Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby conniption » Thu Nov 14, 2013 5:50 pm

The Politics Blog

Nov 14, 2013
Your Occasional Pope

By Charles P. Pierce at 10:30AM

OK, I've got a winner. Warren/Bergoglio '16!

(He gets the second spot on the ticket because he has to be pope, too.)

The Argentinian religious leader said Christians who donated money to the church but stole from the state were leading a "double life" and were sinners who should be punished. Quoting from the Gospel of St Luke in the New Testament, he said: "Jesus says 'It would be better for him if a millstone were put around his neck and he be thrown into the sea'," because "where there is deceit, the Spirit of God cannot be". Without directly mentioning corruption within the Catholic Church, in his sermon he described those involved in corrupt practices as "whitewashed tombs", explaining that "they appear beautiful from the outside, but inside they are full of dead bones and putrefaction." He said: "A life based on corruption is varnished putrefaction."


Jeebus, and you thought the Senator Professor was tough. She only wants a new Glass-Steagall law. This guy wants the avaricious roasting on a spit. And I don't care if you believe in hell or not, that's a delicious prospect. Once again, we point out, you do..not..fk with The Society.

On Friday, he also condemned corruption, asserting parents who earned through bribes or corrupt practices had "lost their dignity", and fed their children "unclean bread". He said: "Some of you might say: 'But this man only did what everyone does!'. But no, not everyone! Some company administrators, some public administrators, some government administrators... perhaps there are not even very many. But it's that attitude of the shortcut, of the most comfortable way to earn a living. "These poor people who have lost their dignity in the habit of bribes take with them not the money they have earned, but only their lack of dignity!"


I hope somebody's tasting this guy's food.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby Ben D » Fri Nov 29, 2013 6:35 am

There is That which was not born, nor created, nor evolved. If it were not so, there would never be any refuge from being born, or created, or evolving. That is the end of suffering. That is God**.

** or Nirvana, Allah, Brahman, Tao, etc...
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby conniption » Fri Nov 29, 2013 5:28 pm



Think Progress

Jeb Bush: Obama’s Decision To Move Vatican Embassy Is All About Obamacare Retaliation

By Igor Volsky
November 29, 2013


Jeb-W-Bush1Jeb Bush became the latest Republican to accuse President Obama of attacking Catholics by relocating the U.S. Embassy to the Vatican. In a tweet sent out on Wednesday, the former Florida governor questioned if Obama closed down the Embassy as “retribution for Catholic organizations opposing Obamacare”:

Jeb Bush ✔ @JebBush
Follow

Why would our President close our Embassy to the Vatican? Hopefully, it is not retribution for Catholic organizations opposing Obamacare.
3:12 PM - 27 Nov 2013


Ironically, the process of moving the embassy from its current location to the compound at the U.S. Embassy to Italy began under Jeb’s brother, President George W. Bush, whose administration purchased the buildings. The new location is actually a tenth of a mile closer to the Vatican and the move will come with no reduction in staff or activities.

And as for Catholic organizations — many support the law and its requirement to provide birth control as part of a comprehensive health benefit package. For instance, the Catholic Hospital Association (CHA), a trade group of Catholic hospitals, endorsed health care reform and in July of this year announced that it is also satisfied with the administration’s contraception rule. Generally, a majority of U.S. Catholics say they believe religiously affiliated groups should comply with the mandate.

Under the rule, all houses of worship are exempt from providing birth control. Should a nonprofit religiously affiliated organization like a Catholic college or hospital objects to offering birth control, the insurance company will be required to provide the coverage free of charge and the employer will not pay for it. Next year, the Supreme Court will consider a challenge to the rule from for-profit organizations claiming that the requirement undermines the First Amendment’s “free exercise clause.”
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Fri Nov 29, 2013 10:27 pm

http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/en/busines ... k-20131128

Maltese cleric to be Pope’s ear on Vatican bank

Francis’s private secretary Mgr Alfred Xuereb appointed delegate on commissioner overseeing Vatican bank

Thursday 28 November 2013


Pope Francis has appointed Maltese cleric Alfred Xuereb as a delegate of the commission for the Vatican Bank IOR and delegate to the Holy See's economic administration unit.

Xuereb is currently the Pontiff's private secretary.

Xuereb will be the Pope's liaison on the work carried out by the Vatican Bank and the commission overseeing the work of the Vatican's finance unit, which were both set up by Francis to carry out much-needed financial reforms.

The commission overseeing the Holy See's economic administration is also led by a Maltese, economist and former Bank of Valletta chairman Joseph F.X. Zahra.

Zahra is president of the new Economic Commission constituted by Pope Francis, which is in charge of assessing the economic and administrative structure of the Holy See. The Commission's members are experts and businessmen of all nationalities.

The main goal is to reach further 'simplification' and 'transparency' in Vatican departments, but also better planning of all economic and the administrative activities of Holy See offices. The Commission will directly address the Pope when considering reforms of Vatican's institutions.

In particular, Pope Francis wants Vatican institutions to have a simpler structure, making sure the offices avoid unnecessary expenses, and that all business deals are made with a high degree of transparency.

The Commission is made up of seven lay experts in economics and law, plus Mons. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, who serves as secretary. The President is Joseph F.X. Zahra, from Malta. Other members include Frenchmen Jean-Baptiste de Franssu and Jean-Videlain Sevestre, Spaniard Enrique Llano, Jochen Messemer, from Germany and Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, from Italy. The only non-European member is George Yeo, from Singapore.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Fri Nov 29, 2013 10:35 pm

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-25121121

"Why did Pope Benedict XVI resign?"

Image
"The Church needed someone with more physical and spiritual energy who would be able to overcome the problems and challenges of governing the church in this ever-changing modern world." - Federico Lombardi

Image
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Sun Dec 01, 2013 5:26 pm

"Pope Francis has appointed Maltese cleric Alfred Xuereb as a delegate of the commission for the Vatican Bank IOR and delegate to the Holy See's economic administration unit."

http://www.stgeorge.org.mt/news_details.asp?NewsID=1748

A deserved sense of pride: Mgr Alfred Xuereb made Conventual Chaplain of the Order of Malta

Last Friday, 13 February 2009, Mgr Alfred Xuereb, a distinguished priest from our parish who is currently serving the Church as one of Pope Benedict XVI’s private assistants, has been welcomed as member of the Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of St John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta. Mgr Xuereb was granted the honour of Conventual Chaplain ad honorem, by decree of the Prince and Grand Master of the Order, H.M.E.H. Frà Matthew Festing, during a concelebration in Latin presided by H.L. Mgr Angelo Acerbi, Bailiff Grand Cross, prelate of the Sovereign Order.

