As the World Cup final looms, what lessons can defeat teach us?
With fewer than 10 matches left to play, the 2026 FIFA World Cup is entering its final stretch. As the tournament continues and more national teams are defeated and eliminated, the dream of becoming world champion fades away.
Faced with this reality, a question arises: What message can defeat convey from the perspective of the Catholic faith?
The worldʼs most important national team tournament has already seen the elimination of host countries Mexico, the United States, and Canada, as well as teams with high aspirations like Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal and Luka Modrić’s Croatia.
Although one might think that a defeat brings only sadness and frustration, Father David Jasso, a priest of the Archdiocese of Monterrey, Mexico, and former sporting director of the Monterrey Soccer Club, said in an interview with ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News, that failure also offers important lessons.
“We learn more from failure and mistakes than from achievements and successes,” the priest stated, noting that defeat is part of life and personal growth.
He also highlighted that the World Cup has demonstrated the power of sport to bring people together around the same dream. He pointed out that experiences like this remind us that we can still “unite, that we can still be together, and that shared hopes and dreams are also part of life.”
He encouraged fans to experience the remainder of the tournament in a spirit of fraternity. “Even though our national team isnʼt participating, we love soccer, so let’s enjoy it, especially with family and friends,” he said, while also calling for gatherings and fan festivities to take place “with respect and peace.”
Jasso noted that although soccer is a “thrilling, indescribable” sport and winning the World Cup is a great aspiration, “there are more important things for which we are playing,” including “glory, heaven, and salvation.”
He also pointed out the importance of preserving the essence of the game, urging people to “carefully protect the sport from corruption, negative practices, and business aspects that unfortunately affect this beautiful sport.”
A moment to reflect on hope
Father José de Jesús Aguilar, a priest of the Archdiocese of Mexico, told ACI Prensa that even in defeat, “one must always have hope.”
The priest noted that the Gospel invites us to “always seek success, the best, and growth,” but he also pointed out that Scripture teaches, in the Book of Ecclesiastes, that “there is a time to win and a time to lose.”
He explained that this is because “there are many things that do not depend solely on oneself, but also on others,” and furthermore, “people, times, circumstances, opportunities, and many other things” can change.
For this reason, he urged fans to accept the final scores with composure, noting that although all the teams are competing to lift up the trophy in celebration, “in this World Cup, there will be only one winner, while all the others participate and learn even from their losses.”
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.
Notre Dame awards religious liberty prize to Becket Fund for Supreme Court wins
Notre Dame Law School awarded its 2026 Prize for Religious Liberty to the Becket Fund — a nonprofit law firm that has secured 13 Supreme Court victories in the past 15 years defending the First Amendment’s religious liberty protections.
“We’re deeply honored to be recognized with the religious liberty prize,” Becket President and CEO Mark Rienzi told EWTN News.
“We’re honored to be able to be part of fighting to protect something that is very important for our country and the Church,” said Reinzi, who accepted the award at the July 8 conclusion of Notre Dame’s sixth annual Religious Liberty Summit in Chicago.
Becket — established in 1994 to provide cost-free legal counsel to those whose religious liberties were violated — has an undefeated record at the Supreme Court.
Its lawyers represented the Little Sisters of the Poor and Hobby Lobby against contraception mandates, defended the rights of Maryland parents to opt their children out of gender-related coursework that conflicted with their religious beliefs, and backed a Catholic foster care agency that only placed children with opposite-sex married couples.
G. Marcus Cole, a dean and professor of law at Notre Dame, said during the award ceremony that when the university started giving out the award, “we always imagined that it would go to one person.”
“But when we think about the Becket Fund, it is an entire team of lawyers, led by Mark Rienzi, who have made a difference in our world, who have made our lives better,” he said. “And for that reason, we thought it only appropriate to give the award to the Becket Fund as an entity."
Ongoing fights for religious liberty
The most recent victory secured by Becket came in Mahmoud v. Taylor, which ensured parents in Montgomery County, Maryland, had a right to opt their children out of coursework that included material related to gender that conflicted with their religious faith.
Rienzi told EWTN News that “parents don’t give up the right to [raise] their children when they drop their kids off at the schoolhouse gates.” He added: “Your children don’t belong to the state just because you use a public school.”
Becket represented Catholic, Ethiopian Orthodox, and Muslim parents in the lawsuit. Rienzi said religious parents have a right to “operate equally as a full citizen and full member of the public” by utilizing the public school system while maintaining the right to instill religious values in their children.
“[This was] the most important case in at least 50 or 100 years in establishing that principle,” he said.
Becket also secured the 2020 victory for the Little Sisters of the Poor in which the Supreme Court ruled in favor of federal regulations that exempted the religious sisters from mandatory contraception coverage in insurance plans.
The sisters, however, are back in court after the governments of Pennsylvania and New Jersey challenged those exemptions on separate grounds than those on which the court previously ruled. This case is now in an appellate court, which heard oral arguments on July 7. Becket is representing them again and Rienzi is the lead attorney on the case.
