Friday 25 March 2022
1 – Pope Francis is drawing on Vatican II to radically change how the Catholic Church is governed
2 – Through the consecration, Pope Francis wants to build bridges, says expert in Mariology
3 – The Moscow Patriarchate responds to Cardinal Hollerich
4 – A reflection on the anniversary of Saint Romero’s martyrdom by a human rights activist
5 – Bringing God’s love to the poor and the excluded: new Superior of the Missionaries of Charity talks about her mission
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America magazine offers a reading of the Apostolic Constitution Praedicate Evangelium, explaining that the text “takes a head-on approach to the crises facing the Church, using the Second Vatican Council as a road map for reclaiming the Church’s credibility.” In the context of the vocations crisis, the Constitution assumes two priorities: evangelization without proselytizing but by attraction, and the assumption of responsibility by the laity, especially women. Their presence in government positions in the Vatican is consistent with their assumption of responsibility in parishes and dioceses. Clerics working in the Vatican will be called upon to perform more pastoral functions, not to remain confined to office work. According to America magazine, these provisions make it possible to implement the conciliar process that came out of Vatican II, which John Paul II and Benedict XVI had “sought to slow or stall the pace.” The new Constitution can thus be “more attractive to those disillusioned by the church’s lack of gender equity,” the Jesuit magazine says.
America, English
Through the consecration, Pope Francis wants to build bridges, says expert in Mariology
On March 25 Pope Francis will consecrate Russia and Ukraine to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Father Alexandre Mello, secretary of the Dicastery for the Laity, Family, and Life and an expert in the Catholic field of Mariology, said in an interview with Crux that Pope Francis’ decision is “a plea for God to intervene for the good of all.” Father Mello emphasized that it “is not a political act, but a religious one” as the consecration is “a prayer of surrender, of intercession for the good of both peoples and of the whole world.” “It is certainly a gesture designed to build bridges. Orthodox Christians are just as Marian, or even more Marian, than we Latins,” he said, insisting that Mary “is, in fact, part of the Christian identity of the Russian people and the Ukrainian people.”
Crux, English
The Moscow Patriarchate responds to Cardinal Hollerich
“These days, the prayers and thoughts of millions of Christians around the world are concerned about the dramatic developments in the land of Ukraine.” This is how the Moscow Patriarchate begins its response to the letter sent by Archbishop Hollerich, Archbishop of Luxembourg and President of COMECE, which urged Patriarch Kirill to put pressure on the Russian authorities to stop the war against Ukraine. It is Metropolitan Hilarion, head of the department of external relations of the patriarchate, who has taken on the task of responding to the European bishops. It says that “His Holiness Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia is doing a lot to restore peace and trust, especially in the Ukrainian land, working hard every day to achieve this.” The Metropolitan believes that COMECE “could play an important role in building such a dialogue by working with the representatives of the European Union to prevent a further escalation of the current situation.”
Vatican News, French