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Pope Leo XIV venerates a statue of the Child Jesus during the celebration of Christmas Mass during the Night in St. Peter's Basilica on Dec. 24, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNA.Vatican City, Dec 24, 2025 / 17:31 pm (CNA).Pope Leo XIV celebrated Christmas Mass during the Night in St. Peter's Basilica on Wednesday. The Mass was attended by an estimated 6,000 people inside the basilica, while around 5,000 people gathered outside in St. Peter's Square, according to the Vatican.Below is the full text of the pope's Christmas night homily:Dear brothers and sisters,For millennia, across the earth, peoples have gazed up at the sky, giving names to the silent stars, and seeing images therein. In their imaginative yearning, they tried to read the future in the heavens, seeking on high for a truth that was absent below amidst their homes. Yet, as if grasping in the dark, they remained lost, confounded by their own oracles. On this night, however, "the people who walked in darkness h...

Pope Leo XIV venerates a statue of the Child Jesus during the celebration of Christmas Mass during the Night in St. Peter's Basilica on Dec. 24, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNA.

Vatican City, Dec 24, 2025 / 17:31 pm (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV celebrated Christmas Mass during the Night in St. Peter's Basilica on Wednesday. The Mass was attended by an estimated 6,000 people inside the basilica, while around 5,000 people gathered outside in St. Peter's Square, according to the Vatican.

Below is the full text of the pope's Christmas night homily:

Dear brothers and sisters,

For millennia, across the earth, peoples have gazed up at the sky, giving names to the silent stars, and seeing images therein. In their imaginative yearning, they tried to read the future in the heavens, seeking on high for a truth that was absent below amidst their homes. Yet, as if grasping in the dark, they remained lost, confounded by their own oracles. On this night, however, "the people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them has light shined" (Is 9:2).

Behold the star that astonishes the world, a spark newly lit and blazing with life: "To you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord" (Lk 2:11). Into time and space — in our midst — comes the One without whom we would not exist. He who gives his life for us lives among us, illuminating the night with his light of salvation. There is no darkness that this star does not illumine, for by its light all humanity beholds the dawn of a new and eternal life.

It is the birth of Jesus, Emmanuel. In the Son made man, God gives us nothing less than his very self, in order to "redeem us from all iniquity and purify for himself a people of his own" (Titus 2:14). Born in the night is the One who redeems us from the night. The hint of the dawning day is no longer to be sought in the distant reaches of the cosmos, but by bending low, in the stable nearby.

The clear sign given to a darkened world is indeed "a child wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger" (Lk 2:12). To find the Savior, one must not gaze upward, but look below: the omnipotence of God shines forth in the powerlessness of a newborn; the eloquence of the eternal

Word resounds in an infant's first cry; the holiness of the Spirit gleams in that small body, freshly washed and wrapped in swaddling clothes. The need for care and warmth becomes divine since the Son of the Father shares in history with all his brothers and sisters. The divine light radiating from this Child helps us to recognize humanity in every new life.

To heal our blindness, the Lord chooses to reveal himself in each human being, who reflect his true image, according to a plan of love begun at the creation of the world. As long as the night of error obscures this providential truth, then "there is no room for others either, for children, for the poor, for the stranger" (Benedict XVI, Homily, Christmas Mass during the Night, 24 December 2012).

These words of Pope Benedict XVI remain a timely reminder that on earth, there is no room for God if there is no room for the human person. To refuse one is to refuse the other. Yet, where there is room for the human person, there is room for God; even a stable can become more sacred than a temple, and the womb of the Virgin Mary become the Ark of the New Covenant.

Let us marvel, dear brothers and sisters, at the wisdom of Christmas. In the Child Jesus, God gives the world a new life: his own, offered for all. He does not give us a clever solution to every problem, but a love story that draws us in. In response to the expectations of peoples, he sends a child

to be a word of hope. In the face of the suffering of the poor, he sends one who is defenseless to be the strength to rise again. Before violence and oppression, he kindles a gentle light that illumines with salvation all the children of this world. As Saint Augustine observed, "human pride weighed

you down so heavily that only divine humility could raise you up again" (Saint Augustine, Sermon 188, III, 3). While a distorted economy leads us to treat human beings as mere merchandise, God becomes like us, revealing the infinite dignity of every person. While humanity seeks to become "god" in order to dominate others, God chooses to become man in order to free us from every form of slavery. Will this love be enough to change our history?

The answer will come as soon as we wake up from a deadly night into the light of new life, and, like the shepherds, contemplate the Child Jesus. Above the stable of Bethlehem, where Mary and Joseph watch over the newborn Child with hearts full of wonder, the starry sky is transformed into "a multitude of the heavenly host" (Lk 2:13). These are unarmed and disarming hosts, for they sing of the glory of God, of which peace on earth is the true manifestation (cf. v. 14). Indeed, in the heart of Christ beats the bond of love that unites heaven and earth, Creator and creatures.

For this reason, exactly one year ago, Pope Francis affirmed that the Nativity of Jesus rekindles in us the "gift and task of bringing hope wherever hope has been lost," because "with him, joy flourishes; with him, life changes; with him, hope does not disappoint" (Homily, Christmas Mass during the Night, 24 December 2024). With these words, the Holy Year began. Now, as the Jubilee draws to a close, Christmas becomes for us a time of gratitude and mission; gratitude for the gift received, and mission to bear witness to it before the world. As the Psalmist sings: "Tell of his salvation from day to day. Declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous deeds among all the peoples" (Ps 96:2–3).

Brothers and sisters, contemplation of the Word made flesh awakens in the whole Church a new and true proclamation. Let us therefore announce the joy of Christmas, which is a feast of faith, charity and hope. It is a feast of faith, because God becomes man, born of the Virgin. It is a feast of charity, because the gift of the redeeming Son is realized in fraternal self-giving. It is a feast of hope, because the Child Jesus kindles it within us, making us messengers of peace. With these virtues in our hearts, unafraid of the night, we can go forth to meet the dawn of a new day.

