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San Diego Cardinal Robert McElroy…

San Diego Cardinal Robert McElroy sharply criticized the Eternal Word Television Network, the conservative Catholic U.S. media conglomerate, in an interview with Spanish magazine Vida Nueva published on March 24. 

Vida Nueva asked McElroy about the decision of newly installed Bishop Fernando Prado of San Sebastián, Spain, to ban diocesan television from carrying content produced by EWTN. Prado wrote that he made the decision « trying to support the communion of the diocese with the Successor of Peter. »

« I would not have EWTN on diocesan media either, » McElroy responded.

« EWTN worries me because it represents a giant of economic and cultural power connected to a religious viewpoint that is fundamentally critical of the pope, » the cardinal said. 

« The main anchors of the channel constantly minimize the abilities and theological knowledge of Francis, cite Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò’s slander of the pope and try to move the world away from the reforms the pope is signaling, » said McElroy. 

Viganò, a former Vatican ambassador to the U.S., has called on Francis to resign the papacy.

McElroy said that Francis has encountered so much opposition because of his « intention of completing the work of the Second Vatican Council, » as well as his « constant inclusion of the experiences and spiritual points of view of the Global South at the center of the life of the church. »

In the U.S., McElroy said that this opposition is exacerbated by Catholics’ worries that « the pope is open to exploring paths of pastoral action in the church that are not prohibited by existing doctrinal formulations. »

« Francis’ attention is centered on the life of the believer in its complexity and on how the Gospel and the tradition of the church can apply in an effective and compassionate way to the lives of those who struggle ardently to draw close to God and follow his path in the midst of so many challenges, » said McElroy.

This focus of Francis « doesn’t have the clarity and security that many have come to trust in their understanding of the faith, » said McElroy. « But it does incarnate the pastoral method of the same Lord who calls us to draw close to each person first with a loving embrace, then with help and healing, and after with the call to conversion and to change. »

In the interview, McElroy reiterated his previous call to open the diaconate to women, while raising concerns about the ordination of women to the priesthood. 

« I am afraid that the ordination of women to the priesthood in this moment would deeply divide the church and for this reason it should not be an objective of the synodal process, » McElroy said, taking a more definitive stance on the issue than in his article for America magazine, where he wrote that it was « likely » the synod would opt to reserve the priesthood for men without stating a personal position.

When asked if Francis can be considered a feminist, McElroy responded that it would be « jarring » to classify the pope that way. But the cardinal praised the pope for better including women in church structures.

Francis « has broken significant barriers for women in the life of the church and has constantly underscored the essential role that women carry out in Catholic faith and action at all levels, » McElroy said.

However, McElroy said, « he is still looking for — as is the whole church — a theological framework that soundly reveals the equality of women in its fullness, in the midst of the unequal cultures of our Catholic world. »

McElroy’s recent writing about how the church should minister to LGBTQ people and divorced and remarried Catholics has received significant backlash, including an essay where Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois, seemed to accuse McElroy of heresy.

When asked by Vida Nueva if the accusation of heresy hurt him, McElroy acknowledged that it did, but he said it hurt the church more. 

« This language endangers the church even more, in breaking down the dialogue that we should maintain these days about the fundamental questions that we are confronting, » McElroy said. 

He noted that he had written his doctoral thesis in theology on Jesuit Fr. John Courtney Murray. Murray, who served as the chief author of the Second Vatican Council document Dignitatis Humanae, the Declaration on Religious Freedom, had been earlier forbidden to write about religious liberty without approval from the Jesuit superior general.

« It is vital that during all of these debates over doctrinal questions we resist the temptation of using negative labels against those who adopt postures that are opposite to ours, » said McElroy.

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Vie de l'église

Former U.S. House Speaker Nancy…

Former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told students at Georgetown University on March 23 that, growing up, she was more attracted to being a priest than being a Catholic sister because of the priest’s ability to celebrate Mass.

« Turning bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, that is real power, » she said.

« Maybe one day women will be able to do that as well, » Pelosi said, expressing hope that Pope Francis would act on women’s ordination.

Pelosi spoke to Rev. Jim Wallis, director of the Georgetown University Center on Faith and Justice, as part of an inaugural conversation in a new series named Higher Calling, where political leaders and public servants will speak about the role of faith and ethics in their lives. She also answered several questions from Georgetown students in the audience. 

Wallis and a Georgetown student both asked Pelosi about how she dealt with disagreements with U.S. bishops. In May 2022, San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone declared that Pelosi could not receive Communion in that archdiocese until she publicly renounced her support for legalized abortion and went to confession. (Pelosi has continued to receive Communion in Washington.) 

Pelosi said that her parents, and especially her mother, taught her about free will. « God has given us a free will, and we have a moral responsibility to live up to that, » she said. 

Of Cordileone and abortion, Pelosi said, « I figure that’s his problem, not mine, because I had five children in six years and one week, » she said.

Pelosi said that the U.S. Catholic bishops « are willing to abandon the bulk of [Catholic social teaching] because of one thing, » in a reference to abortion. She highlighted concern over abortion as preventing the U.S. bishops from supporting the 2010 passage of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

« Thank God for the nuns because they offset the bishops, » Pelosi said, in a reference to how groups such as the Leadership Conference of Women Religious and the Catholic Health Association supported the measure.

