Tag: Vatican

  • Pope holds two days closed-door meetings with cardinals over future direction of church

    Pope holds two days closed-door meetings with cardinals over future direction of church

    Following concern about the future direction of the church, the head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State, Pope Francis, Tuesday, wrapped up two days of closed-door meetings with about 180 cardinals.

     

    The closed-door meetings were with many cardinals young enough to elect a future pontiff.

     

    Among the issues discussed at the meeting was how the Catholic Church’s governance could be made more inclusive.

    Pope holds two days closed-door meetings with cardinals over future direction of church
    Pope Francis

     

    The sessions focused on a new Apostolic constitution that, among other things, allows lay people to head important Vatican offices, envisioning greater decision-making roles for them, including women.

     

    But since the church has closed the door to women in the priesthood, the most prestigious, and ultimately most powerful roles, including that of a pontiff, remain in the realm of men.

     

    The reforms also lend more institutional weight to efforts to fight clerical sex abuse. The document, made public earlier this year, replaced the constitution written by St. John Paul II in 1988.

     

    Francis on Saturday raised 20 churchmen to the rank of cardinal, including 16 younger than 80 and thus eligible to vote in a conclave to elect his successor, when the time comes.

     

    Until Pope Benedict XVI resigned in 2013, the first pontiff in almost 600 years to do so, conclaves in recent centuries had followed the death of popes. Francis, who is 85, has said that resignation can be a valid option for pontiffs who can’t adequately fulfill their role as leaders of the world’s more than 1.3 billion Catholics.

     

    But he has brushed off talk that he is contemplating stepping down soon despite health problems, including a bad knee that necessitates frequent wheelchair use.

     

    In his homily at a Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica to close out the meetings, Francis offered no details about this week’s discussions. But he urged the cardinals, known as the “princes of the church,” to be on guard against the “cancer, the woodworm, of worldly spirituality.”

     

    While in Rome these days, cardinals from around the world could size each other up. Encounters, including informal ones, allow them to see who might have the potential to become a future pope as well as to ponder possible alliances among geographical groupings or among like-minded churchmen from more conservative or more progressive factions.

     

    The Vatican said the themes discussed were the role of lay persons, financial transparency, the managerial structure of the Vatican bureaucracy, and how to “announce the Gospel in an epoch like the current one.”

     

    Francis has worked to reform the Holy See’s finances, including its multimillion-dollar investments, one of which is at the heart of a trial underway at the Holy See and involving, among others, a Vatican cardinal.

    Pope holds two days closed-door meetings with cardinals over future direction of church

     

    Francis has tried to make the church more inviting to those who might feel unwelcome, including LGBTQ Catholics, or undervalued, including women.

     

    On Monday, a half-dozen female activists protested as cardinals, with their iconic red headgear, flocked to the meeting on Vatican grounds. The women held up red parasols with slogans reading, “Sexism is a Cardinal Sin.” Other slogans were: “It’s reigning men” and “Ordain Women.”

     

    One protester, Miriam Duignan, lamented that the cardinals were “going to talk about the future of the church without half of the church.”

  • Vatican discloses uses of Pope’s fund for first time

    Vatican discloses uses of Pope’s fund for first time

    The Vatican, on Thursday, issued the first detailed disclosure of the Pope’s main fund in an attempt to boost the confidence of the faithful in how their charitable contributions were used.

    The Peter’s Pence fund, whose aim was to help the Pope run the Church, was made up of income from a collection taken up in Roman Catholic dioceses around the world once a year, individual contributions and inheritances, and bequests.

    According to the “Annual Disclosure” for 2021, contributions amounted to 46.9 million euros.

    Compared to previously released figures, this was down more than 15 percent over 2020, which was down 18 percent over 2019. That followed a 23 percent reduction between 2015 and 2019, according to the disclosure.

    Disbursements from the fund totalled 65.3 million euros, leaving a deficit of 18.4 million euros which was covered by other Vatican income.

    The Vatican’s economy minister, Father Antonio Guerrero, had said the slump in 2020-2021 was due to the COVID-19 pandemic when many churches were closed.

    Many Catholics, however, said they had stopped contributing because of Vatican financial scandals such as one surrounding the purchase of a building in London, an investment at the centre of an ongoing corruption trial.

    Guerrero said the finances of the Vatican had to be a “glass house”, adding the faithful have a “right to know how we use resources”.

    Significantly, the disclosure for the first time, detailed how the money was spent.