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null / Credit: Rawpixel.com/ShutterstockWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Dec 24, 2025 / 08:00 am (CNA).Abortion clinic workers across the country are once again receiving Christmas cards from religious sisters offering prayers, compassion, and an invitation to seek a career outside the abortion industry.And Then There Were None (ATTWN), a pro-life organization dedicated to assisting abortion clinic workers leave their jobs and find life-affirming careers, carries out this ministry each Christmas season with help from convents around the country. The Christmas card project is a part of a larger mission of handwritten cards sent throughout the year.This year, Dominican, Maronite, Benedictine, Carmelite, Capuchin, and Franciscan sisters, as well as Apostolic Sisters of St. John and Trinitarians of Mary, sent at least 1,030 handwritten Christmas cards to abortion clinic workers with loving messages and an image of the Holy Family. Reaching 'quitters'ATTWN has sent nearly 23,000 hand...

null / Credit: Rawpixel.com/Shutterstock

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Dec 24, 2025 / 08:00 am (CNA).

Abortion clinic workers across the country are once again receiving Christmas cards from religious sisters offering prayers, compassion, and an invitation to seek a career outside the abortion industry.

And Then There Were None (ATTWN), a pro-life organization dedicated to assisting abortion clinic workers leave their jobs and find life-affirming careers, carries out this ministry each Christmas season with help from convents around the country. The Christmas card project is a part of a larger mission of handwritten cards sent throughout the year.

This year, Dominican, Maronite, Benedictine, Carmelite, Capuchin, and Franciscan sisters, as well as Apostolic Sisters of St. John and Trinitarians of Mary, sent at least 1,030 handwritten Christmas cards to abortion clinic workers with loving messages and an image of the Holy Family. 

Reaching 'quitters'

ATTWN has sent nearly 23,000 handwritten cards to abortion facilities in the last decade, encouraging workers to leave their jobs with ATTWN's support.

"The clinics are hearing from us about once every four to five business days in some way, whether it's through some gift, a little trinket, a handwritten card, a postcard, or something we send in," Abby Johnson, ATTWN CEO and founder, told CNA.

Johnson herself once worked in the industry, serving as a clinic director of an abortion facility in Bryan, Texas, for eight years before leaving and starting ATTWN to help other "quitters" leave, find new employment, and heal from their experiences.

"Our handwritten card ministry is one of the most effective ministries we have in reaching abortion clinic workers and having them leave," she said. "There's just something very personal about a handwritten note. Somebody took the time to sit down and write to you." 

ATTWN has "dozens and dozens" of volunteers who send the messages regularly, Johnson said. "We have a really accurate database of abortion clinics and abortion referral facilities. I think there's about 850 facilities on there, and this group of women are constantly writing notes." 

When workers receive the notes, "they leave," Johnson said. "Workers will say, 'I got this letter. I folded it up, I kept it in my purse, I put it in my scrub pocket, and I went home and I called you guys.' So it is very powerful. We see that it does truly make a difference."

"I received a handwritten note from one of my sidewalk counselors when I worked at the clinic, and I still have it in my wallet," Johnson said. "It's just a Bible verse on it, but it says, 'The Lord has done great things for us, and we are filled with joy.' And I still have that little card in my wallet from 18 years ago."

The note "meant enough at that time to keep it," Johnson said. "I pull it out and remind myself why I'm doing [pro-life work] and how God has blessed me so much. It's just a powerful reminder that someone out there took the time to think about you, specifically."

Christmas card ministry 

The letters create "by far the most overwhelming response … and we have the highest response from them at Christmastime, which is when they are receiving the notes from the sisters," Johnson said. 

Five years ago, Johnson decided to incorporate the Christmas season into the ministry, specifically with the help of religious sisters. 

"The idea came to me because I was very moved by a Franciscan sister who used to pray in front of the facility where I used to work in Bryan, Texas. It was the first time that I had ever seen a nun in public in my life."

"I was so struck by her being out there and her presence," she said. "It was so hot outside, and she was in her full habit, and her little face was so red. It was over 100 degrees. I remember I just watched her all day outside my window."

"I remember the first patient that left that day after having an abortion, she fell to her knees and was just weeping. I thought: 'Wow, this has really impacted her in a way that I just can't understand. She has a sorrow that I just don't understand.'"

"That's always stayed with me ever since I was working there … So when we started the ministry,  we started thinking: 'How could we incorporate nuns in some way?'" 

If workers started speaking with religious sisters, it could "make an impact on their heart," Johnson thought. "We started reaching out to convents across the country, asking them if they would partner with us."

Several reached back out to ATTWN and eagerly wanted to be a part of the project.

A 'perfect partnership'

ATTWN shares its database of clinics with the sisters, "then they just start writing," Johnson said. "It's just been really beautiful to see the fruit of that."

Some of the participating sisters live in cloistered convents. "They don't go out. They spend their lives in contemplative prayer," Johnson said. "So their only real correspondence is through mail, through writing. So it's beautiful work for them."

"This is what they do. They write notes, they send letters, they pray. That's what they do all day long. So it's a perfect ministry for them. It's a perfect partnership."

ATTWN will send the sister some ideas of what they can write so they know the proper resources to share with the workers, but then they can add any additional messages.

"They fill in other things that they would like to say, different spiritual things that they feel led to say," Johnson said. Their messages are "from their hearts and are just so prayerful and beautiful."

After the sisters write the Christmas cards, they are "put on the altar, they're blessed, they're prayed over, and they're sent in."

"We always make sure that we send them a card that has the image of the Holy Family on it. We just want to remind them that that's what God wants for them, and this is what Christmas is about — it's about the Lord."

The image is a reminder that "this is what we're designed for," Johnson said. "We're designed for families, and God wants families for them as well. He wants families for the women who are walking into those clinics." 

"He created us for good, for family, for love, and for creation, not for destruction. We make sure that the cards that we send in have an image that really defines that."

Johnson plans for ATTWN to continue to send the annual cards from the sisters. "For so many of these convents, being pro-life is a part of who they are. It's part of their charism," she said. "So we would love to have as many as we can participate.

