Church in Thailand equips seminarians for deaf ministry

The Catholic Church in Thailand is stepping up efforts to strengthen pastoral care for the Deaf, beginning with a training program for seminarians at Fatima Minor Seminary in the Archdiocese of Thare-Nongseng in the northeast of the country. Fr. Peter Bhuravaj Searaariyah, Director of Pastoral Ministry for the Deaf of the Diocese of Chanthaburi and of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Thailand, led the training program from August 22–24 with the support of the seminary director, Fr. Chatchai Nilkhet.

The sessions introduced seminarians to basic pastoral approaches for ministering to the Deaf, religious sign language terminology, participation in Thai Sign Language (TSL) Mass, and reciting the Liturgy of the Word in sign language.

Encouraged by the response, Fr. Peter plans to expand the training to other minor seminaries in the country, as well as to novices of male and female religious congregations. “The goal is to prepare future priests and religious to serve the Deaf with understanding and compassion,” he said. “There will be at least three sessions, each lasting at least two days,” he told LiCAS News.

The sessions at Thare drew strong engagement from seminarians, many of whom expressed a desire to deepen their knowledge of sign language for future pastoral work. A group of about 15 seminarians has already formed an online network to share resources, discuss Deaf culture, and explore how pastors can adapt to emerging challenges, including the role of technology in communication. Plans are also underway for in-person gatherings to strengthen the network.

Fr. Peter stressed that pastoral care for the Deaf requires more than language skills. “Many Deaf people live in isolation and feel excluded from opportunities hearing people take for granted,” he said.  Effective ministry, he added, means listening attentively, building trust, and ensuring access to sacraments and community life.

He noted that some Deaf Catholics feel neglected by the Church, making it urgent to develop specialized pastoral care similar to that offered to migrants and travelers. The Deaf, he said, have talents and skills equal to those of the hearing but require ministers who understand their unique cultural and linguistic identity. 

Myanmar bishop hopes to rebuild church bombed by military junta

A Catholic bishop in civil war-torn Myanmar voiced hope that “everyone will do their part” to rebuild a church destroyed in his diocese during a military junta airstrike against rebel groups. Hakha Bishop Lucius Hre Kung spoke during a recent visit to the Church of Christ the King, which was destroyed in military bombings in April, Vatican’s Fides news agency reported.

“They destroyed the walls of the church, but not the faith. Our faith remains strong, the people of God in Falam continue to believe and hope,” Bishop Kung added. The church was consecrated in November 2023 with assistance from the estimated 1000 Catholics in the Falam region. Chinland Defense Force (CDF), a part of the People’s Defense Forces, which opposes the military junta, had taken control of Falam, resulting in retaliatory airstrikes from the junta.

Bishop Kung said he regularly visits the affected people in his diocese while bringing them “the consolation of the Lord”. “In this moment of suffering and trial, we remain firmly anchored in prayer,” he said while praying to Jesus and Mary to give them “the strength and hope to continue and hope for a future of peace.” Bishop Kung was able to visit the church and its vicinity only recently, to assess the damage and comfort the local population, Fides reported.

Fr Paulinus G.K. Shing, a local priest, expressed deep sorrow at the current state of the church while expressing hope that it will be rebuilt soon. “It was a very beautiful church, and the parish was happy to take care of it. I hope it can be rebuilt soon. I look with sadness at pictures of priests of the diocese being ordained there,” Fr Shin said.

At least 107 religious buildings, including 67 churches, have been destroyed by army bombing in Chin State since the deadly civil war began in February 2021, after the military ousted the elected civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi. The junta’s bloody campaign of violent repression against dissent has resulted in more than 6000 deaths, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners.

Cardinal David defends ‘bullied’ Filipinos in police abuse case

The Bishop of Kalookan Cardinal Pablo Virgilio David vowed to stand on the side of “bullied” Filipinos as he accompanied a victim of police abuse to file a complaint against police officers.

Cardinal David appeared at the National Police Commission (Napolcom), which administers and controls the Philippine National Police, with Jayson Dela Rosa on 18 August. The cardinal, who is also the outgoing president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, spoke to reporters at Napolcom afterwards. 