“It’s outrageous that governments keep volunteering for the beating they get when they keep [going after] the Little Sisters of the Poor,” Rienzi said.
He said “the law is really, really clear” that Pennsylvania cannot remove their exemptions from the mandate.
Becket is also representing a coalition of Catholic preschools in Colorado that is suing the state because they were excluded from a “universal” tuition program. The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case.
Notre Dame awarded Becket the prize less than one week after Americans celebrated the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, which culminated in the adoption of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights, which secured religious freedom.
“God created everybody equal and equally free and gave them rights,” Rienzi said, adding that religious freedom is “essential to the declaration’s idea of who we are as a country and … [it] is crucial for maintaining it.”
“It’s a shame that you still have to fight about it,” Rienzi said. “But on the other hand, it’s worth fighting for.”
Iranian delegation visits Our Lady of Guadalupe Basilica, engaging in ‘interfaith dialogue’
An Iranian delegation recently visited Our Lady of Guadalupe Basilica in Mexico City, the Marian shrine that displays the original image of the Virgin Mary that miraculously appeared on the tilma of the Indigenous St. Juan Diego nearly 500 years ago.
On July 8, the Iranian Embassy in Mexico shared on social media that “at the spiritual heart of Mexico, Our Lady of Guadalupe Basilica, we had the honor of sharing a fraternal meeting between representatives of Islam and Christianity.”
The Iranian delegation consisted of Iranʼs ambassador to Mexico, Abolfazl Pasandideh; Ayatollah Dr. Emran Khanzadeh; and Mohammad Reza Gilani, the counselor of cultural affairs at the Iranian Embassy.

The three were welcomed at the Marian shrine by Monsignor Edgar Alan Valtierra López, senior penitentiary canon and head of the Commission for Ecumenism and Interreligious Dialogue at the basilica.
In its social media post, under the title “When respect opens the way, friendship is born,” the Iranian embassy highlighted that “during the conversation, Dr. Emran Khanzadeh recalled that the Virgin Mary (Maryam) occupies a unique place in Islam,” since “she is the only woman mentioned by name in the Quran and an eternal example of purity, faith, and dedication to God.”
“We also share a little-known reality: In Iran, Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians have lived together for centuries with mutual respect. Because when people know each other, prejudices disappear,” the Iranian delegation said.
“Religions may have different paths, but they all lead to peace,” the embassy wrote.
The Virgin Mary and her ‘very important’ role in dialogue between Catholics and Muslims
Speaking to ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News, Valtierra said that “the role of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Catholic-Muslim dialogue is very important.”
“Ambassador Abolfazl told us that in the Quran, their holy book, she is called Maryam, and she is the only woman to whom a surah, that is, a chapter of the Quran, is dedicated. Surah 3:42 states: ‘Oh Mary! God has chosen you, purified you, and selected you above the women of all worlds.’”
“Although there are very profound differences regarding the figure of Jesus, Mary becomes a sign of rapprochement and respectful dialogue, as we discover shared values such as love for God, obedience, faith, humility, hope, and many others,” the Mexican priest said.
Valtierra noted that the gathering took place in the context of the desire of the primatial archbishop of Mexico, Cardinal Carlos Aguiar Retes, for the shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe to be a place where people of all faiths can learn about and draw closer to the message of Our Lady of Guadalupe and her son, Our Lord Jesus Christ.
“Interfaith and ecumenical events are held in various areas of the shrine,” he said, noting that meetings have taken place with Lutheran, Anglican, and evangelical Christians as well as believers “from other religions such as Jews, Buddhists, and Hare Krishnas,” among others.
“In this context, the Iranian embassy requested to visit the shrine on the occasion of a visit by a very important figure, Ayatollah Dr. Emran Khanzadeh, who wished to engage in interfaith dialogue,” he explained.

‘A testimony to the Church’s openness’
Valtierra noted that during the visit, “we first toured the shrine, which included viewing the image head-on from the sanctuary. Afterward, we moved to a room where Ayatollah Emran spoke, drawing on profound Islamic theology, about the need for religions to work together.”
The ayatollah, he said, “mentioned that in Iran there is a street where there is a Mazdean [Zoroastrian] temple, an Armenian Christian church, and a mosque,” and “noted that monotheistic religions share many common points, one of which is a merciful God who calls upon us to work in fraternity.”
This meeting, the canon of the basilica noted, demonstrates “that the Church can welcome everyone with respect and without neglecting the proclamation of Our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Visitors who were ‘very devoted to Our Lady of Guadalupe’
According to Valtierra, the Iranian visitors “showed themselves to be very devoted to Our Lady of Guadalupe” and noted that “in the sacristy, we gave them some holy cards featuring the image of the Virgin, and they liked them very much.”
The ambassador and the ayatollah shared with him that both men have daughters named Mary.
Furthermore, “they also told us that they have an image of Our Lady of Guadalupe in their homes, and that in Iran there is even a metro station named ‘Holy Virgin Mary,’ which features a beautiful relief image of the Virgin on one of its walls.”