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Olive Scout Troop Christmas Carnival in Old Damascus, 2025. / Credit: ACI MENAACI MENA, Dec 24, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).In a scene reflecting Syrians' deep longing for life and joy after long years of suffering, Christmas celebrations continue across various regions of Syria, carrying messages of hope that transcend divisions and wounds. These festive atmospheres coincided with the official repeal of the Caesar Act, U.S.-imposed sanctions on Syria, which propels the country into a time of rebuilding its economy and securing the basic requirements for a dignified life for its citizens.Among the most prominent Christmas events this week was the organization of a Christmas carnival by the Roman Melkite Olive Scout Troop in Old Damascus. A majestic procession toured the ancient streets with the participation of hundreds of people accompanied by handcrafted Christmas figures, decorated vehicles, brass band performances, and the display of both church and national flags. Arch...

Olive Scout Troop Christmas Carnival in Old Damascus, 2025. / Credit: ACI MENA

ACI MENA, Dec 24, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).

In a scene reflecting Syrians' deep longing for life and joy after long years of suffering, Christmas celebrations continue across various regions of Syria, carrying messages of hope that transcend divisions and wounds. 

These festive atmospheres coincided with the official repeal of the Caesar Act, U.S.-imposed sanctions on Syria, which propels the country into a time of rebuilding its economy and securing the basic requirements for a dignified life for its citizens.

Among the most prominent Christmas events this week was the organization of a Christmas carnival by the Roman Melkite Olive Scout Troop in Old Damascus. 

A majestic procession toured the ancient streets with the participation of hundreds of people accompanied by handcrafted Christmas figures, decorated vehicles, brass band performances, and the display of both church and national flags. Archimandrite Michel Deirani told ACI MENA, CNA's Arabic-language news partner, that the aim of these initiatives is to "plant joy in the hearts of children and help them live in peace, overcoming the effects of wars and upheavals that have burdened the world."

Patriarch John X visits Mar Elias Church in Doueilaa, Damascus. Credit: Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch and All the East
Patriarch John X visits Mar Elias Church in Doueilaa, Damascus. Credit: Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch and All the East

The celebrations were not limited to the capital. The village of Qinniyeh in the Idlib countryside witnessed the lighting of its Christmas tree and Nativity scene for the first time in 14 years. A Christmas market was also inaugurated in Tartous through a non-ecclesial initiative. 

In the same context, the Joy Choir, with its various age groups, continued presenting its customary hymn evenings in Damascus and Yabroud, leaving a positive impression on attendees including the acting head of the European Union delegation to Syria, Michael Ohnmacht, who remarked that the choir is "true to its name" and succeeded in embodying Syria's true image.

Despite widespread praise for the heightened security measures accompanying the celebrations, troubling incidents emerged, including the burning of a Christmas tree in the Al-Adawiya district of Homs and another attempted arson in Al-Qusayr, in addition to the theft of a bronze statue of St. Paul in Bab Kisan. 

Controversy also arose over a social media post by Wael Hamza, director general of the Syrian General Organization for Books, who asked via Facebook not to be congratulated on the holidays — an unusual stance for a government official.

In the lead-up to Christmas, the Church did not forget its martyrs. John X Yazigi, Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, visited Mar Elias Church, which had previously been targeted by a bombing, to review the rehabilitation work underway. 

Though the Caesar Act has been repealed, Syria remains subject to U.S. oversight related to counterterrorism efforts, the removal of foreign fighters, and the protection of minorities. In this context, 134 Republican members of the U.S. Congress signed a statement affirming their commitment to monitoring the new Syrian administration, stressing that violations against Christians and other minorities must become a thing of the past.

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

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U.S. Vice President JD Vance. / Credit: Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia CommonsCNA Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 14:27 pm (CNA).U.S. Vice President JD Vance, America's second Catholic vice president, laid out a distinctly Christian vision for American politics in a speech this week, declaring that "the only thing that has truly served as an anchor of the United States of America is that we have been and, by the grace of God, we always will be a Christian nation."Speaking to more than 30,000 young conservatives at Turning Point USA's AmFest 2025 some three months after the death of TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk, Vance called for a politics rooted in a Christian faith that honors the family, protects the weak, and rejects what he described as a decades-long "war" on Christianity in public life.The Christian faith has provided a "shared moral language" since the nation's founding, the Yale-trained lawyer argued, which led to "our understanding of natural law and rights, our sense ...

U.S. Vice President JD Vance. / Credit: Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

CNA Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 14:27 pm (CNA).

U.S. Vice President JD Vance, America's second Catholic vice president, laid out a distinctly Christian vision for American politics in a speech this week, declaring that "the only thing that has truly served as an anchor of the United States of America is that we have been and, by the grace of God, we always will be a Christian nation."

Speaking to more than 30,000 young conservatives at Turning Point USA's AmFest 2025 some three months after the death of TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk, Vance called for a politics rooted in a Christian faith that honors the family, protects the weak, and rejects what he described as a decades-long "war" on Christianity in public life.

The Christian faith has provided a "shared moral language" since the nation's founding, the Yale-trained lawyer argued, which led to "our understanding of natural law and rights, our sense of duty to one's neighbor, the conviction that the strong must protect the weak, and the belief in individual conscience."

"Christianity is America's creed," the vice president said to loud cheers, while acknowledging that not everyone needs to be a Christian and "we must respect each individual's pathway" to God. Even so, he said, "even our famously American idea of religious liberty is a Christian concept." 

Vance described how, over the past several decades, "freedom of religion transformed into freedom from religion" as a result of the cultural assault on Christian faith from those on "the left" who have "labored to push Christianity out of national life. They've kicked it out of the schools, out of the workplace, out of the fundamental parts of the public square."

He continued: "And in a public square devoid of God, we got a vacuum. And the ideas that filled that void preyed on the very worst of human nature rather than uplifting it."

Vance said cultural voices opposed to Christian faith "told us not that we were children of God, but children of this or that identity group. They replaced God's beautiful design for the family that men and women could rely on … with the idea that men could turn into women so long as they bought the right bunch of pills from Big Pharma." 

The former U.S. senator and Catholic convert credited President Donald Trump for ending the cultural "war that has been waged on Christians and Christianity in the United States of America," touting the administration's policy priorities as the fruit of Christian motivation.

"We help older Americans in retirement, including by ending taxes on Social Security, because we believe in honoring your father and mother rather than shipping all of their money off to Ukraine," he said. "We believe in taking care of the poor, which is why we have Medicaid, so that the least among us can afford their prescriptions or to take their kids to see a doctor."

