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The Bishops' Conference of Scotland

Habemus Papam

Papal crest, crossed keys and triple mitre crown

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Credit: Associated Press / Alamy Stock Photo

LEO XIV

8th May 2025

Read more about Pope Leo XIV

The Bishops’ Conference of Scotland welcomes the election of Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, Cardinal Prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, as Pope Leo XIV. It asks all Catholics in Scotland to pray for the new Pope as he begins his ministry.

The Roman Catholic Bishops in Scotland work together to undertake nationwide initiatives through their Commissions and Agencies.

The members of the Bishops' Conference are the Bishops of the eight Scottish Dioceses. Where appropriate the Bishops Emeriti (retired) provide a much welcomed contribution to the work of the conference. The Bishops' Conference of Scotland is a permanently constituted assembly which meets regularly throughout the year to address relevant business matters.

Members of The Bishops' Conference of Scotland

https://www.holyyear2025.org.uk

Click here to visit the Jubilee 2025 website

The Jubilee Prayer

Father in heaven,
may the faith you have given us
in your son, Jesus Christ, our brother,
and the flame of charity enkindled in our hearts by the Holy Spirit, reawaken in us the blessed hope for the coming of your Kingdom.

May your grace transform us into tireless cultivators of the seeds of the Gospel.
May those seeds transform from within both humanity and the whole cosmos in the sure expectation of a new heaven and a new earth,
when, with the powers of Evil vanquished,
your glory will shine eternally.

May the grace of the Jubilee reawaken in us, Pilgrims of Hope, a yearning for the treasures of heaven. May that same grace spread the joy and peace of our Redeemer throughout the earth. 

To you our God, eternally blessed, be glory and praise for ever.

Amen

News from the Commissions and Agencies

May 2025



The Hebrides are especially beautiful during this warm and sunny spell. However, the natural tranquility has been routinely disturbed by military exercises: the sounds and flashes caused by the firing from both land missiles and warships. The weapons aim away from the islands into the sea but many parishioners have told me that they find the experience frightening, particularly when they think of the harm being inflicted upon people where powerful weapons are being fired today such as in Gaza, Ukraine and Sudan. Pope Francis insisted that war is always a defeat while since his first address Pope Leo has asked us to embrace peace. The Popes didn’t invent these teachings; they are rooted in the Gospel. The statue of Our Lady of the Isles invites us to walk the alternative path of the Prince of Peace. I recognise that life is complex but as Christians our choices must be discerned in the light of the Gospel.
+Brian
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The Catholic Headteachers Association of Scotland conference concludes today in Lanarkshire.

Bishop Joseph Toal (Motherwell Diocese), Bishop Frank Dougan (RC Diocese of Galloway) and Archbishop Leo Cushley (Archdiocese of St Andrews & Edinburgh) took part this morning in prayer and conversation.

The Conference theme is 'Catholic Schools: Pilgrims of Hope' and it's a chance for headteachers to think about their leadership and how they can give hope to all those who they work with.







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https://www.franciscanmedia.org/saint-of-the-day/saint-matthias/


Acts of the Apostles records that Saint Matthias was selected by the early Church to replace Judas Iscariot in the ranks of the apostles. We know little more about him except that he was a witness to Jesus from his baptism to his ascension.
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Statement of Bishop Keenan, President of the Bishops' Conference, following the first stage vote at Holyrood on Assisted Suicide:
I am deeply disappointed that our Parliament has taken the first step to permit the state to provide vulnerable people with the means to end their lives prematurely.
Many MSPs, however, expressed significant reservations about the terms of Liam McArthur's Bill.
I hope and pray that MSPs will take time to reflect very carefully on these concerns and reject the Bill before it is passed into law.
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The Motion lodged in the Scottish Parliament last week to celebrate the election of the Holy Father by Paul O'Kane MSP.
That the Parliament welcomes the election of Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost as Pope on the second day of the Papal Conclave, following the death of the late Pope Francis; notes that he has chosen the name, Pope Leo XIV; further notes his extensive time as a missionary in Peru, his role as Bishop of Chiclayo, and his leadership in the Church as Prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops and President of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America; acknowledges that he was born in Chicago, thus becoming the first Pope from the United States of America, but that he also has international connections with his parents being of Spanish and Franco-Italian descent, and him speaking multiple languages, including Spanish, Italian and French; celebrates with the Catholic community in Scotland and around the world upon the election of the new Holy Father; wishes him well in his Pontificate, and acknowledges his first words as Pope from the balcony of St Peter's Basilica regarding "building bridges, dialogue, always open to receiving with open arms for everyone, like this square, open to all, to all who need our charity, our presence, dialogue, love.”

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Ben Wilson, SCIAF's Director of Public Engagement, wrote this article that featured in The Herald on why Pope Francis was brave to ask uncomfortable questions.