Pelosi also criticized Cordileone’s role in the 2008 passage of Proposition 8, a California ballot measure banning the recognition of same-sex marriages that technically remains in that state’s constitution even after the U.S. Supreme Court required states to recognize same-sex marriages in its landmark 2015 case Obergefell v. Hodges.

« He’s made it very clear, maybe we’re not all God’s children. Maybe we do not have a free will, » Pelosi said of the San Francisco archbishop.

Pelosi said she mentioned HIV/AIDS in her very first speech on the floor of the House of Representatives in the 1980s. On the topic of defending LGBTQ+ rights, Pelosi said, « it’s my joy. »

« All God’s children, they have their own dignity and worth, their own individuality, their own authenticity, and that’s a beautiful thing for us to embrace, » Pelosi said. 

She recounted conversations she said she has recently had with families of transgender children who fear not being able to meet the needs of their children because of new state laws limiting access to health care for trans individuals.

« I also see kids on the streets of San Francisco who are there because their families disowned them, » Pelosi said.

When asked about her Catholic education, Pelosi referenced her March 15 commentary for National Catholic Reporter celebrating Pope Francis’ 10th anniversary, in which she stated that between herself, her husband and their children and grandchildren her family has « more than 150 years of Catholic school education among us. »

When a Chinese international student at the Georgetown event asked Pelosi about how her faith influenced her decision to go to Taiwan last August despite reservations from the Biden Administration, Pelosi said, « I’ve been fighting the Chinese for decades on human rights, » referencing her positions of support for Tibet, Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Uyghur ethnic minority group.

Pelosi also said she has had a « little disagreement » with Francis over his efforts to negotiate with the Chinese government to normalize the status of the country’s Catholic Church.  

The Vatican entered into a bilateral agreement with the Chinese in 2018. While the details of the agreement have not been made public, it is understood to allow government input into the selection of Catholic bishops in the country. A number of observers have criticized the deal as being too deferential to the Chinese government.

« I don’t think they’ve gained anything from it, » Pelosi said of Chinese Catholics’ benefit from the agreement.

About the U.S., Pelosi spoke about the viciousness of the campaign process as a deterrent to women running for office. « They do attack the integrity and the compassion that women have, » she said. 

« If we could lower the role of money, increase the level of civility, we would have many more women, » Pelosi said.

Pelosi said that child poverty and hunger in the U.S. has motivated her throughout her political career. 

« You have to be prepared to take a punch. You have to be prepared to throw a punch, for the children. Always for the children, » Pelosi said.

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To evangelize well, the faithful…

To evangelize well, the faithful need to dialogue with God, let the Holy Spirit renew their hearts and lives, and then dialogue with today’s world, Pope Francis said.

The Holy Spirit is « the protagonist of evangelization. Without the Holy Spirit we will only be advertising the church, » he said during his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square March 22.

The church, too, always must be « evangelizing herself » or else « it remains a museum piece, » he said.

The pope continued his series of talks about « the passion for evangelization: the apostolic zeal of the believer » by reflecting on St. Paul VI’s apostolic exhortation « Evangelii Nuntiandi » (On Evangelization in the Modern World) and its emphasis on witnessing to Christ.

« You cannot evangelize without witness — the witness of the personal encounter with Jesus Christ, the incarnate Word in which salvation is fulfilled, » he said.

« Witness also includes professed faith, that is, convinced and manifest adherence to God the father, son and Holy Spirit, who created and redeemed us out of love, » he said.

And, he said, it is a faith « that transforms us, that transforms our relationships, the criteria and the values that determine our choices. Witness, therefore, cannot be separated from consistency between what one believes and what one proclaims. »

« A person is credible if there is harmony between what they believe and live, how they believe and live, » the pope said. Anything else is hypocrisy.

« Every one of us is required to respond to three fundamental questions, posed in this way by St. Paul VI: ‘Do you believe what you are proclaiming? Do you live what you believe? Do you preach what you live?' » the pope said.

« We cannot be satisfied with easy, pre-packaged answers, » he said. « We are called upon to accept the risk, albeit destabilized, of the search, trusting fully in the action of the Holy Spirit who works in each one of us, driving us ever further: beyond our boundaries, beyond our barriers, beyond our limits, of any type.

St. Paul VI, he said, « teaches that the zeal for evangelization springs from holiness which springs from a heart filled with God. Nourished by prayer and, above all, by love for the Eucharist, evangelization in turn increases holiness in the people who carry it out. »

« Without holiness, the word of the evangelizer ‘will have difficulty in touching the heart of modern man’ and ‘risks being vain and sterile' » because it is just a string of empty words, he said, quoting St. Paul’s exhortation.

Evangelization is addressed not only to others « but also ourselves, believers in Christ and active members of the people of God, » Francis said. « We have to convert every day, receive the word of God and change our life each day, this is how you evangelize the heart. »

The Catholic Church, « which is the people of God immersed in the world, » is often tempted by many idols, therefore, « she always needs to hear the proclamation of the mighty works of God, » to pray and feel the power of the Holy Spirit, which changes people’s hearts, he said.

