A woman prays alongside a barrier inside the Cologne Cathedral in Germany March 15, 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic. (CNS/Reuters/Thilo Schmuelgen)
Oxford, England — When Spanish parliamentarians passed a law allowing euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide in the run-up to Easter, it was the latest in a program of radical measures that has set the country's Socialist-led government against its once-powerful Catholic Church.
Despite a year of bitter controversies, Spain's bishops have maintained a conciliatory stance, pledging dialogue and cooperation where possible.
There and elsewhere across the 27-country European Union, however, there have been complaints that coronavirus restrictions are being used to push through measures that could compromise religious rights.