The case of Dela Rosa went viral, catching the attention of authorities, after David posted about it on Facebook earlier this month. The alleged abuse took place in David’s diocese in northern Metro Manila. 

Dela Rosa’s 20-year-old son, Dion Angelo, recently died of leptospirosis after wading in floodwaters to search for his missing father. The Dela Rosa family did not know, at that time, that the father had been arrested for illegal gambling. 

David said Dela Rosa had been wrongfully accused by abusive police officers. He recounted how Dela Rosa entered a “not guilty” plea, but his alleged co-player in an illegal street game pleaded “guilty”.

“The poor have no choice but to plead guilty to crimes they did not commit. That is hard to accept. The law should not be like that,” David said. 

The cardinal appealed to Filipino police officers to “save” their institution. “I still believe that a majority of police officers are good people. Yet a few abusive ones will destroy the institution,” he said. “How will people follow the law when law enforcers themselves do not follow it?”

David, 66, is a known defender of human rights in the Philippines. He rose to national prominence after criticising the drug war, which featured widespread police abuses, under former president Rodrigo Duterte from 2016 to 2022.

Rafael Vicente Calinisan, vice chairperson of Napolcom, thanked David for accompanying Dela Rosa in filing the complaint. “His presence in our office is a symbol of trust, a symbol of the new battle that we have to wage,” Calinisan said. “We will not let you down, cardinal.”

David said in response: “I am a priest, a bishop, that is why I am here. Our mission is to side with the marginalised, especially those who are bullied. It is not the role of law enforcers to bully people.” 

Catholic priest forced to leave Texas amid visa backlog and residency denial

A Mexican-born Catholic priest who has served in the Diocese of Laredo, Texas, for nine years must leave the United States because his application for residency was denied and his religious worker visa is expiring. Father Alan Sanchez, the pastor of St. Joseph Church in La Pryor and St. Patrick Mission in Batesville, will return to his native country of Mexico on Aug. 27, amid the visa issues. He will be received into the Archdiocese of Monterrey in northeastern Mexico when he arrives.

“Originally, I was hopeful … [this would] be resolved,” Sanchez told CNA. “I was sad [when I got the news] because of the community I was serving,” he said. “This is a very small and poor community in Texas and this was my first role as a pastor.”

Sanchez applied for residency two years ago but said the process was repeatedly delayed and then his application was eventually denied in November 2024. He appealed the denial and later applied for a different visa but said he ultimately “ran out of time.” He still hopes the matter can be resolved so he can return to his parish at some point.

“I spoke to my bishop about it and the attorney, but there’s nothing else that [I] can do except return to Mexico,” he said. Sanchez said the delay was caused by a backlog of applicants and that he was denied because of a lack of available spots for visas. He noted that asylum seekers and unaccompanied minors were given priority and that priests cannot have a “change of status for residency, because the spots are already taken.”

“True forgiveness does not wait for repentance, but is offered first,” the Pope explained during the General Audience in the Paul VI Hall on 20 August, noting that “forgiving does not mean denying evil, but preventing it from generating more evil.”

Pope Leo XIV to inaugurate Laudato Si’ Village in Castel Gandolfo

On Friday, September 5, at 4 PM Rome time, Pope Leo XIV will inaugurate the Borgo Laudato Si’, at the historic papal residence in Castel Gandolfo, newly opened to the public and dedicated to embodying the vision of Laudato si’, Pope Francis’ encyclical on care for creation—now celebrating its tenth anniversary.

First entrusted to the Laudato Si’ Centre for Higher Education in 2023, the Borgo—which in Italian means “village”—represents a tangible sign of the Church’s mission to unite faith with concrete care for the earth and for the most vulnerable.

Spread across 135 acres of gardens, villas, archeological sites, and farmland, the project integrates history with a forward-looking commitment to education, sustainability, and community life.

In a press release, the Centre explains, “This is not simply a place to visit but a place to live, to pray, to learn, and to grow in communion with God, with one another, and with creation.”

The Holy Father will begin the inauguration with a symbolic pilgrimage through the Village’s grounds, meeting workers, collaborators, their families, and all who have contributed to this new chapter of the papal estate. He will encounter educators, students, local communities, and benefactors—those who, through their work and dedication, give life to the Village’s mission. Following the procession, Pope Leo XIV will preside over a Liturgy of the Word with a Rite of Blessing.