“While the image in the station does not depict Guadalupe, it certainly speaks volumes about the respect held for Holy Mary,” the priest noted.
Our Lady of Guadalupe Basilica and interreligious dialogue
Valtierra clarified that when receiving visits from believers of other religions, “the basilica does not stop being a Catholic shrine; rites blending beliefs are not performed,” but rather “each participant fully retains their own religious identity.”
The aim, he emphasized, is “to promote mutual understanding, respect, and collaboration for peace and human dignity, as called for by the Second Vatican Council and the contemporary magisterium of the popes.”
“Visits by people of other faiths to Our Lady of Guadalupe Basilica offer an opportunity to encounter the Catholic faith through its liturgy, devotion to the Virgin, and the witness of popular piety,” he said, noting that “interreligious dialogue does not promote relativism or syncretism; rather, it expresses the conviction that Christianity can bear witness to Christ with clarity while simultaneously listening to, learning from, and working alongside people of other religious traditions.”
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.
Housing bill to become law as federal data shows drop in homelessness
A long‑negotiated housing bill will become law without President Donald Trump’s signature, ending months of debate.
Congress sent the measure to the president’s desk on June 29, and he refused to sign it to leverage lawmakers to address restrictions on voter identification and mail-in ballots. Without a veto, the measure becomes law 10 days later, excluding Sundays, under the Constitution.
The legislative push comes as federal data shows homelessness has begun to fall nationwide.
According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)’s annual Point-In-Time (PIT) report, 745,652 people were homeless in the U.S. in 2025, including 266,320 people living on the street on a single night in January 2025. While the total number of homeless people in the U.S. has increased by 27% since 2013, the number decreased by 3% from 2024 to 2025.
Under federal law, HUD also is mandated to release another annual report on homelessness. HUD has yet to release the Annual Homelessness Assessment report (AHAR), despite legal requirements and congressional pressure. HUD did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Rep. French Hill, R-Arkansas, sponsored the bill, (HR 6644), titled “The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act.”
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has repeatedly said the government has a legitimate role in ensuring access to safe, affordable housing, especially when market forces fail vulnerable families. The Catholic Church recognizes housing is a basic human right that must be available to all persons so that they may lead a life that reflects their God-given dignity, U.S. bishops said.
“The necessity of housing dictates that individuals, community and religious institutions, the private sector, and the government must all work together to make safe and decent housing affordable to all, especially people who are most vulnerable,” the USCCB said in its fact sheet on affordable housing.
Catholic Charities USA has long maintained that coordinated federal, state, and local efforts, paired with community‑based ministries, can reduce homelessness when sustained over time.
In June, Catholic Charities USA praised provisions in the housing measure related to zoning reforms, increased private investment in the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program, a higher public welfare investment cap for banks, changes to homeless assistance programs, and the reauthorization of the Community Development Block Grant-Disaster Recovery program.
“The rate of homelessness in the United States continues to rise. On any given night last year, roughly 650,000 people were unsheltered. That is a 12% increase compared to the prior year and the largest level of homelessness since the federal government began tracking that statistic,” Catholic Charities said in its 2024 housing report. “At the same time, there is a national shortage of more than 7 million affordable rental homes for our nation’s roughly 10.8 million extremely low-income families.”
“This represents an urgent crisis that gets ignored far too often by the government and the media,” the report added. “With so many families living on the brink, Catholic Charities USA and its member agencies are providing short- and long-term solutions.”
U.S. Catholic bishops to lawmakers: SNAP policy is ‘our greatest concern’ in farm bill
WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. bishops and Catholic charitable organizations sent a letter to senators asking them to strengthen domestic and international programs designed to alleviate hunger and to prioritize rural development and conservation efforts in the 2026 farm bill.
“Our greatest concern with the current draft is with the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), our nation’s core nutrition program,” the bishops said in the letter sent to the leadership of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
The letter was signed by Louisville, Kentucky, Archbishop Shelton J. Fabre, chair of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Domestic Justice and Human Development Committee, and Bishop A. Elias Zaidan, chair of the USCCB Committee on International Justice and Peace.
The bishops cautioned the draft of the farm bill released June 23 by the Senate Agriculture Committee “does not sufficiently strengthen or modernize SNAP.” They warned “it shifts focus away from addressing hunger itself and toward additional administrative and compliance requirements.”
Specifically, they urged lawmakers to delay a plan to shift costs to the states for two years to “allow states adequate time to plan and fix error rates and would help prevent disruptions in access to nutrition assistance for vulnerable households.”
Additionally, they asked Congress to eliminate a restriction on SNAP that bans access to some people with felony convictions. They wrote: “Removing this restriction would better support successful reentry, reduce food insecurity, and promote family stability without compromising program integrity.”
The House passed its version of the measure in April. It would reshape U.S. global food aid programs by shifting more resources toward purchasing food closer to crisis regions rather than shipping U.S. commodities overseas.
