Friday, February 27, 2026

The 10th and final Lenten retreat reflection for the Pope, Cardinals in Rome and the Dicastery's by Bishop Varden

 

2026.02.22 Inizio Esercizi Spirituali

Lenten Retreat: Bishop Varden reflects on 'De consideratione'

Bishop Erik Varden delivers his tenth reflection at the Spiritual Exercises in the Vatican for Pope Leo XIV, Cardinals residing in Rome, and heads of Dicastery's, focusing on the theme of 'On Consideration'. The following is a summary of his reflection.

By Bishop Erik Varden, OCSO*

St. Bernard wrote a treatise On Consideration. It enjoyed the widest circulation of any of his works. This may seem odd, for the text is in essence a letter addressed to a specific person in a singular predicament. Bernard wrote it for a confrère of his, an Italian monk named Bernardo dei Paganelli who, already a priest of the church of Pisa, had entered Clairvaux in 1138.

In 1145 Paganelli became Pope Eugene III.

While contemplation deals with truths already known, consideration, in Bernard’s vocabulary, seeks truth in contingent human affairs, where it can be difficult to notice. It can be defined as ‘thought searching for truth, or the searching of a mind to discover truth.’

Considering the problems of the Church, Bernard offers no institutional remedies. He rather advises Eugene to surround himself with good people. The better the Church’s central offices are run, the greater the benefit will be for the Church worldwide.

The qualities Bernard asks him to look out for and cultivate are immortal. Needed are collaborators ‘of proven sanctity, ready obedience, and quiet patience; […] catholic in faith, faithful in service; inclined towards peace, and desirous of unity; […] farsighted in counsel, […] industrious in organization […], modest in speech’.

Such people ‘habitually devote themselves to prayer, and in every undertaking place more confidence in it than in their own industry or labor. Their arrival is peaceful, their departure unassuming.’

In so far as the Church operates in these terms will she reflect the organization of the angels’ hierarchies. Whoever considers her then will see her principal mission: that of giving God glory.

To consider earthly necessities rightly, we must seek, through them, what is above. This is not, Bernard tells Eugene, somehow to ‘go into exile: to consider in this way is to return to one’s homeland’.

Bernard asks himself: What is God? Omnipotent will, benevolent virtue, unchangeable reason. God is ‘supreme blessedness’ who, for love, wishes to share his divinity with us. He has created us to desire him. He broadens us to receive him, justifies us to merit him. He leads us in justice, molds us in benevolence, enlightens us with knowledge, preserves us unto immortality.

Whatever else prelates have to think about, and it is much, they must consider these things first. Thereby their consideration of practical matters, too, will be illumined, ordered, blessed.

A prelate must, in Bernard’s view, be principled, holy, and austere. But he should also be the Bridegroom’s friend, delighting in sharing that friendship with others.

Augustine liked to describe episcopal office as a sarcina, a legionary’s bundle. It is a raw image conceived by one who knew the desolation and fear of campaigns in the North African desert. He goes on, though, to improvise on his own set theme. Though the pastoral burden does have a fearful aspect, it is fearful only if we fail to notice who puts the burden on our shoulders. For it is no less a participation in the sweet yoke of Christ, who lets us discover that the cross-bar entrusted to us is luminous and light, that a share in it is joyful.

Augustine once wrote: ‘Perduc sarcinam tuam quia levis est si diligis gravis si odisti‘, that is: ‘Bear your own load to the end. If you love it, it will be light. If you hate it, it will be heavy.’

‘Yours, good Jesus’, wrote Bernard in his Life of St Malachy the Irishman, ‘is the deposit which has been entrusted to us; yours the treasure hidden in our possession, to be given back at the time you shall ordain for its reclaiming.’

Bishop Erik Varden, Bishop of Trondheim, Norway, was asked to preach the 2026 Spiritual Exercises for Pope Leo XIV, Cardinals residing in Rome, and the heads of Dicastery's of the Roman Curia, which runs from Sunday, February 22, to Friday, February 27. Here is the link to his website.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Saint for Friday

 

St. Gregory of Narek




Gregory was raised in a monastery and eventually entered the Narek Monastery, known as Narekavank in what is now Turkey, as a monk and lived there for nearly the entirety of his life.

At the time, Armenia was experiencing a literature, painting, architecture, and theological renaissance, in which Gregory participated.