    About 55.5 million euros were used to help defray the costs of running Vatican departments, its embassies around the world, its communications structure and to help local churches.

    About 10 million euros from Peter’s Pence went to 157 direct assistance projects, including those to help the poor, children, elderly and victims of natural disasters and war.

    According to the disclosure, most of the projects were in Africa and Asia.

    The disclosure gave details of some of the direct assistance projects, such as one constructing a building for young people in Haiti and another ending online sexual exploitation and trafficking of children in the Philippines.

    The changes in transparency regarding Peter’s Pence stemmed from a decree by Pope Francis in December 2020.

    The Vatican had been facing a series of issues some of which were clerical abuse and its handling, the new translation of the Roman Missal, the Bishop Bill Morris affair, the reining in of Caritas, the censure in the United States of the group representing religious sisters and of the work of two women theologians.

    Some pressing issues also included the silencing of prominent Irish priests and the cleaning out of the Irish College in Rome, the public disquiet expressed by clergy in Austria and Ireland, the sacking of the head of the Vatican Bank, the steady leaking of confidential Roman documents.

    On May 12, a former Harford County church priest was sentenced to 22 years in federal prison for coercing a boy, a parishioner to engage in sexual activities with him for nearly two years.

    Fernando Cristancho was ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in Colombia, South America, in 1985, before moving to Alexandria, where he worked as an assistant priest from 1994 to 1997.

  • Pope Francis appeared in public for first time on wheel chair

    Pope Francis appeared in public for first time on wheel chair

    Pope Francis, who suffered from pain in his knee, used a wheelchair for the first time at a public event on Thursday.

    The 85-year-old was wheeled into the Paul VI hall at the Vatican for a meeting of a Catholic organisation of sisters and nuns, according to an AFP journalist.

    He used a wheelchair after an operation on his colon last summer, but this was the first time he has been pictured in one at an event open to the media.

    Francis has been suffering for months with pain in his right knee, cancelling numerous engagements, and in recent days has struggled to walk.

    On Wednesday, he had to be helped out of his chair by an assistant at the weekly audience in St Peter’s Square.

    Although sources have disclosed that the pope has chronic arthritis, the Vatican has not said officially what the problem is.

    The pope himself has also spoken of an injured ligament in his knee.

    He told Italian daily Corriere della Sera in an interview published Tuesday that he would undergo an “intervention with infiltration”.

    Vatican sources said, this involved the injection of anti-inflammatories into the joint, adding that no surgical intervention was currently planned.

    He told a newspaper in Argentina in April that he was treating his knee pain by putting ice on it and taking some painkillers.

  • Pope Francis to undergo medical examinations – Vatican

    Pope Francis to undergo medical examinations – Vatican

    Pope Francis cancelled his appointments on Friday to undergo medical examinations, Vatican spokesperson Matteo Bruni said.

    The Vatican did not say what ailment caused the pope to clear his calendar, although the 85-year-old had been struggling with problems in his right knee for some time.

    Climbing stairs and walking longer distances had become strenuous for him.

    Francis has a noticeable limp.

    During the recent Easter celebrations, he often sat and could not stand for long.

  • Vatican rejects Israeli criticism over pope comments on Jewish law

    Vatican rejects Israeli criticism over pope comments on Jewish law

    The Vatican has rejected criticism from senior Israeli rabbis over remarks by Pope Francis about Jewish books of sacred law, saying he was not questioning their continuing validity for Jews today.

    Last month Reuters reported that Rabbi Rasson Arousi, who is in charge of the Israeli Chief Rabbinate’s relations with the Vatican, had written a stern letter to the Vatican in which he said that Francis’ comments at a general audience on Aug. 11 appeared to suggest that the Torah, or Jewish law, was obsolete.

    The Vatican’s official response, seen by Reuters on Friday, said the pope’s comments in a homily on the writings of St. Paul should not be extrapolated from their context of ancient times and had no bearings on today’s Jews.

    “The abiding Christian conviction is that Jesus Christ is the new way of salvation.

    “However, this does not mean that the Torah is diminished or no longer recognised as the ‘way of salvation for Jews,’” wrote Cardinal Kurt Koch, whose Vatican department covers religious relations with Jews.

    “In his catechesis the Holy Father does not make any mention of modern Judaism; the address is a reflection on (St. Paul’s) theology within the historical context of a given era,” Koch wrote.

    “The fact that the Torah is crucial for modern Judaism is not questioned in any way,” he said.