« A church that evangelizes herself in order to evangelize is a church that, guided by the Holy Spirit, is required to walk a demanding path of conversion and renewal, » he said.

This includes « the ability to change the ways of understanding and living its evangelizing presence in history, avoiding taking refuge in the protected zones of the logic of ‘it has always been done this way’ (which) are shelters that make the church fall ill, » he said.

« The church must always go forward, it must continually grow, » he added. « This way it stays young. »

At the end of the audience, the pope underlined the sanctity of all human life. He greeted the faithful from Poland, which celebrates the Day for the Sanctity of Life March 25.

« As a sign of the need to protect human life from conception to its natural end, the Yes to Life Foundation is giving to Zambia the ‘Voice of the Unborn’ bell, which I blessed this morning, » he said.

« May its sound carry the message that every life is sacred and inviolable, » he added.

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Vie de l'église

Churches in Asia need to play an…

Churches in Asia need to play an active role in addressing pressing realities including migrants, refugees, indigenous peoples, climate change, family issues, women and youth, Asian bishops said in their continental synod document.

The leaders of the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences released the 40-page « Bangkok Document » March 15 during an online ceremony. It is a compilation of the discussions held during the federation’s general conference in the Thai capital last October.

The Oct. 12-30 gathering, which also marked the federation’s golden jubilee, drew church leaders and delegates from about 29 countries. The meeting was followed up with the Asian Continental Synod Assembly Feb. 24-26.

The document is to be presented during the synod on synodality at the Vatican.

During the launch, federation president Cardinal Charles Bo of Yangon, Myanmar, said the document highlights the Asian Church’s « journey together by responding to the call of ideality, reflecting on the various emerging realities confronting the church in Asia, and envisioning new pathways for the future. »

Its former president, Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Bombay, said the document is not a « finished product (but) the beginning of (the) journey » and urged all to approach it as « a spiritual document. »

« To my mind, it is a spiritual document, a document for prayer, for discernment, for spiritual conversation, » the prelate said.

Federation secretary-general Archbishop Tarcisius Isao Kikuchi of Tokyo, clergy, laity and media personnel from across the globe joined the virtual launch.

Filipino Bishop Pablo Virgilio David of Kalookan, the coordinator of the documentation committee, said the « Bangkok Document » is divided into five parts based on the biblical narrative of the three Magi, who are journeying together, looking, discerning, offering gifts and making new pathways.

The first part is titled « Journeying » and draws inspiration from the synod on synodality, he said.

« Synodality’s basic principles of communion, participation and mission have actually given a fuller expression and affirmation to FABC’s long-standing affirmation to triple dialogue: namely with religion, culture and the poor of Asia, » David said.

The second part, titled « Looking, » takes a « serious phenomenological look at the emerging realities confronting the churches in Asia, » he pointed out.

The section deals with nine of the most important realities in Asian societies — migrants, refugees and Indigenous people displaced from their homelands, families, gender issues, the role of women, youth, the impact of digital technology, promotion of an equitable economy, climate crisis and interreligious dialogue.

The third part, titled « Discerning, » deals with the answer to the question of « what the Spirit is telling the churches in Asia in the present times. »

The fourth section, « Offering Our Gifts, » reflects on what Asia can contribute to the universal church specifically focusing on Asian culture and spirituality drawing inspiration from St. John Paul II’s apostolic exhortation « Ecclesia in Asia. »

The last part is titled « Following New Pathways » and aims to « articulate the new directions that the federation feels it is called to undertake in the wider dynamics of the life and mission of the church in Asia. »

The continental synod in the last section identified five pathways that it aims to take: from dominative to « inculturated » evangelization; from basic Christian communities to ecclesial communities that promote basic human communities; from dialogue to synodality; from proclamation to storytelling; and from beaten tracks to new pastoral priorities.

David pointed out that the « Bangkok Document » « underscores the new pathways that had been taken by the 16th-century Italian Jesuits Matteo Ricci and Alessandro Valignano. »

Frs. Ricci and Valignano and other missionaries in the 16th and 17th centuries « chose to follow a different pathway in their approaches to mission, » David said.

He said the FABC seeks to follow the footsteps of figures such as Ricci who chose « interreligious and intercultural dialogue » rather than the more convenient way of « royal patronage » for evangelizing the newly found peoples.

The « Bangkok Document » will be circulated across all dioceses and parishes in Asia, and it is open for further improvements, FABC officials said during the press conference.

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The Vatican said March 18 it had…

The Vatican said March 18 it had closed its embassy in Nicaragua after the country’s government proposed suspending diplomatic relations, the latest episode in a yearslong crackdown on the Catholic Church by the administration of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega.

The Vatican’s representative to Managua, Msgr. Marcel Diouf, also left the country March 17, bound for Costa Rica, a Vatican official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The Vatican action came a week after the Nicaraguan government proposed suspending relations with the Holy See, and a year after Nicaragua forced the papal ambassador at the time to leave. It’s not clear what more the proposed suspension would entail in diplomatic terms.