As an Armenian monk, Gregory lived humbly and taught at the monastic school. He wrote his prayers in the encyclopedia of prayer for all nations in hopes the book would one day guide people of all stations around the world to prayer.

He was a leader of the well-developed school of Armenian mysticism at the Monastery and was asked to answer the question, "What can one offer to God, our creator, who already has everything and knows everything better than we could ever express it?"

In his Book of Prayer, also called the Book of Lamentations or the Song of Songs, Gregory wrote that the answer to the question is "the sighs of the heart." The book contains 91 prayers and was completed one year before he died.

Several miracles and traditions have been traced back to Gregory, and he is known as "the watchful angel in human form."

Gregory of Narek was venerated as a saint by the Armenian Catholic Church and is also recognized as a saint of the Roman Catholic church. On April 12, 2015, Pope Francis officially proclaimed Gregory of Narek as a Doctor of the Church.


Though not yet named the patron saint of a particular patronage, his Book of Prayer has been used to treat several diseases including schizophrenia, Hepatitis C, periodic disease, stress symptoms and depression.

Candid interview with U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See

 

US Ambassador sees potential for ‘Catholic Moment’ with Leo



Pope Leo XIV receives the letters of credential of Brian F. Burch as U.S. ambassador to the Holy See during an audience Sept. 13, 2025, in the Apostolic Palace at the Vatican. (Credit: Vatican Media.)


ROME – United States Ambassador to the Holy See Brian Burch, in an exclusive sit-down interview with Crux Now, said he sees the potential for a “Catholic Moment” in the U.S. given the high-profile Catholics in the current administration, with history’s first U.S.-born pope.

According to Ambassador Brian Burch, there is a new kind of conservativism in U.S. politics being shaped largely by prominent Catholic personalities including U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a “common good conservatism” which can help shape the future of the country.

RELATED: US immigration law ‘not rooted in hate or xenophobia,’ ambassador says

“There is a real moment, I think, and Pope Leo and I talked about this when I sat down with him to present my credentials,” Burch told Crux Now in a wide-ranging sit-down interview in his office at the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See.

President Donald Trump, he said, “deeply cares about and understands intuitively this Catholic view of the human person and of human communities.”

“I think this is represented in the vice president he chose, in the secretary of state he chose. They speak about this frequently,” he said.

Burch noted that Rubio in a speech at the Catholic University of America spoke about a “common good conservatism” as a new and upcoming type of conservative instinct that is bubbling up in U.S. politics and culture, and which is distinct from similar movements in the past.

“We have this political camp that I came from that sees old Republican politics as inadequate, certainly progressive ideology as incompatible, and a kind of third way that’s this common good conservatism that I think is deeply rooted in a lot of the principles found in Catholic social teaching and which I think will contribute to the possibilities of a ‘Catholic Moment’,” he said.

In his interview Burch also spoke about collaboration between the U.S. and the Holy See on issues such as religious freedom and artificial intelligence, a potential papal trip, celebrations for the U.S.’s 250th anniversary this year, and Pope Leo’s sports affinity.

Please read below for Part Two of Crux Now’s sit-down interview with U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See Brian Burch (Part One is here):

Crux Now: There are many areas where the Holy See and the United States do have a lot of common ground. The area of religious freedom, for example, parents’ rights in education, and artificial intelligence. What do you think are the strongest points of interaction and dialogue between the United States and the Holy See at this point?

Burch: I think any ambassador in this role inherits a set of issues where there has been a deep and abiding collaboration, and that includes global peace and security and religious freedom and human dignity writ large. Of course, we’ve talked about Russia-Ukraine, we talked about the Middle East, we talked about Venezuela. In many respects, I think the Holy See and the United States see the world very similarly in terms of, we’re not on different sides, we want to work towards a peaceful resolution, we believe in principles of justice, and we understand that there’s a moral order that ought to govern human action. We are a part of a Christian civilization that they help shape. We may not always agree on the best means, or rhetoric, or tools, but there is a deep shared commonality when it comes to the peace and security of the world in terms of the goal.

Religious freedom, as you point out. Archbishop [Paul] Gallagher in his recent UN speech pointed out that the Christians are the largest persecuted group in the world. The numbers are shocking and there are many places where that is especially felt like Nigeria, for example, or the church in Nicaragua, or various places where Catholics, Christian believers’ lives are being threatened.