The bishops urged senators to align with the House version by allowing Puerto Rico to move from the Nutrition Assistance Program (NAP) to full SNAP participation over a 10-year transition, saying the phased shift would better match benefits to need, strengthen responsiveness during downturns and disasters, and advance parity for U.S. citizens in the territories.
“SNAP remains our nation’s most effective and responsive tool to combat hunger, particularly during periods of economic uncertainty, rising food costs, and persistent poverty,” the bishops added. “Policies that weaken its reach or add unnecessary barriers ultimately harm low-income families, seniors, people with disabilities, and children who rely on these programs to meet their basic nutritional needs.”
Last year, the bishops took issue with SNAP requirements added in the reconciliation bill, which shifted federal government cost to states, raised the work requirement age from 54 to 64, and imposed stricter eligibility verification rules.
Alternatively, the bishops welcomed some farm bill provisions related to SNAP, such as a provision to make online purchasing a permanent option; the reauthorization of the Commodity Supplemental Food Program, which supports seniors in rural communities; and the inclusion of cost-sharing waivers for counties with high poverty rates.
Leadership of Catholic Relief Services, Catholic Charities USA, Catholic Rural Life, and National Council of the U.S. Society of St. Vincent de Paul joined the bishops in signing the letter.
The letter states that these organizations, along with the bishops, are united in “our shared commitment to alleviate hunger and urge Congress to pass a farm bill that furthers this goal.” They quoted Pope Leo’s address from Oct. 16, 2025, related to the World Day of Hunger.
“Hunger … is a cry that rises to heaven and requires a swift response from every nation, every international organization, every regional, local, or private body,” Leo said. “No one can remain on the sidelines in the fight against hunger.”
Additional priorities
The bishops and other signatories expressed appreciation for continued funding of international food assistance programs, including the Food for Peace, McGovern-Dole Food for Education, Food for Progress, Farmer-to-Farmer, and the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust.
As Congress considers possible changes to how Food for Peace is administered, the bishops declined to take a formal position on potential reforms, so long as “operations continue” without impediment through any transition.
“We recommend maintaining a focus on the most hungry and malnourished places around the world using market-appropriate food aid,” they wrote. “We also support efforts to ensure cooperation and consultation between [federal agencies] and other relevant stakeholders as policy changes and award decisions are made to this program going forward.”
The bishops also expressed support for the draft bill’s inclusion of rural development funding, which they said strengthen health care, new farmers, scholarships, and infrastructure. They similarly told lawmakers they support the draft bill’s reauthorization of conservation funds, which include research programs on soil health and technology to prevent and respond to climate change.
“We encourage members to work together to advance nutrition, rural development, and conservation policies that are practical, compassionate, and responsive to current challenges,” the bishops wrote.
“We stand ready to work with the committee in a constructive and collaborative manner to ensure that the final farm bill reflects our shared responsibility to protect vulnerable families, support thriving communities, and promote the common good,” they added.
British Catholic politician’s death investigated as murder, police say
Police are conducting a murder investigation into the death of long-serving British Catholic politician Ann Widdecombe, authorities said on July 10, one day after her death at 78.
The long-serving British politician, who converted to Catholicism in the early 1990s, was found dead on July 9 at her home in Dartmoor in southwestern England.
Initial reports suggested she may have died from a fall in her home. But in a statement on July 10 Devon and Cornwall Police said they had launched a murder investigation into her death.
Police “are conducting extensive enquiries into the circumstances surrounding Miss Widdecombe’s death,” the statement said, adding that investigators were performing forensic examinations of the purported crime scene.
“Our murder enquiry is in its early stages but moving at a significant pace,” Chief Inspector Ilona Rosson said in the statement. “We are deploying all of the necessary resources to find out exactly what has happened and to locate the person responsible, who we believe to be a white male.”
The police said later on July 10 that a 26-year-old male suspect had been arrested as part of the investigation and was in police custody. The event was not being treated as terrorism, authorities said.
A member of the U.K.’s Conservative Party, Widdecombe served in various government roles for decades, including as a member of Parliament and as prisons minister under Prime Minister John Major.
She famously converted to Catholicism in 1993 after the Church of England began ordaining women. In an interview with The New Statesman, she described the English church as “a huge bundle of straw,” with women’s ordination “the last straw.”
“For years I had been disillusioned by the Church of Englandʼs compromising on everything. The Catholic Church doesnʼt care if something is unpopular,” she told the outlet.
Throughout her life as a Catholic she was a vocal defender of the Church and its teachings, especially on the sanctity of life and the sanctity of marriage.
She herself never married; she lived with her widowed mother, Rita, in London until 2007 when her mother died at the age of 95.
In one of her last interviews before her death, she told EWTN News’ Colm Flynn in September 2025 that the “great thing about Catholicism is it doesn’t compromise.”
“You know, something’s either true or it’s false. It’s right or it’s wrong. It’s sin or it’s not,” she told Flynn. “[In the Catholic Church] there is none of the endless fudging that you got with the Anglican Church.”
