The Catholic Church in Mexico called on Latin American society and authorities to care for the family, emphasizing that “protecting the family is prote-cting the future of our society.” In a recent editorial in its weekly publication Desde la Fe (From the Faith), the Primatial Arch-diocese of Mexico City noted that the region is facing “a profound and silent demographic transfor-mation, but at an accelerated pace, and its consequences are already being felt in the social fabric.”
The reflection is based on the study “Changes in Demographic Structures,” prepared by the Net-work of Latin American Univer-sity Institutes on the Family, which examines new forms of family organization in the region. According to the editorial, the report’s conclusions show that “birth rates are steadily declin-ing, marriages are decreasing, divorces are increasing, single-person households are multiply-ing, and an aging population has ceased to be a distant threat and has become a palpable reality.”
Given this scenario, the arch-diocese called for people to view the phenomenon not merely as a matter of numbers but as a reality “that profoundly transforms daily life, human relationships, and the very foundations of coexistence.” “The family, understood as the primary nucleus of society, is the great protagonist – and also the greatest victim – of this transition. When bonds weaken, when loneliness replaces belonging, and when aging is not accompanied by structures of support and affection, the result is a more fragmented, more vulnerable, and less resilient society,” the editorial stated.
The archdiocese also high-lighted that the data portray a region where “aging is occurring without sufficient generational offset and with increasingly fragile family ties” and warned that “the number of deaths now exceeds the number of births.” The archdio-cesan publication also warned that “without strong family structures – based on love, commitment, co-responsibility, and mutual care – the entire society deteriorates” and urged authorities to ensure that public policies “must treat the family as a social priority.”

Spanish bishops speak out after leaks of their meeting with Leo XIV
The executive committee of the Spanish Bishops’ Conference, (CEE, by its Spanish acronym) meeting in Madrid this week, issued an official statement regarding the leaks