He said:

"[Pope Francis] was truly a remarkable figure, a tremendous communicator, and a towering voice for social, political and economic justice. A Pope for our time, Francis was not only a pastor but a prophetic leader, able to look long into the future of humanity — an advocate, a campaigner, and a searing critic of the inequality and injustice that defines so much of our world today. "

Read the whole article today: https://pulse.ly/5n1k7xjx37
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🌱JOIN US TO CELEBRATE 10 YEARS OF LAUDATO SI

🌎Justice & Peace Scotland along with the Bishops' Conference of Scotland Care of Creation Office and various partner Christian organisations invite you to join us during Laudato Si Week 2025 for "Raising Hope", a special online event to celebrate the Jubilee Year and to reflect on a decade of Laudato Si and its legacy in light of the death of Pope Francis.

💚We are delighted to welcome Bishop John Arnold of Salford Diocese, the Spokesperson for the Environment of the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales. It will be a wonderful opportunity to listen and dialogue with Bishop John as we seek to read the signs of the times in the context of Laudato Si' and be Pilgrims of Hope.

🗓️Friday 30th May
🕖7.00PM - 8.30PM
⬇️Use the link in the comments to register and receive access.

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Homily of Cardinal Nichols
reflecting on the election of Pope Leo XIV
Chapel of the Venerable English College, Rome
Sunday, 11 May 2025
We are the humble flock on a journey to the place where the Brave Shepherd has already reached, the Risen Lord, our heavenly home. The first reading vividly portrays how this journey took on a particular moment, a decisive moment, how the message broke out into new missionary endeavour beyond its Jewish birthplace.
The second reading offers a vivid description of the fulfilment this humble flock is striving for and which we are to proclaim. The Gospel proclaimed the brave shepherd in his fullest nature, one with the Father, and it is he who protects and guides his flock. We know our weaknesses. He knows our weaknesses. For our journey, he stays with us in many ways, one of which is in the person of the Bishop of Rome.
I asked Father Stephen Wang [Rector of the Venerable English College] if I could speak at Mass today about this moment of the election of a new Pope. I wanted to do so here because it is much more than a dramatic moment of history. For me, it was an intense experience of the working of the Holy Spirit.
So what can we learn about that working of the Holy Spirit? What touched me most deeply and what has it taught me?
Well, firstly, an awareness of the prayers of the entire Church. An intense focus of prayer. A proclamation of a sensus fidei, and of the nature and importance of this decision. Then, of course, this was firmly focused on us cardinals - humble agents of the Holy Spirit. Humbled, not least, because of the wounds in the Church. The wounds of abuse, the wounds of the misuse of power, all of which we were very conscious of.
There are many signs of the grandeur of a cardinal's office, but there was among us, no sense of grandeur or self-importance. More precisely, when we moved from the General Congregations to the conclave on Tuesday evening and entered that sealed space - no phones, no contact with the outside world. What happened there? For me, it became not so much such a sealed space as a precious space. It was peaceful. There was no clamour. There was attentiveness to each other. In fact, I was a bit sorry when it ended, because there was so much more time to use creatively and to give generously. It suggests that we might all benefit from a day a week without our phones, and allow that inner freedom to flourish again, which is so often distracted by that compulsive turning to the Internet. So it was a precious space of peace.
Secondly, it was very prayerful. And by prayerful, I mean the atmosphere in which we lived, the simple ways in which we greeted each other. It was a prayerfulness to which everybody contributed. There weren't too many formal prayers, but being prayerful is a disposition, not necessarily an activity. I think it was that disposition, that turning to God, that marked this time most strongly, and all the relationships formed in there.
The third quality was fraternity - another essential quality that needs to be present if we are to be sensitive to the Holy Spirit. That comradeship. There was, I tell you, no rancour. There was no competitiveness. There were no harsh words, no denigration of one another, and no expressions of ambition. There was a shared knowledge that the decision, the prize, was a Cross - a death to self and a most intense self-sacrifice into service. That we all knew, and prayed for the one to whom it would be given.
So what was our discernment like?
Who was prepared for this by experience and gifts? In whose heart was this vocation written since his first conception in the mind of God?
We chose a son of St Augustine, and I was just a few yards away when Cardinal Parolin put the question to Cardinal Prevost, "Do you accept?" And with utter calmness, he said, "I accept".
As a son of Augustine, his life and theology has been marked by it being 'affective'. Theology springing from the heart, from Augustine's conversion experience. A theology, a life, a preaching, centred on an awareness of the restlessness of the human heart until it finds rest in God. A way of life in Augustinian communities which has, as its principle, belonging to one another. He will show us again and again that the very core of our journey lies in our relationship with Christ Jesus, in love, in gratitude, and in joy. Without that, everything else counts for little.
Pope Leo described the conclave as a Pascal experience, lived in the light of Christ, to whom we wish to stay close, wanting above all to let His life shine in our world.
So let us pray for Pope Leo XIV, as he leads this humble flock to the joys of heaven, where the Brave Shepherd has gone before.
Amen.
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I warmly welcome the First Minister's commitment to protecting the vulnerable from the existential threat of assisted suicide and upholding the dignity of life by deciding to vote against Liam McArthur's Bill and I hope that fellow parliamentarians will follow his lead.
+Brian
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