She argued that the Church is “appealing to young people” in the modern era, pointing to an uptick of interest and an increase in the sale of Bibles. She also cited high levels of religious devotion in the Global South, including in Africa.
“We live in a surprisingly optimistic time,” she said.
This story was updated at 1:30 p.m. ET on July 10, 2026, with news of the arrest of a suspect in Ann Widdecombe’s murder.
How the design for the official logo for Pope Leo XIV’s visit to France was created
The French Bishops' Conference unveiled the official logo for Pope Leo XIVʼs visit to France, scheduled for Sept. 25–28, and it is a design rich in symbolism.
Instagram post
The modern design seeks to express the journey’s theme, “So That the World May Have Life” (cf. John 6), through a visual language inspired by peace, the Eucharist, the heritage of French cathedrals, and Art Deco, one of France’s most iconic artistic movements.
The bishops’ conference highlighted on social media that it is “a striking symbol that combines the dove of peace, the bursting forth of life, and the spirit of our cathedrals' rose windows.” It also noted that “France’s tricolor hues blend with the orange of life and the green of hope, creating a universe that is decidedly joyful and radiant.”
The artwork was created by Atelier Argo, a French studio specializing in design and brand identity. Its founder, Ghislain dʼOrglandes, explained the creative process behind the logo, typography, and graphic elements.
“When the French Bishops' Conference came to present the project to me, they did so using the phrase the pope chose to express the meaning of his journey and visit. I studied it closely and wanted to get to the essence,” dʼOrglandes explained.
“That’s where the idea of the dove with an olive branch, a symbol of a return to life, originated. I started with that initial sketch and then worked on the pope’s name as if it were a logo. It’s a short, memorable name. Those four letters [‘Leon’ in French], together with the Roman numeral, already formed a very powerful image,” he explained.
The result is a circular emblem reminiscent of a cathedral stained-glass window. Inside, it features a blue dove, a cross, an architectural shape evoking both a church and an open doorway, and an olive branch.
Inspired by the stained-glass windows of French cathedrals
Regarding the meaning of the symbols, the designer explained that “the dove naturally represents peace; the branch symbolizes the sprouting of life — rebirth. At the same time, the overall design adopts a stained-glass style, resembling a large rose window that evokes both the one at Notre Dame and those of the great cathedrals.”
In addition to the main logo, the accompanying images feature minimalist illustrations of three iconic locations from the papal visit: Paris, Lourdes, and Metz.

As part of the project, Atelier Argo developed an original typeface “following the same style as the logo.”
“It conveys stability and a timeless character, yet simultaneously possesses curves and a certain softness in its horizontal and vertical lines. These are letters with a commanding presence and full forms that can symbolize the Eucharist, because the Eucharist is fullness,” dʼOrglandes said.
A design conceived to convey joy
“And it is precisely here that the Mass with the pope on Sept. 26 will be celebrated,” the designer said in the video released by the French bishops, speaking from Place de la Concorde, where the pope will celebrate a Mass in Paris.
Finally, he expressed his hope that the logo and related imagery would help spiritually prepare for the pontiffʼs arrival in France.
“I hope my modest contribution also helps to beautify this event and succeeds in conveying a spirit of joy, the joy of welcoming the pope,” he concluded.
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.
Catholic bishop: ‘There’s no political will in fight against terrorism in Nigeria’
YOLA, Nigeria — Bishop Stephen Dami Mamza of Nigeriaʼs Catholic Diocese of Yola has said the countryʼs inability to defeat terrorism is not due to a lack of military resources but rather the absence of the political will needed to end the persistent insecurity that has claimed thousands of lives in the West African country.
Speaking to ACI Africa, the sister service of EWTN News in Africa, on the sidelines of the Catholic Menʼs Organization (CMO) meeting of the Jos Ecclesiastical Province on July 7, Mamza expressed concern about the governmentʼs failure to demonstrate sufficient commitment to tackling insurgency despite Nigeria possessing the capacity to overcome the threat.
“In the security challenges that we are facing, we all know that the government is unserious,” the bishop said, noting that the countryʼs continued struggles against terrorism raises serious questions about the commitment of those entrusted with protecting citizens.
“You cannot say that the government doesnʼt have a hand in what is happening since the government is not prepared to resolve these issues and also give the military full authority to get rid of the terrorists,” Mamza said.
The Church leader pointed to the track record of the Nigerian Armed Forces in peacekeeping and military operations across Africa as evidence that the country has the means to confront insurgency successfully.
“The Nigerian Army has resolved issues in different African countries. We have air power, we have land power, and we have all the necessary advantages that we need in order to get rid of the insurgency. But there is no will, there is no seriousness, there is no commitment, and there is too much politics in it,” he said.
Mamza also faulted both the ruling government and opposition politicians for exploiting Nigeriaʼs security crisis for political gain rather than working together to safeguard lives.
“Even the sitting government is politicizing the whole security issue. Even those who are in the opposition are also politicizing the security issues,” he lamented.
