Tag: Christianity

  • Ukrainian Orthodox Church celebrates Metropolitan Onuphry’s name’s day

    Kiev, July 26, 2024

    Photo: news.church.ua Photo: news.church.ua     

    A host of hierarch, clerics, monastics, and faithful gathered yesterday to celebrate the name’s day of the primate of the canonical and persecuted Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

    His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry of Kiev and All Ukraine led the Divine Liturgy for the feast of St. Onuphrios the Great in the main cathedral of the St. Panteleimon’s Monastery in Kiev, reports the UOC’s Information-Education Department.

    Photo: news.church.ua Photo: news.church.ua     

    The service was sung by the choir of the Kiev Theological Academy. Prayers were offered for peace in Ukraine, for the healing of the sick, and for shelter for those who have lost their homes.

    “Many years” was proclaimed for His Beatitude at the end of the service. He was then presented with an award from the Holy Synod—the UOC’s order of the Resurrection of Christ.

    Met. Onuphry thanked all those present and spoke about the life of St. Onuphrios.

    His Beatitude also received greetings from brother primates, including His Holiness Patriarch Porfirije of the Serbian Orthodox Church, His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA’s Metropolitan Tikhon visits persecuted Ukrainian Orthodox Church, Romania, and Constantinople (+VIDEOS)His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon of Washington and All America and Canada, primate of the autocephalous Orthodox Church in America, has been leading a delegation visiting Sister Orthodox Churches this month.

    “>who recently visited the UOC) and His Beatitude Metropolitan Rastislav of the Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia, as well as the Holy Synod of the Macedonian Orthodox Church.

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  • Court rejects constitutional challenge to prohibit public camping in Oregon city

    The Supreme Court June 28 rejected a constitutional challenge to an ordinance adopted by Grants Pass, Oregon, prohibiting public camping within city limits that critics said unfairly punished people who are experiencing homelessness.

    In a 6-3 vote, the court ruled in favor of the city of Grants Pass, rejecting an argument that the ordinance ran afoul of the Constitution’s Eighth Amendment, which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. The ruling overturned a 2022 decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and will in effect permit the city to enforce the ordinance.

    Writing for the majority opinion, Justice Neil Gorsuch said while homelessness is “complex,” and so is policy addressing it, the Eighth Amendment “does not authorize federal judges to wrest those rights and responsibilities from the American people and in their place dictate this Nation’s homelessness policy.”

    In a dissenting opinion, Justice Sonia Sotomayor argued in favor of the claim that the ordinance violated the Eighth Amendment, arguing that “the Constitution provides a baseline of rights for all Americans rich and poor, housed and unhoused.”

    “This Court must safeguard those rights even when, and perhaps especially when, doing so is uncomfortable or unpopular,” she said.

    In a statement, Metropolitan Archbishop Borys A. Gudziak of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia said, “Policies that criminalize homelessness are a direct contradiction of our call to shelter those experiencing homelessness and care for those in need.”

    “Criminalizing (the) homeless is not the response to caring for those in need,” added Archbishop Gudziak, chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development. “This decision fails to affirm the inherent dignity of a person, which is properly recognized by the constitution. Having to sleep in public with a blanket is the definition of being homeless.

    “Ticketing and arresting people for it is a counterproductive approach to the problem of homelessness,” he said. “Instead of punishing the most vulnerable among us, government should help provide shelter and economic and social programs that uphold and enhance the dignity of homeless persons. Such action would offer real opportunities for a better life and to remedy the deeper causes of homelessness.”

    The USCCB filed an amicus curiae brief in this case in favor of the challengers.

    In a statement, the National Homelessness Law Center called the ruling “profoundly disappointing” and argued the court decided that the U.S. Constitution “does not protect homeless people against cruel and unusual punishment, even when they have no choice to sleep in public using things like blankets or pillows.”

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  • Dagestan: Martyred priest laid to rest

    Derbent, Republic of Dagestan, Russia, June 28, 2024

    The funeral for Fr. Nikolai Kotelnikov. Photo: goragospodnya.ru The funeral for Fr. Nikolai Kotelnikov. Photo: goragospodnya.ru     

    The priest and church guard who were brutally murdered in the terrorist attacks in Dagestan over the weekend were prayerfully laid to rest earlier this week.