Speaking of the despair he felt after the assassination of Kirk, his friend and TPUSA founder, he said: "What saved me was realizing that the story of the Christian faith … is one of immense loss followed by even bigger victory. It's a story of very dark nights followed by very bright dawns. What saved me was remembering the inherent goodness of God and that his grace overflows when we least expect it."

Of masculinity, Vance said: "The fruits of true Christianity are good husbands, patient fathers, builders of great things, and slayers of dragons. And yes, men who are willing to die for a principle if that's what God asked them to do."

He described how he saw the fruits of Christian men living out their faith during a recent visit to a men's ministry that aids those who struggle with addiction and homelessness: "They feed them. They clothe them. They give them shelter and financial advice. They live out the very best part of Christ's commission."

After eating lunch with some of the men who were "all back on their feet" after receiving help, Vance said he saw that the answer to "What saved them?" was not "racial commonality or grievance … a DEI prep course" or "a welfare check."

"It was the fact that a carpenter died 2,000 years ago and changed the world in the process." 

"A true Christian politics," Vance said, "cannot just be about the protection of the unborn or the promotion of the family. As important as those things absolutely are, it must be at the heart of our full understanding of government." 

On immigration policy, Vance has challenged U.S. bishops, popes

The vice president has publicly disagreed with the U.S. bishops on their reaction to the Trump administration's immigration policies, as well as with Pope Leo XIV and the late Pope Francis, who seemed to criticize Vance in a letter the pontiff penned to the U.S. bishops last winter. 

In defense of the adminisration's approach to immigration, Vance had in a late January interview invoked an "old school … Christian concept" he later identified as the "ordo amoris," or "rightly ordered love." 

He said that according to the concept, one's "compassion belongs first" to one's family and fellow citizens, "and then after that" to the rest of the world.

After Pope Leo XIV on Nov. 18 asked Americans to listen to U.S. bishops' message opposing "the indiscriminate mass deportation of people" and urging the humane treatment of migrants, Vance countered: "Border security is not just good for American citizens. It is the humanitarian thing to do for the entire world."

Vance continued: "Open borders" do not promote "[human] dignity, even of the illegal migrants themselves," citing drug and sex trafficking.

"When you empower the cartels and when you empower the human traffickers, whether in the United States or anywhere else, you're empowering the very worst people in the world," Vance said.

In this week's AmFest speech, Vance touted the administration's successes regarding immigration: "December marks seven months straight of zero releases at the southern border. More than 2.5 million illegal immigrants have left the United States. The first time in over 50 years that we have had negative net migration."

At the end of the speech, Vance told the thousands of young people that while "only God can promise you salvation in heaven" if they have faith in God, "I promise you closed borders and safe communities. I promise you good jobs and a dignified life … together, we can fulfill the promise of the greatest nation in the history of the earth."

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Pope Leo meets with Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker in November 2025. / Credit: Courtesy of the Office of Gov. JB PritzkerCastel Gandolfo, Italy, Dec 23, 2025 / 14:55 pm (CNA).Pope Leo XIV appealed to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker to veto a bill legalizing assisted suicide during a Vatican meeting last month, the pope told reporters Tuesday.The pope, responding to a question from Rudolf Gehrig of EWTN News, said he made his opposition to the bill clear in the November conversation with the governor. Leo told Pritzker it was important to defend the value of life and that every life is sacred, the pope told reporters outside the papal villa of Castel Gandolfo before his return to Rome.The Vatican had not earlier provided details of the meeting.Pritzker signed the assisted suicide measure, ardently opposed by Catholic leaders, into law Dec. 12."I spoke very explicitly with Gov. Pritzker about that," the pope said, and he said Cardinal Blase Cupich also expressed his views. "But we were...

Pope Leo meets with Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker in November 2025. / Credit: Courtesy of the Office of Gov. JB Pritzker

Castel Gandolfo, Italy, Dec 23, 2025 / 14:55 pm (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV appealed to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker to veto a bill legalizing assisted suicide during a Vatican meeting last month, the pope told reporters Tuesday.

The pope, responding to a question from Rudolf Gehrig of EWTN News, said he made his opposition to the bill clear in the November conversation with the governor. 

Leo told Pritzker it was important to defend the value of life and that every life is sacred, the pope told reporters outside the papal villa of Castel Gandolfo before his return to Rome.

The Vatican had not earlier provided details of the meeting.

Pritzker signed the assisted suicide measure, ardently opposed by Catholic leaders, into law Dec. 12.

"I spoke very explicitly with Gov. Pritzker about that," the pope said, and he said Cardinal Blase Cupich also expressed his views. "But we were very clear about the necessity to respect the sacredness of life from the very beginning to the very end. And unfortunately, for different reasons, he decided to sign that bill. Very disappointed about that."

People should use Christmastime to think about the value of life, the pope added.

"I would invite all people, especially in this Christmas feast days, to reflect upon the nature of human life, the goodness of human life. God became human like us to show us what it means really to live human life. And I hope and pray that the respect for life will once again grow in all moments of human existence, from conception to natural death," the pope said.

Catholic bishops had objected to the Illinois law.

"This law ignores the very real failures in access to quality care that drive vulnerable people to despair," according to the Catholic Conference of Illinois. "It does nothing to ensure patients are offered services, protected from coercion, or surrounded by loved ones when they kill themselves." 

Several states and countries also have advanced legislation to expand access to physician-assisted suicide besides Illinois.

Other U.S. jurisdictions with assisted suicide laws include California, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, and the District of Columbia. 

Pope Leo XIV tells reporters Dec. 23, 2025, that he appealed to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzer to veto a bill legalizing assisted suicide during a Vatican meeting in November. Credit: EWTN News
Pope Leo XIV tells reporters Dec. 23, 2025, that he appealed to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzer to veto a bill legalizing assisted suicide during a Vatican meeting in November. Credit: EWTN News

British lawmakers in the House of Commons passed a bill in June to legalize assisted suicide for terminally ill patients in England and Wales. Legislators in Uruguay passed a bill in August to legalize euthanasia in the country.

A Canadian law allowing medical assistance in dying led to disproportionately high rates of premature deaths among vulnerable groups, a report showed.

Rudolf Gehrig contributed to this story.