There’s a bigger opportunity here within the realm of religious freedom. I’m going to play armchair theologian here with an Augustinian pope. Saint Augustine talks about the tranquility of order, peace as the tranquility of order, which is that peace is not simply the absence of conflict or coercion, but it’s actually the set of conditions that lead to broad flourishing. This is the kind of religious freedom, and this is the peace that the U.S. wants to help advance. It’s not simply not being threatened inside the walls of a church so that you can read the Bible. It’s to be able to live out one’s faith in the public square, within your community, within your family to have access to faith-based health care, to have access to a religious school, to be able to speak and to write and to share faith-informed opinions in the public square without fear of censorship or coercion.

This is religious freedom broadly understood. It’s not simply lack of coercion; it’s a set of conditions that will lead to broad flourishing as a believer. I think that that’s an important piece because I think sometimes religious freedom can shrink. I think rightly understood, at least in the tradition of both the Church and I think in the way that the United States is best understood, it’s that people of faith can not merely believe, but can thrive.

It’s widely acknowledged that [Pope] Leo chose his name with reference to his predecessor by the same name [Leo XIII]. There is a lot of expectation around what his first encyclical might include, and the fact that probably the most transformative thing that will happen during my time here is, what impact will AI have on our world? There perhaps be no bigger issue while I’m here than to help relate U.S. policy to the Church’s rich tradition around a rightly understood human anthropology and a set of ethical principles that need to guide innovation and technology that’s transforming our world.

The U.S. has a particular proposal for the world when it comes to AI. We have tech leadership, we have commercial interests, we have a set rule of law, we have a deep tradition of respect for speech, for freedom of religion, for privacy, for intellectual property. We have an opportunity to take advantage of all of the benefits that AI will bring the world, circumscribed by this ethical and human dimension that the Church contributes and which could be extraordinary and spectacular. There could be amazing leaps of innovation that could change the world in great ways.

There are also lots of risks. Some of the ethical and human questions that the Church will guide are extremely important. I think some of the threats that alternatives to the AI model that the U.S. is advancing that other parts of the world are proposing will threaten censorship, privacy, intellectual property, religious freedom, fundamental human rights, because of how transformative this technology could be. It’s very important that countries, and I’m going to call this a Western-civilization-modeled AI, an AI that’s worth pursuing and that’s good for the world, is going to have to incorporate some of those Western civilization ideas that Secretary [Rubio] spoke about in Munich.

You mentioned playing armchair theologian. You are Catholic, and the U.S. usually sends a Catholic to this assignment, but you are here with history’s first American pope when there are two other prominent Catholics serving in the current administration. Is this a ‘Catholic moment’ for the U.S.? How can this shape U.S.-Vatican relations at this point?

When I hear ‘Catholic Moment’ I think of Father Richard John Neuhaus and his book [The Catholic Moment: The Paradox of the Church in the Postmodern World, Harper Collins, 1987]. I wrote a far less erudite and interesting book, similarly titled, about Donald Trump and the ‘Catholic Moment’, in part because I believe the president and what he represented and his policies are not just compatible, but in many ways help advance a Catholic understanding of the world.

Now you have an American Pope, with a president who has a deep commitment to broad human flourishing and the common good, rightly understood. There is a real moment, I think, and Pope Leo and I talked about this when I sat down with him to present my credentials, that for all of the political noise and the accusations that surround the president – in a very real sense, this is a president who deeply cares about and understands intuitively this Catholic view of the human person and of human communities. I think this is represented in the vice president he chose, in the secretary of state he chose. They speak about this frequently.

What they say and how they carry out their work is informed by their Catholic faith, and they find the faith to be one not just of spiritual inspiration, but of rich intellectual and social teaching and to be deeply helpful to how they are doing their work.

There are different kinds of models for, let’s call, conservatism that are being advanced. Marco Rubio called it common good conservatism at the Catholic University of America, and we have this political camp that I came from that sees old Republican politics as inadequate, certainly progressive ideology as incompatible, and a kind of third way that’s this common good conservatism that I think is deeply rooted in a lot of the principles found in Catholic social teaching and which I think will contribute to the possibilities of a ‘Catholic Moment.’

Obvious question: the answer to this has flip-flopped like a pancake from one week to the next, but when will the U.S. get a papal trip?

Pope Leo said to me when I met with him that he wants to go to the U.S. Who wouldn’t? When he does go to U. S., it will be the largest gathering of Catholics in American history. It will be extraordinary. We’ve engaged in conversations about the possibility of a trip. I know he’s been invited by the United Nations to speak as well. There was some talk that he may go this year. I think if I had to make a guess, I think he’ll probably go next year sometime, that’s latest we’ve heard.