The solemn Mass, which started at midday, took place at the Priory’s church of Santa Maria, on the Aventine in Rome, where the Order has also its headquarters at 68 Via Condotti. After Mgr Acerbi’s homily, a declaration by Mgr Xuereb followed whereby he vowed to observe the Order’s spirit and tradition. This was when Grand Master Festing walked towards where Mgr Xuereb was standing and accepted his formal request, investing him with the insignia of the newly-received grade in the Order. A parchment handed to Mgr Xuereb at the end of Mass shows his admission to the Order. Present for the solemn ceremony were also prominent members of the Order’s General Council, along with other high-ranking members.

On the same occasion other notable celebrities were welcomed as new members of the Knights of Malta: Archduke Gerhard of Austria, Archduke and Archduchess Martin of Austria, Archduke and Archduchess Carl Philipp of Austria, and Archduke and Archduchess Simeon of Austria. Meanwhile, last Saturday, 14 February 2009, Mgr Pawlu Cremona op, archbishop of Malta, was also elevated to Conventual Chaplain Grand Cross ad honorem of the SMOM.

H.H. Benedict XVI expressed his joy at Mgr Xuereb’s new appointment to the Order, sending his greetings and apostolic blessings to those present. During his homily, Mgr Acerbi also asked Mgr Xuereb to convey the members’ veneration to His Holiness. A special greeting came from the Grand Master, who asked Mgr Xuereb to ascertain the Pope that the members of the Order are praying for him in a very special way, in these turbulent and challenging times for the Church. The Order of St John, as it is alternatively knows, enjoys a close relationship with the Vicar of Christ, as it has always acted in defence of the Church and its Supreme Pontiff. In fact it holds the status of a religious Order of the Catholic Church and at the same time an Order of Knighthood, and the Grand Master is answerable only to the Pope himself when it comes to ecclesiastical hierarchy.

In a few comments Mgr Xuereb exchanged with this website, he told us how, back inside the Vatican after the ceremony, just in time for lunch, he received an applause from those present in the dining hall. His Holiness was delighted with the news and at lunch showered him with questions. At the evening dinner he asked Mgr Xuereb if he had found an appropriate place in his room to hang the insignia. Mgr Xuereb’s told us: “I think that he [His Holiness] felt that I had received this honour because of him, because I am his (second) secretary”.

Mgr Alfred Xuereb, a humble but intelligent priest ordained for the diocese of Gozo in the early 80s, was born in Victoria, Gozo, baptized at St George’s basilica and ordained a priest by bishop emeritus Mgr Nicholas J. Cauchi. After his ordination he left the Maltese islands and served in the “parrochia della Natività” in Rome, a few hundred metres away from the Lateran basilica, the cathedral of the bishop of Rome. While in Rome he studied at the Pontifical Institute Teresianum from where he obtained a doctorate in Spirituality. Later on he worked in the Roman Curia. He was chosen to work within the Vatican and moved on from one important position to another. Mgr Xuereb is now one of the two private secretaries of the Supreme Pontiff. Never before a citizen of our islands and a priest of our parish has been so near to the Vicar of Christ! Regular readers and subscribers of the Osservatore Romano come across pictures of Mgr Xuereb on a constant basis. Tiny Gozo and tinier St George’s should be glad that one of their sons serves Christ’s Vicar so well… The latest conferral by the Order of Malta is a credit to him and to us, once more!

Our warmest congratulations to Dun Alfred, wishing him perseverance and joy in his special mission in Rome!


"The commission overseeing the Holy See's economic administration is also led by a Maltese, economist and former Bank of Valletta chairman Joseph F.X. Zahra.

Zahra is president of the new Economic Commission constituted by Pope Francis, which is in charge of assessing the economic and administrative structure of the Holy See. The Commission's members are experts and businessmen of all nationalities."

http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/ar ... 0584?eng=y

Vatican Diary / Even the Foundations Are Being Put Through the Wringer

Among the organizations with offices inside the Leonine Walls, only the Foundations escaped the controls of the Financial Information Authority and the Vatican magistracy. Not any more. Moneyval has requested it, and the Holy See has obeyed. Here they are, one by one.

[...]

The foundation "Centesimus Annus - Pro Pontifice” was set up in 1993 and had its statutes renewed in 2004, and "proposes to collaborate in the study and spread of Christian social doctrine, as presented in particular in the encyclical by John Paul II 'Centesimus Annus,'" as well as to “promote the raising of funds to support the activity of the Holy See.” Its administrative board is made up of nine laymen, one of whom is designated by the administration of the patrimony of the apostolic see, seven called by cooptation, and one chosen by the assembly of members.

Currently this foundation is headed by the Spaniard Domingo Sugranyes Bickel, and its administrative board includes high-sounding names like Grazia Rizzo Bottiglieri, leader of the shipping firm of the same name, Princess Camilla Borghese Khevenhüller, steel magnate Federico Falck, Prince Alois zu Lowenstein, Count Lorenzo Rossi di Montelera, a former president of the same foundation, and Joseph Zahra of Malta, recently appointed by Pope Francis as head of the commission reporting on the Vatican's finances. The college of auditors includes Cavaliere Piero Melazzini, president of the Banca Popolare di Sondrio.


This is a different Joseph Zahra:

http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/2002/11/03/t2.html

Ministers deny en masse ‘we are not freemasons’

By Matthew Vella

3 November 2002

SAN GWANN - The Ministers of the Cabinet and Parliamentary Secretaries have all denied categorically that they were ever freemasons or members of a masonic lodge.

The allegations of ministers being involved in freemasonry were sparked off in a PBS programme, Bondi+, after a member of the production team, Mr Joe Zahra, said ministers and members of parliament from both sides of the House of Parliament were and still belonged to masonic lodges.

Mr Zahra, a former freemason and police sergeant with close associations to former Labour Minister Lorry Sant, did not mention any names of MPs who were freemasons.