This story was updated at 3:15 p.m. ET on Dec. 23, 2025, with the quotations from the pope.

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null / Credit: hyotographics/ShutterstockACI Prensa Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 15:25 pm (CNA).Nigerian authorities have confirmed that 130 students and teachers kidnapped in November from a Catholic school in Nigeria have been released.According to the Associated Press (AP), Wasiu Abiodun, a police spokesperson for Nigeria's Niger state, said "the remaining batch of the abducted students" were released, in addition to the first 50 who managed to escape shortly after the abduction and another 100 who were freed in early December.At least 303 students and 12 teachers were kidnapped on Nov. 21 at St. Mary's Catholic Primary and Secondary Schools.Sunday Dare, spokesperson for Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, stated on X that with the 130 released, there are "none left in captivity."However, Abiodun said there are still 35 students and teachers unaccounted for and "further details will be communicated" concerning them.According to Bayo Onanuga, another figure close to the Nigerian p...

null / Credit: hyotographics/Shutterstock

ACI Prensa Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 15:25 pm (CNA).

Nigerian authorities have confirmed that 130 students and teachers kidnapped in November from a Catholic school in Nigeria have been released.

According to the Associated Press (AP), Wasiu Abiodun, a police spokesperson for Nigeria's Niger state, said "the remaining batch of the abducted students" were released, in addition to the first 50 who managed to escape shortly after the abduction and another 100 who were freed in early December.

At least 303 students and 12 teachers were kidnapped on Nov. 21 at St. Mary's Catholic Primary and Secondary Schools.

Sunday Dare, spokesperson for Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, stated on X that with the 130 released, there are "none left in captivity."

However, Abiodun said there are still 35 students and teachers unaccounted for and "further details will be communicated" concerning them.

According to Bayo Onanuga, another figure close to the Nigerian president, the release was the result of "a military intelligence-driven operation."

The AP reported that no organization has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping, which is attributed by local residents to armed groups that profit from this practice.

The Church's gratitude

The Nigerian Diocese of Kontagora, to which the attacked school belongs, issued a statement on Dec. 21 announcing that "the release of the second batch of those abducted from St. Mary's Catholic Primary and Secondary Schools, Papiri, has been confirmed as of Sunday, Dec. 21."

"We are profoundly grateful to the federal government of Nigeria, the Niger state government, the security agencies, and all other partners whose efforts and interventions contributed to the safe release of the victims," ??the diocese said.

"We also extend our sincere appreciation to the parents, guardians, clergy, religious communities, humanitarian organizations, and the wider public for their prayers, support, and solidarity throughout this challenging period," the diocese added.

The diocese explained that "further updates and additional information, as may be necessary, will be communicated to the public in a timely manner, through the appropriate and authorized channels to ensure accuracy, transparency, and clarity in all official statements."

"The diocese remains committed to keeping all stakeholders fully informed as the situation develops and verification processes are completed," it stated.

"May the Lord grant the swift release of those still in captivity and continue to protect his people from all dangers," the diocesan statement concludes.

On Dec. 22, the diocese shared on its Facebook page photographs showing the meeting of the released children and teachers with "Gov. Umar Bago of Niger state, the vicar general [Father Musa John Gado], traditional leaders, and some government officials."

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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Rome's International Conference on Human Trafficking was held at the Pontifical Gregorian University on Dec. 10, 2025. / Credit: EWTN News/ScreenshotRome Newsroom, Dec 23, 2025 / 15:55 pm (CNA).Fifty million people are currently being trafficked around the world, according to the 2023 Global Slavery Index, driving over $236 billion into the hands of criminals, with numbers continuing to rise.The 2024 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report documented that between 2019 and 2022 the number of identified trafficking victims increased by 25%, forced labor rose by 47%, and the number of child victims rose by 31%, with a dominating 38% increase in girls. Earlier this month, the Sovereign Order of Malta, Praeveni Global, the Santa Marta Group, and the Institute of Anthropology of the Pontifical Gregorian University organized an international conference in Rome to discuss prevention efforts, strengthen collaboration, and promote comprehensive action plans. Con...

Rome's International Conference on Human Trafficking was held at the Pontifical Gregorian University on Dec. 10, 2025. / Credit: EWTN News/Screenshot

Rome Newsroom, Dec 23, 2025 / 15:55 pm (CNA).

Fifty million people are currently being trafficked around the world, according to the 2023 Global Slavery Index, driving over $236 billion into the hands of criminals, with numbers continuing to rise.

The 2024 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report documented that between 2019 and 2022 the number of identified trafficking victims increased by 25%, forced labor rose by 47%, and the number of child victims rose by 31%, with a dominating 38% increase in girls. 

Earlier this month, the Sovereign Order of Malta, Praeveni Global, the Santa Marta Group, and the Institute of Anthropology of the Pontifical Gregorian University organized an international conference in Rome to discuss prevention efforts, strengthen collaboration, and promote comprehensive action plans. 

Conference panelists included law enforcement, activists, United Nations rapporteurs, and human rights experts as well as appearances from Cardinal Fabio Baggio, the undersecretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, and Pam Bondi, attorney general for the U.S. Department of Justice.

Reem Alsalem, U.N. special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, speaks about how human trafficking and pornography are often interconnected at the anthropology institute of the Pontifical Gregorian University's international conference in Rome on human trafficking on Dec. 11, 2025. Credit: Screenshot from EWTN TV video footage
Reem Alsalem, U.N. special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, speaks about how human trafficking and pornography are often interconnected at the anthropology institute of the Pontifical Gregorian University's international conference in Rome on human trafficking on Dec. 11, 2025. Credit: Screenshot from EWTN TV video footage

Survivor testimony

Among those participating in the conference was Karla De la Cuesta, who was rescued alongside other girls from the hands of her traffickers in Mexico.

"We were victims of human trafficking in different ways," De la Cuesta told EWTN News, explaining that their forms of exploitation included "abuse, sexual exploitation, labor slavery, torture, unlawful deprivation of liberty, forced marriages, forced abortions — multiple crimes committed against us."

It was thanks to the intervention of Interpol (International Criminal Police Organization) that De la Cuesta's alleged perpetrators were caught and the girls were able to return home. 

