their resilience. He spoke to the importance of a strong, faith-rooted approach, drawing from the Catholic tradition's emphasis on a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, something he feels is far too valuable to be discredited or forgotten. 

"Chaplains are trained to provide a sort of generic role of assistance and counseling, but the conviction was very strong that while that is good and important, it's simply not enough. What these chaplains were telling us was that they want and need to reach into the deepest places of meaning and purpose in their lives, and that is something that can only come from a relationship with the living God," he said.

"Encouraging words and optimism are great, but they're not enough in those sorts of situations. The risen Christ, who is alive, has power over death and the ultimate last word on everything; that's what we need to receive — that's how we get the spiritual resiliency that is necessary in those situations."

Now back in Canada, he also shared his hopes that his insight on the military chaplain situation in Ukraine can serve as a reminder to Catholics on home soil. As there hasn't been a wartime situation for Canada since the end of the country's involvement in Afghanistan, McCaig fears Canadians have forgotten the critical importance of spiritual resilience in the military chaplaincy. That is the specific liturgical faith, hope, and charity that come from the depth of the Catholic faith.

And while most are unable to stand in the trenches, both proverbial and literal, with soldiers around the world as military chaplains do, they can support them through the vital act of prayer.

"?Pope Francis and now Pope Leo XIV are calling the country the martyred Ukraine. They truly do need our prayers. There's a lot of pressure for them to just surrender themselves to Russian political and cultural domination, which is a reality they're facing. [They are] begging for prayers not to forget them, and we can ?remember them as we pray the rosary," McCaig said.

This story was first published by the The Catholic Register in Canada and has been reprinted here with permission.

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Idaho State Capitol building, Boise. / Alden Skeie via UnslpashWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 12, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).Just over a decade ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered that every state must offer marriage licenses to homosexual couples. Ten years later, several lawmakers throughout the country are reigniting the marriage debate within their state legislatures.In 2025, lawmakers in several states introduced resolutions that urged the Supreme Court to overturn the 2015 ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, which established same-sex civil marriage nationwide. The North Dakota House and the Idaho House passed resolutions, but both efforts failed when sent to their respective state senates. In most states, the resolutions died in committees.The limited success was in legislative chambers with overwhelming Republican supermajorities. The Idaho House, for example, has a 61-9 Republican majority and passed the resolution in a 46-24 vote. The North Dakota House, with its 81-...

Idaho State Capitol building, Boise. / Alden Skeie via Unslpash

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 12, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).

Just over a decade ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered that every state must offer marriage licenses to homosexual couples. Ten years later, several lawmakers throughout the country are reigniting the marriage debate within their state legislatures.

In 2025, lawmakers in several states introduced resolutions that urged the Supreme Court to overturn the 2015 ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, which established same-sex civil marriage nationwide

The North Dakota House and the Idaho House passed resolutions, but both efforts failed when sent to their respective state senates. In most states, the resolutions died in committees.

The limited success was in legislative chambers with overwhelming Republican supermajorities. The Idaho House, for example, has a 61-9 Republican majority and passed the resolution in a 46-24 vote

The North Dakota House, with its 81-11 Republican majority, adopted the resolution more narrowly: 52-40.

Still, both measures died in the upper legislative chambers despite Republicans holding a 29-6 supermajority in the Idaho Senate and a 42-5 supermajority in the North Dakota Senate.

The current effort to urge state lawmakers to pass resolutions on Obergefell is being led by the national pro-family group MassResistance. Arthur Schaper, the group's field director, told CNA he expects the resolutions to be reintroduced in 2026 in most states where lawmakers carried them this year and is working with lawmakers to carry them in several additional states.

"We are hitting the pedal to the metal," Schaper said. "We are doubling down on this fight. We are not giving up. We are going to keep pushing."

Most of the state legislatures likely to see a resolution on their dockets next year will again be ones with Republican majorities, but Schaper said the holdups in many states are caused by "a real timidity on the part of Republican operatives in some states," along with "liberal politicians masquerading as conservatives."

Some Republican leadership in states have "frustrated our efforts," he said. In some cases, he added, members of the party "just don't want to touch the issue."

Still, Schaper expressed optimism moving forward, saying that "people are waking up to the dangerous, destructive realities of redefining marriage." He noted that recent polling shows a majority of Republicans oppose same-sex marriage.

Yet about 41% of Republicans do support it, as do about two-thirds of the country's voters as a whole, which is contributing to the difficulty of getting legislative support.

Ongoing efforts in Idaho

Although resolutions don't have the force of law, Idaho Rep. Heather Scott — who introduced her state's resolution — told CNA that a resolution "lays out the facts on the issue and allows legislators to take a stand on the idea itself."

Idaho State Representative Heather Scott at the 2022 Hazlitt Summit hosted by the Young Americans for Liberty Foundation. Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Idaho State Representative Heather Scott at the 2022 Hazlitt Summit hosted by the Young Americans for Liberty Foundation. Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

"It also alerts the Supreme Court of the Idaho state lawmakers' opposition to their decision," she said. "Resolutions are often the first step in crafting language for successful legislation."

Scott said the resolution was successful in the House "because we strategized a path forward and worked with outside supporters and legislators to be clear with the messaging." But she noted it became "a very controversial issue," which she attributed to "false narratives and messaging."

According to Scott, some members of the media "promoted the idea that Idaho lawmakers were trying to end all 'gay marriages'."

She said many citizens "did not understand that this is a state sovereignty issue that should be discussed, debated and dealt with at the state level, not mandated from the federal government."

Schaper partially attributed the success to Idaho's commitment to "state's rights" and "state's authority." He said "it's kind of baked into the idaho culture, resistance to federal overreach."

In the Senate, however, he noted that leadership "didn't bring the bill up for a vote." But he said he expects "widespread outrage" at some of the chamber's leadership for failing to take up major conservative priorities. He said he is "more confident going into next year."

