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“Encourage a young man to consider the priesthood or to attend Eucharistic Adoration; he could be your future pastor,” says Bishop Boyea
Posted on 04/24/2025 08:30 AM (USCCB News Releases)
WASHINGTON – According to a new survey, nine in ten men who will be ordained to the priesthood this year were encouraged to consider this vocation by someone in their life. Three-quarters of them regularly participated in Eucharistic Adoration before entering the seminary. “Encourage a young man to consider the priesthood or to attend Eucharistic Adoration; he could be your future pastor,” said Bishop Earl Boyea. “We express our deepest gratitude to the many priests, family members, mentors, formators, and laity who have encouraged and supported these men in their discernment of their call to the priesthood.” In conjunction with the World Day of Prayer for Vocations on May 11, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations released the Ordination Class of 2025 Study, conducted annually by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) at Georgetown University.
“We pray for the continued fidelity of the newly ordained to the voice of God and for the faithful to whom they will minister,” said Bishop Boyea, who serves as chairman of the Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations. “As witnesses of hope, we thank them for their courage to commit their lives to what Pope Francis said is a call that embraces their entire existence.”
Out of the 405 men who are to be ordained this year, 309 completed CARA’s Ordination Class of 2025 survey, for an overall response rate of 76%. These ordinands represent 115 dioceses and eparchies in the United States and 36 distinct religious institutes.
A few of the major findings in the report:
- Nine in ten responding ordinands (89%) reported being encouraged to consider the priesthood by someone in their life, most frequently by a parish priest (60%), friend (52%), or fellow parishioner (42%).
- Regarding prayer practices, three-quarters of responding ordinands participated in Eucharistic Adoration (78%) on a regular basis before entering the seminary.
- Most of the ordinands received formation at a seminary in the Midwest (37%) followed by the South (29%), Northeast (16%), West (13%), and abroad (5%).
- Responding ordinands indicate they first considered priesthood during elementary school (35%), followed by high school (20%).
- Hispanics/Latinos constituted 12% of the responding ordinands. Between 2006 and 2025, the share of Hispanics/Latinos averaged 15% and ranged between 11% and 22%.
- Ordinands who attended Catholic elementary school constituted 46% of all respondents, and 36% attended a Catholic high school.
- Most respondents (92%) were baptized Catholic as an infant and raised primarily by their biological parents (95%) and a married couple living together (89%).
The full CARA report and profiles of the Ordination Class of 2025 can be accessed here.
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Cardinals set plans for conclave meditations (Vatican News)
Posted on 04/24/2025 00:04 AM (CatholicCulture.org - Catholic World News)
Father Donato Ogliari, the Benedictine abbot of the basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls, will deliver the first meditation. He will be followed by Cardinal Raniero Cantalamessa, the former preacher of the pontifical household. The date for the opening of the conclave—probably May 5 or 6—has not yet been settled.
As cardinals arrive in Rome, they are joining in the general congregations, which will continue each day until the opening of the conclave. All the cardinals are taking the oath prescribed by the apostolic constitution Universi Dominici Gregis, for prelates preparing for the conclave.
German bishops issue guide for same-sex blessings (CNA)
Posted on 04/24/2025 00:04 AM (CatholicCulture.org - Catholic World News)
“Non-church married couples, divorced and remarried couples, and couples in all the diversity of sexual orientations and gender identities are of course part of our society,” the bishops say, adding that any request for a priest’s blessing should be recognized as “an an expression of gratitude for their love and an expression of the desire to shape this love from faith.”
The blessing, the bishops’ guidelines state, is given “at the service of the divine-human encounter,” and in “the hope of a relationship with God that can sustain human life.” While not specifying the form that the church blessing should take, the bishops say that it would “express the appreciation of the people who have asked for the blessing, their togetherness and their faith.”
The guidelines are a response to the 2023 Vatican document Fiducia Supplicans, which opened the way for church blessings of same-sex couples.
Vatican announces schedule for Masses for Pope Francis (Vatican News)
Posted on 04/24/2025 00:04 AM (CatholicCulture.org - Catholic World News)
The Novemdiales begin with the funeral Mass, on Saturday, April 26, at 10 AM Rome time, with Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals, as principal celebrant. There will follow (all times are local Rome times):
- Sunday, April 27, at 10:30 am, in St. Peter’s Square, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Secretary of State, presiding;
- Monday, April 28, at 5:00 PM in St. Peter’s basilica, with Cardinal Baldassare Reina, vicar general of Rome, presiding;
- Tuesday, April 29, at 5:00 PM in St. Peter’s basilica, with Cardinal Mauro Gambetti, Archpriest of the basilica, presiding;
- Wednesday, April 30, at 5:00 PM in St. Peter’s basilica, with Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, Vice-Dean of the College of Cardinals, presiding;
- Thursday, May 1, at 5:00 PM in St. Peter’s basilica, with Cardinal Victor Fernandez, prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, presiding;
- Friday, May 2, at 5:00 PM in St. Peter’s basilica, with Cardinal Claudio Gugerotti, prefect of the Dicastery for the Eastern Churches, presiding;
- Saturday, May 3, at 5:00 PM in St. Peter’s basilica, with Cardinal Ángel Fernández Artime, pro-prefect of the Dicastery for Religious, presiding; and
- Sunday, May 4, at 5:00 PM in St. Peter’s basilica, with Cardinal Dominique Mamberti, Protodeacon of the College of Cardinals, presiding.