Relations between the church and Ortega’s government have been deteriorating since 2018, when Nicaraguan authorities violently repressed anti-government protests.

Some Catholic leaders gave protesters shelter in their churches, and the church later tried to act as a mediator between the government and the political opposition.

Ortega branded Catholic figures he saw as sympathetic to the opposition as “terrorists” who had backed efforts to overthrow him. Dozens of religious figures were arrested or fled the country.

Two congregations of nuns, including from the Missionaries of Charity order founded by Mother Teresa, were expelled from Nicaragua last year.

Prominent Catholic Bishop Rolando Álvarez was sentenced to 26 years in prison last month after he refused to board an airplane that flew 222 dissidents and priests to exile in the United States. He also was stripped of his Nicaraguan citizenship.

Pope Francis had remained largely silent on the issue, apparently not wanting to inflame tensions. But in a March 10 interview with Argentine media outlet Infobae, after Álvarez’s sentencing, he called Ortega’s government a “rude dictatorship” comparable to Hitler’s that was led by an “unbalanced” president.

According to Vatican News, the care of the Vatican’s embassy, or nunciature, was entrusted to the Italian government, according to diplomatic conventions. The report said diplomats of the European Union, Germany, France and Italy gave Diouf, the chargé d’affaires, a farewell salute before he shuttered the diplomatic post and left.

During the farewell ceremony, Germany’s ambassador to Nicaragua, Christoph Bundscherer, expressed regret at the embassy’s closure and asked Diouf to share a message with Francis, according to a statement on the German Embassy’s Facebook page.

“Together with the Catholic Church, the representatives of the European Union in Nicaragua will also always defend the Christian values of freedom, tolerance and human dignity,” Bundscherer said, according to the statement.

The Nicaraguan government, which since September 2018 has banned all opposition demonstrations in the country, also restricted Catholic activities inside churches, including banning the traditional street processions that thousands of Nicaraguans used to celebrate in the lead up to Holy Week and Easter.

The restrictions forced church authorities to hold the Stations of the Cross procession on the grounds of the Metropolitan Cathedral of Managua, as they did March 17.

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As the third season of « Ted Lasso »…

« Ted Lasso » showed up in our world at the perfect time. Ravaged as we were in August 2020 by a world pandemic, pervasive threats to democracy, painful racial reckonings and climate disaster, this sitcom had something of the Divine to show anyone really looking and listening. As the third season kicked off this week (March 15), it’s worth examining how this humble television show can help us learn a thing or two about who or what God is, and what our response might be in our bruised, blessed world.

Catholicism directs us to learn from the world of our senses and creative works — and « Ted Lasso » has much we can learn: true leadership, the importance of personhood, how to listen to children and the power of genuine forgiveness.

Leadership

If you Google « Ted Lasso » and leadership, you’ll see that entire MBAs appear to have been set up on the principles found in Ted’s coaching: curiosity, non-judgment, helping others, self-belief, sincere apologies and the importance of taking a stand against forces that destroy people and our battered planet.

It’s sobering to observe how different these messages are from the way too many yearning, broken people experience religion. The tagline from the second season of « Ted Lasso » was « Kindness makes a comeback. » Religion could learn a thing or two. It should just be a given that people of faith are curious, nonjudgmental, seek and draw out the best in people, apologize when they are in the wrong and take principled stands against corporations that poison the planet. But, alas.

Personhood

Just about every mainstream church today is feeling attendance-challenged. When I read religious articles bemoaning all those empty pews, the authors routinely say some version of « we need more young people, » or « we need more men, » or « we need to do a better job of reaching out to BIPOC or LGBTQ+ populations. » Here is a place where religious leaders really need to watch and learn from « Ted Lasso. »

Coach Lasso may well want more marquee footballers or more supportive fans. But he never puts that desire in such vague, impersonal ways. Lasso calls each person by their name, comes to know each person’s values and he engages from there. There’s a wonderful scene in one episode in which Ted enters AFC Richmond’s building and greets each person not only by their name, but with a question about something that matters to them. Being known by name and for who you really are is a gift. This is a truth that religious leaders must embrace: It feels good to be seen and called by our name. Churches don’t need more people, they need Rick and Rosie and Alex and Maya and Darlene; they need to know what makes those individuals glow and wither and aspire and despair and get back up again when their spirit has been crushed. « Ted Lasso » can help with that.

Listening to children

Jesus taught us to prioritize the little children. « Ted Lasso » can help us understand why.

We see this acutely in Roy Kent’s relationship with his niece Phoebe. Scenes between little Phoebe and her Uncle Roy are among my favorite in the entire series, and I almost always need a few Kleenexes in the seven or eight times I view each one. One key story arc in the first season is Roy Kent having to navigate the slowing down of his legendary soccer skills as he ages. He tells his girlfriend Keeley that he likes being the « Great Roy Kent, » and isn’t ready to be « some loser has-been called Roy » if he were to retire.