    Two churches, a synagogue, and a traffic police post were attacked on Sunday, leaving many dead, including Archpriest Nikolai Kotelnikov, 66, and a church guard named Mikhail Vavilin, whose sacrifice saved many others.

    The funeral for Mikhail Vavilin. Photo: goragospodnya.ru The funeral for Mikhail Vavilin. Photo: goragospodnya.ru     

    On Tuesday, June 25, His Eminence Archbishop Varlaam of Makhachkala and Grozny served the funeral for Mikhail Vavilin at the Holy Dormition Cathedral in Makhachkala. He was then buried behind the cathedral altar, reports Patriarchia.ru.

    The next day, the funeral for Archpriest Nikolai was served in the Holy Protection Church in Derbent, which it where he served and was shot and killed. The service was again led by Abp. Varlaam, and attended by a number of public officials.

    Fr. Nikolai was buried behind the altar of the church where he had served for 44 years.

    ***

    Fr. Nikolai was born on February 4, 1955, in the Republic of Ingushetia.

    In 1974, he graduated from a railway vo-tech school, and in 1974-1975, he served in the Soviet army.

    He later studied at the Stavropol Theological Seminary. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1977 and then moved to Dagestan, where he served in the Znamenny Church in Khasavyurt from 1977 to 1979.

    In 1979, he was appointed rector of the Holy Protection Church in Derbent, where he went on to serve for nearly 45 years.

    In 1999, he was appointed confessor of the clergy of the Baku-Caspian Diocese.

    He had three daughters, all of whom became matushkas. He had 11 grandchildren.

    He was Priest martyred in Dagestan posthumously honored by Church and stateTwo churches, a synagogue, and a traffic police post were attacked on Sunday, leaving many dead, including Archpriest Nikolai Kotelnikov, 66, and a church guard named Mikhail Vavilin.

    “>posthumously honored by both His Holiness Patriarch Kirill and President Vladimir Putin.

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  • Georgia: 6th-century monastery damaged by tornado

    Akhmeta, Kakheti Province, Georgia, June 28, 2024

    Photo: ipress.ge Photo: ipress.ge     

    A 6th-century monastery complex in eastern Georgia suffered damage during a tornado that briefly struck on Tuesday.

    The National Agency for the Protection of Cultural Heritage of Georgia reports:

    As a result of the natural disaster, the tin covering of the dome has been removed, the roof tiles on the southern slope of the cathedral are damaged, the windows on the western side of the cathedral and the dome are shattered, the tin roof of the bell tower and the tile roof of the episcopal palace are damaged, the balcony of the palace has collapsed, the cross has fallen from the cathedral’s dome, and the infrastructure of the surrounding area is damaged.

    Photo: wikimedia.org Photo: wikimedia.org   

    Employees of the National Agency and local clergy are assessing the extent of the damage. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Culture, Sport, and Youth Thea Tsulukiani also visited the monastery, and discussed plans for moving forward with His Eminence Metropolitan David of Alaverdi.

    Drone footage published by the National Agency show the extent of the damage:

    Parts of Alaverdi Monastery date back to the 6th century, when it was founded by the Assyrian Father St. Joseph of Alaverdi. The present-day Cathedral of St. George was built in the 11th century.

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  • Saint of the day: Irenaeus of Lyons 

    St. Irenaeus of Lyons was a second-century bishop and writer in present-day France. While most of his important writings have survived, the details of his life are mostly unknown. 

    Irenaeus was born in the Eastern half of the Roman Empire, around the year 140. As a young man he heard the preaching of St. Polycarp, who had been personally instructed by the apostle John. 

    Irenaeus became a priest and served in the Church of Lyons during the late 170s. At this time, Christians were being persecuted by the government, and were struggling as a Church with several heresies. 

    Irenaeus was sent to Rome to provide Pope St. Eleutherius with a letter about the Montanism heresy. When he returned to Lyons, he became the city’s second bishop, following the martyrdom of the previous bishop, St. Pothinus. 

    As bishop, Irenaeus came up against various heretical movements, many of which insisted that the material world was evil, and not part of God’s plan. Advocates of these movements tended to claim superior “spirituality” or “enlightenment” for their supposed secret knowledge. 

    Recognizing these as false, Irenaeus denounced them all as direct attacks on the Catholic faith. He wrote tirelessly to refute their claims, defending Christian orthodoxy and the reality of Christ’s human incarnation. His book “Against Heresies” is still studied today. Another, the “Proof of the Apostolic Preaching,” details his presentation of the Gospel message, and focuses on Christ’s fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies. 

