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Leading Philippine prelate urges Catholic families to move beyond 'closed circles,' embrace mission role (CBCP News)

The president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines said that “the Church today needs families that are not only inward-looking, but outward-going.”

“This is the identity of a people blessed by God—not stagnant, but growing; not closed in, but bearing fruit for others,” Archbishop Gilbert Garcera of Lipa preached on June 13, at a Mass attended by 10,000 members of the Missionary Families of Christ.

“Let your families become schools of mission,” Archbishop Garcera added. “Let your communities become spaces of encounter. Let your homes become starting points of evangelization.”

Power shortages force Cuban priests to ration Communion (AFP)

Worsening power shortages in Cuba have led to lower production of unconsecrated hosts. As a result, some priests are rationing Holy Communion.

Referring to nuns who make the hosts, Father George Payano, O.P., said that “they told the priests and bishops, you have to ration them a bit so that there are enough for all.”

Detroit archbishop lauds opening of new mosque (The Arab American News)

Archbishop Edward Weisenburger of Detroit lauded the opening of a $20-million mosque in Dearborn Heights, Michigan.

“There is no place where I feel more respect, fraternity, and kindness,” Archbishop Weisenburger said at the mosque’s opening ceremony on June 12, according to The Arab American News. “From the moment I entered this beautiful site, I felt a profound divine presence.”

South Korean president thanks Holy See for supporting peace process (Fides)

South Korean President Lee Jae-Myung thanked the Holy See for its “unconditional support and constant attention” to the peace process on the Korean Peninsula.

President Lee made his remarks at the Papal Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls in Rome on June 14, at the conclusion of a Mass celebrated by Cardinal Lazzaro You Heung-sik, the Korean prefect of the Dicastery for the Clergy.

The president, a Protestant, also praised the Catholic Church in Korea. He said that the Church there “has always firmly supported the Korean people, respecting human dignity and promoting peace and solidarity in all the trials our society has faced.”

Plaintiffs in New York archdiocese abuse case weigh $800M offer (New York Times)

1,300 plaintiffs who allege they were abused as minors by priests or lay staff of the Archdiocese of New York are weighing an $800-million settlement offer.

Under the offer, each plaintiff “can choose a one-time lump sum of $250,000 or go before an arbitrator to seek a higher payment,” The New York Times reported. “For any of them to get the deal, all must agree to take it ... If the settlement falls through and the archdiocese files for bankruptcy, it could set off years of uncertainty.”

Australian cabinet minister, ambassador who became a priest dies at 80 (The Catholic Weekly (Australia))

Father Michael Tate, an Australian senator who became the nation’s justice minister and ambassador to the Netherlands and the Holy See, died on June 5 at the age of 80.

Tate left behind his political and diplomatic career to become a seminarian and was ordained a priest of the Archdiocese of Hobart in 2000.

“For the next 26 years he served as a parish priest in Tasmania, far from Canberra, far from the headlines, a life very different from the high office he had once held,” The Catholic Weekly reported.

French lawmakers pass abuse bill after threat to seal of Confession removed (Ad Vaticanum)

Members of France’s National Assembly unanimously passed anti-abuse legislation after a provision targeting the seal of Confession was removed.

The legislation originally stated that “ministers of religion are subject to the obligation to report acts of violence against minors, even if they became aware of them in the course of their duties: no ‘seal of confession’ can prevent them from doing so.”

While supporting the intention of combating violence in schools, the Conference of Bishops of France expressed “great concern” that the bill, as originally written, would “call into question several fundamental freedoms, such as freedom of conscience, professional secrecy, freedom of education or freedom of religion.”

Pope expresses gratitude for visit to Spain, closeness to Philippine earthquake victims (CWN)

At the conclusion of his June 14 Angelus address, Pope Leo XIV expressed gratitude for his apostolic journey to Spain and closeness to victims of the Mindanao earthquake.

Holy See renews call for peace in Lebanon, Iran (Holy See Mission)

Addressing a UN Security Council discussion of peace in the Middle East, a Vatican diplomat renewed the Holy See’s call for peace in the region.

“It is vital to resolve all ongoing conflicts in the Middle East,” Msgr. Robert Murphy, chargé d’affaires of the Permanent Observer Mission of the Holy See to the United Nations, said on June 11. “In this regard, the Holy See urges an immediate end to the ongoing military escalation in Lebanon, and calls for concerted efforts, patience and diligence in pursuing a comprehensive and lasting peace, including addressing the situation concerning Iran.”

“Furthermore, it is imperative that any aggression stops, that the dramatic humanitarian situation in Gaza is addressed and that a path towards a two-State solution is paved,” Msgr. Murphy added.

Italian missionary priest beatified as martyr in Brazil ( Cancão Nova Cuiabá)

Father Nazareno Lanciotti (1940-2001), an Italian missionary who was national director of the Marian Movement of Priests in Brazil, was beatified as a martyr on June 13.

Cardinal João Braz de Aviz, prefect emeritus of the Dicastery for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, presided at the Mass of beatification, which took place at the Parish of Our Lady of the Pillar in Jauru, the small town where Father Lanciotti ministered for three decades.

“He was Marian and Eucharistic, loved hearing confessions, and practiced great penance,” said Otávio Piva, lay representative of the Marian Movement of Priests in Brazil. “Our spirituality of littleness, spiritual childhood, consecration to the Heart of Mary, and total trustful abandonment to God—these were all characteristics he embodied.”

Vatican News reported that Father Lanciotti combatted drug trafficking and prostitution. He was shot by two men who opposed his work and forgave his attackers before he died.