    The Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, contains hundreds of commandments for Jews to follow in their everyday lives.

    The measure of adherence to the wide array of guidelines differs between Orthodox Jews and Reform Jews.

    In his letter to Koch in August, Arousi said the pope’s comments risked a return of the “teaching of contempt” that was prevalent in the Catholic Church until the last century.

    “Bearing in mind the positive affirmations constantly made by Pope Francis on Judaism, it cannot in any way be presumed that he is returning to a so-called ‘doctrine of contempt’” Koch wrote.

    “Pope Francis fully respects the foundations of Judaism and always seeks to deepen the bonds of friendship between the two faith traditions,” he added.

    Relations between Catholics and Jews were revolutionised in 1965 when the Second Vatican Council repudiated the concept of collective Jewish guilt for the death of Jesus and began decades of inter-religious dialogue.

    Francis and his two predecessors visited synagogues.

    Francis has had a good relationship with Jews.

    While still an archbishop in his native Buenos Aires, he co-wrote a book with one of the city’s rabbis, Abraham Skorka, and has maintained a lasting friendship with him.

  • Pope Francis returning home ‘as soon as possible’ – Vatican

    Pope Francis returning home ‘as soon as possible’ – Vatican

    Pope Francis, 84, continues to recover and will return home “as soon as possible” from hospital following surgery on his colon, the Vatican said on Tuesday.

    “The Holy Father is continuing his planned treatment and rehabilitation, which will allow him to return to the Vatican as soon as possible,” spokesman Matteo Bruni said.

    The pope was admitted to Rome’s Gemelli hospital on July 4 after suffering from a type of diverticulitis, an inflammation of pockets that develop in the lining of the intestine.

    The Vatican initially said he would be in hospital for about a week, and the pope led the Angelus prayer from his hospital window on Sunday.

    On Monday, Bruni said he would stay for a “few more days”.

    “Among the many patients he (the pope) has met during these days, he addressed a special thought to those who are bedridden and cannot return home,” Bruni said on Tuesday.

    Francis is in the same suite used by Pope John Paul II, who also lead the Angelus prayer from there.

    The Argentine pontiff temporarily ran a fever last week but a chest and abdomen scan and other tests revealed no particular abnormalities.

  • Vatican gives update on Pope’s health after Colon surgery

    Vatican gives update on Pope’s health after Colon surgery

    Pope Francis was doing well on Monday after surgery for an inflamed large colon, but the 84-year-old was expected to spend around seven days recovering in hospital, the Vatican said.

    The pontiff was admitted to Rome’s Gemelli hospital on Sunday for a scheduled operation under general anaesthetic for symptomatic diverticular stenosis of the colon.

    Francis “is in good general condition, alert and breathing spontaneously”, spokesman Matteo Bruni said in a statement, adding that the surgery “lasted about three hours.

    “A stay of about seven days is expected, barring complications,” he said.

    A week earlier, on the eve of the feast of Saints Peter and Paul, Francis seemed to hint at the upcoming operation, saying: “I ask you to pray for the pope, pray in a special way. The pope needs your prayers.”

    The pontiff had already put his Wednesday general audience on hold for the summer, and has no other official appointments in his calendar until Sunday, when he is due to lead the Angelus prayer.

    Italy’s Prime Minister Mario Draghi sent Francis “affectionate get well soon wishes”, while former pope Benedict XVI is also praying for him, according to the latter’s private secretary Georg Ganswein.

    The spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians, Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople, and Sheikh Ahmed el Tayyeb, the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, one of the Muslim world’s leading authorities, both urged the pontiff a quick recovery.

    Francis is in the same suite on the 10th floor of the Gemelli hospital that was used by Pope John Paul II.

    The late pope underwent surgery there seven times, including after an attempt on his life in 1981, and for a tumour in the colon in 1992.

  • Vatican punishes Polish bishop over sex abuse negligence

    Vatican punishes Polish bishop over sex abuse negligence

    The Holy See, on Friday prohibited a Polish bishop emeritus from participating in any public celebrations and meetings.

    The bishop was prohibited following an investigation into accusations of negligence in a cases of sex abuse committed by priests subordinate to him.

    Bishop Tomasz Rakoczy was ordered to live his life “in the spirit of repentance and prayer,’’ prohibited from participating in meetings of Poland’s bishops conference, and ordered to pay an adequate amount from private funds to a foundation supporting abuse victims, the Archdiocese of Krakow said in a statement published online.