MaltaToday decided to follow up the allegations by sending a fax to each Minister and Parliamentary Secretary with the following query:

"…In a current affairs programme, Bondi+, broadcast last Tuesday 29 October on PBS, a member of the team, a certain Mr Joe Zahra, said certain Ministers and other Members of Parliament from both Parties, were freemasons and were still active in Masonic lodges in Malta, such as the St John and St Paul Lodge in Marsamxett Street, Valletta.

"In the light of these serious accusations, we are requesting whether you deny these accusations."

One after another, Ministers and Parliamentary Secretaries responded to MaltaToday’s query with this same statement: "…In reply to your request, I deny categorically the allegations that have been made."

All members of the Cabinet and Parliamentary Secretaries came back with the same refrain.

The categorical denial by the Cabinet now effectively kicks the ball back to Joe Zahra. Speaking to MaltaToday, Mr Zahra confirmed there were MPs who were still freemasons but refused to divulge any names on ‘ethical grounds’!

Joe Zahra, a private investigator and recent addition to the Bondi+ team, was once a security guard with the notorious ex-Labour Minister for Works Lorry Sant. He also acted as chauffeur to Carmen, Lorry Sant’s wife. She later denied any such association.

Up until mid-1991, Joe Zahra was a police sergeant. The Alternattiva newspaper of 27 July, 1991, quotes Joe Zahra as claiming that Lorry Sant was a personal friend of his.

Mr Zahra’s career in private investigation started off in August 1991, when he opened the Professional Private Investigation Agency Limited, situated in Regency House, Valletta. The private investigation company also operated a sophisticated forensic laboratory, and provided bodyguards and debt-collectors.

In 1993, Mr Zahra was one of the witnesses in the case against former Police Commissioner Lawrence Pullicino, who was accused of murdering Nardu Debono on 29 July, 1980 . He was called to the stand after Pullicino mentioned in his testimony an alleged encounter between Joe Zahra and Superintendent Charles Cassar.

In April 1995, Mr Zahra was implicated in the ‘Sapri Case’ where he was investigated by an Italian court in connection with the forging of documents of banking transactions and deviating investigations. Mr Zahra had allegedly sent the forged documents, carrying the stamp of ‘Mid-Med Overseas Limited’, to the Italian weekly magazine Panorama, against payment. Part of the Tangentopoli saga, the case involved Massimo Bassi, director of ‘Sapri Finanziaria’, an offshore company registered in Malta.


Incidentally, here's another Joseph Zahra in Malta:

Malta's coffers were depleted after much squandering by Pinto, so his successor, Grand Master Ximenes was faced with the daunting task of rebuilding the country's finances. He introduced various austerity measures and new taxes. On September 8th 1775, in an attempt to get the Grand Master to reduce the price of wheat, a group of priests led by Gaetano Mannarino and Joseph Zahra staged a revolt. They were banking on the support of the Maltese populace which however did not materialise. The coup failed, and three of the rebel priets were decapitated and their heads impaled for public display. Ximenes died in November 1775 and was succeeded by the French Grand Master Emmanuel De Rohan Polduc. De Rohan tried to win over the Maltese, and amongst other measures, he reduced the price of wheat.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby norton ash » Tue Dec 03, 2013 5:57 pm

Stunned St. Peter’s Square Crowd Overhears Pope Francis Getting Bitched Out By God
NEWS • Religion • God • News • ISSUE 49•49 • Dec 3, 2013


VATICAN CITY—Calling the tense confrontation both “incredibly harsh” and “uncomfortable to sit through,” a stunned crowd gathered in St. Peter’s Square Tuesday confirmed that they overheard Pope Francis being viciously bitched out by God. “Wow, He’s really laying into him,” said Vatican City resident Sofia Caratti as she and hundreds of other individuals positioned near an open window in the Papal Apartments listened in on the leader of the Catholic Church being mercilessly raked over the coals by a furious Heavenly Father. “He’s actually yelling. And the pope’s just sitting there taking it. Whoa—He just told the pope to ‘either get your shit together or take a walk.’ I really can’t believe they’re doing this with everyone within earshot—don’t they realize that we can hear everything?” When reached for comment, the Supreme Deity declined to discuss the nature of the altercation with his subordinate, telling reporters to “mind [their] own fucking business.”


http://www.theonion.com/articles/stunne ... ran,34728/
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Thu Dec 19, 2013 3:26 am

http://www.catholicnews.com/data/storie ... 305309.htm

Another Swiss guard: Finance officer works to protect the Vatican

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- News headlines in 2013 about turmoil at the Vatican bank and an arrested monsignor who served as a Vatican accountant seem to be modern-day illustrations of a famous line from the First Letter of Timothy in the New Testament: "For the love of money is the root of all evils, and some people in their desire for it have strayed from the faith and have pierced themselves with many pains."

But from his office near the Vatican gas station, a young Swiss lawyer is working to prevent the greedy or corrupt from misusing the Vatican's financial structures, which serve its own operations and those of dioceses, schools, hospitals and charitable activities around the world.

Rene Brulhart, 41, is director of the Vatican's Financial Intelligence Authority, charged with establishing procedures and checks to ensure Vatican institutions cannot be used for money laundering or the financing of terrorism. He also investigates suspicious transactions and works internationally with other government financial-intelligence units to fight financial crime.

"This isn't window dressing," Brulhart told Catholic News Service Dec. 17. "It is a sustainable process."

Pope Francis has appointed special commissions to look into specific aspects of the Vatican's finances and budget process, as well as the Vatican bank, formally called the Institute for the Works of Religion. Those commissions are still meeting and Pope Francis has said the results of their work are not foregone conclusions.

But Vatican City State is an independent country, and the Holy See serves a global community of more than 1 billion Catholics. With or without the so-called Vatican bank, money will change hands, and Brulhart's job is to help ensure those hands are clean.

The Vatican is unique in its financial sector, in that the 109-acre state has no commercial banking operations, so "it makes sense to come up with a tailor-made system," Brulhart said.

"It's a different environment in a positive sense," he said. "It's an environment built on trust and respectful interactions, which makes it different from an ordinary commercial activity."

Brulhart was working for a law firm when the government of Liechtenstein hired him in 2001 to help establish an anti-money laundering system, after the country briefly appeared on the international Financial Action Task Force's black list.

The Vatican, he points out, is not now and has never been on the FATF's black list.

Under Pope Benedict XVI, the Vatican hired Brulhart as a consultant on combating money laundering and terrorism financing, before the pope appointed him director of the Financial Intelligence Authority.