After becoming a lawyer and an activist, De la Cuesta studied her own case file in great depth. More than 10 victims had testified before authorities in her case, but those authorities did not act in accordance with the law or open proper investigations into their cases. This led De la Cuesta to write a book: "All in the Light: The Criminal Case that Mexico Left in the Darkness."

"I [wrote] about all of this analysis I carried out as a lawyer and activist, hand-in-hand with other experts, where I specifically laid out all of these … omissions on the part of the authorities."

The publications of De la Cuesta's findings didn't come without repercussions. "The Mexican state brought against me great retaliation, brutal attacks," she said. "Which is why in less than six months after the publication of my book, I had to leave my country and now I live in Spain seeking international protection."

De la Cuesta highlighted that the existence of safeguarding laws is not enough — the laws need to be enforced.

"In my country, we have a wonderful law, but in reality, it does not end up addressing the actual needs," she stated. "There is no proper prevention, no proper prosecution, and no proper protection for the victims."

De la Cuesta said no one should ever have to endure what survivors of human trafficking have lived through. While the harm cannot be undone, she emphasized that resilience is still possible, even in the face of pain that often lasts a lifetime. 

"We can indeed make flowers grow from these wounds," she said.

Karla De la Cuesta, a survivor of human trafficking and now an activist and lawyer, spoke at an international conference in Rome at the Pontifical Gregorian University to discuss trafficking prevention efforts Dec. 11, 2025. Credit: Screenshot from EWTN TV video footage
Karla De la Cuesta, a survivor of human trafficking and now an activist and lawyer, spoke at an international conference in Rome at the Pontifical Gregorian University to discuss trafficking prevention efforts Dec. 11, 2025. Credit: Screenshot from EWTN TV video footage

Trafficking and pornography go together

The trafficking of children is increasing globally. Not only is it an issue across borders but also in places where children should feel their safest — at home. 

A member of the conference panel, Reem Alsalem, U.N. special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, spoke about how human trafficking and pornography are often interconnected.

"Pornography is a system of online prostitution," Alsalem said. "So by definition it is exploitative, abusive, and preys on women and girls. Some of the violence and abuse that they're exposed to happens also through trafficking. They are trafficked for the purpose of being sexually exploited in pornography."

Alsalem refuted the widely used argument that consuming consensual pornography is the better option.

"Many digital platforms and businesses involved in pornography, first of all, use nonconsensual material; second, many of the women and children that appear in these images and material have been coerced, have been forced, have been threatened and again, as we said, especially the adults have not consented to this, even after they have requested that this material be removed many of these platforms have refused to do so," she said.

'Written into the Gospel'

Another panelist at the conference was pyschologist and theologian Father Hans Zollner, director of the Institute of Anthropology at the Pontifical Gregorian University. The Jesuit priest is known for his work in the field of safeguarding against sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.

Father Hans Zollner, SJ, a psychologist and theologian, and the director of the Institute of Anthropology at the Pontifical Gregorian University, is known for his outstanding work in the field of safeguarding against sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. Credit: Screenshot from EWTN TV video footage
Father Hans Zollner, SJ, a psychologist and theologian, and the director of the Institute of Anthropology at the Pontifical Gregorian University, is known for his outstanding work in the field of safeguarding against sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. Credit: Screenshot from EWTN TV video footage

"What we need to do … is to understand that child protection or the safeguarding of all people is something that is written into the Gospel," he told conference participants. He said he believes the Church has made a lot of progress in the last 12 years in terms of supporting victims, especially those who have been subject to clergy abuse.

"If we understood it better and if it was integrated better and more wholeheartedly, that would also come with an openness to listening to stories of victims who want to share with us their life experience," he said.

Zollner continued to say that evil has been in the world since the beginning of humanity and that there is no salvation from crime and sins except in the perspective of our future in heaven.

"Jesus Christ himself has been a victim of violence," Zollner said. "And he suffered death because he was unjustly treated."

"So we believe that he has risen, and that gives us hope that with all the evil that is happening today we still have some hope, some perspective — that this is not the end of it, that the violence and harm we do to each other as human beings is not the last word."

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The Berlaymont building in Brussels, seat of the European Commission. / Credit: EmDee/Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 4.0)ACI Prensa Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 16:25 pm (CNA).The European Commission has decided to withdraw funding from the Federation of Catholic Family Associations in Europe (FAFCE), an organization founded in 1997 to promote and defend the family, based on marriage between a man and a woman, before European institutions.The decision comes at a time when the European Union has recently given the green light to initiatives that promote so-called abortion tourism financed by European funds and the imposition of the recognition of homosexual unions on all member states.In contrast, funding is being denied to this Brussels-based Catholic federation, which brings together 33 associations from 20 European countries and is currently active with EU institutions, the Council of Europe, and the U.N.At the end of November, the EU froze the funds allocated to projects submitted by FAFCE wi...

The Berlaymont building in Brussels, seat of the European Commission. / Credit: EmDee/Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 4.0)

ACI Prensa Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 16:25 pm (CNA).

The European Commission has decided to withdraw funding from the Federation of Catholic Family Associations in Europe (FAFCE), an organization founded in 1997 to promote and defend the family, based on marriage between a man and a woman, before European institutions.

The decision comes at a time when the European Union has recently given the green light to initiatives that promote so-called abortion tourism financed by European funds and the imposition of the recognition of homosexual unions on all member states.

In contrast, funding is being denied to this Brussels-based Catholic federation, which brings together 33 associations from 20 European countries and is currently active with EU institutions, the Council of Europe, and the U.N.

At the end of November, the EU froze the funds allocated to projects submitted by FAFCE without providing an explanation, even though several of them were aimed at protecting minors from pornography or promoting digital security, areas that the union itself considers priorities.

The president of FAFCE, Vincenzo Bassi, said the European Union's rejection is based on the federation's alleged shortcomings related to its approach to gender and equality, criteria promoted by the EU itself. 

In a statement to ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner, Bassi noted that his organization is subject to systematic discrimination, since it seems that "the family experience is not compatible with the values ??of the European Union."

This rejection, Bassi emphasized, "is not due to technical issues but to an explicit ideological prejudice," because the European Union does not conceive of the family "as a relevant social actor."