Legal dispute over Rio de Janeiro’s Christ the Redeemer statue: this is the solution proposed by the Senate

From the slopes of Corcovado, Christ the Redeemer gazes over Rio de Janeiro with open arms, a figure that has long symbolized both faith and nation. For millions, it is not simply a tourist attraction but a sanctuary in the sky — a place of prayer, pilgrimage, and sacramental life where weddings, baptisms, and daily Masses continue against the backdrop of Brazil’s most famous skyline. Yet behind the serenity of this landmark lies an ongoing dispute that pits the Church’s historical role against the demands of environmental authorities. The heart of the conflict is not the statue itself — consecrated in 1931 and entrusted ever since to the Archdiocese of Rio de Janeiro — but the land around it, a fraction of the vast Tijuca National Park. In late June, a federal court ruled in favour of the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation (ICMBio), the agency managing the park, in a case concerning commercial stalls along the stairways leading up to the monument. While the Archdiocese was not formally on trial, it has sided with the vendors, many of whom operate under long-standing agreements with the Church. The ruling sparked confusion in the press and on social media, with some questioning who truly governs the sanctuary. The Archdiocese responded firmly in August: the monument, the plateau, and the chapel beneath remain Church property, safeguarded by the Mitra Arquidiocesana. “The Brazilian people must have certainty that Christ the Redeemer is sacred,” declared Father Omar Raposo, rector of the sanctuary, who underlined that the Church is the only legitimate authority over its use and preservation.

Still, legal ambiguities remain. Because Tijuca National Park was only established decades after the statue’s completion, overlapping jurisdictions have led to tensions. A bill now before Brazil’s Senate seeks to resolve the matter by carving out a small area — less than 0.02 percent of the park — to be managed solely by the Archdiocese. Supporters argue that this adjustment would free the Church from bureaucratic restrictions while having no impact on biodiversity, as the disputed zone is already heavily urbanized. Grassroots movements have rallied in favour of the measure, urging senators to guarantee that stewardship of the sanctuary stays with the Church. For Father Omar, these initiatives reflect not politics but devotion: “They show how the Brazilian people love and wish to care for Christ the Redeemer, a monument built by the Church with the offerings of the faithful, and one that welcomes all with open arms.”

Emotion in Assisi: Carlo Acutis sculpture unveiled in the garden near his tomb

With less than a month to go before the canonization of Blessed Carlo Acutis, the sculpture St. Carlo at the Cross was unveiled in Assisi. The bronze artwork, created by renowned Canadian artist Timothy Paul Schmalz, shows him kneeling at the foot of the Cross. It is located in the garden of the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore, within the Sanctuary of the Renunciation complex. Created by the artist behind iconic works such as Homeless Jesus and Angels Unawares, this is the first sculpture to pay tribute to the millennial saint-to-be. St. Carlo at the Cross, a work by sculptor Timothy Schmalz, is inspired by one of his own paintings, which is currently on display at the Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City.

Known as the “Influencer of God,” Acutis used the internet to spread devotion to the Eucharist, documenting Eucharistic miracles from around the world and showing how faith can be integrated with technology. In the sculpture, Carlo holds a laptop computer, its screen displaying a chalice and paten—symbolizing how he brought the Holy Eucharist to the world through digital means. A sling also hangs from the side of his backpack, which artist Schmalz interprets as “a reference to David before Goliath: a young man confronting today’s secular culture with the tools of the digital world, drawing his strength from the pillar of the Cross.” St. Carlo at the Cross is a gift from the Canadian artist to the city. Reflecting on his work, Schmalz said, “As we add new figures to the army of Catholic saints, we also add new works of art; both enrich our heritage and deepen our understanding of the faith.”

The canonization of Carlo Acutis, known as “the saint of the millennials,” is scheduled for Sunday, Sept. 7, in Rome and will be presided over by Pope Leo XIV. The event, which will mark a significant moment of the Jubilee, is also expected to have a major impact on Assisi, where the young blessed’s remains rest and where preparations are already underway to welcome an extraordinary influx of pilgrims before and after the ceremony.