Novelists and filmmakers paint a shady image of Vatican financial dealings, but "the facts are telling another story," Brulhart said.

In 2010, the Vatican began drawing up new finance laws, regulations and criminal penalties in compliance with international standards against money laundering and the financing of criminal and terrorist networks. The Vatican later requested an evaluation of its efforts by "Moneyval" -- the Council of Europe's Committee of Experts on the Evaluation of Anti-Money Laundering Measures and the Financing of Terrorism.

The latest Moneyval review, published Dec. 12, praised the new laws and procedures, as well as new norms strengthening Brulhart's office. It also praised the Vatican bank's review of its accounts and clients, which Brulhart said was conducted in coordination with his office.

Moneyval urged the Financial Intelligence Authority to expedite onsite inspections of the so-called Vatican bank and the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See. Brulhart said the inspection of the Institute for the Works of Religion is scheduled for January.

Day-to-day, he said, his office reviews reports of suspicious transactions, while working to improve international cooperation and tighten supervision of Vatican financial transactions.

"The legal and institutional frameworks have been established," he said; now it is time to make sure the procedures come to be seen as absolutely normal operating procedures. "It's a building process now."

In its December report to Moneyval, the Vatican said 105 "suspicious transaction reports" had been filed with Brulhart's office in 2013. "A suspicious action report indicates suspicious behavior and not, per se, criminal activity," he said, arguing that the growing number of reports shows Vatican institutions are paying greater attention to financial transactions and noticing when something appears out of the ordinary.

"The preventive approach is very important," Brulhart said. "Ultimately, what we're aiming for is to have an early warning system."


http://www.economist.com/news/finance-a ... me-another

On His Holiness’s public service

Can the man who cleaned up one tiny state do the same for another?

Oct 20th 2012

RENÉ BRÜLHART made his name as head of Liechtenstein’s financial-intelligence unit. Thanks to his diligence in rooting out financial crime over the past eight years, the tiny European principality, nestled between Switzerland and Austria, is no longer widely condemned as a haven for dirty money. This success, combined with his good looks, led one magazine to dub the 40-year-old Swiss lawyer the James Bond of the financial world.

His latest job might unnerve even 007: Mr Brülhart has been recruited to clean up the Vatican’s reputation. For years allegations of financial shenanigans have swirled around the Institute for Works of Religion, commonly known as the Vatican Bank. The bank is modest in size: as of last November it had just €6.3 billion ($8.3 billion) in assets, 33,400 accounts and 13 ATMs (for use by its own clients, which comprise religious organisations and individuals, Holy See lay employees and foreign countries’ embassies). But it also has features that make it alluring to money-launderers: an evaluation in July by Moneyval, the Council of Europe’s anti-money-laundering group, pointed to high volumes of cash transactions, global activities and limited information on many organisations operating in the Vatican.

In the latest scandal, its president, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, was sacked in May. He and his former employer are now caught up in a money-laundering investigation led by Naples prosecutors. Mr Gotti Tedeschi has denied wrongdoing, saying the reason he was fired was that he got “too close to the truth” about the bank’s dealings. Only in December 2010 did Pope Benedict XVI issue a so-called Motu Proprio outlawing money-laundering and the financing of terrorism.

Mr Brülhart’s challenge is the same as it was in Liechtenstein: to get his client onto the all-important “white list” of territories that are deemed to comply with the standards on combating financial crime set by the OECD, a club of rich and emerging economies. First, he will need to build a financial-intelligence unit that can investigate suspicious money flows properly. The Vatican has a group that is supposed to do this but it has made little progress, not least because its people lack training.

Second, he will need to create a truly independent supervising authority for the Vatican Bank and the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, which manages the Vatican’s property and securities holdings. A supervisor-of-sorts created by Benedict in 2010, the Financial Information Authority (FIA), lacks the legal powers and independence necessary to monitor and sanction these financial institutions, according to Moneyval. The FIA has no clear right to demand access to books for accounts or other information, for instance. Overall, the Vatican was compliant or largely compliant with only nine of Moneyval’s 16 core standards, proving deficient in areas such as customer due diligence and the reporting of suspicious transactions.

Mr Brülhart has the right pedigree to help. During his time transforming Liechtenstein’s bad-boy image, he was involved in the return of assets owned by the regime of Saddam Hussein to the new Iraqi government, as well as in uncovering the Siemens bribery scandal. His efforts were recognised by his peers in 2010, when he was appointed deputy head of the Egmont Group, a network of national financial-intelligence agencies. His strong Catholic credentials should also help. He even studied canon law as a student in Fribourg. He is said to have the strong backing of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican’s powerful secretary of state, who hired him.

But he faces unique challenges. The Holy See’s financial institutions are not straightforward commercial organisations, but “canonically recognised” public entities created to serve the church. It is hard to introduce the sort of rules that brought Liechtenstein’s banks to heel. And though he may have the support of the pope’s right-hand man, he is still an outsider trying to shake up the financial affairs of an ecclesiastical city-state that is notoriously resistant to change and external interference. He will need Bond-like cunning to complete his mission.


James Bond, what a great role model.

http://www.egmontgroup.org/

Recognizing the importance of international cooperation in the fight against money laundering and financing of terrorism, a group of Financial Intelligence Units (FIUs) met at the Egmont Arenberg Palace in Brussels, Belgium, and decided to establish an informal network of FIUs for the stimulation of international co-operation. Now known as the Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units, Egmont Group FIUs meet regularly to find ways to promote the development of FIUs and to cooperate, especially in the areas of information exchange, training and the sharing of expertise.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Sat Feb 22, 2014 9:52 pm

Pope Francis appoints 19 new cardinals in Vatican ceremony

Benedict joins Francis as pope installs new cardinals

Image

(CNN) -- Pope Francis created 19 new cardinals Saturday in a ceremony in the Vatican's St. Peter's Basilica -- the first such appointments since he was elected pontiff last March.

The new cardinals come from countries around the world, hailing from as far afield as Brazil, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, South Korea and Haiti.

The pope presented them with the traditional biretta, or red cap, and ring at a formal ceremony called a public consistory.

The scarlet color of the cap symbolizes the cardinals' willingness to die for their faith.

Looking frail, Benedict, the Pope Emeritus, lined up with the existing cardinals for the ceremony in the historic church.