"The state population has become very conservative," Shcaper said, adding "a lot of liberal Republicans have been phased out; they lost their primaries or they retired."

"There's a real push for respect for the 10th Amendment, respect for family, the population is getting more conservative, and they want the legislature to respect that," he said.

North Dakota lawmaker defends marriage

North Dakota Rep. Bill Tveit, who introduced his state's resolution, told CNA that despite the Republican supermajority in the House, "clearly it wasn't a unanimous vote." But, he added, "we were pleased with that passage."

Yet, when the bill got to the Senate, Tveit said the chamber took a "verification vote," which allows lawmakers to vote anonymously to gauge the level of support for a resolution. 

Tveit referred to the procedure as "a chicken way to do things." Most Republicans voted against the resolution in a 31-16 vote, but it's unclear who voted for it and who against it.

"It was very easy for all of the senators to hide behind what they considered to be the threat of the next election," Tveit said. "I think all too often we have 'RINOS' in charge — Republicans In Name Only. … Once it passed the House, I thought this thing would sail through the Senate."

"Under certain leadership, it did not move forward," he added.

The North Dakota legislature meets every two years, and Tveit noted he is up for re-election before the next session. He said, if re-elected, he will introduce the resolution again. If not, he said he expects another lawmaker to do so.

"I believe it's that important," Tveit explained. "We need to keep the pressure on."

Movements in South Dakota and elsewhere

South Dakota Rep. Tony Randolph also introduced his state's resolution in 2025. Although only one Democrat serves on the House Judiciary Committee, eight Republicans voted with the sole Democrat to defer a vote to the 41st legislative day, essentially killing the resolution. 

Only four Republicans voted against the deferral.

"This is one of those things where, a lot of times, folks really struggle with what to do with it," Randolph told CNA.

South Dakota State Representative Tony Randolph at the 2024 Hazlitt Summit hosted by the Young Americans for Liberty Foundation. Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
South Dakota State Representative Tony Randolph at the 2024 Hazlitt Summit hosted by the Young Americans for Liberty Foundation. Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Randolph attributed its failure to a mix of reasons, saying that many Republicans are "worried about getting on the wrong side of certain groups." He said some lawmakers are "concerned about public backlash."

Although both chambers of the legislature have Republican supermajorities, similar to Idaho and North Dakota, he said South Dakota is "not as red as it appears from the outside." He said that "some of the Democrats are actually more conservative than [some of] the Republicans." There are some lawmakers, he said, who run as Republicans because it's the "only way to get elected in their district."

In spite of the setback this year, Randolph said he plans to introduce the resolution again next year. He said the resolution this year was put together at "the last minute" and he believes "it'll have more support" next year.

Lawmakers in Michigan and Montana introduced resolutions nearly identical to Idaho, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Lawmakers in four other states introduced different resolutions to establish a new legal category reserved for one man and one woman, called a "covenant marriage."

Schaper said MassResistance is in talks with lawmakers in other states where he hopes to get resolutions introduced that encourage the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn Obergefell. Some of the states he hopes will see resolutions include Louisiana, Florida, Arkansas, Missouri, and Kansas.

He noted that state-level resolutions have been able to launch larger legislative movements in the past, and that the next step will be to get states approving resolutions in both chambers.

"It's about starting the conversation," Schaper said.

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Friar Clodovis Boff belongs to the Order of the Servants of Mary. / Credit: Lennoazevedo, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia CommonsSao Paulo, Brazil, Jul 12, 2025 / 08:40 am (CNA).Friar Clodovis Boff has written an open letter to the bishops of the Latin American and Caribbean Bishops' Council (CELAM, by its Spanish acronym), who recently met in assembly, asking: "What good news did I read there? Forgive my frankness: None. You, bishops of CELAM, always repeat the same old story: social issues, social issues, and social issues. And this has been going on for more than fifty years.""Dear older brothers, don't you see that this music is getting old?" asked the priest who belongs to the Order of the Servants of Mary (Servites), in reaction to the final document of the 40th Ordinary General Assembly of CELAM, held at the end of May in the Archdiocese of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. "When will you give us good news about God, Christ, and his Spirit? About grace and salvation? About conver...

Friar Clodovis Boff belongs to the Order of the Servants of Mary. / Credit: Lennoazevedo, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Sao Paulo, Brazil, Jul 12, 2025 / 08:40 am (CNA).

Friar Clodovis Boff has written an open letter to the bishops of the Latin American and Caribbean Bishops' Council (CELAM, by its Spanish acronym), who recently met in assembly, asking: "What good news did I read there? Forgive my frankness: None. You, bishops of CELAM, always repeat the same old story: social issues, social issues, and social issues. And this has been going on for more than fifty years."

"Dear older brothers, don't you see that this music is getting old?" asked the priest who belongs to the Order of the Servants of Mary (Servites), in reaction to the final document of the 40th Ordinary General Assembly of CELAM, held at the end of May in the Archdiocese of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 

"When will you give us good news about God, Christ, and his Spirit? About grace and salvation? About conversion of heart and meditating on the Word? About prayer and adoration, devotion to the Mother of the Lord, and other such themes? In short, when will you send us a truly religious, spiritual message?"

Clodovis Boff, along with his brother Leonardo Boff, was one of the most important philosophers of liberation theology. However, in 2007, he published the article "Liberation Theology and Return to the Fundamentals" in the 68th issue of the Brazilian Ecclesiastical Review. 

There, he stated that "the error of liberation theology…was to have put the poor in the place of Christ, making them a fetish and reducing Christ to having a mere supportive role; when Christ did the opposite: he put himself in the place of the poor, to make them sharers in his divine dignity." 

The letter, written on June 13 — the feast of St. Anthony of Padua, a doctor of the Church — was sent "first and foremost to the president general of CELAM," Cardinal Jaime Spengler, archbishop of Porto Alegre in Brazil, and "to all the presidents of the regional CELAM," Boff told ACI Digital, CNA's Portuguese-language news partner.