    Irenaeus died around 202. He may have been a martyr, but this is not definitively known. 

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  • Archimandrite Kirill (Pavlov)—Milestone of His Biography

    Archimandrite Kirill (Pavlov) Archimandrite Kirill (Pavlov) The Gentle Light of Authenticity: Archimandrite Kirill (Pavlov)I remember batiushka’s own words of two years ago, when he still had the strength and desire to say at least something: “After all, a person needs nothing besides God’s mercy!”

    “>Archimandrite Kirill was born on October 8, 1919 into a peasant family of faithful Orthodox in the village of Makovskie Vyselki in Mikhailovsky district of Ryazan region. The Pavlovs had five children. Fr. Kirill was the fourth child, with Alexandra, Adrian and Anna born before him and Maria being the youngest in the family. He was baptized on the next day after his birth in the Church of the Nativity of the Most Holy Mother of God in a nearby village of Makovo. He was born on the remembrance day of the St. Sergius of RadonezhUndoubtedly, the most outstanding establisher of the truly selfless “life equal to the angels” in fourteenth century Russia is St. Sergius of Radonezh, the founder of the famous Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Monastery, which embodies in its historical legacy his blessed precepts, and gradually became a kind of spiritual heart for all of Orthodox Russia.”>Venerable Sergius of Radonezh, while his baptism fell on the remembrance day of the The Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the TheologianTruth is reflected in his mind and in his words, for he feels it and comprehends it in his heart. He contemplates eternal Truth, and as he sees it, passes it on to his beloved children.”>Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian, so he was named John in his honor. Archpriest John Kuzmenko, the rector of the church, became Ivan Pavlov’s first mentor.

    Batiushka’s father Dmitry Afanasyevich, who won respect of his fellow villagers for his rational mind and ability to offer good advice, sang in the church choir. Their family loved to sing both the church hymns and traditional songs. From early childhood, batiushka learned to love everything that has to do with the Church, he also loved singing and he had a good voice. Like all men of the Pavlov family, Dmitry Afanasyevich lived long to the age of ninety-two and died in 1963. Fr. Kirill’s mother, Paraskeva Vasilyevna, was a very sickly woman. She came to the Lavra while Fr. Kirill was studying at the theological schools, but she didn’t live to see him enter the monastery and died in 1954 not reaching seventy years old.

    Ivan finished a primary five-grade school in the neighboring village of Makovo, where he had to walk from his home village. Then, his older brother Adrian Dmitrievich took him to the village of Pustotino (Korablinsky district of Ryazan region). Adrian worked as a teacher there, later becoming a school vice-principal and a principal. This village is quite a distance from Ivan’s parental home, so he could only visit his parents and attend church there while on school breaks.

    “I lived surrounded by non-believers since I was twelve, so my spirituality faded away,” Fr. Kirill recalled later.

    After graduating from high school in 1933, the future elder entered the Kasimov industrial technical school and graduated from it in 1937 with a degree in “technology of nonferrous rapid machinery.” Between 1937 and September 1938, Ivan worked as a technician at a watch factory in the town of Katav-Ivanovsk in Chelyabinsk region.

    Ivan Pavlov in the army Ivan Pavlov in the army     

    Somewhere in September or October of 1938, Ivan Pavlov was drafted into the army and sent to serve in the Far East in the town of Barabash. While on leave, he would go with his friend to the shores of Peter the Great Bay to watch the majestic tides. They were there on a Sunday afternoon of June 22, 1941—Ivan Pavlov and his friend, while on leave, were sitting on the shore of the bay, when they suddenly saw people began to rush back and forth, here and there… They went up to the embankment and that’s where they heard everyone screaming: “The war, the war!” In October 1941, Ivan was supposed to receive a discharge, but it never materialized. He was sent to the front.

    In the battles near the Bologoye railroad station, he was wounded for the first time and sent to the hospital. After recovery, he participated in the battles for Voronezh, Tambov, Lipetsk and Stalingrad. Sergeant Pavlov took part in the Battle of Stalingrad in the 10th Infantry Brigade. Batiushka recalled of Stalingrad that it was “either hell or a fiery furnace…”

    We served on guard duty and took corpses away. That’s when I found a Gospel in the ruins of a house and took to reading it….

