Pope Francis calls on religious not to be discouraged by ‘lack of vocations or by aging’

Pope Francis on November 7 asked religious not to succumb to pessimism over a lack of vocations and to pray with him to “deliver us from the presumption of self-sufficiency and the spirit of worldly criticism.”
Addressing representatives of the Claretianum Institute of the Theology of the Consecrated Life on the occasion of its 50th anni-versary at the Vatican on Nov. 7, the pontiff asked the religious to pray with him to God: “You who feed us with tenderness, deliver us from self-referentiality, from the diabolical deception of pola-rizations, from ‘isms.’”
Pope Francis warned that con-secrated life today should not be discouraged by a “lack of voca-tions or by aging.”
“Those who allow themselves to be caught up in pessimism set aside their faith,” he continued.
“It is the Lord of history who sustains us and invites us to faithfulness and fruitfulness. He cares for his ‘remnant,’ looks with mercy and benevolence upon his work, and continues to send his Holy Spirit.”
Pope Francis with representa-tives of the Claretianum Institute of the Theology of the Conse-crated Life at the Vatican, Nov. 7, 2022.

Poll: Nearly half of Americans think the US should be a Christian nation

Forty-five percent of Americans believe the U.S. should be a “Christian nation,” one of several striking findings from a sweeping new Pew Research Center survey examining Christian nationalism. But researchers say respondents differed greatly when it came to outlining what a Christian nation should look like, suggesting a wide spectrum of beliefs. “There are a lot of Americans — 45% — who tell us they think the United States should be a Christian nation. That is a lot of people,” Greg Smith, one of the lead authors of the survey, said in an interview.

Anglican Converts Warn of Synodal Perils

Drawing on their experience of the Church of England’s synodal process, high-profile Anglican converts to Catholicism are warning of the perils of Pope Francis’ Synod on Synodality.
Two former Anglican bishops, Dr. Michael Nazir-Ali and Dr. Gavin Ashenden, who recently came home to Rome, are cautioning against the synod being hijacked by “pressure groups” and the listening process “mistaking the spirit of the age for the Holy Spirit.”
Supported by several ex-Anglican clergy who are now priests in the Catholic Ordinariate, the orthodox converts have been savagely attacked by revisionist Catholics for “fueling fear” because of an “anti-synodal mindset” tainted by an association with Anglicanism.
On November 9 , Ashenden, former chaplain to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, noted that “ex-Anglicans believe they can offer some help” because they have witnessed the “ploy” of synodality used in the Church of England “to such divisive and destructive effect.”
“The fact is that the ex-Anglicans have seen this trick played on the Church before. It is part of the spirituality of the progressives. Very simply put, they wrap up quasi-Marxist content in a spiritual comfort blanket and then talk a lot about the Holy Spirit,” Ashenden warned.
The outcome of the synodal process within Anglicanism was “division, demoralization, spiritual impoverishment, theological incoherence, diminishment of faith, apostasy and a fatal impairment of the church,” the host of the Merely Catholic podcast explained.

Record number of Swiss Catholics left the Church in 2021

A record number of Swiss Catholics formally left the Church in 2021, according to new stati-stics.
The Swiss Institute of Pastoral Sociology (SPI) in St. Gallen said that 34,182 people left the Church last year, around 2,500 more than in the previous record-setting year of 2019.
Around 2.96 million people remained members of the Church at the end of 2021, out of a total Swiss population of roughly 8.7 million.
The Protestant Church in Swi-tzerland also reported a record number of departures in 2021, with 28,540 exits.
Switzerland is a federal re-public composed of 26 cantons. The latest Church departure figures do not include cantons where membership is not linked to the payment of church tax, such as Geneva, Valais, Neuchâtel, and Vaud, reported the Swiss Catholic Church website kath.ch.
The rate of departures varied from canton to canton. Basel-Stadt, Switzerland’s northernmost canton, recorded the highest exit rate of 3.6%, while the nearby cantons of Aargau and Solothurn also recorded relatively high figu-res of 2.4%.
Earlier this month, Pope Fra-ncis accepted the resignation of 59-year-old Bishop Valerio La-zzeri, who had led the Diocese of Lugano in the southern Swiss canton of Ticino, since 2013.