The bishop warned that public officials who fail to fulfill their responsibility to protect citizens will ultimately answer to God for preventable loss of life.
“Our government is not sincere, and our government, on the last day, will be held accountable for the loss of lives in Nigeria at the moment,” he said.
Reflecting on the theme of the CMO gathering, Mamza said Godʼs justice extends not only to perpetrators of violence but also to those who neglect their duty to protect human life.
“The theme of this gathering is that Godʼs judgment is just; both perpetrators of violent terrorism and those who fail in their responsibility to protect lives will face divine accountability,” he said, explaining that, unlike human justice, divine judgment cannot be influenced by corruption, favoritism, or personal relationships.
“Godʼs judgment is not human judgment. God knows everything about us. It is not only what we see that God knows. Even our thoughts, our secret emotions, and what is in our hearts, God knows. His judgment is just and fair,” Mamza said.
The bishop also commented on reports about an alleged fake government agency whose purported leadership supposedly established offices and engaged in diplomatic activities despite claims that the agency has no legal basis.
He said the reports point to the need for greater transparency and accountability within public institutions.
“Every year, they will be getting a budget, and then nothing is being used at the end of the year. This is just one. There might be so many that we donʼt know,” he said.
Calling for divine intervention, the bishop added: “We pray that God will expose them.”
He encouraged CMO members and all Nigerians not to lose hope despite the countryʼs challenges, emphasizing that while injustice may appear to prevail temporarily, Godʼs justice remains certain.
“The message of the Church is one of hope rooted in the certainty that God sees every act of righteousness and every act of evil. While his judgment is uncompromisingly just, it is also rich in mercy for those who repent and seek his forgiveness,” Mamza said.
This story was first published by ACI Africa, the sister service of EWTN News in Africa, and has been adapted by EWTN News.
Nicaraguan bishop: Irrationality and cruelty are tragic characteristics of the dictatorship
Forced to leave Nicaragua in April 2019 for defending protesters opposing the regime of President Daniel Ortega and his wife and vice president, Rosario Murillo, during a crackdown that left more than 350 people dead, exiled Auxiliary Bishop Silvio Báez of Managua decried the “irrationality” and “cruelty” of the countryʼs dictatorship.
“One of the most tragic characteristics of this dictatorship is its irrationality. Along with that irrationality is cruelty. But the irrationality of this system is shocking,” Báez said in an interview with the Nicaraguan newspaper Confidencial.
The interview took place in Madrid, Spain, where he had recently traveled to attend a conference in Ávila. The exiled bishop resides in Miami.
On April 18, 2018, in response to the brutal repression unleashed by the dictatorship, he had said: “I call upon Daniel Ortega and his wife to stop the violence and repression. Do not jeopardize the countryʼs peace. Learn to listen, engage in dialogue, and have the maturity to correct so many errors. For the sake of Nicaragua, be sensible!”
The bishop said this message “has become even more relevant today. I would repeat it to their faces, the very same thing I told them eight years ago: Be sensible!”
“So much blood has been shed, so many lives sacrificed, so much pain. And that has an infinite cost. I hope that all of this is not in vain, and I trust that the Lord will gather all that blood, all that pain, and all that struggle into his gracious hands, and that it may serve as a deposit for a new chapter in Nicaragua’s history,” he said.
Since 2018, the Nicaraguan dictatorship has relentlessly persecuted the Catholic Church in the country, keeping priests under tight surveillance, expelling religious sisters, confiscating Church funds and property, banning ordinations, and exiling bishops.
Báez celebrates Mass every Sunday at St. Agatha Parish in Miami where the pastor and the parochial vicar — Fathers Marcos Antonio Somarriba and Edwing Román — are also Nicaraguan exiles.
‘God is never on the side of a pharaoh’
Báez noted that “in Nicaragua, there is a dictatorship that kills, persecutes, exiles, confiscates, lies, and manipulates, one that resembles the authoritarian and totalitarian regimes found in the Bible. In sacred Scripture, the reality of oppression, slavery, and injustice is more present than one might think,” he explained.
The prelate highlighted that “the history of the people in the Bible begins with a state of oppression where there is a pharaoh who decides who lives and who dies, holds the people in slavery, and uses that people for his own ends of enrichment and grandeur.”
Nevertheless, he said God “hears the cry of the oppressed, sees the suffering of the poor, and feels for them. He is a God who does not remain indifferent. He comes down into history. And the way God came down into history in the Book of Exodus was by calling Moses, who liberates the people of Israel by the power of God and leads them to the Promised Land.”
Today, the bishop continued, “Pharaoh still exists, and what we believers must live out and hold as a deep conviction is that our God, the God of the Bible, the God and Father of Jesus Christ, is never on the side of a pharaoh.”
The silence of the Church
After denouncing the silencing of individuals and the media as a crime against human dignity, Báez addressed the silence within the Catholic Church.