He’s already built that already that every pope has which is, it’s the pope, but also people just sense in him that, ‘he cares about me’. Just his disposition exudes that; he doesn’t have to even say anything. I think the other piece of it would be, we’re living in this moment in history where there is such deep thirst for real spiritual richness and the Church always thrives in the midst of moments where people say, ‘Who has the answers to eternal life? To whom shall we go?’

I ask people all this all the time, when did this all really start to pick up? I think it was really post-COVID when people had this kind of moment of reset. We stopped our routines, we had this time to do some more reflection and found this wanting for something more out of life. Often when people spend enough serious time asking the bigger questions, they get to religion again. Then once you get to the religion, you start to ask, to whom shall we go, right.

There are some other things we’re working on with respect to the Holy Father in the United States that we’ll probably be announcing fairly soon. It’s a big year for the U.S., ‘America 250’, our 250th anniversary. I know the Holy See, and this pope in particular, understands that wants to ways to acknowledge the significance of our anniversary.

This is the big curveball: This Pope is a sports fan, and this year, most of the World Cup is going to be played in the Americas. Are you going to have a watch party?

People have asked about this. We were joking, actually, at the diplomatic corps address. I went up to him when you get to greet him. I said some substantive things to him about some things we had going on, and he acknowledged a couple things we said back and forth. Then I said at the end, oh yeah, and one more thing, ‘go Bears!’ If you remember, the Chicago Bears were in the playoffs and I knew he was watching because anyone from Chicago – you might like Cubs or Sox, but everyone was watching the Bears this season because it was extraordinary and he really laughed out loud. He just laughed like it was so funny that after this kind of serious substance thing, which tells me he is a real sports fan.

After the tragic shooting at Catholic school/church, Minnesota parents display school desks at state capitol to measure the loss

 

Empty school desks on Minnesota Capitol grounds signify children lost to gun violence


Jackie Flavin, mother of Harper Moyski, who died in the Aug. 27, 2025, shooting at Annunciation Church in south Minneapolis, carries a desk she and other Annunciation volunteers were setting up on the grounds of the Minnesota Capitol Feb. 23, 2026, to signify children who have died by gun violence in Minnesota since 2021. They are part of an organization of parents called Annunciation Light Alliance, which is lobbying to protect children from gun violence. (OSV News photo/Dave Hrbacek, The Catholic Spirit)

ST. PAUL, Minn. (OSV News) — They were preparing for three days of presence and legislative testimony as they seek gun safety laws. The desks represented more than 200 Minnesota children lost to gun violence since 2021, the group said.

Jackie Flavin — the mother of Harper Moyski, a 10-year-old student who died in an Aug. 27 shooting during an all-school Mass at Annunciation Church in south Minneapolis — helped spearhead the lobbying effort through an organization of parents called Annunciation Light Alliance.

Two school desks inside Capitol

The shooting also took the life of 8-year-old Fletcher Merkel and wounded more than a dozen other students and three adults. In their honor, Flavin set up two desks inside the Capitol building: one for her daughter and one for Fletcher, with their backpacks and school-related things. She included her daughter’s photo, a soccer ball, slip-on shoes, papers and a pencil cup.

Flavin’s husband, Mike Moyski, also helped set up the desks in 20-degree weather on the snow-filled Capitol grounds. The desks were expected to be in place through Feb. 26.

“My hope is that all this brings some meaning into the big decisions that are being made as the (legislative) session takes shape Feb. 17 through May,” Moyski told The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. “We hope that as legislators — Democrat, Republican, whatever it might be — as they walk in and enter the session every morning, they see … the impact” gun violence “has on communities and families and think about what they’re doing.”

‘Not just for legislators to see’

“And just one other thing,” Moyski said. “It’s not just for the legislators to see this and find some meaning. I think it’s also for all of our kids who have been through something at a young age they should never have (had) to. To see that somebody’s out here doing something about it and that there can be some light amongst all the darkness.”