The priest told the bishops that he dared to write to them "because for a long time" he has seen "with dismay, repeated signs that our beloved Church is running a truly grave danger: that of alienating itself from its spiritual essence, to its own detriment and that of the world."

"When the house is on fire, anyone can scream," Boff explained. After reading CELAM's message, something he said he felt almost 20 years ago came back to him, when, "no longer able to bear the repeated equivocations of liberation theology, such an impetus arose from the depths of my soul" and he said: "Enough! I have to speak."

"It was under the impact of a similar inner impulse that I wrote this letter, hoping that the Holy Spirit may have played some part in it," he emphasized. "So far, I have only received the reaction of Don Jaime, president of CELAM, and also of the CNBB," the National Conference of Bishops of Brazil, the friar told ACI Digital.

According to Boff, Spengler, who was his "student back in the 1980s in Petrópolis," was "receptive to the letter, appreciating the fact that I had expressed my thoughts, which could help revise the ways of the Church in the Americas."

Boff wrote in his letter that, upon reading the document of the CELAM assembly, "the words of Christ come to mind: The children ask for bread and you give them a stone (Mt 7:9)."

For the friar, "the secular world itself is fed up with secularity and is off searching for spirituality," but the CELAM bishops "continue to offer them social issues and more social issues; and of the spiritual [you give them], almost only crumbs."

"And to think that you are the custodians of the greatest treasure, that which the world needs most and yet, in a certain way, you deny it to them," the priest wrote.

"Souls ask for the supernatural, and you insist on giving them the natural. This paradox is evident even in parishes: While lay people delight in displaying signs of their Catholic identity (crosses, medals, veils, blouses with religious prints), priests and nuns go in the opposite direction and appear without any distinctive sign."

In their "Message to the Church on pilgrimage in Latin America and the Caribbean," the CELAM bishops wrote that the 40th Assembly "has been a space for discernment, prayer, and episcopal fraternity," in which they shared "the lights and shadows" of their "realities, the cries" of their "peoples, and the longing for a Church that is a home and school of communion."

"[We are] aware of the current challenges that affect us as a Latin American and Caribbean region: the persistence of poverty and growing inequality, violence that goes unpunished, corruption, drug trafficking, forced migration, the weakening of democracy, the cry of the earth, and secularization, among the most common," the bishops stated.

Boff responded: "You say, without any hesitation, that you hear the 'cries' of the people and that you are 'aware of the challenges' of today. But does your listening reach deep? Doesn't it remain on the surface?"

"I read your list of today's 'cries' and 'challenges' and see that it goes no further than what the most ordinary journalists and sociologists observe. Don't the Most Reverends hear that, from 'the depths of the world,' a formidable cry for God is rising today? A cry that even many secular analysts hear? And isn't it to hear this cry and give it a response, the true and full response, that the Church and its ministers exist?" 

"Governments and NGOs are there for the 'social cries'. The Church, without a doubt, cannot exclude herself from this service. But it is not the protagonist in this field. Her proper field of action is another and higher: responding precisely to the 'cry for God,'" he emphasized.

'Progressives' or 'traditionalists'

The friar stated in his letter that he knew that bishops "are harassed day and night by public opinion to define themselves as 'progressives' or 'traditionalists,' 'right-wing' or 'left-wing.'"

"On this, St. Paul is categorical," he wrote, quoting: Men should consider us simply as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God (1 Cor 4:1).

"It is worth remembering" that "the Church is, first and foremost, the 'sacrament of salvation' and not a mere social institution, progressive or not," the friar said.

"She exists to proclaim Christ and his grace. That is her central focus, her greatest and enduring commitment. Everything else comes after that," the priest emphasized.

"Forgive me, dearest friends, if I'm here recalling what you already know. But why then is all of this not mentioned in your message and in the writings of CELAM in general? From reading them, one almost inevitably draws the conclusion that the great concern of the Church today, on our continent, is not the cause of Christ and his salvation, but rather social causes, such as justice, peace, and ecology, which you cite in your message as another refrain."

The friar also noted that "the very letter that Pope Leo sent to CELAM, in the person of its president, speaks clearly of the 'urgent need to remember that it is the Risen One who protects and guides the Church, reviving it in hope, etc.'"

"The Holy Father also reminds us that the Church's proper mission is, in his own words, 'to go out to meet so many brothers and sisters, to announce to them the message of salvation in Christ Jesus,'" Boff said.

"However, what was the response the venerable brothers gave to the pope? In the letter you wrote to him, there is no echo of those papal warnings. Rather, you asked him to help you, not to keep the memory of the Risen Lord alive in the Church; not to proclaim salvation in Christ to your brothers, but rather to support them in their struggle to 'encourage justice and peace' and to 'support them in denouncing every form of injustice.' In short, what you made the pope hear was the same old refrain: 'social issues, social issues...', as if he, who worked among us for decades, had never heard it."

Boff was referring to the fact that Pope Leo XIV was a missionary and bishop in Peru and, therefore, familiar with both the social reality of Latin America and the various types of theology and pastoral care practiced on the continent.

"You will say: But these are assumed truths, which do not need to be repeated all the time. No, my dearest ones; we do need to repeat them, with renewed fervor, every blessed day, otherwise they will be lost," Boff wrote to CELAM.

"If it weren't necessary to keep repeating them, then why did Pope Leo remind you about them? We know what happens when a man takes his wife's love for granted and doesn't bother to nurture it. This is infinitely more important in relation to faith and love for Christ."

The friar pointed out in his letter that "the vocabulary of faith" such as God, Christ, evangelization, resurrection, Kingdom, mission, and hope "is not lacking" in CELAM's message, but, for him, these are "words placed there in a generic way," because "one sees nothing of clear spiritual content in them" and "rather, they make one think of the usual refrain 'social issues, social issues, and more social issues.'" 