“Within the Church, there exists a negative silence, keeping quiet to avoid trouble or difficulties with power groups, the established system, or those currently in power. The easiest thing to do is to be silent. And the Church succumbs to this temptation when it remains silent,” he charged.
“As the community of Jesus, we are called to be a courageous, transparent community, a community of the Word. We are not a community of silence,” he said, noting that there is also a positive silence rooted in prayer and prudence, where one silences “every human word in order to listen to the Lord.”
“During my final days in Managua, I spoke some words that many remember: ‘A crucified people will always rise again,’ because the paschal icon of the cross reveals to us the same truth found in exile. For God, there is no final moment when everything comes to an end. A new light can always shine in the darkness,” he said.
Bishop Rolando Álvarez
Báez recalled Bishop Rolando Álvarez, bishop of Matagalpa and apostolic administrator of Estelí, one of the four exiled Nicaraguan prelates.
Álvarez was unjustly accused of treason and sentenced to 26 years and four months in prison following a trial riddled with irregularities before being deported in January 2024.
Báez said he suffered “greatly over the tragedy Rolando went through in Nicaragua, and I find satisfaction in the fact that besides praying for him every day, I also did everything within my power. I raised my voice in various U.S. states and with different media outlets” so that “he would not suffer in prison and would be released.”
A bishop in exile
Reflecting on Pope Francis’ decision that Báez should leave Nicaragua in 2019, the bishop admitted that accepting it “was very painful. I argued with Pope Francis at length, but he was convinced it was for the best.”
“He told me, ‘I don’t want another martyr bishop in Central America.’ He took me by the arm there in Rome and said, ‘Listen to me; I know what I’m talking about.’ After a long discussion, I finally realized there was no point in arguing with the Holy Father, and I recognized the affection and kindness with which he was trying to save me from an attack and a death that were highly likely,” he recounted.
Regarding his ministry while in exile, Báez said that “it is a challenge to pastoral creativity. You are where your heart is, not where your feet are. And I have discovered during these years of exile that not being physically present does not necessarily mean being far away.”
One example of this work is that, on the last Monday of every month, more than 200 exiled Nicaraguan priests meet via Zoom, a gathering he said that has the approval of Pope Leo XIV and in which another exiled bishop, Carlos Enrique Herrera, president of the Nicaraguan Bishops' Conference, also participates.
“It‘s the clergy in exile, but that is one of the dimensions in which I carry out my episcopal ministry of being close to the priests,” he stated.
Pope Leo XIV and hope for Nicaragua
In August 2025, Pope Leo XIV met with exiled bishops, including Báez, who stated that the Holy Father “has a very detailed knowledge of the situation in Nicaragua. He knows what is going on, he knows the situation of the Church, he was aware of our own situation, and I believe he is going to make decisions.”
“Pope Leo is very thoughtful; he is a man of God and deeply spiritual. He is a wise man who knows how to listen and does not let himself be guided by impulse. I am certain that Nicaragua, the Church in Nicaragua, the priests, and the bishops, are in his mind and in his heart,” the prelate stated.
The bishop acknowledged that, given the climate of persecution in Nicaragua, he has at times felt afraid, but he said the important thing is to take action and not let “fear paralyze or silence you.”
“Sometimes, fear also helps us perceive things more clearly. The important thing is that it doesnʼt hold you back,” he added.
The prelate stressed that the source of hope is faith in God: “When all paths are closed, when everything seems dark, faith in God gives you the inner strength to say, ‘No, it’s not all over.’ A new beginning is possible, one that is brighter than discouragement or sadness; we must not let fear block us, hem us in, cause us to give up, or silence our voices.”
Báez said he believes change in Nicaragua depends on the people who are still there and that he dreams of a country where “we can share our ideas and our resources without fear, and in a spirit of solidarity and fairness; where we can build a homeland where no one feels excluded, where thinking differently is not a crime; a country with true peace founded on social justice.”
“And I believe,” he affirmed, “that it is possible. I am certain we will achieve it.”
“The homeland lives in your heart. And I love Nicaragua.”
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News English.
Northern Ireland launches inquiry into mother and baby homes with landmark bill
Northern Ireland has passed legislation to establish an inquiry-and-redress scheme concerning mother and baby institutions, which were prevalent in the country from 1922 until 1995.
The bill was first introduced in June 2025 and completed its final stage on June 30 of this year.
The inquiry will investigate issues raised in the Truth Recovery Independent Report, which was also published this week.
Both the report and the bill focus on institutions that for over 60 years housed unmarried pregnant women who were sent to the homes by a variety of authorities — welfare, priests, family members — to have their babies. The children born there were typically adopted or sent to baby homes, while some returned home with their mothers.
Over 15,000 women and girls are estimated to have passed through mother and baby homes, as well as Magdalene laundries — institutions in both the north and south of Ireland operated by Catholic religious orders in which thousands of women and girls were confined and forced to perform unpaid hard labor. The last one closed in 1996.