Keeley asks Phoebe to tell Uncle Roy who he is. I love that her succinct, heartfelt description of his essence is followed by a stadium of AFC Richmond fans cheering Roy Kent as he hobbles off the field after his final heroic play. Richmond loses that game, and the Great Roy Kent accepts retirement from the sport he loves, but little Phoebe leads the way in perceiving that Roy Kent is not just about what he does, but who he is: the gruff uncle who will play the Princess to her Dragon after an ice cream, and who she will be delighted to accompany to his podiatrist’s because she loves him. He is not what he does on the soccer pitch. He matters, period. That’s a gift that Phoebe gives both him and me.

Forgiveness

The final lesson religion (and I) should take from « Ted Lasso »: the muscularity of genuine forgiveness. Rebecca’s long silent walk in her Christian Louboutin stilettos to Ted’s office to confess her scheme was a viewers’ favorite among the scenes of the entire show. True forgiveness is life-changing, it’s transformative; it’s not about being a doormat. It’s a muscular, active act, not for the faint of heart.

A number of elements from the Rebecca-Ted forgiveness scene illustrate this. First, that long walk. We do not like silence, as a species, and our constant engagement with devices suggests we especially do not like the silence in our own heads and hearts. We may be apprehensive of what we’ll hear there, and so we crowd out the sounds of our own solitude. Rebecca takes the long walk from her office in the executive level to Ted’s office at the bottom of the building by herself, facing and replaying what she has put Ted and the team through in her quest for revenge on her awful ex-husband Rupert. Asking forgiveness doesn’t start by thinking of what the other person can give you, but of taking a realistic interior look at your own complicity and guilt. That is one of the most risky, courageous things a person can do. The second most risky, courageous thing a person can do is to fully and unconditionally offer the forgiveness asked of them, as we saw Ted do in response. Rebecca’s icy (wounded) British reserve is shattered by Ted’s forgiveness.

Having experienced the cleansing fire hose of forgiveness once, Rebecca understands there are more fractured relationships she has to mend, and she goes about doing it. Once she has started to repair her relationship with her assistant Higgins, she starts calling him by his first name, Leslie.

Her scars do not go away. She still tears up when she sees her ex and his new young wife and baby; later, we see that the scars of her childhood still linger in her adult relationship with her mother. But her own experiences of being forgiven animate many of her subsequent interactions with the team, and even her ex-husband. Rebecca and Ted’s forgiveness cycle is a vibrant illumination of one of Pope Francis’ contentions in Fratelli Tutti:  » ‘Goodness is never weak but rather, shows its strength by refusing to take revenge’ [referencing his own earlier words]. … Those who truly forgive do not forget. Instead, they choose not to yield to the same destructive force that caused them so much suffering. They break the vicious circle; they halt the advance of the forces of destruction. »

Entire courses and seminars are being built around the wisdom of « Ted Lasso. » Read the books, take the workshops, but never lose the joy and the pathos of your own encounters in this fictional world. Religion will be better off for it.

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Author Barbara Mahany urges…

The idea for this Catholic writer’s book came from a rabbi, which will not seem remarkable to readers who quickly notice Barbara Mahany’s eagerness to pay attention to everything the world offers up.

In The Book of Nature: The Astonishing Beauty of God’s First Sacred Text, set to release on March 21, she urges readers to be equally attentive so they will notice and fall in love with what she calls « God’s first sacred text » and what St. Augustine called the book of nature — the natural world in which we live. She argues our failure to be attentive is costing us a great deal, including experiences of the presence of the living God.

« Mine, » she writes, « is the God of sunrise and nightfall, the breath behind birdsong and breeze in the oaks. Mine is the God of a thousand voices, a thousand lights and gazillions of colors. Whether I notice or not, mine is the God who never hits pause when it comes to creation: inventing, reinventing, tweaking, editing, starting from scratch all over again, day after day after heavenly day. »

This God’s first sacred text, she insists, « needs no translation; it’s unfurled without words, composed in an alphabet of seashell and moonbeam, the flight of the birds and even the plundering of nests. »

Mahany, who has written for The Chicago Tribune for decades, writes in ways that are nearly as arresting as the book of nature she describes. She has no time for the pathetic excuses we have for missing what’s in nature’s book, the pages of which are all around us and free. She writes:

Ours now is a world lit up in digital glare. We stare into our phones instead of the stars, glued to our screens instead of the world in all its real-time rumblings and respirations. It’s an ecology of loss; we’re too often blind to creations. And the losses I worry about aren’t only the ones tabulated by climatologists, counted in species decline and extinctions, water rising and ice caps melting. The losses I tally are just as profound yet outside the bounds of measurable beauty: beauty, wonder, the wild, intimacy; knowing the world by the whorl of your fingertips, by the dew of the dawn under your toes. Most of all, there’s a slipping away of a palpable sense of the sacred. It needn’t be. It shouldn’t be.

Mahany asks readers to do something Buddhists have been urging the world to do for centuries: Pay attention, be mindful. In other words, walk neither on a city sidewalk nor on a path through the forest with your eyes focused on your smartphone. She issues a call to notice the sacred and the inexplicable all around. In some ways, it’s an echo of what Annie Dillard argued decades ago in her classic Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.

