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O.Carm

O.Carm

Wednesday, 12 November 2025 07:59

Extraordinary Chapter in Indonesia

Extraordinary Chapter of the Province of Indonesia

With the election of the Prior Provincial of the Province of Indonesia, FX. Hariawan Adji, O. Carm., as Vice Prior General, based on Constitution no. 337 § 2, the Province of Indonesia held an Extraordinary Provincial Chapter to elect a new prior provincial. This Chapter was held at the Carmelite Novitiate in Batu, on Friday, November 7, 2025. The Vice Prior General, Hariawan Adji, was present to preside over this Extraordinary Chapter. 

In the Extraordinary Chapter, which was conducted smoothly and in a spirit of brotherhood, Fr. Edison R. L. Tinambunan was elected  as Prior Provincial of the Carmelite Order of the Indonesian Province for 2025-2028.

Edison serves as rector and professor at the Widya Sasana School of Philosophy and Theology in Malang.

Not So Soon
(Luke 21:5-19)

Passages of Scripture, like today’s Gospel, can leave us feeling disturbed.
Talk of destruction, wars, revolutions, persecution and betrayal by close family members can be quite unsettling.
We have to read the Gospel as Luke’s community would have received it, knowing that the Temple and Jerusalem had already been destroyed (ca 70AD) at the end of the Jewish-Roman war, some 10-20 years before Luke’s Gospel was written. In the light of that destruction, and the ongoing persecution by both Romans and Jews, perhaps many in Luke’s community thought the end was near.
Looking at the world today many of us, too, are dismayed by the wars, persecutions and destruction in our own day.
Like Luke’s community, perhaps we, too, long for a saviour to come to our rescue, to make it all right. Maybe that is why so many are prepared to put their trust in harsh dictators who promise to make things right and restore a sense of control and national identity, even at the expense of basic human rights.
The words which Luke places on the lips of Jesus are designed to comfort and give hope. Jesus warns them not to listen to those who think they know God’s plan for the end of time – rather, they should know that God is with them always and no matter what happens.
The Church must continue its journey (persevere) in spite of all sorts of difficulties and persecutions. Like Jesus, the disciples will be vindicated by God with the gift of eternal life.

Tuesday, 11 November 2025 08:59

COP 30 in Belém, Brazil: Just Another Summit?

The Carmelite NGO | Advocacy for a Just World
The Climate Summit in Belém, Brazil: Just Another Summit?

From November 6 to 21 this year, COP 30 will be held in Belém, in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon. Ten years after the Paris Agreement, this climate summit transcends the usual diplomatic calendar to become an event of profound symbolism. As stated by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the summit will be an opportunity for the world to discuss the importance of the Amazon within the Amazon itself, listening directly to its peoples.

The conference agenda is anchored in crucial mandates that will define the trajectory of global climate action for the next decade. It inherits from COP 28 the task of responding to the first Global Stocktake, which concluded that current efforts are insufficient to limit warming to 1.5°C and called for the submission of a new and more ambitious round of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), or national climate action plans by February 2025. It will also need to build on the financial commitments established at the last COP 29, particularly with regard to the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG), which will replace the target of $100 billion per year in aid to countries affected by climate change.

Heading up the Carmelite NGO delegation to the meetings in Brazil will be Renato Rallo, a long time member of the Carmelite NGO. He holds a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering in Energy Resources and Environment. Mari Carmen Molina, Chair of Biodiversity and Environmental Conservation, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Madrid, will participating as a delegate of the Carmelite NGO and will present a side event in the green zone. Five others will be participating virtually as part of the Carmelite NGO. 

Eduardo Agosta Scarel, O. Carm., Director of the Department of Integral Ecology, Spanish Episcopal Conference and Vice President of the Carmelite NGO, published an article in VIDA NUEVA digital on Monday, November 3, 2025 before leaving for the conference. The article was originally published in Spanish. We provide here a translation in English.