(In this listing, the titles of officials of the Roman Curia are given for purposes of identification. Officially, the mandate of prefects of the Vatican dicasteries ceases with the death of the Pontiff.)
Apr. 24 Thursday within the Octave of Easter, Solemnity
Posted on 04/24/2025 00:00 AM (Catholic Culture Liturgical Year)
16 Monumental Moments to Remember in Pope Francis' Papacy
Posted on 04/23/2025 23:27 PM (ChurchPOP)
'Why Is This in Kids’ Movies?'—A Catholic Filmmaker Exposes Hollywood’s Hidden Agendas
Posted on 04/23/2025 20:37 PM (ChurchPOP)
Clericalism was chief target of Pope Francis' teaching
Posted on 04/23/2025 08:30 AM (USCCB News Releases)
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- From the moment he took the helm of the Catholic Church's sprawling hierarchy, Pope Francis positioned himself as a pastor close to the people he served, and he called out the behavior of priests who were distant from and thought they were superior to their flocks.
The pope set the tone early for his consistent rebukes of clericalism by including it in his first apostolic exhortation, "Evangelii Gaudium," the 2013 document that was considered a roadmap for his pontificate.
Discussing the need to recognize the baptismal dignity and gifts of the laity, the pope wrote that sometimes laypeople did not have the necessary training to exercise leadership, but often "room has not been made for them to speak and to act, due to an excessive clericalism which keeps them away from decision-making."
Pope Francis' campaign against clericalism was waged when meeting both ordinary parish priests and "princes of the church," as cardinals once were known.
In a 2016 homily -- given at a morning Mass with members of his international Council of Cardinals -- he said that modern-day priests "feel superior, clerics distance themselves from the people," and the poor and humble suffer as a result.
"The evil of clericalism is a really awful thing," he added.
In an open letter published in 2023, Pope Francis told priests of the Diocese of Rome that clericalism is "a disease that causes us to lose the memory of the baptism we have received" and leads to priests exercising authority "without humility but with detached and haughty attitudes."
The papal message has reached those preparing for priesthood, too, Msgr. Andrew R. Baker, rector of Mount St. Mary's Seminary in Emmitsburg, Maryland, told Catholic News Service.
In an email interview in March 2024, the monsignor, head of the largest Catholic seminary in the United States, said that since the start of Pope Francis' pontificate he has noticed "a growing desire among the seminarians to be other-centered," in contrast to a pervasive worldly mentality that emphasizes the needs of the self.
"Seminarians today are not becoming priests because they want an easy, revered, and privileged life," he said. "Pope Francis' message on clericalism serves the seminarians as a kind of warning if they don't forget about themselves and serve others."
At the Vatican Pope Francis tried to lead by example by appointing more laypeople, especially women, to positions of responsibility.
In a significant shift, the pope revised language about who can lead Vatican dicasteries, the departments that make up the Roman Curia, opening the door for laypeople to be at the helm of the church's governing bodies.
St. John Paul II's 1988 apostolic constitution "Pastor Bonus" had dictated that the top Vatican offices would be led by a cardinal or archbishop and specified that "matters requiring the exercise of power of governance be reserved to those in holy orders."
Pope Francis replaced that language in 2022, writing in his constitution "Praedicate Evangelium" that "any member of the faithful can preside over a Dicastery or Office."
Immediately following the promulgation of "Praedicate Evanglium," he named three women, including a laywoman, to the Dicastery of Bishops, the Vatican office that helps the pope choose bishops. Before the reform, only cardinals and a few bishops were members of the body.
One of the three women, Salesian Sister Yvonne Reungoat, told CNS that her appointment was "one sign among many" of Pope Francis' desire to respect the different vocations of the church's members and incorporate them into its decision-making.
While some priests still exercise their ministry as "a power over others, who then become inferior," Sister Reungoat said she receives "absolute respect of our vision and equality" from the cardinals and bishops in the dicastery.
Pope Francis, she said, understood the complementary nature of men and women working alongside one another as well as the fruitful collaboration of the church's lay and religious members -- both dynamics that cut down on clericalism.
The listening that took place as part of Pope Francis' 2021-2024 Synod of Bishops on synodality, she said, allowed "a large, free expression of the sufferings, many sufferings, caused by clericalism and which remain wounds to be healed."
Merely stating the problem of clericalism and its consequences is not enough to solve it, she said, but "the act of being able to express it and that such (sentiments) are accepted is a step on a journey of change."