    Similar actions were undertaken in recent months by the Vatican against several other Polish bishops.

    Following investigations, Slawoj Leszek Glodz, archbishop emeritus of the Gdansk archdiocese, and Edward Janiak, former bishop of Kalisz, had been ordered to live outside of their dioceses and were banned from any public religious celebrations or lay gatherings there.

    Bishop of Bydgoszcz Jan Tyrawa resigned in May amid a similar investigation.

    Late in 2020, now-deceased Polish cardinal Henryk Gulbinowicz was also symbolically penalised for his role in sex abuse scandals.

    The problem of sex abuse within the Polish Catholic church, including of minors, returned to the spotlight in recent years after a series of TV documentaries and reports about abuse and cover-up attempts.

  • APC quotes Bible; threatens to report Father Mbaka to Pope, Vatican for asking Buhari to resign

    APC quotes Bible; threatens to report Father Mbaka to Pope, Vatican for asking Buhari to resign

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has quoted some biblical passages to fault the spiritual director of Adoration Ministry, Rev Fr. Ejike Mbaka for asking President Muhammadu Buhari to either resign or be impeached.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that the popular Catholic Priest who was instrumental to President Buhari’s election in 2015 and 2019 in a viral video on Thursday asked the president to either resign or be impeached because of the current security challenges.

    However, in a swift reaction, the APC’s Deputy National publicity secretary, Yekini Nabena in a statement argued that Mbaka’s call constitutes a threat to democratic rule in the country.

    The statement said it was unfortunate that Mbaka who is expected to deploy all known spiritual means of ensuring peaceful coexistence among Nigerians went out of his ways to make such pronouncement in pursuit of his selfish desires.

    While making reference to the book of Mark 4: 35-40 where Jesus Christ calm the storm when a wild storm came up and the waves crashed over the boat, Nabena said Jesus did not blame anyone but prayed and calm the storm.

    He said: “One will wonder whom Father Mbaka is emulating because the Lord Jesus Christ did not threaten to bring down the government during his own time, in fact, Jesus Christ obeyed and honoured constituted authority. That’s why he paid his tax.

    “We are calling on Father Mbaka to concentrate on his spiritual calling and stop speaking like politicians who it is obvious he (Mbaka) has been dining and wining with. If Mbaka has found another political ally, it is better to leave political message for politicians.

    “Calling on President Muhammadu Buhari to either resign or be impeached because of the current challenges is ungodly. Father Mbaka should not, however, take his luck too far because there are lot to tell the Vatican and the Pope about his person and his sources of inspiration.”

    Nabena also called on other clerics to emulate the likes of Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) and Pastor WF Kumuyi of the Deeper Life Bible Ministry and many other men of God who will rather fast and pray to avert a crisis in the country instead of threatening the government of the day.

    Stating that Mbaka’s utterances were capable of breaching the peace in the country, he threatened to drag Mbaka to the headquarters of the Roman Catholic Church and the Pope if he (Mbaka) does not repent from his alleged divisive role in the country.

  • Nigerian agency applauds Vatican for prohibiting same sex marriage

    Nigerian agency applauds Vatican for prohibiting same sex marriage

    The National Orientation Agency has commended the Vatican for banning all Catholic churches nationwide from conducting same sex marriages.

    The Spokesman for the NOA, Mr. Paul Odenyi made this known in a chat with Punch.

    He urged Nigerian youths to respect valued traditions and not to be deceived by international trends

    He said, “The law today is that gay marriage is illegal and that is what should be our orientation and that is the rule. As an agency of government that is what we preach and that is what we think is correct. I am proud that the Catholic Church has made it clear because it seemed there was confusion on the matter. This matter has now been put to rest.

    “Marriage is between a man and a woman. As an agency, we must continue to preach that the law continues to be followed. Gay marriage and relationships are illegal.”

    On the increasing trend of cross-dressers on social media, Odenyi said it was caused by poor enforcement of the law.

    “So many laws are being flouted but when those found wanting are caught, they must be ready to face the consequences. If person is in gay relationship whether on internet is illegal and when caught, he will be punished,” he said.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that former President Goodluck Jonathan had in 2014 signed a law that criminalizes same-sex relationships, challenging western pressure over gay rights and provoking international criticism.

    The law suggests penalties of up to 14 years in prison and bans gay marriage, same-sex “amorous relationships” and membership of gay rights groups.