To read the complete article ... The Climate Summit in Belém, Brazil: Just Another Summit? by Eduardo Agosta Scarel, O. Carm.

Tuesday, 11 November 2025 08:21

Carmelites Celebrate 80 Years in Zimbabwe

The Carmelites Celebrate 80th Anniversary of Presence in Zimbabwe

The Zimbabwe Commissariat celebrated the launch of their Oak Jubilee and diaconate ordination of Br Lloyd Champiruka on Saturday, October 25, 2025, in St. Simon Stock Parish, Rusape. The occasion was graced by his Carmelite Bishop Paul Horan, O. Carm., and the Irish provincial, Simon Nolan, O. Carm. 

The Zimbabwe Commissariat was established by the Irish Carmelites in November 1946. Three Carmelites—Donal Lamon, Anselm Corbett, and Luke Flynn—arrived in what was then called Rhodesia. Five additional Carmelites came to assist in 1947. In early 1953, the Prefecture of Umtali was entrusted to the care of the Irish Carmelites with Donal Lamont as Apostolic Prefect. Four years later, the Prefecture was raised to become the Diocese of Umtali, now Mutare, with Lamont as the first bishop. Along the 80-year journey, friars from the USA, Australia, and Britain contributed to the Commissariat.

The Commissariat currently has nine communities with a variety of ministries being served. The novitiate serves not only Zimbabwe but Kenya and Mozambique.

Interview with Desiderio García Martínez, O. Carm., Elected Prior General in September 

During a recent stay in Rome, the recently elected prior general, Fr. Desiderio García Martinéz, was kind enough to sit with members of the Carmelite Communications office and answer a few questions.

The interview is in Spanish with English subtitles.

We hope you enjoy!

View the Interview ...

In his Saturday, November 8, 2025 catechesis for Jubilee year pilgrims, Pope Leo XIV spoke about Blessed Isidore Bakanja, the Congolese martyr who refused to remove his Carmelite scapular when ordered to by his Belgian boss. The pope’s reflection was entitled To Hope Is to Bear Witness. Isidore Bakanja

Here is what the pope said:

Dear Brothers and Sisters, as we continue our Jubilee catechesis, let us reflect today on the life of Blessed Isidore Bakanja, a Congolese martyr who lived out his faith with joy and authenticity, even in hostile environments such as his workplace. The supervisor of the European-owned plantation where Isidore worked despised the Catholic missionaries who defended the rights of the indigenous, and unleashed his anger upon Isidore.

This courageous young man continued to manifest his faith, expressing his devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary by wearing his brown scapular. While close to death due to the abuse he suffered, Isidore declared that he would pray for his aggressors from heaven. His testimony reminds us that we have much to learn from our persecuted brothers and sisters in Africa. Let us strive to follow his example of perseverance in the faith despite any persecution or rejection we may face. Blessed Isidore, pray for us, so that we too can give witness to our faith with courage and enthusiasm!

A video from TikTok is available with the pope’s words.

Carmelite Monastery of the St. Thérèse of Lisieux in Allentown, USA Celebrates Elective Chapter

The Carmelite nuns of the monastery of St. Thérèse of Lisieux in Allentown, Pennsylvania (USA) held their triennial chapter on September 25, 2025.

The monastery of St. Thérèse in Allentown was the first monastery of the Order established in the United States of America. In 1931 the prior general at the time, Elias Magennis, sent two sisters, Rev. Mother Therese of Jesus and Sr. Clement Mary of the Guardian Angel, from the monastery of Santa Croce di Lucca in Naples to establish a monastery in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia dedicated to St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus.

A number of candidates presented themselves and before long the community numbered eleven. Four additional nuns from Naples were sent to help out for two years. This monastery flourished and was able to found new monasteries in Hudson (Wisconsin) and Wahpeton (North Dakota) as well as two other monasteries that have closed.