Grand Imam Lectures Francis on ‘True’ Islam

The grand imam of Al-Azhar offered a robust defence of “true” Islam before Pope Francis at the Bahrain Forum for Dialogue on the first day of the pontiff’s apostolic journey to Bahrain.
“What is said and promoted from time to time about the institution of war in Islam against the infidels is not true,” Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayyeb told Francis at the Sakhir Royal Palace during a dialogue session on Friday.
“Indeed, it is a real lie about Islam and the life of its prophet, even if this is affirmed by some followers of the same religion, a religion that is based on evidence and testimony, not on ambiguity and lies,” al-Tayyeb claimed.
“I hope you are not bored with the constant claims that Islam is a religion of peace and equality,” the grand imam quipped.
Muslim scholars should “be diligent in letting Westerners know about true Islam,” and “continue to highlight what Islam encompasses in terms of lofty ideals, human brotherhood and cooperation, and other commonalities that the West and East agree on and welcome,” al-Tayyeb stressed.
“Western culture should not be represented as the only civilized society and as the standard for judging other cultures. Any interference with other cultures is an abuse of power,” he maintained, quoting words from Tzvetan Todorov’s The Fear of the Barbarians.

German bishop calls current Catholic teaching on sexuality ‘too simple’

Bishop Helmut Dieser of Aachen wants the Catholic Church to take a new perspective on sexuality.
“Same-sex feelings and love are not an aberration, but a variant of human sexuality,” he said in an interview with Deutsche Welle Nov. 8. His remarks were reported by the German Catholic news agency, KNA.
Homosexuals have a right to church support and blessing, said the bishop, who is also the spokesman on abuse issues for the German bishops’ conference. He said the current state of church teaching does not do justice to certain realities when it comes to sexuality: “The thinking is too simple.”
KNA reported the bishop said the church can no longer signal to homosexual people that their feelings are unnatural and that they have to be celibate.
“Homosexuality is — as science shows — not a glitch, not an illness, not an expression of any kind of deficit, and by the way it’s not a consequence of original sin, either,” the bishop said, adding that if two lesbians approached him to have a child baptized, he would do it. “Where is the problem, I ask.”
On Nov. 14-18, Dieser and other German bishops will be at the Vatican to meet with Pope Francis and other Vatican officials for their “ad limina” visits, periodic visits to report on the status of their dioceses.
Dieser also defended the Synodal Path taken by the church in Germany and its demands for reform.
“The Synodal Path is, after all, a consequence of the uncovering of sexual abuse scandals. And reliable scientific studies show that these scandals have systemic causes in the church,” he told Deutsche Welle.
To not respond “would be a failure of authority in the church. We must not ignore the voice of the people of God,” the bishop said.

SUNDAY LITURGY TURNS GOLDEN!

Sunday Liturgy, the premier liturgical publication, turns golden this month. Published by the Indian Province of the Society of St Paul, the periodical was launched in Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, the mother house of the Congregation in India in November, 1972, coinciding with the beginning of the coming liturgical year. The goal of the till-now four- page leaflet was/is to help the Catholic faithful to more actively participate in the Sunday Eucharist.

Indian priest stabbed in Ireland

A Catholic priest from India is reco-vering in a hospital in Ireland after an intruder broke into his residence and stabbed him on October 30. Father Bobit Augusthy was attacked at around 9:30 am at Waterford in the Republic of Ireland.
The property is located in the grounds of Waterford Regional Ho-spital where Father Augusthy is a chaplain and he was rushed for treat-ment and remains in a serious condi-tion. It is understood that the priest, who is originally from India and a member of the Order of St Camillus, was attacked when he came upon the intruder in the home he shares with two other priests.

First nun from Kandhamal celebrates golden jubilee

The first Catholic nun from Odisha’s Kandhamal region thanks God for accompanying her in her 50 years of religious life.
About 50 people, 27 nuns and 7 priests attended the November 5 thanksgiving Mass of Sister Florentia Digal, a member of the Daughter of Charity congregation.
The Mass was presided over by Divine Word Archbishop John Barwa Cuttack-Bhubaneswar at Jatni, Khordha Road.