"Please consider the first two words, key words and more than elementary words of our faith: 'God' and 'Christ.' As for 'God,' you never mention him in and of himself," the friar wrote, but "only refer to him in the stereotypical expressions 'Son of God' and 'People of God.' Brothers, shouldn't you be astounded?

The name of Christ "appears only twice, and both times only in passing," Boff observed.

The friar said the bishops "declare," and "rightly so, that they want a Church that is a 'house and school of communion,' and, furthermore, 'merciful, synodal, and outgoing,'" and that "a Church that does not have Christ as its reason for being and speaking is, in the words of Pope Francis, nothing more than a 'pious NGO.'"

"But isn't that where our Church is headed? A lesser evil is when, instead of going to the non-religious, Catholics become evangelicals. In every case, our Church is hemorrhaging. What we see most around here are empty churches, empty seminaries, empty convents," the friar observed.

"In our Americas, seven or eight countries no longer have a Catholic majority. Brazil itself is on its way to becoming 'the largest ex-Catholic country in the world,' in the words of a well-known Brazilian writer," said the friar, referring to the playwright, writer, and journalist Nelson Rodrigues. "However, this continued decline doesn't seem to worry the venerable brothers so much."

The priest even said that CELAM's message affirms that the [heart of the] Church in Latin America "continues to beat strongly" and that there are "seeds of resurrection and hope," and asked: "But where are these 'seeds', dear bishops? They don't seem to be in the social sphere, as you might imagine, but in the religious sphere. They are especially in the renewed parishes, as well as in the new movements and communities."

"All these expressions of spirituality and evangelization" are "the ecclesial aspect that most fills our churches (and the hearts of the faithful)," he wrote. "It is there, in this spiritual seedbed, where the future of our Church lies. An eloquent sign of that future is that, while in the social sphere, currently, we see almost only 'people with white hair; in the spiritual realm, we see the rush en masse toward the spiritual by today's young people."

"Without the leaven of a living faith, social struggle itself ends up being perverted: from liberating, it becomes ideological and ultimately oppressive," Boff emphasized. "This is the lucid and grave warning that St. Paul VI issued (in Evangelii Nuntiandi 35.2) regarding the then-nascent 'theology of liberation' (a warning from which that theology, it seems, drew no benefit)."

Where does CELAM want to 'take our Church'?

"Dear elder brothers, allow me to ask you: Where do you want to take our Church?" Boff asked. The bishops "speak a lot about the 'Kingdom,' but what is the concrete content of their 'Kingdom'?" the friar asked in his open letter.

"Since you speak so much about building a 'just and fraternal society' (another of their refrains), one might think that this society is the central content of the 'Kingdom' that is evoked. I am not unaware of the grain of truth therein. However, the most reverend bishops say nothing about the principal content of the 'Kingdom,' that is, the Kingdom present, both in hearts today and in its consummation tomorrow," he observed.

"In your discourse, there is no eschatology to be seen. It is true: You speak twice of 'hope,' but in such an indefinite way that, given the social slant of your message, no one, upon hearing such a word from your mouths, raises their eyes to heaven."

"Why this reticence in speaking loudly and clearly, as so many bishops of the past did, of the 'Kingdom of Heaven' (and also of 'Hell'), of the 'resurrection of the dead,' of 'eternal life,' and of other eschatological truths, which offer such great light and strength for the struggles of the present, as well as the ultimate meaning of everything?"

"It is not that the earthly ideal of a 'just and fraternal society' is not beautiful and great" the friar noted, "but nothing compares to the Heavenly City (Phil 3:20; Heb 11:10, 16), of which we are fortunately, by our faith, citizens and workers, and you, by your episcopal ministry, its great engineers."

"It is, therefore, time, and more than time, to bring Christ out of the shadows and into the full light. It is time to restore to him absolute primacy, both in the Church ad intra (in the individual conscience, in spirituality, and in theology), and in the Church ad extra (in evangelization, ethics, and politics)," Boff wrote. "The Church on our continent urgently needs to return to its true center, to return to its 'first love.'"

"With this, my dearest friends, would I be asking you for something new?" Boff asked. "Absolutely not. I am simply reminding you of the most evident requirement of faith, of the 'ancient and ever new' faith: the absolute option for Christ the Lord, the unconditional love for him, required particularly of you, as he did of Peter (Jn 21:15-17)."

For the friar, it is urgent for the bishops "therefore to adopt and practice clearly and decisively a strong and systematic Christocentrism; a truly 'overwhelming' Christocentrism, as St. John Paul II expressed it," and "to live an open Christocentrism that acts as leaven and transforms everything: people, the Church, and society."

This story was first published by ACI Digital, CNA's Portuguese-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by ACI Prensa/CNA.

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French Catholic priest Abbe Pierre takes part in a demonstration on May 6, 1994. / Credit: JOEL SAGET/AFP via Getty ImagesCNA Newsroom, Jul 12, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).The Bishops' Conference of France this week said a dozen new accusers have come forth with allegations of abuse against deceased Capuchin priest Abbé Pierre.The famed French priest has already been accused by several dozen people of inflicting abuse over the course of several decades. Pierre founded the Emmaus movement, an international charity effort, after World War II.In a July 10 press release the French bishops said they were "shocked to receive the testimony of 12 new victims of Abbé Pierre, including 7 minors at the time of the events."The bishops "assure these people of their support," the prelates said in the release. Allegations of abuse against Pierre, who for decades was hailed for his charity work in France, shocked the Catholic world last year. Emmaus International revealed the abuse claims in July of...

French Catholic priest Abbe Pierre takes part in a demonstration on May 6, 1994. / Credit: JOEL SAGET/AFP via Getty Images

CNA Newsroom, Jul 12, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).

The Bishops' Conference of France this week said a dozen new accusers have come forth with allegations of abuse against deceased Capuchin priest Abbé Pierre.

