logo
US bishops: Youth are ready to make world better

US bishops: Youth are ready to make world better

Herald Malaysia4 days ago
The church must give young people space to discern God's call and boldly shape a better future, they say Aug 01, 2025
Archbishop Nelson J. Perez of Philadelphia (Photo: Wikipedia)
By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service
Young people have such a great desire to make the world a better place that church leaders should help give them the space to discern what God wants for them, a group of bishops said during the Jubilee of Youth.
"We need their voice," Archbishop Nelson J. Perez of Philadelphia told Catholic News Service before the start of the USA National Jubilee Pilgrim Gathering at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome.
"We need to listen to their hearts and listen to their minds. They have a great desire to make the world a better place, to make the church a better place, and our lives a better place," he said July 30. "So I'm thrilled that so many of them are here."
The archbishop was one of eight archbishops and bishops who attended the special gathering at the basilica organized by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops with the support of the Knights of Columbus. More than 4,000 people from the U.S. attended the event as part of their pilgrimage to Rome for the Holy Year.
Auxiliary Bishop Italo Dell'Oro of Galveston-Houston told CNS he tries to attend as many youth activities as he can, especially World Youth Days and this Holy Year's Jubilee dedicated to young people July 28-Aug. 3.
The Italian-born bishop used to serve as the vocation director for his religious order, the Congregation of Somascan Fathers, so he is aware how much young people need a lot of "dedicated attention."
"I think the church should offer space for them so that they can confront one another in a way that makes them look forward," and broadens their mind beyond their current situation to see how they can play a role in changing things for the better, he said.
They have a responsibility "to become good disciples on their own," he said, so he sees his role as "challenging them" to not only enjoy being young but to also "be brave, courageous and trustful that if they make one step forward, the foot will land on solid ground."
Recalling his youth and the "struggle to find the answer" to whether he should get married or pursue the priesthood, Bishop Dell'Oro praised the guidance of his spiritual director who helped him discern and provide "the tools to make what I would say were courageous decisions, (and) renounce what needed to be given up and taking the chances of being in another setting."
"I was fortunate to have had such good guidance in a fairly Catholic environment," without the "distractions of the media that we have today," he said. "It was, in a certain way, easier to focus on the fundamentals of life, of our faith."
The church, therefore, should give young people "the space to discern, which is absolutely very, very important, even more than, if I may, space to do some ministries," he said.
If "we engage them to live their life in the fullness as lay people, and then if they have vocations, they can discern, and that's a very, very important space that needs to be provided," he said.
Bishop Edward J. Burns of Dallas, who was giving a homily during the Eucharistic adoration in the basilica for the pilgrims, told CNS he wanted young people to know that the presence of today's online "Catholic influencers" is nothing new.
"We've had apostles, we've had martyrs, we've had saints" who were "the influencers of their day and through their lives and through their sanctity, and they continue to influence us," he said.
Young people can continue to be "authentic as disciples in proclaiming the Word of God, even through digital means," he said.
Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, Australia, who coordinated World Youth Day in Sydney in 2008 as an auxiliary bishop, told CNS the Jubilee of Youth has been just as big an event as a World Youth Day and will have the same positive impact.
"We have had fruit from that World Youth Day for 20 years now," he said, and the Jubilee celebrations will be "very good" for Rome, for Italy and for the young people from all over the world because of their testimony and their joy in their faith.
"Certainly that's what World Youth Day does wherever it goes. It brings huge fruit in terms of vocations, good marriages, just young people thinking, 'Where does God fit into my life?' and 'Where do I fit into God's plans?' So that's going to happen here," he said.--ucanews.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pope Leo exhorts crowd of million Catholic youth to spread their faith
Pope Leo exhorts crowd of million Catholic youth to spread their faith