The monastery's website is www.carmelite-nuns.com

Those elected to leadership are:

Prioress | Priora | Priora:
Mother M. Veronica Korb

1st Councilor | 1ª Consejera | 1ª Consigliera:
Sister M. Grace Erl

2nd Councilor | 2ª Consejera | 2ª Consigliera:
Sister M. Michael Nerlonger

Treasurer | Ecónoma | Economa
Sister M. Elijah Guingon

Formator | Formadora | Formatrice
Sister M. Michael Nerlinger

Sacristan | Sacristana | Sacrestana:
Sister M. Elijah Guingon

Thursday, 06 November 2025 09:14

St. Elizabeth of the Trinity (OCD), Virgin

8 November Optional Memorial

Elizabeth of the Trinity is one of the best-known figures in contemporary spirituality. Through her example and her teaching, she has exerted an ever-growing influence for many years, due above all to her Trinitarian experience and her short writings (spiritual notes, correspondence) rich in doctrine and echoing her communion with the Three Divine Persons.

Humble and pure, rich in intelligence and open to all the beauties of grace, nature, and art, she learned the lesson of love for the “Three”—according to the expression she loved—and at the same time the laws of correspondence to that love from St. Paul, St. Teresa of Avila, and St. John of the Cross. Silence and recollection, enlightened contemplation of the Trinitarian mystery and Christological dogma, generous docility to the slightest inspirations, unconditional fidelity to the divine will in her Carmelite vocation, formed her to a life of dedication that soon reached high perfection.

Adhering to the soul of Christ, “her favorite book,” in him and with him she rose to the Trinity, of which she wanted to be laudem gloriae, that is, a soul “who always adores and, so to speak, is wholly transformed in praise and love, in the passion of the glory of her God.” Such praise and such love were directed essentially to the Three Divine Persons present in her soul: this is the center of her spirituality and her message. In fact, she wrote: “I am Elizabeth of the Trinity, that is, Elizabeth who disappears, who loses herself, who allows herself to be invaded by the Three.” And she added, "Love dwells in us: therefore, the exercise is to enter into my interior and lose myself in Those who are there.

This spiritual orientation, based on the conviction of faith in the divine indwelling, was the grace of her life. Faithful to the progressive inner enlightenment that came to her, above all, from her contemplative study of the texts of the Gospel and St. Paul, she was able to achieve remarkable experiences, such as that of the Ascensions of 1906: "This morning I heard this word deep in my soul: ‘If anyone loves me, my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him’, and at that very moment I saw how this was really happening. I cannot say how the Three Divine Persons revealed themselves, but I saw them holding their council of love within me, and I still seem to see them like that." The grace of an almost uninterrupted awareness of the indwelling of the Trinity accompanied her during the last months of her life, strengthening and sustaining her during the period of martyrdom that was to “configure her to the death of Jesus, transform her into him crucified” for the glory of the Father and for the Church.

Already on November 21, 1904, in her famous Elevation to the Trinity: O mon Dieu, Trinité que j'adore, she had asked the Holy Spirit: “Descend into me, so that in my soul there may be another incarnation of the Word: that I may be an added humanity (”une humanité de surcroit“) in which he renews his mystery,” understanding that this aspiration could only be realized on the cross. God answered her prayer. The year 1906 was a succession of sufferings endured with fortitude in union with Christ, with her gaze turned to the Church and to souls. After a violent crisis, she was heard to exclaim: "O Love, Love! Consume all my substance for your glory. May it be distilled drop by drop for your Church! It was the ideal that sustained her and made her write to her mother: "The Father has predestined me to be conformed to his crucified Son; my Spouse wants me to be an added humanity in which He can suffer again for the glory of the Father and to help the Church: this thought does me so much good. He has chosen your daughter to associate her with the great work of Redemption, he has marked her with the seal of the Cross, and she suffers on it as an extension of the Passion."

Animated by these certainties, sustained by an ever more lively and theological love for the Immaculate Virgin, Ianua coeli, “the great praise of glory of the Trinity,” as Our Lady defined her, enjoying even in pain the intimacy with the “Three,” died, murmuring almost in a singing tone: “I am going to the light, to love, to life.”

