Why the people Stay, Leave, or Return to Religion in a Changing Spiritual Landscape
Jorge Enrique Mújica
Taken together, these findings point to a religious landscape defined less by abrupt rupture than by gradual reconfiguration. Belief, belonging, and identity are no longer inherited in a straightforward way; they are negotiated, reassessed, and often reshaped over time
A Church Against the Logic of War: Vatican Voices, Middle East Realities, and the Risk of a Vanishing Christianity
ZENIT Staff
Parolin, speaking on the sidelines of a book presentation dedicated to Pope Leo XIV, framed the current moment as one of dangerous escalation. His message was directed not only at Washington but also at Israel: conflicts must be resolved through diplomacy, not force
Amazon Synodality Enters a New Phase: Cardinal Steiner Elected to Lead CEAMA Through 2030
ZENIT Staff
Steiner’s election must be read against this institutional backdrop. According to CEAMA, his leadership is expected to “strengthen the path of a Church with an Amazonian face,” a phrase that has become shorthand for a model of inculturation that goes beyond symbolic gestures. In practical terms, this includes promoting indigenous leadership within ecclesial structures
A Catholic priest in Iceland is facing trial for claiming that the Church provides spiritual guidance to gay people who do not want to be gay
Elizabeth Owens
The police in Reykjavík have since confirmed that they are examining the priest’s statements to determine whether a formal criminal investigation should proceed
The King of Spain is invested with his title at the Papal Basilica of Saint Mary Major
ZENIT Staff
The title Felipe VI assumed is not a mere honorary distinction, but a unique ecclesiastical privilege reserved exclusively for the Spanish head of state
The account of the resurrection of Lazarus and the symptom of a longing for the infinite, as reflected upon by Leo XIV
ZENIT Staff
Address on the occasion of the Angelus prayer on Sunday, March 22, 2026
Pakistan: Demand for justice after Catholic man found hanged
John Pontifex
The Christian community has refused the official account that Mr Marqas Masih committed suicide, and claim instead that he was murdered. Two men have been arrested.
Catholic bishops in the U.S. call for “rejecting anti-Semitism and the lies and conspiracy theories that fuel it”
ZENIT Staff
The archbishop’s remarks address a distortion with deep historical roots: the notion of collective Jewish responsibility for the death of Jesus. Drawing on authoritative Church teaching, including the Catechism of the Council of Trent, he underscores that such an interpretation is not only inaccurate but theologically untenable
USA: South Dakota Supreme Court Prohibits Birth Certificate Changes for People Who Do Not Identify with Their Biological Sex
Rafael Manuel Tovar
The South Dakota Supreme Court unanimously upheld the decision in response to a petition from transgender people, who are not entitled to have the sex or name on their birth certificates changed.
Is the Church of the Holy Sepulchre closed? The Catholic Church in the Holy Land issues a statement in response to rumors on social media
ZENIT Staff
Statement from the Custody of the Holy Land regarding the closure of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem
Belgian bishop threatens to ordain married men within two years
ZENIT Staff
The bishop’s intervention revives a debate that has surfaced repeatedly but never fully matured into reform
Questions about liturgy: Is the adoration of the Eucharist on Holy Thursday held in a monstrance or in a tabernacle?
ZENIT Staff
Answered by Legionary of Christ Father Edward McNamara, professor of liturgy and sacramental theology at the Pontifical Regina Apostolorum university.
USA: Indiana school district pays former music teacher $650,000 to settle religious discrimination case
ZENIT Staff
Indiana music and orchestra teacher John Kluge is challenging the legality of Brownsburg Community School Corporation’s decision to revoke his religious accommodation over students’ pronoun usage. When the school district mandated that teachers call students by their preferred gender pronouns and names, Kluge requested a religious accommodation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act to call all his students by their last names only—like a coach—instead of referring to female students with male names and pronouns and vice versa. The school district granted Kluge’s request based on his religious beliefs, and Kluge successfully continued teaching under the religious accommodation for an entire school year. But in response to the grumblings of a few students and faculty, the school district revoked the religious accommodation and forced Kluge to resign, ending his teaching career.