"That doesn't mean these steps will necessarily change the whole world, but I believe they are irreversible," she said.
Cardinal Robert Prevost, prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, told CNS that having women members of the dicastery "contributes significantly to the process of discernment in looking for who we hope are the best candidates to serve the church in episcopal ministry."
To deter attitudes of clericalism among bishops, he said, "it's important to find men who are truly interested in serving, in preaching the Gospel, not just with eloquent words, but rather with the example and witness they give."
In fact, the cardinal said, Pope Francis' "most effective and important" bulwark against clericalism was his being "a pastor who preaches by gesture."
Pope Francis tackled the issue "head on through some of the talks he's given to the Roman Curia," urging clerics at the highest levels of the church's hierarchy "to examine ourselves and think about what it means to also be at the service of the church."
"His message is precisely to inspire, to lead, to push all of us who are members of the clergy to not get so caught up in a lot of the external trappings but look for ways to truly be examples of the mercy, the compassion, the healing of Jesus Christ," Cardinal Prevost said.
Prayer, pilgrims accompany pope's body to basilica
Posted on 04/23/2025 08:30 AM (USCCB News Releases)
VATICAN CITY -- To the chanting of Christ's promise, "I am the resurrection and the life; whoever believes in me, even if he dies, will live," the mortal remains of Pope Francis were carried into St. Peter's Basilica by 14 pallbearers.
Thousands of people had made an early morning pilgrimage to St. Peter's Square April 23 to witness the transfer and pray for the late pope; they erupted in applause when his body, in an open casket, reached the square and again when it reached the top of the basilica steps.
The basilica was to be open until midnight April 23, from 7 a.m. to midnight April 24 and 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. April 25 for visits by the public. Another rite, to close the casket, was scheduled for late April 25. The pope's funeral was scheduled for April 26 in St. Peter's Square with burial to follow in Rome's Basilica of St. Mary Major.
U.S. Cardinal Kevin J. Farrell, as chamberlain of the Holy Roman Church, led the prayer service that accompanied the transfer of the body from the chapel of the Domus Sanctae Marthae, where the pope had lived and where he died April 21 at the age of 88.
More than 80 cardinals joined the procession ahead of Cardinal Farrell, who was wearing a red and gold cope, and immediately preceded the pallbearers flanked by members of the Pontifical Swiss Guard.
Directly behind the casket were the men closest to the pope in his final days: his nurse, Massimiliano Strappetti; his two valets; and his personal secretaries.
Three religious sisters and a laywoman, whom the pope had appointed to top positions in the Roman Curia, came behind them: Franciscan Sister of the Eucharist Raffaella Petrini, president of the office governing Vatican City State; Salesian Sister Alessandra Smerilli, secretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development; Xavière Missionary Sister Nathalie Becquart, undersecretary of the Synod of Bishops; and Emilce Cuda, secretary of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America.
The basilica's bell-ringer sounded the death knell as the procession began.
To the singing of Psalms, beginning with "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want" (Psalm 23), the procession with the casket went into St. Peter's Square amid the public and then up the central ramp -- where Pope Francis would ride in the popemobile -- and into the church.
Inside the basilica, the choir and assembly chanted the Litany of Saints and then "Subvenite Sancti Dei," which begins with the petition: "Saints of God, come to his aid. Hasten to meet him, angels of the Lord. Receive his soul and present him to God the Most High."
Pope Francis' body, in a zinc-lined wooden casket covered in red fabric, was placed before the main altar on a low platform cut at an angle so that people coming to pay their respects could see his face.
Cardinal Farrell blessed the pope's body with holy water and incense and led those assembled in praying the Lord's Prayer.
Removing their red zucchettos, the cardinals bowed before the coffin, made the sign of the cross and left the basilica. They were followed by bishops, both those who work at the Vatican and those who head dioceses, then hundreds of priests and religious and top Vatican lay employees.
Mary Frances Brennan, who teaches at Kennedy Catholic High School in Seattle, was in the front row in St. Peter's Square.
She said she had learned the pope had died just a few hours before her flight to Rome was scheduled to leave.
"It was devastating," she said. "We really wanted to see the pope."
"He's my pope," she said. "I love him and want to honor him."
Additionally, Brennan said, "now all the people back home have a contact here and can see this through my eyes."
Waiting in line later to enter the basilica, Adjani Tovar from Mexico City told Catholic News Service that Pope Francis "was a very disruptive pope: As a Jesuit, a true Jesuit, he naturally had a closer connection with people, especially young people."
"He addressed topics that had been off-limits in the Catholic Church for a long time, and he's going to be remembered as a turning point for all the openness he showed to different communities, for his focus on inclusion, his relationships with heads of state, and his constant calls for peace," Tovar said.
Apr. 23 Wednesday within the Octave of Easter, Solemnity
Posted on 04/23/2025 00:00 AM (Catholic Culture Liturgical Year)