The famed French priest has already been accused by several dozen people of inflicting abuse over the course of several decades. Pierre founded the Emmaus movement, an international charity effort, after World War II.

In a July 10 press release the French bishops said they were "shocked to receive the testimony of 12 new victims of Abbé Pierre, including 7 minors at the time of the events."

The bishops "assure these people of their support," the prelates said in the release.

Allegations of abuse against Pierre, who for decades was hailed for his charity work in France, shocked the Catholic world last year. Emmaus International revealed the abuse claims in July of 2024, with new allegations surfacing in September of last year.

The Abbé Pierre Foundation announced it would change its name due to the revelations. The French bishops also said they would release archive files on Pierre nearly six decades ahead of schedule amid the abuse claims.

French prosecutors said earlier this year they would not mount an investigation into the priest due to his having died in 2007.

This week, meanwhile, the French bishops said that they were "committed to helping victims rebuild their lives after what they have been through."

The bishops and Emmaus "are working together with determination on a process of reparation," they said.

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null / Credit: Tomsickova Tatyana/ShutterstockCNA Newsroom, Jul 12, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA)."The only males allowed in our meetings will be very young ones," said Ruth Lewis, one of the founders of MoMa Breastfeeding, a newly launched support group for breastfeeding mothers. The group was founded by former trustees of La Leche League Great Britain, who say they were ousted from the group for their belief that only women can breastfeed. "As experienced breastfeeding counselors, we saw skills and knowledge being lost through changes in language and the abandonment of mother-centered practice," says the website of MoMa Breastfeeding. "Support for mothers and children that protects the mother-baby dyad is needed more than ever." Group has Catholic rootsFounded in 1956 by seven Catholic women in Illinois who named the group after the nursing Madonna and in response to a rise in formula feeding, La Leche League ("La leche" means milk in Spanish) originally supported...

null / Credit: Tomsickova Tatyana/Shutterstock

CNA Newsroom, Jul 12, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).

"The only males allowed in our meetings will be very young ones," said Ruth Lewis, one of the founders of MoMa Breastfeeding, a newly launched support group for breastfeeding mothers. 

The group was founded by former trustees of La Leche League Great Britain, who say they were ousted from the group for their belief that only women can breastfeed. 

"As experienced breastfeeding counselors, we saw skills and knowledge being lost through changes in language and the abandonment of mother-centered practice," says the website of MoMa Breastfeeding

"Support for mothers and children that protects the mother-baby dyad is needed more than ever." 

Group has Catholic roots

Founded in 1956 by seven Catholic women in Illinois who named the group after the nursing Madonna and in response to a rise in formula feeding, La Leche League ("La leche" means milk in Spanish) originally supported natural family planning and other Catholic moral teachings.

It changed over the years, however, dropping its Catholic identity as it grew. And in recent years, the group in the U.S. and elsewhere has embraced gender ideology and so-called "inclusive" language, using terms like "chestfeeding" and allowing men who say they are women to participate in meetings. 

This pivot clashed with the convictions of many of the group's leaders, including Marian Thompson, 95, one of the original founders who resigned from the board of La Leche League International in 2024 in protest.

The breaking point in Britain came in early 2024 when six trustees with the British group, including Lewis, a 17-year veteran La Leche League leader, were suspended after raising their concerns about the inclusion of males in women-only spaces and the confusing new language with the U.S.-based international board, on which sit members from all over the world.

The international group had issued an order in early 2024 for all affiliates in Great Britain to offer breastfeeding support to all nursing parents, regardless of their "gender identity" or sex.

The suspended trustees complained to the British Charity Commission, which they argued protects single-sex organizations. 

Lewis said the trustees then published their full correspondence with all the La Leche League leaders in Great Britain, and it was not long before the press got wind of the dispute. 

A spokesperson for the trustees said in 2024 that they had "exhausted every process available to us to defend sex-based services."

"[La Leche League] International and a small number of fellow trustees at [the British chapter] have undermined our efforts and left us with no choice but to alert the Charity Commission … We would like to reassure group leaders and the mothers who benefit from LLLGB's services that we are confident the law is on our side, as 'mother' is a sex-based term in UK law."

The Supreme Court in the United Kingdom ruled in April that sex is determined by biology, a decision welcomed by both MoMa's founders and advocates for biological reality worldwide.

"La Leche League International called us hateful bigots, but we were just trying to protect the mother-baby relationship," Lewis told CNA. 

MoMa's mission is to provide free, voluntary, mother-to-mother support from pregnancy through weaning, Lewis said, and the group insists on clarity. 

"The gender-neutral language is damaging," Lewis said. "When you say 'parent' instead of 'mother,' it detracts from the relationship. It makes information harder to access, especially for mothers with dyslexia or whose first language isn't English."

Justine Lattimer is a lawyer specializing in child protection who is helping MoMa get off the ground and is the sister of one of the group's founders.

"The baby's needs have been overlooked in all this talk of 'chestfeeding' and 'parent'," Lattimer said in an interview with CNA. "It's all about what the parent wants. None of it is about the baby's needs." 

"A baby is born expecting to breastfeed — it's a biological imperative," Lattimer said. "The mother is the complete answer to all the baby's questions in those first moments." 

Lattimer argues that breastfeeding is more than nutrition — it's about comfort, bonding, and the tactile, emotional connection between a mother and her child. 

"Breastfeeding is part of mothering," she said. "It's part of a mother's natural learning of being responsive in parenting."

"A lot of things have happened over the course of the twentieth century that have broken that relationship a little bit," Lattimer continued. "Mothers have been disenfranchised."

Lattimer says she hopes MoMa can help restore some of that brokenness by providing a place for mothers to talk about their common experiences.

"It's also empowering for women" to have such a place, she said. "Women have been led to believe everything is technical and requires an expert," she added. "We're here to say, 'You're enough. You were made for this. You can do this.'"

