Lipa’s Garcera is new CBCP president

Filipino bishops elected Archbishop Gilbert Garcera as CBCP president during their 130th plenary assembly in Anda, Bohol on July 5. Garcera, 66, succeeds Cardinal Pablo Virgilio David, and will serve a two-year term beginning Dec. 1, 2025.

A former bishop of Daet and archbishop of Lipa since 2017, Garcera has held key leadership roles within the CBCP and the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences, including commissions on mission and the family.

Archbishop Julius Tonel, 68, was elected vice president, replacing Bishop Mylo Hubert Vergara. Tonel, a former bishop of Ipil and archbishop of Zamboanga since 2023, chairs the CBCP Committee on Bishops’ Concerns.

Seven ‘new martyrs’

The names of seven “new martyrs”—priests and lay Catholics killed for their faith and Gospel witness, most of them in conflict-affected areas in the southern Philippines—were submitted to the Vatican’s Commission on New Martyrs for Jubilee Year.

The list includes Fr. Rhoel Gallardo, abducted and killed by Abu Sayyaf in Basilan in 2000; Fr. Marcelito “Tito” Paez, slain in Nueva Ecija in 2017 for his human rights advocacy; and Alberto Pinagawa, a lay leader murdered in 2009 for opposing illegal logging and mining.

Also included were four lay Catholics — Junrey Barbante, Janine Arenas, Evangeline Aromin and Riza Daniel — who died in the 2023 bombing during Mass at Mindanao State University in Marawi.

Pope Francis had encouraged dioceses worldwide to remember modern martyrs and the “saints next door” who gave their lives for Christ.

Death of Pope Francis

Bells tolled on April 21, 2025 as news broke of the death of Pope Francis, whose apostolic voyage a decade ago to console typhoon victims and stirring tribute to Filipinos as “smugglers of faith” and bearers of “joy to the whole world” made a lasting impression on the Philippine Church.

Jose Cardinal Advincula, the archbishop of Manila and one of three Filipino cardinals created by Pope Francis throughout his 12-year pontificate, led the tribute to the beloved “Lolo Kiko” of Filipinos.

Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas, in a message titled “Message of Sorrow and Hope,” recalled the late pope’s assurances to him amid persecution during the Duterte administration’s bloody war on drugs.

Cardinal David said the pope’s vision for a more welcoming and listening Church must be sustained.

The Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences expressed “profound sorrow and a deep sense of loss” over the death of Pope Francis, hailing his life as one dedicated to “spreading the Gospel, championing the cause of the poor and of the marginalized, and calling the world to embrace compassion, justice and care for creation.”

3 Filipinos in conclave

On May 6, Filipino clergy in Rome sent off the three Filipino cardinals eligible to vote in the papal conclave. Cardinals Luis Antonio Tagle, Jose Advincula and Pablo Virgilio David concelebrated Mass at the Pontificio Collegio Filippino on the eve of the conclave.

The 2025 conclave saw the largest number of Filipino cardinal electors in history, underscoring the Philippines’ growing influence in the universal Church. Previous conclaves had included only one or two Filipino electors.

Pope Leo XIV, first US-born, Augustinian pontiff

The new pope, Robert Francis Prevost, is an American cleric from the Augustinian order.

The election of Prevost, 69, the first pope from the United States, was announced by the Cardinal Proto-Deacon, Dominique Mamberti, on May 8 at past 7 p.m. Rome time, about an hour after white smoke rose from the Sistine Chapel chimney.

A native of Chicago and a naturalized citizen of Peru, where he spent years as a missionary, Prevost took the name Leo XIV, a signal that he would take off from the legacy of Leo XIII, under whose long reign from 1878 to 1903 promulgated the Church’s social doctrine with the encyclical Rerum Novarum.

A former superior general of the Augustinians from 2001 to 2013, Prevost appeared to signal a recalibration in Church leadership.

Inaugural Mass

Pope Leo XIV called for a Church united in Christ’s love as a model for global reconciliation and peace during his inaugural Mass on May 18.

The 267th pope formally began his Petrine ministry before an estimated 150,000 people in St. Peter’s Square, alongside religious and political leaders. Millions more watched worldwide.

“Brothers and sisters, I would like that our first great desire be for a united Church, a sign of unity and communion, which becomes a leaven for a reconciled world,” he said, according to the official English translation of his homily.

“In this our time, we still see too much discord, too many wounds caused by hatred, violence, prejudice, the fear of difference, and an economic paradigm that exploits the Earth’s resources and marginalizes the poorest,” he said.

Pope Leo referenced the motto on his papal coat of arms: “In the one Christ, we are one,” a phrase drawn from a homily by St. Augustine and reflective of his vocation as an Augustinian missionary.