    “We sat in the trenches at the front line—we could hear the Germans talking. We ate once a day: Our field kitchen could only come at night there. It was awfully cold. We survived because we used the captured German blankets. Artillery preparation began. Oh, there was so much fire! Literally nothing was left of Stalingrad. Not a single surviving house, everything lay in ruins. Once the fighting was over, dead silence set in… We served on guard duty and took the corpses away, separating the Germans soldiers from ours and burying them in mass graves. That’s where I found a Gospel in the ruins of a house and began to read it…”

    It seems that at that moment the Lord revealed His mercy to the future elder and called him to a special ministry. Fr. Kirill talked about it as follows:

    “It was April and the sun already warmed everything around. One day, in the ruins of a house, I picked up a book in the trash. I began to read it and felt something so dear and sweet to my heart. It was the Gospel. I found such a treasure, such comfort for myself! I gathered all of its pages together, as the book was broken. That Gospel was with me all the time. I was so confused prior to finding it. Why do we have this war, why are we fighting? There was a lot of confusion, because our country had atheism, deception throughout; we couldn’t see the truth. But when I began to read the Gospel, it was as if my eyes finally saw everything in a truthful light, all those events. It was such a balm to my soul! I went to the battle with the Gospel and felt no fear—never again! It was so inspiring! It was simply because the Lord was with me and I wasn’t afraid of anything…”

    After the Battle of Stalingrad was over, Sergeant Ivan Pavlov was presented for an award. He was asked to join the Communist Party: the hero could not be a non-party man. Earlier, before Stalingrad, Ivan Dmitrievich had been a candidate for party membership. But now, after he found the Gospel, he refused. Batiushka said that they tried to persuade him with threats for a long time, but then he was reduced to the ranks and sent to disciplinary battalion. He was brought in to see the battalion commander who asked, “What is he here for?” The escort replied, “He is a believer, he believes in God and he gave up party membership.” At this the commander replied, “Take him back, have too many of those in our ranks!”

    At the time, the 254th tank brigade was being formed and soldier Ivan Pavlov was assigned to this brigade as a clerk. By the fall of 1943, his military unit happened to be in the area of Pavlograd, Dnepropetrovsk region. At the request of the collective farmers, the servicemen were sent to assist at harvesting watermelons and melons at melon fields. Batiushka recalled, “Instead of a disciplinary battalion, I was sent to collect melons!” They stayed there for a month and then their unit, as part of the 3rd Ukrainian Front, went to liberate Romania, Hungary, and Austria.

    “Our self-propelled artillery regiment went through Romania and got into Hungary,” recalled Fr. Kirill, “where we encountered heavy fighting near Lake Balaton. We lost twenty self-propelled guns, but I had the Gospel and I wasn’t afraid… I went as far as Austria.”

    In 1944 in Hungary, in the battles near Lake Balaton, Ivan Pavlov received his second wound, in the arm. He went to receive treatment in Tambov. Fr. Kirill recalled how in Tambov he went to a church, the only one that remained open on a Sunday afternoon:

    “The cathedral stood all bare inside; it had nothing but walls… The people were crowded inside. I was in a military uniform and an overcoat. The priest, Fr. John, who later became Bishop Innocent of Kalinin, gave such a heartfelt sermon that everyone who was present in the church began to weep. It was just one continuous wail… You stood there and it seized you involuntarily, so touching were those words the priest has said!”

    Ivan Pavlov met the end of the war in Austria. He rejoiced greatly, but he was not yet demobilized in the spring of 1945. Their unit was sent to the Western Ukraine to guard ammunition and provision depots. According to batiushka, many more of our soldiers died there. Bandera1 supporters would creep up on the guards at night and slaughter a whole host of sentry posts.

    Ivan Pavlov Ivan Pavlov Batiushka was demobilized only in October. He came to Moscow. At that time, his sister Anna Dmitrievna and her husband lived in Biryulevo. She worked at a brick factory. They lived in a barrack, but they took in relatives. Batiushka asked his sister, “Nyura, do have any seminaries or some kind of spiritual schools anywhere?” “I don’t know,” she said. “Why don’t you go and check at the Elokhovsky Cathedral, they should be able tell you there.” So, batiushka went in his service shirt to the Elokhovsky Cathedral, inquired at the candle shop and learned that theological courses had been reopened that year in the Novodevichy Convent. He went there wearing his military uniform. The vice-rector Fr. Sergius Savinsky welcomed him cordially and gave him the program for the entrance examinations, as well as an admission application for the courses. But since the exams were still six months away, he had to find a job. Batiushka decided, “If I go to work in my specialty as a technologist, they won’t let me go afterwards. I need to get a job as a watchman somewhere.” He walked around Moscow and wandered into the Kalitniki cemetery, which had a wood warehouse, and that’s where he was hired as a watchman. He had to work hard there unloading logs, but he was able to prepare for his seminary entrance exams.