When last year he became the first pope in almost six centuries to stand down, Benedict said he would live a life of seclusion and study.

His presence in St. Peter's Basilica alongside that of Francis and the cardinals who will one day vote for his successor is a highly unusual event.


Francis spoke

Sixteen of the new cardinals are under the age of 80, making them eligible to elect a new pope when the time comes, according to Vatican Radio.

Three of them are over age 80 and "are chosen for their distinguished service" to the Vatican and the Roman Catholic Church, it said.

One of those is 98-year-old Archbishop Loris Capovilla, who was the secretary of Pope John XXIII. He was not present for the ceremony, but will be presented with his biretta in the coming days.

Two of the newly appointed cardinals already hold top Vatican positions -- Archbishop Pietro Parolin is its secretary of state, while Archbishop Gerhard Mueller is head of the church's chief doctrinal office, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

No Americans were named among the new members of the college of cardinals, but there is one Canadian, Quebec Archbishop Gerald Cyprien Lacroix.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Sat Feb 22, 2014 10:14 pm

-

Legionaries of Christ founder abused son, said he was CIA

Vows of Silence is an anatomy of the Vatican justice system, following the haunting saga of Father Marcial Maciel, who won the favor of Pope John Paul II despite years of pedophilia accusations. The greatest fundraiser of the modern church, Maciel founded the Legionaries of Christ, a religious order with a $650 million budget and history of controversial tactics. The film tracks 1998 abuse charges against Maciel filed with Cardinal Ratzinger. The Secretary of State, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, tries to abort the case. In 2004, with Pope John Paul II dying, Ratzinger takes action.


http://www.news.va/en/news/pope-francis-encourages-renewal-of-congregation-of

Pope Francis encourages renewal of Congregation of the Legionaries of Christ

2013-06-27

Pope Francis has confirmed the mandate of Papal Delegate Cardinal Velasio De Paolis for the Legionaries of Christ until 2014 and commended him for his work in fostering renewal within the Congregation following the 2010 visitation


http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/07/world ... llado.html

Legionaries of Christ Denounce Founder, Marcial Maciel Degollado

By REUTERS FEB. 6, 2014

ROME — A Roman Catholic order whose late founder lived a double life as a pedophile and womanizer officially denounced him on Thursday and apologized to his “many victims.”

The Legionaries of Christ, which former members said was run like a secretive cult, accused the founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, who died in 2008, of “reprehensible and objectively immoral behavior” as head of the order from its founding in 1941 until Pope Benedict XVI removed him in 2006.

Once a favorite of the Vatican because it drew many young Catholics to religious vocations and made sizable financial donations to the church, the order has been in Vatican receivership since 2010 and came close to being disbanded.

The apology, issued by delegates from around the world meeting in Rome to set a new direction for the order, came a day after a United Nations committee singled it out in a scathing report accusing the church of ignoring child abuse by priests.

The statement denounced “the magnitude of the evil and scandal caused” by Father Maciel and said the organization was now ready to turn a page. “We want to express our deep sorrow for the abuse of minor seminarians, the immoral acts with men and women who were adults, the arbitrary use of his authority and of material goods,” the statement said.

For decades, the Vatican dismissed accusations by seminarians that Father Maciel had abused them sexually, some when they were as young as 12. The order’s rules forbade criticizing the founder or questioning his motives. Pope John Paul II strongly backed Father Maciel, even as criticism of him mounted.

The order was long admired by the church for its dynamic growth and fund-raising prowess, and it had many wealthy conservative benefactors who saw it as a bulwark against liberalism in the church.

In 2006, a year after John Paul’s death, a Vatican investigation concluded that the previously denied accusations of molestation were true. Benedict ordered Father Maciel to retire to a life of “prayer and penitence.”

After his death, Vatican investigations found that Father Maciel had also fathered several children with at least two women, visited them regularly and sent them money.

The order’s newly elected general director, the Rev. Eduardo Robles Gil, has a long history with the group himself. According to its website, he helped establish the Legion in Brazil, and in 2011 he was named to a commission created to work with the victims of Father Maciel.

The Rev. John Stegnicki, a former Legion priest now working in the archdiocese of Brasília, was quoted by The Associated Press as saying that the outcome of the election was “disappointing” but predictable, given that the priests voting were by and large Maciel confidants or their protégés.

“Who else could they choose from?” he said. “All of them are entrenched in Legion-think.”


http://www.bostonglobe.com/news/world/2 ... story.html

(money quote in bold)

Legionaries are Pope Francis’ problem now

By John L. Allen Jr. - February 15, 2014

It’s a measure of how bad things have become for the scandal-plagued Legionaries of Christ that the first question a journalist feels obliged to ask the religious order’s new leader is, “Have you ever sexually abused anyone?”

For the record, the answer of Father Eduardo Robles Gil Orvañanos was, “I can promise, swear, whatever you want, that I haven’t. . . it would make no sense at all for us to put someone in a leadership position with something to hide.”

Robles spoke in a Feb. 14 interview with the Globe, his first with an English-language news outlet.

The Legionaries not so long ago were a Catholic powerhouse, a body of gung-ho priests enjoying the support of Pope John Paul II and other Vatican heavyweights and wielding vast political and financial muscle. The order fell from grace after revelations that its founder had lived a shocking double life, including having relationships with two women and fathering up to six children, as well as sexual abuse of young seminarians and, reportedly, even two of his own children.

The founder, Mexican Father Marcial Maciel Degollado, died in 2008. The bombshell about his misconduct, along with scandals involving other prominent Legionaries, makes the order the most polarizing symbol of the broader sexual abuse crisis in Catholicism. A recent Associated Press report described the Legionaries as “one of the most egregious examples of how . . . church leaders put the interests of the institution above those of the victims.”

Some critics, including some of the order’s former members, called for it to be abolished. Benedict XVI instead placed it under papal receivership in 2010, installing a papal delegate to promote reform. That process concluded with the Jan. 20 election of Robles, a 61-year-old priest and formerly the top Legionaries official in Mexico.

Given that history, it’s obviously relevant to wonder if Maciel’s successor has any skeletons in his own closet.

In his Globe interview, Robles insisted there aren’t. He also claimed he wasn’t in on the coverup regarding Maciel, saying that he’s spent his career in the field, mostly in Latin America, and that he only learned the truth in 2008 when one of the order’s officials told him.