Cynthia Dulworth agrees. The former La Leche League leader and Catholic mother of three told CNA that the "Catholic theology that my body could do this – to grow the baby in my womb, to give birth, and to breastfeed – completely changed my lifestyle and helped me connect with my children."

"I truly believe that breastfeeding is not merely for nutrition but more importantly a relationship between a mother and a baby which is irreplaceable," said Dulworth, who resigned as a leader because she disagreed with the changes in language. 

"I didn't want to confuse my daughters, who were often with me in meetings or when I took phone calls," she said.

"Breastfeeding is a sex-based reality. It's not about gender — it's about mothers and their babies," Paula Clay, a lactation consultant and long-time La Leche League leader in the U.S. who supports MoMa's mission, told CNA.

For Clay, a Catholic who wears a crucifix and miraculous medal at her breastfeeding support groups, MoMa represents a return to "true north" — a focus on mothers and babies.

MoMa's launch in May garnered immediate attention on social media, amplified by a "substantial" donation from famed author J.K. Rowling, an outspoken critic of men who call themselves women "invading" women's spaces, who re-posted the group's announcement to her millions of followers. 

"We couldn't have bought publicity like that," Lewis told CNA, noting the donation covered critical startup costs like registering the company and setting up a website. The group has since received dozens of small donations, averaging £20, often accompanied by heartfelt messages. 

The positive response has been overwhelming, Lewis said. 

"People write, 'Sorry it's not more,' but we're grateful for every bit," she said. 

As MoMa grows, it aims to remain "small and perfectly formed," Lattimer said. 

"We're not here to police language or fight culture wars. We just want to help mothers breastfeed their babies. The world won't end if we call mothers 'mothers' and say no to men occasionally," she said.

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"When you love the people with whom you disagree, and then you talk about the disagreements, then you're able to persuade people, potentially," Brooks points out. "Its your only shot at persuading people, is with love." / Credit: EWTN NewsWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 11, 2025 / 09:40 am (CNA).Best-selling author, Harvard professor and renowned social scientist Arthur Brooks says the missionary character and approach of Pope Leo XIV is one which all Catholics should emulate.In an interview with "EWTN News in Depth," Brooks called attention to the new pope's track record of threading the needle of "speaking the truth in a spirit of love, and that's a lot more of what we all need to emulate as Catholic people."This approach, Brooks said, is a winning one that gives him a lot of hope and optimism for Leo's pontificate and the future of the Church, which he says is on the cusp of a revival.Speaking with anchor Catherine Hadro, Brooks said all Catholics are called to missionary wor...

"When you love the people with whom you disagree, and then you talk about the disagreements, then you're able to persuade people, potentially," Brooks points out. "Its your only shot at persuading people, is with love." / Credit: EWTN News

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 11, 2025 / 09:40 am (CNA).

Best-selling author, Harvard professor and renowned social scientist Arthur Brooks says the missionary character and approach of Pope Leo XIV is one which all Catholics should emulate.

In an interview with "EWTN News in Depth," Brooks called attention to the new pope's track record of threading the needle of "speaking the truth in a spirit of love, and that's a lot more of what we all need to emulate as Catholic people."

This approach, Brooks said, is a winning one that gives him a lot of hope and optimism for Leo's pontificate and the future of the Church, which he says is on the cusp of a revival.

Speaking with anchor Catherine Hadro, Brooks said all Catholics are called to missionary work grounded in joy, excellence, and clarity of purpose. 

"We need to ask ourselves tomorrow as we go out: Am I being a good missionary or am I not? Is somebody going to say, I like the way that that person lives their Catholic faith or not? Is that attractive or is that unattractive? Those are the choices."

A convert to Catholicism at age 16, Brooks says he considers himself a "secular missionary." In a recent article in The Atlantic, he wrote that his secular writing, speaking and teaching is the principal way that he shares his faith publicly.

"My approach is basically to be open and easy and natural about my Catholic faith," said Brooks, who is also the former president of the Washington, D.C.-based American Enterprise Institute think tank.

The two best tools in secular evangelization, Brooks said, are friendship and excellence. 

"Be a good friend, be a good person, all the time, impeccable in the way you treat other people and somebody people can rely on and actually love," Brooks told Hadro. 

"And two, be excellent in everything you do. Be the best at what you do…because people want to be around excellence and people want to have good friends," he added.

Catholics, Brooks said, are called to "magnetize" their faith by "making it natural and normal and excellent" such that it draws people to the faith.

When it comes to speaking truth in a spirit of love, Brooks said we "have a moral obligation to call out things that are wrong when they're wrong for the good of the person," noting that when there's grave sin "we have to call it out."

"But we will be ineffective in doing so if we don't do that with love," he emphasized. 

"When you love the people with whom you disagree, and then you talk about the disagreements, then you're able to persuade people, potentially," Brooks pointed out. "[Y]our only shot at persuading people is with love."

In his 2023 book Build the Life You Want: The Art and Science of Getting Happier, co-authored with Oprah Winfrey, Brooks offers practical strategies for both emotional and spiritual growth. The book debuted at number one on the New York Times bestseller list.

He continues exploring these themes in his forthcoming book, The Happiness Files, in which he likens the pursuit of happiness to launching a start-up: deliberate, experimental, and mission-driven.

Watch the full "EWTN News in Depth" interview with Arthur Brooks below:

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null / Credit: Wolfgang Schaller|Shutterstock.Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 11, 2025 / 10:45 am (CNA).A recent poll has revealed that the majority of American adults' beliefs align with recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings supporting parental authority, allowing states to ban transgender treatment for minors, and permitting authorities to require age verification on websites with sexually explicit content.On June 18, the Supreme Court ruled that Tennessee was permitted to ban medical treatments for minors including hormone therapy, puberty blockers, and surgeries. On June 27, meanwhile, the high court ruled that public schools in Maryland must allow parents the option to withdraw their children from discussions of LGBT topics if they have religious objections. It also ruled that a Texas law that requires pornography websites to verify that users are at least 18 years old does not violate the Constitution and can remain in effect.The poll, which was conducted before the rulin...

null / Credit: Wolfgang Schaller|Shutterstock.