    At the entrance exams, he successfully wrote an essay on an evangelical topic, and his constant reading of the Holy Scriptures helped him in this. When he received the invitation with the notice of enrollment, he “took off his overcoat and put on a quilt jacket” to go to his place of studies. In 1946, seventy-nine students were admitted to the seminary, with the future Archimandrite Kirill among them. Fr. Kirill wrote:

    “We studied in the classrooms of the Novodevichy Convent, at the church. I must say that the situation at the time wasn’t an easy one. The war had left everything lying in ruins and there was food rationing.”

    To be continued…



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  • 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time: ‘I say to you, arise!’

    Wis. 1:13-15, 2:23-24 / Ps. 30:2, 4-6, 11-13 / 2 Cor. 8:7, 9, 13-15 / Mk. 5:21-24, 35-43

    God, who formed us in his imperishable image, did not intend for us to die, we hear in today’s First Reading. Death entered the world through the devil’s envy and Adam and Eve’s sin; as a result, we are all bound to die.

    But in the moving story in today’s Gospel, we see Jesus liberate a little girl from the possession of death.

    On one level, Mark is recounting an event that led the disciples to understand Jesus’ authority and power over even the final enemy, death (see 1 Corinthians 15:26). On another level, however, this episode is written to strengthen our hope that we, too, will be raised from the dead, along with all our loved ones who sleep in Christ (see 1 Corinthians 15:18).

    Jesus commands the girl to “Arise!” — using the same Greek word used to describe his own resurrection (see Mark 16:6). And the consoling message of today’s Gospel is that Jesus is the resurrection and the life. If we believe in him, even though we die, we will live (see John 11:26).

    We are called to have the same faith as the parents in the Gospel today — praying for our loved ones, trusting in Jesus’ promise that even death cannot keep us apart. Notice the parents follow Him even though those in their own house tell them there is no hope, and even though others ridicule Jesus’ claim that the dead have only fallen asleep (see 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18).

    Already in baptism, we’ve been raised to new life in Christ. And the Eucharist, like the food given to the little girl today, is the pledge that he will raise us on the last day.

    We should rejoice, as we sing in today’s Psalm, that he has brought us up from the netherworld, the pit of death. And, as Paul exhorts in today’s Epistle, we should offer our lives in thanksgiving for this gracious act, imitating Christ in our love and generosity for others.

    The post 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time: ‘I say to you, arise!’ first appeared on Angelus News.

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  • Moldovan bishop ordered to pay $1,000+ for anti-pride parade statement

    Chișinău, June 26, 2024

    Photo: gagauzvedomosti.md Photo: gagauzvedomosti.md     

    A hierarch of the Moldovan Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) has been ordered by a Chișinău court to pay compensation for moral damages for “homophobic” statements he made in 2022.

    His Eminence Archbishop Marchel of Bălți and Fălești was ordered on June 11 to pay $1,123.60 (20,000 Moldovan leu) to two members of the LGBT community for “incitement to discrimination based on sexual orientation,” after he referred to LGBT people as “sodomites,” “lost,” and “sinners,” in a statement against the so-called Solidarity March in 2022, reports esp.md.

    In his address, the hierarch said that “sodomites want to hold a parade of shame in our municipality,” referring to the city of Bălți. He later called on locals come to the cathedral “to hold a religious procession and to reject, to resist this shameless invasion that wants to march through the center of our city.”

    GenderDoc-M, which represents the LGBT community in Moldova, filed a complaint against Abp. Marchel during a meeting of the Equality Council in November 2022. During the meeting, the hierarch reiterated his stance.

    Two members of the LGBT community then sued the Archbishop. The decision against him can be appealed within 30 days.

    The Moldovan Church and hierarchs have condemned the LGBT agenda many times. Moldovan Church opposes legalization of gay marriageThe European Court of Human Rights attempt to impose gay marriage on member countries is, in fact, an attack on traditional Moldovan values, says the head of the Moldovan Orthodox Church.