Robles pledged that the Legionaries are now committed to zero tolerance for sexual abuse, including a rigorous commitment to transparency.

“We’re fully committed to creating a safe environment in all of our schools and in everything we do,” he told the Globe.

Whatever one makes of Robles’s guarantees, one point is crystal clear: The Legionaries are Pope Francis’ problem now.

Heretofore, one could fault Pope John Paul II for not taking the charges against Maciel seriously, or blame Benedict XVI for appointing a delegate, Italian Cardinal Velasio De Paolis, who has, in the eyes of critics, produced reforms that are more cosmetic than substantive. In any event, none of it could be laid in Francis’ lap.

Now, however, Francis has placed his fingerprints on the order’s future.

In May, he sent a letter offering “a word of encouragement,” and in August he named a prominent member of the Legionaries to the number two position in the Vatican City State. By ratifying the results of the recent elections, he’s signaled that the Legionaries are ready to get back to business, so from here on, it’s his reputation on the line.

Robles said Francis passed on a “very warm” message about his election, and that the Legionaries feel “totally supported” by the pope.

If the Legionaries are seen to have genuinely turned over a new leaf, relaxing their internal controls, collaborating more effectively with the rest of the church, and telling the full truth both about their past and their present, Francis will get deserved credit for engineering real change.

However, if the take-away is that the Legionaries remain mired in the old ways , that they haven’t absorbed the lessons of the Maciel debacle, then Francis has nowhere to deflect the blame.

In his own recent interview with the Globe, Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who enjoys a reputation as a reformer on the sex abuse front, insisted that Francis is “certainly aware of how serious this issue is.”

If so, the pope’s awareness had better include a keen grasp of how the future workings of the Legionaries of Christ looms as an acid test of his commitment. If anything could put a damper on Francis-mania, a perception that he’s half-hearted about recovery from the church’s child abuse scandals might be it.

Creative tension between Francis and his doctrinal czar

Archbishop Gerhard Müller, the Vatican’s doctrinal czar who will become a cardinal on Feb. 22, was in Milan on Thursday to deliver a lecture marking the opening of the academic year at the Theological Faculty of Northern Italy. If you closed your eyes and drifted back in time, you might have thought you were listening to another German doctrinal prefect — Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, before he became Pope Benedict XVI.

Müller touched on many of Ratzinger’s favorite themes, particularly the danger of Catholic theology being skewed by “media pressure” and “mentalities incompatible with the authentic content of the faith.”

Taking up the sensus fidelium, a Latin phrase referring to the idea that teaching ought to reflect the beliefs of the church’s grass roots, Müller said it doesn’t mean determining truth by opinion polls or plebiscites. He insisted that the correct formula is sensus fidelium in Ecclesia, meaning that popular belief must be rooted in the “insuperable and indispensable” sources of the faith in Scripture, tradition, and the official teaching authority of the church.

Müller urged “critical rigor” in Catholic theology, as opposed to the “carelessness” that arises from taking one’s cues from the media and public pressure over issues such as “women in the priesthood . . . and access to the sacraments for those who are not in full communion with the church.”

That last point was a way of confirming Müller’s opposition to allowing divorced and remarried Catholics to receive the sacraments, a position he already expressed in October.

Müller also seemed to question the value of a recent survey of Catholics around the world in advance of October’s Synod of Bishops on the Family, the results of which have been released by some bishops’ conferences and which show substantial numbers of Catholics breaking with official teaching on matters such as contraception and premarital cohabitation.

“There’s no one who can’t see the mistake and the myopia of using e-mail to indiscriminately sound out everyone’s opinions on the Internet,” he said.

In sum, Müller used this speech, delivered in the presence of Cardinal Angelo Scola of Milan, another heavy-hitter in the Catholic world, to draw some lines in the sand.

It may seem puzzling why a pope such as Francis, who seems to embody a fairly moderate doctrinal stance, confirmed Müller as the Vatican’s theologian-in-chief last September. Isn’t there a contradiction between Francis’ penchant for opening doors, and Müller’s apparent determination to slam them shut?

The same question used to arise under Pope John Paul II, particularly during the 1990s when he had a strong progressive organizing his own liturgies and an archconservative heading the Vatican department that set the rules for Catholic worship. Then, too, many observers saw that juxtaposition as mere incoherence.

Yet there’s another way of looking at things, inspired by an adage of Pope John XXIII who once said, “I have to be pope both for those with their foot on the gas and those with their foot on the brake.”

In his day, John Paul II wanted to push the envelope in his own liturgical celebrations, especially when he went on the road and tried to blend in elements of local worship in whatever society he was visiting. For precisely that reason, he wanted a hard-liner back in Rome making sure that the church didn’t throw the baby out with the liturgical bathwater.

This wasn’t incoherence, in other words. In John Paul’s mind, at least, it was a creative tension.

Something similar may be going on today vis-à-vis Francis and his doctrinal chief.

This pope knows that his spontaneous, shoot-from-the-hip style is occasionally going to shake things up, and that his emphasis on mercy will raise hard questions about whether traditional Catholic judgments still stand. He’s not going to rein himself in, but he may also want somebody to pull in the other direction, hoping for a sort of “Heraclitus effect” — stability through the balancing of opposing forces.

If that’s indeed the logic, so far Müller seems to be playing his part awfully well.

Nostalgia for Pope Benedict XVI

If proof were needed that some Catholic conservatives are feeling a bit nostalgic for Pope Benedict XVI, it came on Feb. 11, the one-year anniversary of his resignation announcement. Two striking essays from high-profile Italian writers, both of whom have a significant following in Catholic circles, make the point.

In a Feb. 12 piece in the Italian paper Libero, Antonio Socci floated the question of whether Benedict’s resignation was actually valid under church law — hinting that in the eyes of God, anyway, Benedict may still be the pope. At the same time, Robert de Mattei posted a piece on the website of his Lepanto foundation asserting that developments since the election of Francis, including his famous “Who am I to judge?” sound bite about gays, risk “a road that leads to schism and heresy.”

De Mattei also points to the Franciscans of the Immaculate, a traditionalist religious order devoted to the older Latin Mass whose leadership was deposed in December by Francis, as a case in which the pope’s emphasis on mercy is basically a sham.

Neither Socci nor de Mattei, to be clear, is a crackpot. On the contrary, they’re veteran voices in Catholic affairs who speak for important constituencies in the church.