However, unlike Dillard — whose considerable attention to the cruelty that can be found in nature sometimes leaves her slack-jawed with horror — Mahany leans toward beauty, intricacy, astonishing complexity. Yes, she certainly notes how, as she says, it all started 13.8 billion years ago with the violent Big Bang, « when untold numbers of bits — think heavenly cinders — kaboomed into the black canyon of space. » But her focus is much more on what she calls nature’s « endless bedazzlement. »

There’s a strange story in the Gospel of Mark (8:22-25) in which Jesus heals a blind man in two stages. After Jesus first spit on the man’s eyes and then asked him if he saw anything, the man’s response was: « I can see people, but they look like trees, walking. » So Jesus touched the man’s eyes again, at which point the man « looked intently and his sight was restored, and he saw everything clearly. »

Mahany seems to be saying that many of us are half blind when it comes to reading the book of nature. The best we are able to do is misread what we’re seeing, just as the man being healed saw what looked like walking trees.

We need spiritual healing to be able to read God’s original scripture, of which we’re a part. Mahany wisely includes several references to the ways in which Indigenous peoples in North America have a better grasp of the nature of nature than do many of us who are descendants of European invaders who stole the land on which such people lived unmolested for centuries.

It’s common for Indigenous peoples to say that they belong to the land and are always and everywhere a part of nature, whereas many others hold to the imported idea that the land belongs to them — and they have the deeds to prove it.

That approach can prevent us from seeing the sacred, complex, beautiful, sometimes inexplicable nature of nature itself. As Mahany writes, « Peel back the wisdoms of East of West, plumb the canons of any civilization, listen to the thrum of Indigenous truth telling, and there you will find the spiritual practice of paying closest attention. On alert to the visible invisibility. »

Humanity once was gentle enough with the planet that Earth could recover pretty quickly whenever it felt some injury. But as Pope Francis wrote in his 2015 encyclical on the environment, « Laudato Si’, on Care for Our Common Home, » Mother Earth « now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. »

Let’s listen to both Francis and Mahany, both of whom urge us to fall in love again with nature — not because nature is God (that’s pantheism) but because God is in all of nature (that’s panentheism).

« It’s ours to love, » she writes, « this Book of Nature offering page after page to pore over — this book with its infinite lessons, its thousand embraces. If only we put down our distractions and behold it — all of it, any of it. »

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The church in Ireland is launching…

The church in Ireland is launching a Year for Vocations as it grapples with a steep decline in seminary numbers and with aging priests.

Focused on diocesan priesthood, the Year for Vocations opens April 30, on the 60th anniversary of St. Paul VI’s launching of the World Day of Prayer for Vocations in 1963. It will last until April 2024.

« Take the Risk for Christ » is the theme of the initiative, which was unveiled at the national seminary in St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, March 7 by the Irish Bishops’ Council for Vocations.

It takes place as the Irish church’s 26 dioceses implement radical structural changes, including parish partnerships and enhanced roles for the laity, to offset the lack of priests.

« I suggest you look at your priest. He may be the last in a long line of resident pastors and may not be replaced, » Archbishop Francis Duffy told the congregation in St. Mary’s Church, Westport, in the Archdiocese of Tuam last July.

His stark warning was borne out by a survey published by the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) last November that showed that a quarter of all priests currently serving in the Irish church are set to retire over the next 15 years.

The survey revealed that 547 of the 2,100 priests working in the Irish Church are aged between the ages of 61 and 75 and nearly 300 or 15% of working priests are 75 years old or older. The survey also showed that just 52 priests — or less than 2.5% of working priests — are younger than 40, and there are just 47 seminarians in St. Patrick’s College. In 1984, there were 171 ordinations in Ireland.

One of the factors that has contributed to the decline in vocations is the clerical sexual abuse scandals. It was publicly underscored recently when a rising political star of the Fianna Fáil party announced he was resigning his council seat to train as a priest. Thirty-year-old Councillor Mark Nestor said he first thought about priesthood in his late teens but was « put off by the various scandals involving the church in Ireland. »

« There are vocations in Ireland. God is constantly calling; it’s just that in the midst of the loudness of the alternative voices, God is being drowned out a bit at present, » Bishop Lawrence Duffy of the Irish bishops’ Council for Vocations, told OSV News.

Ordained in 1976, Bishop Duffy trained for priesthood at St. Patrick’s College Carlow, one of a string of seminaries across Ireland that no longer offers formation. « The decline has been gradual, from an exceptionally high level of priests historically to a level today that calls for urgent change, » he said.

He believes the church of the future « will be less clerical and less dependent on a priest » as the Irish church moves toward « greater lay leadership. » But he underlined, « To say that there are ‘no Irish priests’ is clearly not true. »

A case in point is the Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Dundalk, in the Archdiocese of Armagh, seat of the Primate of All Ireland and the place where St. Patrick is reputed to have built his first church. Last year the seminary, which was established in 2012 to form priests for the Neocatechumenal Way, announced it was building an extension to cater to a sustained growth in vocations.

So far four priests have been ordained from the seminary, and they are now serving in the parishes of the Archdiocese of Armagh and in the Diocese of Dromore. Martin Long, a spokesman for Armagh, told OSV News that another 16 men from six countries (Croatia, Italy, Malta, Poland, Spain and the U.S.) are currently studying for priesthood there.