Some time before, she had written: “The Trinity: this is our dwelling place, our home, our father's house from which we must never leave.” And two weeks before her death: “I believe that in heaven my mission will be to draw souls to interior recollection, helping them to come out of themselves to adhere to God with a very simple, loving movement, keeping them in that great interior silence that allows God to imprint Himself on them and transform them into Himself.” The invitation and the promise did not remain a dead letter: many souls, as evidenced by the documentation collected for the beginning of the cause of beatification, follow her path and her example in reliving her grace, the full grace of baptism that configures us to Christ and fixes in the depths of our being the loving presence of the Trinity, the source and end of all perfection.

On July 12, 1982, in the presence of the Holy Father John Paul II, the Decree on Virtues was promulgated. On February 17, 1984, the Decree on the miracle for beatification was promulgated (the Process had been conducted in Dijon in 1964-1965), and on November 25, 1984, the solemn Beatification took place in St. Peter's Basilica. Pope Francis canonized Elizabeth as a saint on October 16, 2016.

[Adapted from Valentino Macca, "Elizabeth of the Trinity" in Dizionario carmelitano, published by Edizioni Carmelitane]

To read more ...

Thursday, 06 November 2025 08:57

Blessed Francis Palau y Quer, OCD, Priest

November 7 | Optional Memorial in the Provinces of Spain

The Efficacy of Prayer in Favor of the Church
From the writings of Blessed Francesco Palau, OCD

In his providence God has disposed that our evils should not be remedied and that his graces should not be granted to us except through prayer, and that through the prayer of some others should be saved (cf. Jas 5:16 ff). If the heavens dripped from on high and the clouds made the righteous rain, if the earth opened and the Savior sprang forth (cf. Is 45:8), God willed that the cries and supplications of the holy Fathers and especially of that singular Virgin who persuaded the heavens by the fragrance of her virtues and drew the uncreated Word into her bosom should precede his coming. 

The Redeemer came and through continuous prayer reconciled the world to his Father. For the prayer of Jesus Christ and the fruits of his redemption to be applied to some nation or people, for there to be those who enlighten them with the preaching of the Gospel and administer the sacraments to them, it is indispensable that there be someone or many who by groanings and supplications, by prayers and sacrifices have won over that people and reconciled them with God.

Read the complete article ...

Read about the life of Bl Francesco ...

A Living Temple
(John 2:13-22)

Today’s feast celebrates the dedication of the Cathedral Church of St John the Baptist in Rome. This cathedral is often referred to as the ‘Lateran’ because it is built on the site of a palace once belonging to the Laterani family. This palace served as the official residence of the Popes from the 4th to the 14th centuries. It is the cathedral church of the diocese of Rome of which the Pope is the local bishop.
We celebrate the dedication of this cathedral as the mother church of the whole Catholic community. Cathedrals, like all churches, are physical signs of God’s presence and the gathering place of the people of Christ. It is the living Body of Christ, which gathers to celebrate and witness, which becomes the living temple of God’s presence on earth.
The readings take up these themes. The first reading is taken from Ezekiel’s vision of a new Temple in Jerusalem. The old one had been totally destroyed. Interestingly, the reading does not focus on the glory of the building, but on the ‘life-giving water’ which flows out of the building.
In the second reading, St Paul makes the point that we are God’s building among whom the Spirit of God is living.
The Gospel is the story of Jesus cleansing the Temple in Jerusalem. This passage always reminds us of the need not to be distracted from our true purpose to be the living Church of God. It also reminds us that the new and true temple is Jesus.
We, who are baptised in Christ, are the living stones in the Temple of God.
Our feast is a celebration of Christ, the one in whom we are built into the true temple of God on earth; the ones through whom the living water of God’s Spirit finds its way into the world to bring growth, goodness and healing.

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