Socci is associated with the powerful lay movement Communion and Liberation, probably the most important grouping of more conservative-minded Catholics in Italy. He’s worked for the state television network RAI, and is the author of best-selling books on topics such as John Paul II, the Capuchin stigmatic Padre Pio, and the reputed revelations of the Virgin Mary at Fatima. De Mattei is a leading figure in neoconservative circles in Europe and a former adviser to the Italian government under ex-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Socci and de Mattei would be considered fairly far to the right, perhaps, but definitely not the lunatic fringe. The fact that both are voicing misgivings about the new pope indicates that despite Francis’ astronomic approval levels, he may have some work to do in bringing along the stragglers in his own flock.

Socci’s piece is especially interesting for its attempt to resurrect Benedict XVI as a rallying point for the discontented.

Church law requires that for a papal resignation to be valid, it must be “made freely.” Socci speculates that Vatican mandarins may have twisted the pope’s arm to step aside in the wake of the spectacular leaks scandal of 2012, meaning that it may not have been a truly free act. Socci also asks if Benedict may have resigned only in “exterior” fashion, meaning that in his heart he still regards himself as the pontiff.

For sure, Benedict XVI has done nothing to stoke such a reaction. On the contrary, he’s kept himself out of the spotlight while privately signaling his affection and support for Francis.

Nonetheless, the Socci essay points to a plausible trajectory if right-wing backlash to Francis continues to mount. The church could end up with a majority of “Francis Catholics” and an influential minority of “Benedict Catholics.” That may not quite add up to a schism, but it’s still something to think about.

The ‘Italian problem’ in Vatican financial reform

A recent European Union study found that the price tag for corruption in the 28 member states each year is 120 million euros, of which 60 million comes in Italy. Another way of phrasing that result is that Italy, all by itself, accounts for half the corruption in the entire European Union.

The study found that 97 percent of Italians believe corruption is widespread in their country. Eighty-eight percent of Italians also said they personally have found that sometimes paying a bribe is the easiest way, if not the only way, to obtain public services.

Granted, the EU study noted that given the vagaries of reporting on corruption in the member states, estimates of its cost are no more than a guess. Still, it’s hard not to conclude that Italy’s got a real problem.

That’s worth remembering as Pope Francis prepares next week for his third meeting with his “G8” council of cardinal advisers, where Vatican financial reform is at the top of the agenda.

In my experience, many developments reported in the international press as Vatican stories are, when you drill down, really Italian stories — episodes in which Vatican officials are simply following the same playbook as their counterparts in Italy. That’s especially true when it comes to money management.

Here’s an example.

In 2010, Italian prosecutors announced that Italian Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe was the target of an anticorruption probe related to his term from 2001 to 2006 as head of the Vatican’s powerful missionary office, the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples. Prosecutors suspect that Sepe gave Italian politicians sweetheart deals on apartments owned by the Vatican at the same time millions of euros in state funds were being allocated for remodeling projects at his congregation.

Even if the scenario prosecutors describe is correct, Sepe may not have understood himself to be doing anything wrong. Rather, he simply may have been doing what Italian power brokers of his generation thought they were supposed to do, i.e., taking care of their buddies.

This observation underscores the deep challenge to Francis’s financial glasnost, which is more cultural than legal or political.

The easy part will be preventing the sort of flagrant corruption, even by Italian standards, revealed in the recent cause célèbre surrounding Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, a former Vatican accountant charged with participating in a John le Carré-esque plot to smuggle millions in cash into Italy from Switzerland on behalf of a family of Italian shipping magnates. The scheme allegedly involved a private jet and a former agent of Italy’s equivalent of the CIA.

Scarano earned a modest Vatican salary of roughly 40,000 euros per year, yet he reportedly owned a network of expensive properties in his native Salerno and had a private art collection featuring originals by Chagall and Van Gogh. He was known in Rome as “Monsignor 500 euro” for his habit of flashing large banknotes. In this case, Scarano had to know he was playing fast and loose with the rules.

The deeper challenge is to change a culture in which many forms of corruption aren’t even perceived as such. Steering a contract to one’s friends despite an allegedly competitive bidding process, for instance, or not asking hard questions about where a senior churchman got the money he wants to deposit in the Vatican bank, are behaviors that many old-timers wouldn’t regard as corrupt but simply as time-honored ways of keeping things “in the family.”

One test of whether the reform measures adopted by Pope Francis are for real, therefore, is this: Will he promote a rapid internationalization of the Vatican’s financial personnel, breaking with the old guard?

At the top of the food chain, that process is underway. The president of the Vatican bank today is a German, the head of the Vatican’s antimoney-laundering watchdog is Swiss, and so on. The question is whether those changes at the top will breed a more international culture of transparency among middle management and the worker bees, or whether the day-to-day reality in the Vatican will continue to parallel the sometimes opaque patterns of il bel paese, the “beautiful country” of Italy.


Remember that a while back Francis made a longtime Legionaries of Christ member the new Secretary General of the Vatican Governorate. For what that's worth.

And maybe things are really going to be different with the Vatican now, what with Tarcisio Bertone being officially ostracized. Somehow I doubt it.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Mon Feb 24, 2014 10:08 pm

seemslikeadream » Fri Feb 22, 2013 2:48 pm wrote:
Vatican should act on gay sex claims: Pell
BY:TESS LIVINGSTONE From: The Australian February 23, 2013 12:00AM
I

Cardinal George Pell at his last mass this week at St Vincent's Church in Ashfield, Sydney, before flying to Rome. Picture: Sam Mooy Source: The Australian
AUSTRALIA'S Cardinal George Pell yesterday called on the Vatican press office to respond "in some constructive way" to reports of an internal investigation by three senior cardinals that told Pope Benedict XVI about an insidious web of blackmail, corruption and homosexual sex inside the Vatican.

Italy's La Repubblica newspaper linked Benedict's resignation with a top secret 300-page dossier prepared by Spanish Cardinal Julian Herranz, Slovak Cardinal Jozef Tomko and Italian Cardinal Salvatore De Giorgi into the "Vatileaks" affair, which saw the Pope's former butler, Paolo Gabriele, arrested and jailed for stealing and leaking papal documents.

None of the three cardinals will take part in the conclave because they are over 80 years of age, but they are expected to brief those voting about their findings.

