Friday, June 12, 2026

USCCB president: Church must ‘put out into the deep,’ offer hope in Christ to all

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USCCB president: Church must ‘put out into the deep,’ offer hope in Christ to all

Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, gives his presidential address June 10, 2026, opening the annual spring meeting of the USCCB in Orlando, Fla. Credit: OSV News photo/Bob Roller

ORLANDO, Fla. (OSV News) — The Church must “put out into the deep” and “create hope in Christ,” said Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

The archbishop shared his thoughts in his opening address at the USCCB’s annual spring plenary assembly, taking place June 10-12 in Orlando. 

The public sessions of the meeting, June 10 and 11, were being livestreamed through the USCCB’s website at usccb.org

Archbishop Coakley opened the public sessions with his first address as USCCB president, having been elected during the conference’s annual fall meeting in November 2025.

Lighthearted quote from Blessed John Paul I

He began his remarks with a lighthearted quote of a comment Blessed John Paul I reportedly made to the cardinals upon his papal election: “May God forgive you for what you have done.”

Also speaking to the bishops was Archbishop Gabriele G. Caccia, who was appointed as papal nuncio to the U.S. in March, having previously served as the Holy See’s permanent observer to the United Nations. Archbishop Caccia succeeded Cardinal Christophe Pierre, who turned 80 in January and had served in the post since 2016.

The meeting will see expected votes on several action items on the USCCB’s agenda, which was publicly released June 8.

Among those items are revisions to the USCCB’s “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” adopted in 2002 and updated at regular intervals over the ensuing years; episcopal consultations for the canonization causes of Slovenian missionary priest Msgr. Joseph Francis Buh and lay American John Rick Miller; and proposed adjustments to portions of several liturgical texts. Presentations on several initiatives, such as Catholic prison ministry and World Youth Day 2027, were also scheduled.

Impact of bishops’ fall immigration message

In his address, Archbishop Coakley said he was “especially pleased to recognize the impact” of the USCCB’s special message on migration, which was released during the conference’s November 2025 plenary assembly under Archbishop Coakley’s predecessor as USCCB president, Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio of the U.S. Archdiocese of the Military Services.

The statement, overwhelmingly approved by the U.S. bishops, came amid the Trump administration’s hardline crackdown on immigration, which has seen sweeping mass detentions and deportations.

The USCCB message “demonstrated our united concern as pastors for the dignity of every person, especially our migrant brothers and sisters,” said Archbishop Coakley.

He noted that “the concern, the grief over how people are being treated, expressed in our message, remains as relevant now,” adding, “We continue to advocate for “meaningful reform of our nation’s immigration laws and procedures.” 

Unity of bishops and Pope Leo XIV

Archbishop Coakley said he was “grateful” for the unity of the U.S. bishops with each other and with Pope Leo XIV, whom he quoted frequently in his comments.

The archbishop said that during the past six months of his tenure as USCCB president, he had returned “many times” to Luke 5:4, the Scripture verse that he chose for his episcopal motto: “Duc in altum.”

“It is the verse from the Gospel according to St. Luke where the Lord says to Peter, ‘Put out into the deep and lower your nets for a catch,’” he explained. 

Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori and Bishop Daniel E. Thomas of Toledo, Ohio, chair of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Pro-life Activities, attend the first public session June 10, 2026, of the annual spring meeting of the USCCB in Orlando, Fla. Credit: OSV News photo/Bob Roller

The words are not only a source of comfort but “a command and a challenge,” said Archbishop Coakley.

Both the Church and its bishops are “commanded to put out into the deep water, to move beyond our comfort zones and the safe places where we can maintain our illusions of safety and control.” 

He added, “Obeying this command is perhaps more necessary at this moment than ever.”

Today’s constant challenges

Archbishop Coakley pointed to current challenges such as “constant flux … forced migration, polarization, disruptions, climatic, and economic upheavals, artificial intelligence, and wars,” as well as the struggles of those who “are wondering what it even means to be a human person.”

To restore hope, he said, “the truth of Christ must be proclaimed all the more confidently.” 

Peace, “which is the heart of the truth of Christ, always brings hope,” said Archbishop Coakley. 

Threats to that hope include attacks on human dignity, especially against “the unborn … the elderly … the sick and suffering,” he said.

He also cited “the violence of war and injustice,” as well as “the scourge of racism,” “abuse, disdain and contempt — especially towards the poor, the stranger, the condemned and the outcast.”