Furthermore, he warned of a broader process of ideological imposition and encroachment on sovereign nations' own laws in areas such as abortion, family, and identity. The EU's objective, he explained, is to "transform policy decisions into legal decisions in order to impose them on member states."

As the FAFCE president explained, through so-called soft law — nonbinding resolutions that create legal consensus — the EU is encroaching on sovereign nations' own laws that the treaties reserve exclusively for the states, especially in matters such as family or abortion. This would allow, for example, pressure to be exerted on countries with more restrictive legislation, alleging violations of the "rule of law."

Bassi said this shift represents an abandonment of the original spirit of the EU's founding fathers, who "envisioned European integration based on social cohesion and the strengthening of families."

Instead, the Italian leader criticized that today a "bureaucratic model" prevails, one that "wants to teach my grandmother how to cook pasta" instead of providing the means for a better life.

Despite the seriousness of the financial situation — since, as he pointed out "without the Catholic community, we run the risk of not being able to continue" — Bassi remains optimistic. He said he believes that Europe's demographic winter and internal contradictions are creating a favorable environment "for a serious debate about the family." His goal, he noted, is not to confront the European Union but to propose an alternative truly emerging from the people, faithful to Europe's roots and vocation.

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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After delaying restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass for three months, Bishop Michael Martin said in a Sept. 26, 2025, letter that the Chapel of the Little Flower in the St. Therese Parish in Mooresville, North Carolina, which was recently renovated by the diocese and can seat just over 350 people, will have two Masses each Sunday and on holy days of obligation, / Credit: Diocese of CharlotteCNA Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 16:55 pm (CNA).Priests as well as the lay faithful are voicing criticisms after Bishop Michael Martin of the Diocese of Charlotte, North Carolina, issued a pastoral letter last week prohibiting the use of altar rails and kneelers in the reception of Communion in the diocese.In the Dec. 17 letter, Martin said that by Jan. 16, 2026, the use of altar rails, kneelers, and prie-dieus (movable kneelers) will no longer be permitted in the diocese, and any "temporary or movable fixtures used for kneeling for the reception of Communion" must be removed.In the letter, M...

After delaying restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass for three months, Bishop Michael Martin said in a Sept. 26, 2025, letter that the Chapel of the Little Flower in the St. Therese Parish in Mooresville, North Carolina, which was recently renovated by the diocese and can seat just over 350 people, will have two Masses each Sunday and on holy days of obligation, / Credit: Diocese of Charlotte

CNA Staff, Dec 23, 2025 / 16:55 pm (CNA).

Priests as well as the lay faithful are voicing criticisms after Bishop Michael Martin of the Diocese of Charlotte, North Carolina, issued a pastoral letter last week prohibiting the use of altar rails and kneelers in the reception of Communion in the diocese.

In the Dec. 17 letter, Martin said that by Jan. 16, 2026, the use of altar rails, kneelers, and prie-dieus (movable kneelers) will no longer be permitted in the diocese, and any "temporary or movable fixtures used for kneeling for the reception of Communion" must be removed.

In the letter, Martin said while an "individual member of the faithful" is free to kneel to receive and should not be denied Communion, the "normative posture for all the faithful in the United States is standing," per guidelines from the U.S. bishops.

In May, a leaked draft of a letter detailed Martin's intended reforms of traditional practices in the diocese. In the letter, the bishop said that because "there is no mention in the conciliar documents, the reform of the liturgy, or current liturgical documents concerning the use of altar rails or kneelers for the distribution of holy Communion, they are not to be employed in the Diocese of Charlotte."

Also in the May letter, Martin said it was "simply absurd" to suggest that "kneeling is more reverent than standing."

Martin said in his Dec.17 letter that it is his "intention to continue to facilitate 'peace and unity' in our liturgies."

A Charlotte priest who spoke to CNA on the condition of anonymity said of Martin's "heavy-handed" approach to reform: "Everybody's had it."

"If the priests of the diocese were asked for a vote of no confidence, a vast majority would vote that way," he said. 

"Unfortunately, Bishop Martin's style of leadership has been a source of division for the diocese since his arrival and there does not seem to be any course correction after many appeals. It has been painful for many across the diocese," he continued.

"Why is kneeling a problem? Why go to such lengths to force these changes?" he asked. Receiving communion is "the most intimate moment of the week for people, who are receiving their God. Why go through all this bad PR? I don't understand it."

"It's going to be a train wreck," he continued, speaking of the continued opposition to the bishop's reforms. 

He told CNA he is hopeful the matter will be addressed at the upcoming consistory of cardinals in Rome.

A letter by an anonymous canon lawyer also began circulating last week throughout the Charlotte Diocese in response to Martin's Dec. 17 letter.

In the anonymous letter, Martin is accused of ignoring the role of synodality in his decision-making. He is also accused of ignoring the feedback of his presbyteral council. 

Writing to Martin, the letter-writer told him that the "decision to prohibit altar rails and aids to kneeling relies on your own preference rather than the law or the tradition of the Church."

Matthew Hazell, a British liturgy scholar, told the National Catholic Register, CNA's sister news partner, in May that Martin's perspective was consistent with what Pope Benedict XVI famously described as a "hermeneutic of discontinuity and rupture." 

"Rather than allow the novus ordo to be celebrated in a manner in keeping with its own rubrics and with the Church's tradition, Bishop Martin seems to see it as an entirely new creation that cannot even be seen to have anything in common with what came before," Hazell told the Register.

Parishes that kneel reportedly provide lion's share of vocations

According to Brian Williams, an advocate for Charlotte's Traditional Latin Mass community, of the diocese's 44 seminarians, "at least 75% are from parishes where kneeling has been the practice to receive holy Communion."

Williams said his small parish, where kneeling is the norm, has produced seven seminarians recently. 

He told CNA that the "mega parishes that have embraced these liturgical changes" have provided "maybe two of the 44 seminarians even though they account for tens of thousands of families." 

One of the largest Catholic parishes in the country, St. Matthew Catholic Church, does not have altar rails. Willliams said there is "one seminarian from there right now, and not more than six men ordained from there in its entire history." 

"They do a lot of great things, but they're not providing vocations," Williams said.

In September, despite a great deal of pushback, Martin canceled the Traditional Latin Mass in all but one small chapel that is not large enough to house the diocese's burgeoning Latin Mass community. 

