The Church in Mexico raises its voice
The Conference of the Mexican Episcopate did not remain silent. With a tone that mixes pain and firmness, he expressed his “deep pain and union” with the religious authorities in the Holy Land. The reason: preventing the Latin Patriarch from celebrating the Palm Sunday Mass at the Holy Sepulcher is, for them, a low blow to freedom of worship.
“We express our deep pain and union with the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem,” said bishops Ramón Castro Castro and Héctor M. Pérez Villarreal in the official statement.
Faith versus confrontation
For these religious leaders, the moment couldn’t be more symbolic. Just when millions of believers begin Holy Week, an act of this caliber sends the wrong message. The CEM was clear: using religion as an excuse for armed conflict is unacceptable.
His positioning goes beyond the complaint. They join the international call to stop the violence and ask to recognize the dignity of all people involved. Faith, they insist, must be the driving force to build bridges, not trenches.
From Mexico, they see these events as an urgent call for attention. They reinforce the imperative need to promote dialogue and reconciliation where there seems to be only room for confrontation. They remembered the central teachings of Jesus Christ on active love and non-violence.
The final message is a call for unity and solidarity with those who directly suffer the consequences of the conflict. For the Mexican bishops, silencing a mass during Holy Week is silencing a message of peace when it is most needed.