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 11, 2025 / 10:45 am (CNA).

A recent poll has revealed that the majority of American adults' beliefs align with recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings supporting parental authority, allowing states to ban transgender treatment for minors, and permitting authorities to require age verification on websites with sexually explicit content.

On June 18, the Supreme Court ruled that Tennessee was permitted to ban medical treatments for minors including hormone therapy, puberty blockers, and surgeries. 

On June 27, meanwhile, the high court ruled that public schools in Maryland must allow parents the option to withdraw their children from discussions of LGBT topics if they have religious objections. It also ruled that a Texas law that requires pornography websites to verify that users are at least 18 years old does not violate the Constitution and can remain in effect.

The poll, which was conducted before the rulings were issued, revealed that the American public was mostly in alignment with the final decisions of the Supreme Court.

The survey was completed online April 10-16 among 2,201 U.S. adults by YouGov for its SCOTUSpoll project. The poll was conducted by researchers at the University of Texas, Harvard University, and Stanford University. 

It found that the majority of all respondents (64%) said states "should be able to ban" minors from being subject to certain transgender medical treatments.

The numbers were lopsided according to political alignment: While 90% of Republicans and 63% of Independents surveyed said states should be able to carry out bans, only 38% of Democrats did.

The poll also found that 77% of Americans believe schools "must give the ability" for parents to remove their children from conversations on gender and sexuality. The majority of respondents across all political parties agreed, including 89% of Republicans, 69% of Democrats, and 72% of Independents. 

Texas is one of 24 states that has enacted a law requiring age verification for porn websites similar to the one voted on by the Supreme Court. The survey found that a high majority (80%) of Americans reported that states should be able to permit verification. This included 88% of Republicans, 75% of Democrats, and 77% of Independents. 

Since the Supreme Court ruled on the case involving transgender medical intervention, meanwhile, the Justice Department (DOJ) announced it has sent more than 20 subpoenas to doctors and clinics involved in child transgender medical procedures.

In a July 9 announcement, the DOJ stated the investigations "include healthcare fraud, false statements, and more."

In the statement, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said: "Medical professionals and organizations that mutilated children in the service of a warped ideology will be held accountable by this Department of Justice."

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Pope Leo XIV (pictured at St. Peter's on June 1, 2025) issued a message of hope on July 10 in anticipation of the upcoming World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly. / Credit: Daniel Ibáñez/CNARome Newsroom, Jul 10, 2025 / 17:29 pm (CNA).For the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly established by Pope Francis and celebrated this year on July 27, Pope Leo XIV has issued a message of hope to the elderly.At the beginning of his message, the Holy Father evoked the Jubilee Year to remind the faithful that "hope is a constant source of joy, whatever our age." He cited some elderly biblical figures, such as Abraham and Sarah, Moses, and Zechariah, whom the Lord surprised in "an act of saving power": "God repeatedly demonstrates his providential care by turning to people in their later years," he explained.The pontiff noted that by making these choices, "God thus teaches us that, in his eyes, old age is a time of blessing and grace, and that the elderly are, for him, t...

Pope Leo XIV (pictured at St. Peter's on June 1, 2025) issued a message of hope on July 10 in anticipation of the upcoming World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly. / Credit: Daniel Ibáñez/CNA

Rome Newsroom, Jul 10, 2025 / 17:29 pm (CNA).

For the World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly established by Pope Francis and celebrated this year on July 27, Pope Leo XIV has issued a message of hope to the elderly.

At the beginning of his message, the Holy Father evoked the Jubilee Year to remind the faithful that "hope is a constant source of joy, whatever our age." 

He cited some elderly biblical figures, such as Abraham and Sarah, Moses, and Zechariah, whom the Lord surprised in "an act of saving power": "God repeatedly demonstrates his providential care by turning to people in their later years," he explained.

The pontiff noted that by making these choices, "God thus teaches us that, in his eyes, old age is a time of blessing and grace, and that the elderly are, for him, the first witnesses of hope."

Life is more than the present moment

He then emphasized that the increasing number of elderly people "is a sign of the times that we are called to discern, in order to properly interpret this moment of history."

The Holy Father noted that "embracing the elderly helps us to understand that life is more than just the present moment, and should not be wasted in superficial encounters and fleeting relationships. Instead, life is constantly pointing us toward the future."

He also emphasized that "if it is true that the weakness of the elderly needs the strength of the young, it is equally true that the inexperience of the young needs the witness of the elderly in order to build the future with wisdom."

"How often our grandparents have been for us examples of faith and devotion, civic virtue and social commitment, memory and perseverance amid trials! The precious legacy that they have handed down to us with hope and love will always be a source of gratitude and a summons to perseverance," he said.

In the context of the Jubilee Year, he invited the faithful to "to break through the barriers of indifference …" and to give of themselves to prevent feelings of loneliness and abandonment among the elderly.

"Our societies, everywhere in the world, are growing all too accustomed to letting this significant and enriching part of their life be marginalized and forgotten," he lamented.

Protagonists of the "revolution" of gratitude and care

The pope emphasized that every parish, association, or church group is called to be "protagonists in a 'revolution' of gratitude and care," and that this must be done "by regular visits to the elderly, the creation of networks of support and prayer for them and with them, and the forging of relationships that can restore hope and dignity to those who feel forgotten."

"Christian hope always urges us to be more daring, to think big, to be dissatisfied with things the way they are … [and] to work for a change that can restore esteem and affection," he explained.

The Holy Father recalled that Pope Francis wanted the faithful, and especially young people, to reach out to those who are alone. He noted that those who cannot make the pilgrimage to Rome this year will be able to obtain the Jubilee indulgence if they visit the elderly alone for an appropriate amount of time.