He initially tried to cancel the Mass several months earlier than the timeline set by his predecessor, Bishop Peter Jugis, but decided in the summer to allow the Mass to continue.

"It falls to every member of the body of Christ to facilitate unity in our celebrations. These norms for our diocese move us together toward the Church's vision for the fuller and more active participation of the faithful, especially emphasized by our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, at the beginning of his Petrine ministry," Martin wrote in the December letter.

In the May letter, Martin described how priestly vestments with too much lace or decoration would be prohibited in the diocese. That letter also decried the use of Latin in any Masses other than ones in which most of the attendees understand Latin, such as "a specific gathering of scholars, clergy, or those trained in classical music."

Martin said pastors who incorporate Latin into their Masses are not being "pastorally sensitive," writing that "the faithful's full, conscious, and active participation is hindered wherever Latin is employed." 

"Most of our faithful do not understand and will never comprehend the Latin language, especially those on the periphery. It is fallacious to think that if we employ Latin more frequently, the faithful will get used to it and finally understand it," he claimed. 

When Martin concelebrated the Mass with several other bishops this summer at a parish that traditionally kneels at an altar rail to receive, per his direction, Communion was distributed in front of the altar rail to discourage parishioners from kneeling. 

Nevertheless, a video showed parishioners kneeling anyway, many of them elderly women who needed assistance standing up after receiving.

The Diocese of Charlotte declined multiple requests for comment.

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The secretary-general of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Nigeria (CBCN), Father Michael Banjo. / Credit: Ijebu-Ode Catholic DioceseACI Africa, Dec 23, 2025 / 11:37 am (CNA).The secretary-general of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) has urged Nigerians to safeguard their future by making informed choices especially during elections and amid the country's security crisis.In his message for Christmas delivered during the festival of Lessons and Carols at the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria, Father Michael Banjo highlighted vices such as dishonesty, corruption, and exploitation as major obstacles to peace, warning of the dangers of ungodliness."If we want peace in Nigeria, we must stop trading our future for crumbs and begin to give glory to God by voting for leaders of integrity, compassion, and proven character, leaders who fear God and truly serve the common good," Banjo said during the Dec. 14 event.He added: "When leaders govern without fear of God, consci...

The secretary-general of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Nigeria (CBCN), Father Michael Banjo. / Credit: Ijebu-Ode Catholic Diocese

ACI Africa, Dec 23, 2025 / 11:37 am (CNA).

The secretary-general of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) has urged Nigerians to safeguard their future by making informed choices especially during elections and amid the country's security crisis.

In his message for Christmas delivered during the festival of Lessons and Carols at the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria, Father Michael Banjo highlighted vices such as dishonesty, corruption, and exploitation as major obstacles to peace, warning of the dangers of ungodliness.

"If we want peace in Nigeria, we must stop trading our future for crumbs and begin to give glory to God by voting for leaders of integrity, compassion, and proven character, leaders who fear God and truly serve the common good," Banjo said during the Dec. 14 event.

He added: "When leaders govern without fear of God, conscience gives way to selfishness, injustice grows unchecked, and violence finds room to thrive."

Banjo said peace is impossible where power is exercised without accountability, wealth is pursued without conscience, and authority is claimed without service. He faulted Nigerians who compromise their civic duty for short-term gain.

"There can be no peace when we sell our votes for a bag of rice or a few naira, or choose leaders based on tribe, religion, or region rather than character, competence, and commitment to the common good," he said.

"When elections are traded for personal benefit, conscience is sacrificed for convenience, and truth is exchanged for loyalty to narrow interests, we deny God the glory he deserves," he added. "Where God is not honored in our civic responsibility, peace cannot endure."

Banjo attributed the ongoing security challenges in Africa's most populous nation to widespread ungodliness, noting that many Nigerians have sidelined the glory of God in their actions and prioritized vices that threaten the country's future.

"For too long, persistent killings, abductions, and targeted violence affecting many communities, particularly Christian communities, have been met with silence, denial, or half-measures," he said.

Reflecting on the U.S. intervention to the security challenge in the country, Banjo said it is unfortunate that Nigeria had to wait for external voices before treating the problem of insecurity with the seriousness it deserves.

"Protecting life is not a favor prompted by foreign pressure; it is the primary duty of the government," he said. "Every Nigerian life matters regardless of whether he or she is a Christian or Muslim." 

Banjo warned that true peace cannot exist when personal gain comes at the expense of honesty and integrity. He warned that engaging in fraudulent or exploitative practices may bring temporary benefits, but they fail to glorify God and cannot provide lasting peace.

"There can be no peace within us when money is made through fraud, corruption, or exploitation," Banjo said.

"If you sell tomatoes in the market and hide rotten ones under fresh ones, or tamper with fuel meters so customers pay for more than they receive, you may gain temporarily, but you do not honor God," he explained. "And what does not give glory to God cannot give peace."

He also highlighted the importance of forgiveness and respect in families, noting that peace disappears where resentment, violence, or disrespect prevail.

"There can be no peace in our homes when couples and family members refuse to forgive. When past wrongs are constantly recalled, or when a husband is violent or a wife openly disrespects her husband, love is destroyed, trust is broken, and the home becomes a place of fear," he explained.

In a situation where forgiveness, love, and mutual respect prevail, the priest said, God is honored and peace is enshrined.

The secretary-general of the Catholic bishops in Nigeria emphasized that a nation that honors God by protecting every human life is a nation where peace can take root.

"It is precisely in the face of the painful realities confronting our nation that the message of Christmas must be clearly heard," he said. "The mystery of the Incarnation assures us that we are not alone. God is Emmanuel. He is truly with us."

He added: "It is no coincidence that we chose to celebrate our Christmas carols on this Third Sunday of Advent, Gaudete Sunday, when the Church calls us to rejoice even in the midst of hardship. To rejoice is to refuse despair."

"It is to carry hope within us and to become a sign of hope for others. We rejoice when we choose gratitude over bitterness, when families still pray together despite empty pockets, when we share the little we have with those who do not have, and when we remain warm and compassionate to one another," he said.

This story was first published by ACI Africa, CNA's news partner in Africa, and has been adapted by CNA.

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