Europe Jun 24, 20264Add to bookmarks

The young delegates of the COMECE Youth Net, appointed by the EU's episcopal conferences, gathered in Brussels in early June 2026 to discuss citizen participation, European values, and current political challenges. François-Xavier Lemoyne analyzes what this gathering reveals about the Catholic presence in the European debate.
The COMECE Youth Net – a network of young Catholics appointed by the episcopal conferences of the European Union – held a three-day meeting in Brussels from 3 to 5 June 2026, dedicated to civic participation, European values, and current political challenges (COMECE, 23 June 2026). Delegates from each Member State exchanged views on their engagement in civil society and the place of faith in the European public sphere.
COMECE plays a discreet but real role within Brussels institutions – the official interlocutor of the Catholic Church with the Commission, Parliament, and Council. The COMECE Youth Net extends this mission by training a generation of Catholics capable of speaking the language of European institutions while upholding an anthropological vision rooted in the Church’s social doctrine. Social teaching reminds us that participation in political life is a duty for Christians (CCC, no. 2239): engaging in European debates through networks like COMECE Youth Net is a contemporary form of this civic duty, precisely where bioethical, migratory, and religious freedom issues are decided.
Europe does not lack lobbies. It lacks voices that speak of the human person, of their dignity, of their ultimate ends. This is precisely the contribution the Church can make – provided it trains young people capable of carrying this message into the forums where decisions are made.
The Commission of the Bishops' Conferences of the European Union (COMECE) represents the Catholic bishops of the EU Member States to the European institutions. It holds consultative status and participates in the dialogue provided for in Article 17 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU.
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Enfin des jeunes qui osent parler d’Europe sans tomber dans le jargon ! Ça redonne un peu d’espoir pour l’avenir de l’Église sur le continent.
Enfin des jeunes qui parlent d’Europe sans tomber dans le jargon ! On voit trop souvent des débats où la foi est soit oubliée, soit plaquée artificiellement.
C’est bien de discuter Europe, mais est-ce qu’ils parlent vraiment des problèmes concrets des jeunes ? Les dogmes, c’est important, mais un RSA à 500€ ou un logement à 800€, ça compte aussi.
C'est encourageant de voir des jeunes catholiques s'engager pour l'Europe sans renier leur foi. Chez nous, les mouvements de jeunesse en parlent trop peu.
Jeunesse catholique et institutions européennes : la COMECE forme ses relais