The Truth Recovery Independent Panel report was commissioned to gather evidence in a nonconfrontational setting and includes the testimonies of over 300 survivors. Seventy recommendations were made, including the specific investigation of “Sister Z,“ a nun at the Good Shepherd Sisters-run Marianvale Mother and Baby Home in Newry, County Down, for sexual abuse.
The report highlights serious systemic failures of the state to exercise oversight in Magdalene laundries and other homes.
Northern Ireland First Minister Michelle O’Neill said: “Within their walls, women and girls were stripped of dignity, silenced, and shamed. Their children, now adults, are still living with that impact today, carrying unanswered questions and loss.”
Conor Brogan, who was born at Marianvale and placed for adoption as an infant, told EWTN News that the bill and the public inquiry are incredibly significant because they were developed with survivors' input.
“It has survivors at the forefront, and that is something that victims and survivors have campaigned for for a long time,” he said. “It is a massive step in the right direction to clearly understand where accountability lies and to ensure that those who are accountable are seen in the public eye as such.”
He continued: “Girls and women who went into these institutions were publicly shamed. It was barbaric in terms of how they were treated. Institutions themselves didnʼt exist in a vacuum. Society was, in those days, very ‘puritan,’ and the whole facilitation of these institutions was by the broader society. There isnʼt a single case of a mother or baby being connected to one of these institutions without some form of government involvement. They all played a part in it.”
Brogan’s birth mother, Geraldine, now deceased, was a resident at Marianvale. He was born there in February 1969 and adopted several weeks later. He says of the redress scheme: “For my mother itʼs getting back to lifting the shame off her shoulders. In todayʼs society, where shame doesnʼt exist, I think education and support for young girls who find themselves in this situation is the biggest legacy that could come out of it.”
Brogan was reunited with Geraldine in his 30s, and he said they established a good relationship. “She had never talked to anybody about it — not her own sisters and brothers. Her children didnʼt know about it. Her spouse did. The trauma that was associated with that weighed heavily on her,” he said.
Geraldine’s time in the Good Shepherd home from November 1968 to April 1969 was too painful for her to ever talk about to Brogan. “That was very hard for her to even sort of go near it at all. She just couldnʼt; it was too painful, too raw, even after all those years, 35 to 40 years later, she couldnʼt. She just said it wasnʼt very nice and didnʼt want to elaborate. Meeting me and having me in her life went some way to, to sort of easing that trauma; I donʼt think it ever fully healed the wound.”
Brogan always knew he was adopted and describes a happy childhood with his adoptive family. He told EWTN News that he, as a child, returned to visit the nuns in Marianvale with his adoptive parents. His brother and sister, also adopted, were born there too.
“There was the convent at the front, but there were other smaller outbuildings around the back, where, looking back now, I realize that’s where the women and girls were quartered.”
He recalled his dad putting money in the collection box there. “I have clear memories of that visit, but I had absolutely no understanding of the other side of it. The trauma of the birth mothers, knowing that youʼre giving up your baby as soon as itʼs born, of the baby being taken away, and then after that, I think, is the most impactful on peopleʼs lives.”
Brogan also embarked on a different journey to make contact with his birth father’s family. Unaware that he had a biological son who had been adopted, his biological father died in 1982.
Brogan said of both journeys: “You donʼt know where youʼre going to end up. You donʼt know if youʼre going to have an open door, a closed door, or visit a graveyard. When I found my fatherʼs family, the connection was fantastic. I did visit his grave, and that was quite tough. The realization that I would never meet my father.”
“I have met every sort of combination a survivor has gone through,” he said. “So, whether that’s a birth mother never able to meet her child, or one who found their child, but the child, now an adult, didnʼt want to have a relationship, and vice versa. Where the mother has locked that away, doesnʼt want it disturbed, hasnʼt told her family, and really doesnʼt want to acknowledge that it happened.”
He added: “I feel incredibly fortunate [that] Iʼm able to talk about it; Iʼm able to talk with others about it. And, you know, if my talking can help one other person, then itʼs worth it.”
He explained that “everybody will automatically think, ‘Oh, the Catholic Church is at fault again,’ but there were more accounts of women from a Protestant background who went through institutions than from a Catholic background. I think thatʼs important to state because the number of people who have come forward from the Protestant community is significantly less than the Catholic community. And I think there has to be some level of outreach to those people who feel that they canʼt come forward.”
Brogan said that beginning this journey was difficult. “But for me to have a better understanding of who I am, and where I came from, itʼs very, very important. And to be able to spend some level of time with my birth mother, and get an understanding of her and what she went through and everything else was pretty priceless.”
In a statement dated July 8 following the publication of the Truth Recovery Independent Report, the Good Shepherd Sisters said: “We respect the courage and strength of all who have come to share their experiences and have contributed to this research. We deeply regret the pain and hurt women in our care experienced, as outlined in their testimony to the panel.”
The statement continued: “We also acknowledge the women who expressed their appreciation to the Sisters they met while in our care in the past, even when they reflect on a time of deep crisis in their lives. We will continue to fully cooperate with the impending work of the public inquiry.”