Clerical abuse damaged credibility and trust, says Archbishop

At the 50th National Day of Intercession for Priests at Ireland’s International Eucharistic and Marian Shine in Knock, Co Mayo, Archbishop of Armagh Eamon Martin said abuse had damaged priestly fraternity, credibility and the “precious trust” between priests and their people.

There are many times, he said, when priests feel their brokenness, woundedness and their need for God, especially when they learn that some of their brother priests have committed awful sins and crimes of abuse. 

He told the assembled priests that one of the greatest challenges they face is to be “good news” for the world even though they may see their priesthood undermined or attacked.

The annual intercession for priests, he said, had helped remind priests that priesthood is not like other jobs or professions because “it is subsumed into our whole being. Our priesthood is not our own. It is a share in the priesthood of Christ.”

Separately in his homily for an open-air Mass on the Hill of Slane in Co Meath for the “Light the Fire” faith event, Archbishop Martin appealed to the faithful not to allow the flame of the Holy Spirit to be quenched in Ireland. 

Acknowledging that these are challenging times for the faith, he said many have drifted away from practicing, distracted by “a frantic world of materialism and consumerism” and the superficial promises of easy pleasure and success. 

“We must be alert to the false gods that surround us, and their empty promises, stealing away life and happiness from our people through addictions to alcohol, drugs, gambling and gaming; destroying the hearts and minds of our children through unfiltered access to misinformation and harmful content online,” he warned.

Two seminarians kidnapped in Nigeria

Two seminarians kidnapped in Nigeria’s southern Edo State appeared in a video filmed by their captors, pleading with their parents, the Church and the general public to help secure their release. They were seized in an attack on the Diocese of Auchi’s Immaculate Conception Minor Seminary in Ivianokpodi, Agenebode, Etsako East Local Government Area on 10 July. In the video, which appeared online earlier this month and was verified by the diocesan spokesman Fr Peter Egielewa, the two teenagers appeared holding human skulls and surrounded by armed masked men who threatened to kill them.

In the video, the seminarians said: “They kill people here. Our abductors have threatened to kill us. Please, send money to them to spare our lives. They told us they have killed people and they are not afraid of killing us.” The diocese asked Catholics and all who sympathise with the seminarians, “who, out of the love of God ‘s work, have volunteered their lives for the vocation”, to come out to their rescue.

Gunmen killed a civil defence officer in their attack on the seminary on 10 July and abducted three seminarians, later releasing one. Following the abduction, the Edo State Commissioner of Police Agbonika ordered the deployment of tactical units to track the attackers and rescue the victims.

Colombia’s bishops condemn terrorist attacks that ‘rocked the country’

Colombia’s bishops expressed their outrage after at least 18 people died and more than 40 were injured after two attacks in Colombia attributed to different dissident factions of the former FARC guerrilla group. Bishops decried as “brutal” the “wave of violence that rocked the country,” with the Archdiocese of Cali, Colombia’s most populous city where the attacks happened, “urgently” calling for justice and peace.

Six people died when a cargo vehicle with explosives detonated near a Colombian Aerospace Force base, causing 71 further injuries, according to the mayor’s office, as reported by Reuters. Hours earlier, the agency reported, a National Police Black Hawk UH-60 helicopter participating in a coca leaf crop eradication operation was shot down in the municipality of Amalfi, in the department of Antioquia, leaving 12 officers dead.

The Colombian bishops’ conference, in an Aug. 22 statement signed by its leaders, including the conference president, Archbishop Francisco Javier Múnera Correa of Cartagena, condemned the terrorist attacks and extended its “sentiments of solidarity” to the families of the victims “at this time when violence continues to knock on the doors of Colombian homes, sowing pain and despair.”

The bishops made a direct appeal to all parties involved in the conflict to abandon “the path of death and walk the path of respect for life, which dignifies and makes true human development possible.”

Colombian President Gustavo Petro attributed the attacks to dissident groups of the former FARC guerrilla movement, which refused to accept the 2016 peace accord aimed at ending the decades-long conflict that has claimed over 450,000 lives.

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