Cardinal Christophe Pierre speaks to EWTN News President and COO Montse Alvarado in Rome on Friday, April 25, 2025. / Credit: EWTN NewsCNA Staff, Apr 25, 2025 / 19:36 pm (CNA).Pope Francis asked us "to be a Church which announces the good news of Christ," Cardinal Christophe Pierre said on Friday, one of the many fruits of the Holy Spirit's having selected the late Argentine prelate to be the supreme pontiff.Pierre, who has served as apostolic nuncio in various countries over several decades and who has served as nuncio to the United States under Francis, told EWTN News President and COO Montse Alvarado that as he sees it, Francis' election in 2013 was the fruit of a process that arose out of the 2007 Aparecida conference of Latin American and Caribbean bishops in Brazil. Then-Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio headed up the committee that produced the conference's final document. The bishops at that conference were "inspired [and] helped" by the future pope, Pierre said. "Then...
Cardinal Christophe Pierre speaks to EWTN News President and COO Montse Alvarado in Rome on Friday, April 25, 2025. / Credit: EWTN News
CNA Staff, Apr 25, 2025 / 19:36 pm (CNA).
Pope Francis asked us "to be a Church which announces the good news of Christ," Cardinal Christophe Pierre said on Friday, one of the many fruits of the Holy Spirit's having selected the late Argentine prelate to be the supreme pontiff.
Pierre, who has served as apostolic nuncio in various countries over several decades and who has served as nuncio to the United States under Francis, told EWTN News President and COO Montse Alvarado that as he sees it, Francis' election in 2013 was the fruit of a process that arose out of the 2007 Aparecida conference of Latin American and Caribbean bishops in Brazil.
Then-Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio headed up the committee that produced the conference's final document. The bishops at that conference were "inspired [and] helped" by the future pope, Pierre said.
"Then, six years later, Pope Francis was elected pope," Pierre said, describing the selection as providential. "The Holy Spirit chose him so that he could be an instrument of Christ in today's world," the cardinal said.
He further pointed to Francis' regular contention — articulated first in his apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium— that "realities are more important than ideas."
"Today in the world, we are all tempted to transform reality into ideas," Pierre told Alvarado. "And when you transform reality, it's in abstractions. And ideas become ideology, and they become instruments of power, of war, of dispute between ourselves. And it is impossible to achieve peace as Christ asks us to do."
"Even in the Church, at times we are tempted to defend our ideas," the cardinal said. "But what Christ wants us to be is simply like him, and like Pope Francis has been."
Asked about what the Catholic Church needs in the wake of Francis' death, Pierre said it "needs first and foremost to be close to the people, to be attentive to the real needs of the people, especially the poor."
He further urged Catholics to "remember that Jesus met you and changed your life." He encouraged the faithful to "be a witness of Jesus for the world today."
"I met Jesus, and this has transformed my life," the prelate said. "And because Jesus transformed my life, I cannot do anything else but to announce his presence through my witness of life, but also through the way I live [and the way] I see the world."
Washington state's governor signed a law on May 1, 2025, that threatens priests with up to one year in jail if they fail to report child abuse they learn about during the sacrament of confession. / Credit: Romana Klee via FlickrWashington, D.C. Newsroom, May 6, 2025 / 16:11 pm (CNA).President Donald Trump's Department of Justice (DOJ) is investigating an "anti-Catholic law" in Washington state that threatens priests with up to one year in jail if they fail to report child abuse they learn about during the sacrament of confession.The new law, signed by Gov. Bob Ferguson last week, adds members of the clergy to the list of mandatory reporters for child abuse. It specifically states that clergy must report abuse, even if it is learned of during "privileged communication." All other mandatory reporters, such as nurses and therapists, are exempt from the reporting requirements when the information is obtained during "privileged communication."A priest who refuses to report informati...
Cardinals gather for the the seventh Novendiales Mass for Pope Francis on May 2, 2025, in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican. / Credit: Daniel IbaƱez/CNAVatican City, May 6, 2025 / 16:41 pm (CNA).In the days leading up to the conclave to elect the next pope, the College of Cardinals gathered for 12 general congregations at the Vatican to reflect on the state of the Church and the many challenges it faces in the modern world.The meetings, held from April 22 to May 6, included both cardinal electors under the age of 80 and non-electors over 80, who, while not eligible to vote in the conclave, actively participated in the discussions.The early sessions focused on procedural matters, including funeral arrangements and confirming that the conclave would begin on May 7. As the days progressed, the cardinals turned their attention to urgent ecclesial and global concerns.According to daily briefings from the Holy See Press Office, the cardinals addressed a wide range of topics, includ...
Thousands participate in the March for Life on May 3, 2025, in Mexico City. / Credit: Courtesy of Steps for LifePuebla, Mexico, May 6, 2025 / 17:11 pm (CNA).Thousands of people participated in the March for Life on May 3 in Mexico City to mark 18 years since abortion was decriminalized in Mexico's capital.The march, organized by the Pasos por la Vida (Steps for Life) association along with other groups, set out from the Monument to the Revolution and followed a route of more than 1.2 miles to arrive at the City Congress, the legislative branch of Mexico City, a quasi state in the Mexican federal system. Young people, senior citizens, and entire families marched amid banners and signs with pro-life messages lamenting the lack of comprehensive policies to aid pregnant women. They also decried the terrible toll of almost two decades of legalized abortion.Since April 2007, abortion has been legal in Mexico City up to the 12th week of pregnancy, making it the first federal enti...