The freedom to love and to pray 

Addressing grandparents and the elderly, Pope Leo XIV encouraged them not to lose hope, even in those moments when they are tempted "to look not to the future but to the past."

"We possess a freedom that no difficulty can rob us of: it is the freedom to love and to pray. Everyone, always, can love and pray," he emphasized

The pope also recalled Pope Francis's words during his last hospitalization: "our bodies are weak, but even so, nothing can prevent us from loving, praying, giving ourselves, being there for one another, in faith, as shining signs of hope."

Pope Leo XIV also indicated that "affection for our loved ones – for the wife or husband with whom we have spent so much of our lives, for our children, for our grandchildren who brighten our days – does not fade when our strength wanes."

"Indeed, their own affection often revives our energy and brings us hope and comfort," he added.

Therefore, the pontiff continued, "especially as we grow older, let us press forward with confidence in the Lord. May we be renewed each day by our encounter with him in prayer and in Holy Mass."

"Let us lovingly pass on the faith we have lived for so many years, in our families and in our daily encounter with others. May we always praise God for his goodness, cultivate unity with our loved ones, open our hearts to those who are far away and, in particular, to all those in need. In this way, we will be signs of hope, whatever our age," the pope concluded.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.

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Our Lady of the Rosary Cathedral in San Bernardino, Calif. / Farragutful via Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 4.0).Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 10, 2025 / 17:55 pm (CNA).Bishop Alberto Rojas of the diocese of San Bernardino, California has granted a dispensation from the obligation to attend Sunday Mass for those within the diocese who fear deportation. The bishop said all of the faithful within the diocese who possess "genuine fear" of arrest while attending Mass are dispensed from the obligation until further notice, and are "encouraged to maintain their spiritual communion with Christ and His Church through acts of personal prayer." In a July 8 statement, Rojas said the decision to grant the dispensation came after he recognized that "fear of immigration enforcement raids by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) may deter some members of our diocese from fulfilling the obligation to attend Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation." According to John Andre...

Our Lady of the Rosary Cathedral in San Bernardino, Calif. / Farragutful via Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 4.0).

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 10, 2025 / 17:55 pm (CNA).

Bishop Alberto Rojas of the diocese of San Bernardino, California has granted a dispensation from the obligation to attend Sunday Mass for those within the diocese who fear deportation. 

The bishop said all of the faithful within the diocese who possess "genuine fear" of arrest while attending Mass are dispensed from the obligation until further notice, and are "encouraged to maintain their spiritual communion with Christ and His Church through acts of personal prayer." 

In a July 8 statement, Rojas said the decision to grant the dispensation came after he recognized that "fear of immigration enforcement raids by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) may deter some members of our diocese from fulfilling the obligation to attend Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation." 

According to John Andrews, the director of communications for the diocese, attendance for Spanish language Masses across the diocese has been "down about 50 percent," since around the time raids began in Southern California last month. 

Andrews told CNA the diocese is aware of two recent instances of ICE enforcement actions on church properties, with both taking place on June 20. 

One of the instances, he said, occurred at St. Adelaide Church in Highland and "involved several men who had been working in the neighborhood where the church is located." The men were chased into the church parking lot and detained, according to Andrews, who said "we do not know whether these men were actually arrested."

The second instance occurred at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Montclair, and "involved the apprehension and arrest of one man who was on parish property to do landscaping work," Andrews told CNA, adding: "He and his family are longtime parishioners there and we know that he was arrested and ultimately sent to a detention facility in Texas." 

"There is real fear gripping many in our parish communities," said Rojas in a separate statement to CNA. "I want our immigrant communities to know that their Church stands with them and walks with them through this trying time." 

A bishop is enabled under the Code of Canon Law to provide dispensations for the faithful under his care "whenever he judges that it contributes to their spiritual good."

"I know that they would be in church if not for this threat to their safety and their family unity," the bishop added. "With all the worry and anxiety that they are feeling, I wanted to take away, for a time, the burden they may be feeling from not being able to fulfill this commitment to which our Catholic faithful are called."

In the July 8 announcement, which was also signed by Vicar General Msgr. Gerard López, Rojas stipulated that priests within the diocese must seek ways to provide support to those affected, and that parishes must also "explore alternative means of catechesis and sacramental preparation for those unable to attend regularly." 

"In issuing this decree, I am guided by the Church's mission to care for the spiritual welfare of all entrusted to my care, particularly those who face fear or hardship," the bishop declared. 

This past May, the Diocese of Nashville also granted a Sunday Mass dispensation to "those in our diocese [who] are concerned about the possibility of being confronted or detained while attending Mass or other parish events." 

ICE: agency 'does not indiscriminately take enforcement actions' at churches

An ICE spokesperson told CNA, "While ICE is not subject to previous restrictions on immigration operations at sensitive locations, to include schools, churches and courthouses, ICE does not indiscriminately take enforcement actions at these locations." 

"U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests aliens who commit crimes and other individuals who have violated our nation's immigration laws," the spokesperson noted, adding: "All aliens in violation of U.S. immigration law may be subject to arrest, detention and, if found removable by final order, removed from the United States."

In January 2025, the Department of Homeland Security removed places of worship from its sensitive locations list, allowing ICE agents to carry out immigration enforcement procedures. 

Following a lawsuit from a group of 27 religious organizations, ICE was temporarily blocked in March from carrying out deportations in places of worship. However, a federal judge in April found the organizations did not have legal standing, thereby allowing operations to continue.

In an interview with CNA last week, Andrew Arthur, a former immigration judge and current fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, expressed doubt that ICE would carry out extensive raids in Catholic churches. 

He noted that while it's possible a dangerous criminal could be targeted for enforcement at a church, "it's not like they're going to sweep through Sunday Mass looking for people."

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