A number of Irish dioceses have recruited priests from Africa and Asia to serve in their parishes in a bid to counter the collapse in priest numbers. In the Dioceses of Clogher, where Bishop Duffy serves, two priests from Nigeria are currently in parish ministry, out of a total of 48 priests serving in the diocese, several of whom are in their late 80s.

Polish priests are also playing a significant role in most dioceses. Father Stanislaw Hajkowski of the Society of Christ is coordinator of the Polish Chaplains in Ireland and rector of St. Audoen’s Church in the Archdiocese of Dublin.

He told OSV News that « at present eight priests are serving Polish communities in Dublin and are involved to a various degree in serving local Irish communities. » The total number of Polish priests serving in Ireland is 25.

According to Father Hajkowski, « Polish chaplains support Irish dioceses by providing pastoral care to Polish immigrants in the Polish language. » As many as 130,000 Poles are living in the Republic of Ireland and 20,000 in Northern Ireland. « Parents with children attending the Irish schools tend to participate in the life of the local parish more often but still come to the Polish chaplaincies for confessions and major feasts, » he explained.

« People really do value their local priest, » Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan, chair of the Council for Vocations highlighted in Maynooth March 7. The new vocations drive aims to tap into that goodwill.

Speaking to the Irish Independent at the national seminary in Maynooth, Bishop Cullinan acknowledged that it was « a battle » to promote priesthood in the wake of the church abuse scandals. But he added, « We believe in it and therefore we are going to promote it. »

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The Biden administration’s…

The Biden administration’s approval this week of a massive oil drilling project in northern Alaska amounts to « a betrayal » of the president’s pledges on climate change and endangers Arctic communities with pollution, said faith-based organizations who joined environmental and Indigenous groups in condemning the decision.

The Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management on March 13 issued its final decision to permit ConocoPhillips’ multibillion-dollar Willow project for Alaska’s North Slope in the state’s National Petroleum Reserve. According to the Bureau of Land Management, the project will include up to 199 oil wells and is estimated to produce 576 million barrels over 30 years, with 239 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions, or the equivalent carbon emissions from 64 coal-fired power plants in one year.

The approved plan scaled back the oil company’s original proposal to three drill sites from five. In a separate arrangement, ConocoPhillips agreed to relinquish oil development leases covering roughly 68,000 acres in the region, with the majority in the Teshekpuk Lake Special Area.

In what was viewed as an effort to quell potential backlash, the Biden administration announced a day earlier it will block future oil and gas leasing in 2.8 million acres off Alaska’s coast in the Arctic Ocean, and 13 million acres in the National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska. And on Tuesday, President Joe Biden, at the urging of former president Jimmy Carter, also canceled a land-swap deal that would have allowed a road to be built through Alaska’s Izembek National Wildlife Refuge.

But those conservation moves have done little to quell outrage over greenlighting the Willow Project. Climate groups have called the project « a carbon bomb » and vowed to continue to try to block it, including in court. Opposition campaigns to Willow on social media, including TikTok, attracted hundreds of millions of views.

A 2022 report from the International Energy Agency stated that governments must stop approving new fossil fuel development if the world is to meet the Paris Agreement goal of limiting average global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

In light of that report, the Willow project « would be devastating to the health of our global climate, as well as the already fragile ecosystems and biodiversity of Alaska, » the Laudato Si’ Movement said in a statement.

« As Catholics, we are called ‘to hear both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor’ and yet this decision threatens irreparable harm to both, » the group said, citing the Pope Francis’ 2015 encyclical « Laudato Si’, on Care for Our Common Home, » where he also stated the use of fossil fuels « needs to be progressively replaced without delay. »

« No more means no more, » said the Rev. Fletcher Harper, executive director of GreenFaith.

« We cannot drill our way into a sustainable future. »

—Charity Sr. Louise Lears, Franciscan Action Network

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Environmental groups have argued the project will lock the United States, the largest historical source of heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions, into decades more dependence on fossil fuels at a time when climate science has outlined the need for a rapid transition to renewable energy to avert the most catastrophic impacts of climate change, especially for frontline communities.

Many of them have also pointed to Biden’s pledge on the campaign trail to bar new oil and gas exploration on public lands,saying at one point « No more drilling on federal lands, period. »

« I guess the period changed to a comma — except for the massive Willow project in the National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska, » Charity Sr. Louise Lears, head of creation advocacy for Franciscan Action Network, told EarthBeat.

« We will continue to ask the Biden [administration] to reverse this decision, » she said. « We cannot drill our way into a sustainable future. »

Rev. Susan Hendershot, president of Interfaith Power & Light, said on Twitter that the Willow Project was « a huge step in the wrong direction » and at odds with the « moral obligation to protect our climate. »

Catholic Climate Covenant directed a request for comment to the Alaska Conference of Catholic Bishops, which declined to comment.

In a statement, People vs Fossil Fuels, a national coalition of 1,200 organizations, said, « Global scientists have been absolutely clear: We must end fossil fuel expansion if we are going to avoid irreversible climate devastation and immediate harm to frontline communities. »

The move by the Biden administration to advance a major oil project comes as global energy uncertainty continues in light of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and as the White House rolls out hundreds of billions of dollars the president signed into law to move the country to clean energy.