    “>In January 2023, His Eminence Metropolitan Vladimir of Chișinău and All Moldova issued a statement against attempts to impose gay marriage on Moldovan society.

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  • Priest martyred in Dagestan posthumously honored by Church and state

    Moscow, June 27, 2024

    The martyred Fr. Nikolai. Photo: pravmir.ru The martyred Fr. Nikolai. Photo: pravmir.ru     

    The priest martyred in the terrorist attacks in the Russian Republic of Dagestan earlier this week has been posthumously honored by both Church and state.

    Two churches, a synagogue, and a traffic police post were attacked on Sunday, leaving many dead, including Archpriest Nikolai Kotelnikov, 66, and a church guard named Mikhail Vavilin.

    Fr. Nikolai, having served as a priest for over 40 years, was known and beloved by many. Following his martyric death, locals established a spontaneous memorial for him, placing flowers and candles

    And yesterday, June 26, during the session of the Supreme Church Council at Moscow’s Christ the Savior Cathedral, Patriarch Kirill announced his decision to bestow the Church’s Order of the Holy Right-Believing Grand Prince Alexander Nevsky, 1st Degree upon the martyred Fr. Nikolai, reports Patriarchia.ru.

    Additionally, in a decree dated June 25, President Vladimir Putin awarded Fr. Nikolai the Order of Courage, and Mikhail Vavilin, who died defending the church and people in Makhachkala from terrorists, the Medal of Courage.

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  • Disability shouldn’t be a ‘boutique interest’ for the Church, experts say

    Experts who participated in a recent conference on Safeguarding and Disability have said that a broader inclusion and recognition of the belonging of disabled individuals in church life would make abuse prevention easier and is something all faithful must work towards.

    Speaking to Crux, Anne Masters, who holds a doctorate in disability theology and who gave a presentation during the conference, said “what was interesting was, by bringing in folks with the experience on disability and practice and theology, it opened their eyes.”

    “That was a real gift because quite frankly, this work often is in the boutique interest,” she said.

    The conference, titled “Safeguarding and Disability,” was organized by the Pontifical Gregorian University’s Institute of Anthropology: Human Dignity and Care from June 18-21.

    Led by German Jesuit Father Hans Zollner, a former member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, the institute holds an annual International Safeguarding Conference, and this year disability was chosen as the theme, given that disabled individuals constitute a significant percentage of those who have been or are being abused.

    Cristina Gangemi, co-director of the Kairos Forum and an expert adviser to Vatican and other Catholic authorities on the topic of disability, told Crux that the conference was significant, as it marked the first time the Gregorian University had ever explored the topic of disability in such a prominent venue.

    Reflecting on why the topic of disability was chosen to be highlighted at this juncture, Gangemi, who has collaborated with various Vatican offices for nearly a decade, said that “in the time of Pope Francis, a lot of the work that we’ve been doing has been that awareness of disability, not as a boutique issue, but something that is central to who the Church is.”

    One fruit of that awareness raising, she said, was the recent conference on safeguarding and disability, which she and Masters agreed was more about “human flourishing,” with safeguarding being an extension of that.

    According to the World Health Organization, roughly 16 percent of the global population experiences a significant disability, and statistics also show that individuals with disabilities are more likely to experience some form of harassment, discrimination, or violence in their lifetime.

    Gangemi, who helped organize the preparatory sessions for the conference, said organizers “were extremely open and really committed to thinking about disability, not only within the context of sexual abuse, but in the context of what it means to be a person in the Church.”

    Vatican Secretary of State Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin gave a keynote address at the conference, noting that in recent years “the international community has made significant progress in recognizing the rights of people with disabilities.”

    “Unfortunately, this has not yet occurred worldwide. Wherever this happens, a more just and caring society can flourish, where belonging is not a slogan to be used in politically correct speeches, but a practice,” he said.

    Parolin said the conference provided an opportunity “to overcome different barriers by gathering and discussing ways to combat abuse, an injustice that strikes all, disabled people and non-disabled ones,” and he stressed the importance of preventing and accompanying every case of abuse, but especially clerical abuse, particularly when it involves a person who is disabled.

    Zollner in introductory remarks voiced hope that the discussion would “foster a deeper understanding of the complex challenges we face and inspire innovative approaches to safeguarding.”

    The focus on disability, he said, “aims to address a critical issue and challenge.”