The Star

time2 days ago

  • The Star

Pope Leo exhorts crowd of million Catholic youth to spread their faith

Pope Leo XIV leads Mass for Jubilee of Youth in Tor Vergata, in Rome, Italy, August 3, 2025. REUTERS/Yara Nardi ROME (Reuters) -Pope Leo celebrated the largest event yet of his nearly three-month tenure on Sunday, encouraging a crowd of more than a million Catholic young people gathered in a field on the outskirts of Rome to spread their faith. Amid shouts of "Viva il Papa" (Long live the Pope) from young people dressed in colourful t-shirts and waving national flags at the Tor Vergata field, Leo led a Mass that capped a special week of events meant to energise Catholic youth. "Dear young people ... spread your enthusiasm and the witness of your faith to everyone you meet," the pope said during his sermon for the event, which also urged them not to focus on gaining material possessions but on helping those in need. "Buying, hoarding and consuming are not enough," said Leo. "We need ... to realise that everything in the world has meaning only insofar as it serves to unite us to God and to our brothers and sisters." Many of the youths attending the event spent the night outside in the field, to be ready for the pope's arrival at 7:45 a.m. (0545 GMT) in advance of heat expected to reach 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) later on Sunday. "It's amazing to see just how big the world church is, and how many people are here ... and (are) on fire to see the pope," said Rita Piendl, 19, who came from Germany. "We want to truly spread hope and love to the world and we really want to make a difference for the better." The Catholic Church, which numbers more than 1.4 billion members globally, has grown slightly in recent years but has experienced sliding adherence in Europe. Sunday's Mass was part of a week-long series of events in Rome for Catholic youth, tied to the ongoing Catholic Holy Year. Leo, the first U.S.-born pope, was elected on May 8 by the world's cardinals to replace the late Pope Francis. (Reporting by Joshua McElwee; Additional reporting by Veronica Altimari and Roberto Mignucci;Editing by Helen Popper)

Witnesses of faith on a Jubilee pilgrimage of hope
Witnesses of faith on a Jubilee pilgrimage of hope

Herald Malaysia

time2 days ago

  • Herald Malaysia

Witnesses of faith on a Jubilee pilgrimage of hope

Three young pilgrims of hope offer powerful testimonies of faith, rediscovery, and love at the pre-vigil of the Jubilee of Youth in Tor Vergata, Rome. Their stories, different in language and life experience, converge in a shared desire to respond to God's love with their own lives. Aug 03, 2025 By Linda BordoniIn the warmth of the setting Roman sun, hundreds of thousands of young pilgrims of hope awaited the arrival of Pope Leo XIV in Rome's Tor Vergata space, giving life to an evening of prayer, music, remembrance and sharing on the eve of the culmination of their Jubilee on Sunday morning. From different countries, cultures and in different idioms, they all spoke the language of faith and fraternity; and joined in their love for Christ, they effortlessly reached out to their peers from all over the world with the passion of youth and the joy of belonging. Antoine: 'I met Christ and everything changed' Antoine Saint-Claire, 18, from France, began his story by painting the image of a happy childhood in a loving Christian family. Faith, he said, was always present, yet somewhat routine: Mass on Sundays, catechism, the sacraments shared with friends. It was during his teenage years, he added, that a deeper yearning began to stir in him. 'I looked at other young people and saw something more,' he said. 'They wept during adoration, they had favourite Bible verses, they spoke to God like a friend, and I wondered why I didn't feel that way.' With these questions within, Antoine attended the FRAT pilgrimage to Lourdes in 2023. There, he said, during a moment of adoration after confession, something shifted: 'I knelt before the Blessed Sacrament, and in my heart I heard the Lord say: 'One day, you will see my love.'' A few months later, in the silence of his home, he continued, he had a profound spiritual encounter with Jesus, a moment of peace, love, and deep joy. 'That encounter gave meaning to my life,' Antoine affirmed. 'I now know I am loved, and I want to love in return, with all I am.' 'Let us open our hearts,' Antoine urged at the end of his testimony, 'each one different, but all capable of receiving love and spreading it. By God's grace, we will succeed. Amen.' Gustavo: "I want to sing the praises of the Lord" Gustavo Eterno, a Brazilian member of the Shalom Catholic Community, spoke about how, for the past 22 years, he has been consecrated in the Shalom Community. 'Fifteen of those years I lived as a celibate. Today, I walk the path of a seminarian, and with God's grace, I hope to one day be ordained to the priesthood,' he said, introducing himself. Gustavo described how music played a significant role in his spiritual and personal journey. In his youth, he said, music was a private refuge, a way to express emotions and find solace amid personal struggles. Over time, he added, this interior world began to lose meaning for him, explaining that as he sought love and freedom in secular experiences, ultimately he felt disoriented and distant from God. 'I came to the point of no longer believing in the possibility of true love,' he recalled. 'The songs that once spoke of life and friendship began to speak of death.' His turning point came during a moment of Eucharistic adoration. 'My eyes were opened, like the disciples on the road to Emmaus,' he said. 'There, I encountered the love I had been seeking.'Eterno concluded by expressing his desire to share this experience through music and witness: 'Every second of my life that God allows me to live on this earth, I want to sing the praises of the Lord and help others encounter the same joy that He poured into my life.' Olimpia: 'Chosen to love' Olimpia Iacono, a physician from Ischia, Italy, offered a deeply personal witness of her vocation to love, not only as a doctor, but as a Christian woman called to serve with her heart. After completing her medical degree, Olimpia's life seemed on track, but she added that a sudden breakup and an unexpected move left her disoriented. A mission trip to Argentina became a turning point. During a moment of prayer, inspired by the Gospel of the blind man of Jericho, she said she heard a message whispered to her: 'The Lord has chosen you to love.' 'I had always thought my vocation was to be a good doctor or a good wife,' she noted, 'But I had never considered the universal vocation of every baptised person: the call to love.' This call took concrete form when Olimpia met Francesco, a terminally ill patient in her hospital. Through simple gestures, she narrated how she accompanied him through his final weeks. 'His hospital room became a small church,' she recalled. On his birthday, Francesco entered eternal life, she said: 'That day, I understood that what seemed like useless suffering had become a time of grace.'--Vatican News