Preaching that ‘life is a gift from God’

Restoring hope “necessitates preaching” that “life is a gift from God,” said Archbishop Coakley. “Every life has value and dignity, and we cannot forfeit that dignity, even when it is besmirched by sin and wickedness. It comes from God.”

That truth “will renew hope in the hardest of hearts,” he said.

Bishop Gregory L. Parkes of St. Petersburg, Fla., attends a June 10, 2026, session of the annual spring meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Orlando, Fla. Credit: OSV News photo/Bob Roller

Another threat is polarization “within our country, and even within our Church,” said the archbishop, who described such division as “a scandal that can only be overcome through encounter, through the cultivation of interpersonal relationships and conversations between those who may disagree.”

“We must never give up on those who are different or see things differently,” he said.

Archbishop Coakley said that the “record numbers” entering the Church this year and prior were both “a great sign of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit” and “a further example of how we need to put out into the deep.”

‘The disaffiliated and the unaffiliated’

The bishops’ current mission directive, “to reach out to the disaffiliated and the unaffiliated, remains a major task in helping to restore hope,” he said.

Looking ahead to the U.S. bishops’ June 11 consecration of the nation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Archbishop Coakley said he was “reminded how deep, unfathomable, and profound is the love that lives in that heart, and how it embraces the entire world.”

“It excludes no one,” he said. “Can there be a greater message of hope? Can a greater gift of hope be offered? It is the love flowing from the Sacred Heart of Jesus that feeds our hope.”

Religious leaders and communities cannot become complacent on immigration.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents stand guard at the Delaney Hall detention center while demonstrators gathered outside in Newark, New Jersey, May 29, 2026 (OSV News photo/Eduardo Munoz, Reuters).

During morning rush hour in Chicago last week, ICE agents crashed into a bystander’s car while trying to detain a Venezuelan migrant. After tackling the screaming, shirtless man to the ground and handcuffing him, agents tased him, according to a local reporter and other witnesses on the scene. Then they used the taser and pepper spray to threaten bystanders who had gathered and started blowing whistles. In the chaos, an agent dropped a loaded magazine in the street. 

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A screen reads "AI" as attendees gather at Rivian's first Autonomy and AI Day in Palo Alto, California, Dec. 11 2025, showing developments in self-driving technology. (OSV News/Reuters/Carlos Barria)

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Thursday, June 11, 2026

Pope Leo tackles depression, domestic violence and the ‘cult of self-image’ in dialogue with young people

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Pope Leo XIV greets faithful as he holds a prayer vigil at the Lluis Companys Olympic Stadium during his apostolic journey in Barcelona, Spain, June 9, 2026. Credit: OSV News photo/Bruna Casas, Reuters

On the fourth day of his visit to Spain, Pope Leo flew to Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia, where he joined 40,000 young people in the city’s Olympic stadium for a festive and prayerful gathering. 

The atmosphere in this city of 1.75 million people was totally different from what he had experienced in Madrid. There were no crowds lining the streets to greet him as he drove from the airport to the cathedral for a prayer service, no festive decoration of the city, almost no Vatican flags to be seen and no posters to acknowledge his presence or welcome him. Instead, the city’s teachers were on strike and decided to conduct a protest during his visit, even wearing paper miters to draw the media’s attention to a lack of funding for education and low pay.

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I am not sure what led my friend to that conclusion—probably some form of intuition or instinct. But his observation sparked my interest. 

A lot of “tech stuff” passes me by. I often say that I am too old for it. After all, I am almost 82. Still, the notion of A.I. and what it can and cannot do has fascinated me. So I tried a little intellectually narcissistic A.I. experiment. 

Toward a Civilization of Love

 

Caravaggio’s ‘The Seven Works of Mercy’ (1607) (Wikimedia Commons)

Over the past decade, civilizational discourse has become a staple of global political thought. This discourse presents nations like India, Russia, and, now, the United States as sacred bearers of a unique historical and cultural heritage. The term also evokes colonial echoes of a “civilizing” mission, positing one people as superior to others it encounters. Given historical work like Mike Davis’s Late Victorian Holocausts, this dimension of civilizational discourse seems thoroughly discredited. Gandhi was reportedly asked, “What do you think about Western civilization?” He tartly responded, “I think it would be a good idea.”

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