    Masters, who spoke about inclusion and the need to overcome certain myths when it comes to disability, told Crux that “There are no special needs, only human needs, but some require more intentionality,” and the goal, especially in church life, is “always for full, meaningful participation.”

    Oftentimes people with disabilities are seen either with pity or as an opportunity for charity, and they are often viewed as having a “holy innocence” and a special connection to Jesus and his suffering on the cross because of their condition, she said.

    These individuals are also often seen, she said, as either not fully human, or as having a special love from God that makes the closeness of their community less necessary.

    Masters said none of these are true, and that “where we are today, a lot of folks with disabilities are not really supported in growth and really flourishing their abilities to, to their capacity.”

    Inclusion is the key not only to making the Church better, but also for safeguarding, she said, saying, “if we’re actually supporting human flourishing, that’s a way that enriches the body of Christ collectively, as well as increases safety for folks with disabilities as well as safety for all.”

    To this end, during her presentation Masters showed the music video of the song “Spaces” by James Ian celebrating the accomplishments of those diagnosed with Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA). Ian himself has SMA and partnered with others in Hollywood with the same diagnosis to draw attention to the disabled community.

    Stressing the importance of proper and effective communication in interacting with disabled individuals, Special Educational Needs and Social Communication specialist Mike Harris lamented that “the situation is so many of our folks, a lot of our folks, they lack a voice.”

    Teaching those who lack verbal communication abilities and learning how to interact them is especially important in safeguarding, he said, telling Crux that oftentimes, “that lack of voice and being able to express yourself, explain possibly what’s happened, identify sort of where, when, by who, etc., just absolutely evades them, and everything that that will bring to them in a safeguarding situation.”

    Harris said he offered tips on practical techniques to use that can be put into practice in everyday life, such as multimodal communication.

    “Communication when you think about what it enables and what it facilitates and what it brings you in life, you know, it’s not just about safeguarding it,” he said, saying it’s more about flourishing.

    Asked about the Vatican’s definition of “vulnerable persons” and the Church’s handling of it in canon law in light of debate over the classification of disabled individuals as “vulnerable,” both Masters and Gangemi said that while they are not canonists, what is important is that the person is seen and valued beyond whatever limitations they might have.

    “I’ve always resisted identifying all people who live with an experience of difference, of disability, physical, intellectual, different ways of being, as being characterized or defined by a particular characteristic of their life, which could include being vulnerable,” Gangemi said.

    Gangemi said that vulnerability to her “means to be open to being injured. Every single person within their existence is open to being vulnerable, but it cannot characterize our lives. You cannot reduce a human person’s existence, in essence, down to one particular characteristic of their life.”

    “Now, to be able to safeguard people who live with an experience of disability, we need to be able to say we must safeguard the vulnerable,” she said, saying the Church’s attitude must not be to protect disabled people because they are vulnerable, but because “of the inherent dignity and the essence” of that person.

    The Church, she said, must say, “that person is someone who we’ve got to safeguard because they’re valuable, and because they’re valuable, their vulnerability has to be safeguarded as well.”

    “I see the difficulty and the challenge of defining, characterizing people and seeking to find a theology that matches that, rather than valuing them first and understanding that their vulnerability is part of that value. That’s how I see it,” she said.

    Asked about the ongoing Synod of Bishops on Synodality and its effort to give a greater voice to marginalized groups in the Church, and whether disabled people have had enough representation, Gangemi said the Vatican, particularly Sister Veronica Donatello in her role as a consultant with the Dicastery for Communications, as well as the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, have done a lot in recent years.

    However, she said that based on conference participation, there is an awareness in various countries in Asia and Africa, but there is a “gap in awareness” of the problem in Europe, apart from Italy, where “a lot of work has been done.”

    According to Masters, stigmas about people with disabilities still exist, and that “if we were to live it right, then listening with empathy is one of those is one of the practices expected to be found in synodal communities.”

    “That’s what’s really critical for that identification, to listen with someone and see them as a person, not a diagnosis, and then as a project to fix,” she said.

    She said the conference provided a key opportunity for experts in the field of disability to expand their networks, which she said allows participants to learn more about disability itself and foster “real participation.”

    “I hope maybe that’s the groundswell movement that may help us to move beyond the boutique interest,” she said, saying, “what we know is that our Church has a lot of beautiful theology that is lived very imperfectly.”

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