US bishops: Youth are ready to make world better
US bishops: Youth are ready to make world better

Herald Malaysia

time4 days ago

  • Herald Malaysia

US bishops: Youth are ready to make world better

The church must give young people space to discern God's call and boldly shape a better future, they say Aug 01, 2025 Archbishop Nelson J. Perez of Philadelphia (Photo: Wikipedia) By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service Young people have such a great desire to make the world a better place that church leaders should help give them the space to discern what God wants for them, a group of bishops said during the Jubilee of Youth. "We need their voice," Archbishop Nelson J. Perez of Philadelphia told Catholic News Service before the start of the USA National Jubilee Pilgrim Gathering at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome. "We need to listen to their hearts and listen to their minds. They have a great desire to make the world a better place, to make the church a better place, and our lives a better place," he said July 30. "So I'm thrilled that so many of them are here." The archbishop was one of eight archbishops and bishops who attended the special gathering at the basilica organized by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops with the support of the Knights of Columbus. More than 4,000 people from the U.S. attended the event as part of their pilgrimage to Rome for the Holy Year. Auxiliary Bishop Italo Dell'Oro of Galveston-Houston told CNS he tries to attend as many youth activities as he can, especially World Youth Days and this Holy Year's Jubilee dedicated to young people July 28-Aug. 3. The Italian-born bishop used to serve as the vocation director for his religious order, the Congregation of Somascan Fathers, so he is aware how much young people need a lot of "dedicated attention." "I think the church should offer space for them so that they can confront one another in a way that makes them look forward," and broadens their mind beyond their current situation to see how they can play a role in changing things for the better, he said. They have a responsibility "to become good disciples on their own," he said, so he sees his role as "challenging them" to not only enjoy being young but to also "be brave, courageous and trustful that if they make one step forward, the foot will land on solid ground." Recalling his youth and the "struggle to find the answer" to whether he should get married or pursue the priesthood, Bishop Dell'Oro praised the guidance of his spiritual director who helped him discern and provide "the tools to make what I would say were courageous decisions, (and) renounce what needed to be given up and taking the chances of being in another setting." "I was fortunate to have had such good guidance in a fairly Catholic environment," without the "distractions of the media that we have today," he said. "It was, in a certain way, easier to focus on the fundamentals of life, of our faith." The church, therefore, should give young people "the space to discern, which is absolutely very, very important, even more than, if I may, space to do some ministries," he said. If "we engage them to live their life in the fullness as lay people, and then if they have vocations, they can discern, and that's a very, very important space that needs to be provided," he said. Bishop Edward J. Burns of Dallas, who was giving a homily during the Eucharistic adoration in the basilica for the pilgrims, told CNS he wanted young people to know that the presence of today's online "Catholic influencers" is nothing new. "We've had apostles, we've had martyrs, we've had saints" who were "the influencers of their day and through their lives and through their sanctity, and they continue to influence us," he said. Young people can continue to be "authentic as disciples in proclaiming the Word of God, even through digital means," he said. Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, Australia, who coordinated World Youth Day in Sydney in 2008 as an auxiliary bishop, told CNS the Jubilee of Youth has been just as big an event as a World Youth Day and will have the same positive impact. "We have had fruit from that World Youth Day for 20 years now," he said, and the Jubilee celebrations will be "very good" for Rome, for Italy and for the young people from all over the world because of their testimony and their joy in their faith. "Certainly that's what World Youth Day does wherever it goes. It brings huge fruit in terms of vocations, good marriages, just young people thinking, 'Where does God fit into my life?' and 'Where do I fit into God's plans?' So that's going to happen here," he

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store