Lears said Franciscan Action Network members have joined letter writing and other campaigns against Willow, including a March 3 rally outside the White House. She added the Franciscan community stood in solidarity with the people of Nuiqsut, the town closest to the project site, and the frontline and Indigenous communities that will be most impacted.

In a statement, Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic said the oil drilling project will have « detrimental impacts » on the local ecosystem and communities, as well as the climate. The Indigenous group is among six parties that are now suing the Bureau of Land Management in the federal district court for Alaska, alleging the approval violated several federal conservation laws, including the National Environmental Policy Act, Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act and Endangered Species Act. Earthjustice, an environmental legal firm, has brought a separate suit to halt the project.

« The true cost of the Willow project is to the land and to animals and people forced to breathe polluted air and drink polluted water, » Sovereign Iñupiat said in the statement.

« The true cost of the Willow project is to the land and to animals and people forced to breathe polluted air and drink polluted water. »

—Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic

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The Bureau estimates the oil drilling project will provide Alaska with $10 billion in increased revenue, and federal revenues up to $7 billion. Construction is expected to take eight years, with up to 1,700 workers employed during that phase and up to 450 workers during drilling.

In a statement, ConocoPhillips’ CEO called the project’s approval « the right decision for Alaska and for our nation. »

Willow drew support from Alaska’s congressional delegation: Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan and Democratic Rep. Mary Peltola. Murkowski, who is Catholic, said with its approval « we can almost literally feel Alaska’s future brightening because of it. »

Fletcher told EarthBeat that Biden’s move to bar oil drilling in other parts of Alaska and the Arctic is « not a free pass » to move the Willow project forward. He said that the current state of climate change — with temperatures on track to rise 2.8 C by 2100 — means fossil fuel projects that contribute only a small percentage to overall greenhouse gas emissions still pose dangerous consequences.

Days before the Willow project was approved, GreenFaith senior organizer and Unitarian Universalist Aly Tharp was removed from a major oil industry conference in Houston, where ConocoPhillips is headquartered. During the CERAWeek panel that included France-based TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne, Tharp stood on her chair and sang a climate justice song while holding a banner against the construction of the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline Project and the Rio Grande LNG gas project in Texas.

« I really see the systemic injustice of our society being reliant on fossil fuels, which are causing tremendous harm … literally killing people and jeopardizing the future of life, of all life, on our planet, » she told EarthBeat.

She added that her protest held special meaning to her since fellow climate activist Svitlana Romanko, a Ukrainian and former campaigner for Laudato Si’ Movement, was barred from attending the CERAWeek conference despite being registered. Romanko has frequently spoken out on the links between the fossil fuel industry and the war Russia is waging in her home country.

« It’s really unjustifiable to use the war in Ukraine to expand fossil fuel infrastructure, » Tharp said. « We should be using the current energy crisis to help us accelerate the transition we need to make off of fossil fuels. »

As for the Willow project, Tharp, who represents GreenFaith on the People vs Fossil Fuels steering committee, said environmental groups are discussing strategies to continue to oppose the new oil drilling in Alaska.

« Biden promised he wouldn’t do this when he ran for election. So it’s a betrayal of his word. And it’s a mistake, » she said.

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The Albany Diocese has declared…

The embattled Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany became the latest diocese in New York to seek bankruptcy protection Wednesday as it faces hundreds of lawsuits alleging sexual abuse.

Bishop Edward Scharfenberger announced the Chapter 11 filing after months of negotiations between the New York diocese and lawyers representing plaintiffs over a potential settlement.

The Albany Diocese, like others in the state, is dealing with a deluge of lawsuits dating to when New York temporarily suspended the statute of limitations to give victims of childhood abuse the ability to pursue even decades-old allegations against clergy members, teachers, Boy Scout leaders and others.

« The decision to file was not arrived at easily and I know it may cause pain and suffering, but we, as a Church, can get through this and grow stronger together, » Scharfenberger said in a release.

The bishop said that as cases brought under the state’s Child Victims Act were settled, « our limited self-insurance funds which have been paying those settlements, have been depleted. » He said the bankruptcy filing was the best way to ensure that all survivors with pending litigation receive some compensation.

The action halts legal actions against the diocese and will allow it to develop a reorganization plan that will determine available assets, Scharfenberger said.

Dioceses across the nation have filed for bankruptcy protection in recent years. In New York, Albany is the fifth of eight dioceses to take the action, a list that includes those based in Buffalo, Rochester and Rockville Centre on Long Island.

Some attorneys representing plaintiffs against the Albany diocese accused it of using bankruptcy as a legal tactic.

« We urge everyone to see the Diocese’s strategy for what it is: chicanery designed to perpetuate a $600 million corporation’s pattern of decadence, deception, and denial, » said attorney Jeff Anderson in a statement.

New York temporarily set aside its usual time limit on civil lawsuits for victims of childhood sexual abuse for a two-year period ending in August 2021. More than 9,000 lawsuits were filed against churches, hospitals, schools, camps, scout groups and other institutions.