Jackie Flavin, mother of Harper Moyski, who died in the Aug. 27, 2025, shooting at Annunciation church in south Minneapolis, looks at desks she set up Feb. 23, 2026, in honor of Harper and another Annunciation student, Fletcher Merkel, who also died in the shooting. Flavin and other Annunciation volunteers set up those two desks plus others outside to signify children who have died by gun violence in Minnesota since 2021. They are part of an organization of parents called Annunciation Light Alliance, which is lobbying to protect children from gun violence. (OSV News photo/Dave Hrbacek, The Catholic Spirit)


In addition to testimony, Annunciation students in grades six through eight participated in a sing-along in the Capitol rotunda Feb. 24. Another sing-along was planned for Feb. 26 with Annunciation students in grades three through five.

“We gather in song and shared humanity to bring care and presence into the space where public decisions are made,” said a flyer advertising what Annunciation Light Alliance billed as “Minnesota Sing Together” community gatherings.

Kristen Neville and her husband, Michael Burt, were among those helping set up the desks. 

Annunciation Light Alliance

Parents of five children at Annunciation, they have been involved with Annunciation Light Alliance since the effort began taking shape in the weeks after the shooting as parents concerned about gun violence contacted one another. Ideas began to solidify in September, Neville said.

“We established what our overall structure was, established a leadership team, task forces. And then we ended up determining our mission, our vision, and our values, and ultimately landed on a name — Annunciation Light Alliance,” Neville said.

The alliance has about 160 members, and its leadership team of about 20 people meets once a week, including co-chairs Neville and Brittany Haeg, Neville said. Quarterly meetings draw about 80 people in person and online, she said. People can learn more at the group’s website at annunciationlight.org.

‘Help keep our kids safe’

Lisa Shepherd, communications director for the alliance, said its members hope to “get all the right people at the right table. It doesn’t matter who you are, what you believe in, just come up with the right solution to keep our kids safe at the end of the day.”

On Feb. 24, Gov. Tim Walz, who urged a special session to address gun violence shortly after the shooting at Annunciation, announced what he called a comprehensive gun violence prevention package.

The proposals included banning military-style assault rifles and high-capacity magazines; requiring safe storage and reporting of lost or stolen firearms; not allowing Minnesotans to possess guns without serial numbers; implementing a firearm insurance requirement; establishing a firearm and ammunition tax; and expanding early intervention resources, including school resources, to prevent gun violence.

Three-tiered approach to gun violence

The Minnesota Catholic Conference — the public policy arm of the state’s Catholic bishops — has suggested a three-tiered approach to gun violence in this legislative session.

Its proposals include banning high-capacity ammunition magazines and expanding safe schools funding to at least $100 per student in state aid while extending eligibility to nonpublic, charter and tribal schools. 

The Catholic conference also suggests increasing state aid and school-board approved levy authority to ensure school districts have sustainable resources to meet safety needs; and stopping the harms of addictive social media by requiring parental consent for children under 16 years old to join social media platforms. If consent is given, the legislation would prohibit targeted advertising and addictive features and require privacy settings for children that help parents monitor and limit use.

Annunciation eighth-grader’s story

During a Feb. 24 news conference to announce Walz’s gun violence prevention package, Annunciation Catholic School eighth-grader Lydia Kaiser spoke to those assembled, describing being in church for “the first school Mass of the year when a gunman fired 116 rounds of bullets through the stained-glass windows.”

“Two students were shot and killed. Two students survived gunshot injuries to the head. I’m one of them,” she said. “Many more students were injured by bullets and flying glass. We all hid under the pews. The older students covered the younger students to protect them.”

Lydia was taken to the hospital “and rushed into surgery.” “The doctor moved a large piece, almost half of my skull, to let my brain swell, and to remove bone and bullet fragments from my head,” she said. “I had a second surgery three weeks later to put the piece of my skull back in my head.”

“All children have the right to live free from gun violence in schools, churches and in our communities,” Lydia said. “Elected officials have a duty to protect us from guns. No one should have to go through what we went through at Annunciation. Thank you.”

Joe Ruff is editor-in-chief of The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. Contributing to this story was Rebecca Omastiak, the news editor at The Catholic Spirit. This story was originally published by The Catholic Spirit and distributed through a partnership with OSV News.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Saint of the Day for Thursday

 

St. Isabel of France




Sister of St. Louis and daughter of King Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile, she refused offers of marriage from several noble suitors to continue her life of virginity consecrated to God. She ministered to the sick and the poor, and after the death of her mother, founded the Franciscan Monastery of the Humility of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Longchamps in Paris. She lived there in austerity but never became a nun and refused to become abbess. She died there on February 23, and her cult was approved in 1521.