According to La Repubblica, the report was "an exact map of the mischief and the bad fish" inside the Holy See, with the cardinals finding that one faction of Vatican officials, "united by sexual orientation", had been subject to "external influence" from laymen with whom they had links of a "worldly nature", which the paper said was a reference to blackmail.

It quoted a source close to the cardinals as saying that everything centred on "non-observance of the sixth and seventh commandments", which forbid adultery (included homosexual sex) and stealing. The report also mentioned numerous venues in and around Rome where clandestine encounters took place, including a sauna, a beauty parlour and a university residence.

Speaking just before he flew to Rome for the conclave that will elect Benedict's successor, Cardinal Pell, who read the full article, said: "I know nothing of the content of the report but whatever it contains it is clear that significant reforms are needed within the Vatican bureaucracy."

He praised Benedict for his "courage for commissioning such a report".

The cardinal said it remained to be seen how much of La Repubblica's report was accurate or whether it went beyond recycling material already on the public record. But it was important, he said, that the Vatican press office responded "as I'm sure it will given recent reforms".

But Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi pulled down the shutters yesterday. He said: "Don't expect comments or rebuttals of what is being said on this issue."

Cardinal Herranz, who chaired the commission, confirmed: "The Pope is the only person we have reported to on this question."

The report was handed to the Pope on December 17 last year and has been locked in a Vatican safe, awaiting Benedict's successor.

In a wide-ranging interview with The Weekend Australian, Cardinal Pell said the 24-hour news cycle had became a game-changer for the Pope and the church, just as it had for domestic and international politics.

As cardinals head to Rome for a series of meetings ahead of the conclave, controversy surrounds the attendance of retired Los Angeles cardinal Roger Mahony. Cardinal Mahony was stood down from all church duties earlier this month by his successor over his mishandling of sexual abuse complaints.

Tomorrow, Benedict will greet the crowd that will gather in St Peter's Square for the final Angelus address of his pontificate. More than 30,000 have applied for tickets for his General Audience in the square on Wednesday.


Cardinal George Pell named as head of Vatican finances, will relocate to Rome - February 25, 2014

Image

Australia's most senior Catholic cleric Cardinal George Pell is to leave his post as Archbishop of Sydney and take on a new role at the Vatican.

In the new role, the 72-year-old will be responsible for preparing the Holy See and Vatican's annual budget, as well as financial planning and enhanced internal controls.

The new ministry is the first decisive action by Pope Francis in the wake of scandals at the Vatican bank.

"The Holy Father today announced a new coordination structure for economic and administrative affairs of the Holy See and the Vatican State," it said in a statement.

The Vatican said the move followed recommendations made by cardinals advising the Pope, including for a "more formal commitment" to international standards.

The changes "will ensure better use of resources, improving the support available for various programs, particularly our works with the poor," it said.

It is seen as a plum posting for Cardinal Pell, who will relocate to the Vatican by the end of next month.

Robert Mickens, the Vatican correspondent for Catholic weekly The Tablet, says Cardinal Pell will play a key role in putting the Vatican's expenditures in a more transparent and fiscally sound light.

"It's a brand new position that's been created; it's a top level Vatican post," he said.

"In some ways, you might say, he's the chancellor of the exchequer, in a sense, from the Vatican's point of view."
Cardinal Pell says reforms will be significant

In a written statement, Cardinal Pell says he is deeply honoured with his new appointment.

He says the financial reforms will be significant and will make better use of the resources to help the poor and disadvantaged.

The new ministry, formally a Secretariat for the Economy, will be governed by a 15-member council of eight clergymen from different parts of the world and seven lay international financial sector experts.

Pope Francis will also nominate a general auditor with broader powers to oversee all Vatican departments.

Last April, Cardinal Pell was appointed as one of eight cardinals to advise the Pope on how to reform the Catholic Church.

His spokeswoman says the new job will not prevent him from giving evidence at the hearing into the case of a former altar boy who took action against the church in 2006.


Previously:

viewtopic.php?p=484699#p484699

Cardinal 'sociopathic' in his lack of understanding

Stuart Rintoul The Australian November 24, 2012

THE father of two Catholic abuse victims says Archbishop George Pell showed a "sociopathic lack of empathy" when his family approached the church about the abuse.

Anthony Foster told the Victorian parliament's abuse inquiry how two of his daughters, Emma and Katie, were abused by convicted pedophile priest Kevin O'Donnell and of the "gruelling" meeting with Archbishop Pell that ensued.

"In our interactions with the now-Cardinal Archbishop Pell, we experienced a sociopathic lack of empathy, typifying the attitude and responses of the church hierarchy," Mr Foster said.

The abuse occurred in their early school years at Sacred Heart Primary School in the Melbourne suburb of Oakleigh. Emma, who took her own life in 2008, started prep at the school in 1987, and Katie, who was left permanently disabled after being hit by a car while drunk, started at the school in 1989.
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O'Donnell retired in August 1992. In March 1995, he was charged with child sex offences dating from 1946 to 1977. In August 1995, he pleaded guilty and was jailed for 17 months.

Describing him as an "animal", Mr Foster told how the church received complaints about O'Donnell in 1946, 1958 and 1984, but took no action. He said O'Donnell should have been reported to the police.

He told how in March 1996, while in an adolescent psychiatric unit, Emma, 14, disclosed that O'Donnell sexually assaulted her. Katie disclosed sexual assaults 15 months later.

In 1999, Katie, who had begun to binge-drink "to obtain respite from memories of her assaults", was hit by a car while crossing a road drunk. Emma took her own life in 2008 at the age of 26. "She had led a life of torment and self-destruction,"Mr Foster said.

Saying he was "elated" by the announcement of a royal commission, Mr Foster read from a 2010 book written by his wife Chrissie, Hell on the Way to Heaven, in which she describes a "gruelling" meeting with Archbishop Pell to discuss the abuse of their daughters. Before the meeting, they heard Archbishop Pell ask someone in a booming voice, "Are they friends?"

When they outlined O'Donnell's crimes, Australia's most powerful Catholic replied "that was before my time" and warned them: "I hope you can substantiate that in court."

They said he showed no emotion, even when they showed him a photograph of Emma after she had slashed her wrists.

Mr Foster said the church offered them maximum compensation of $50,000, then claimed the assaults never occurred when they took legal action, and finally after 10 exhausting years settled for "far less" than they believed was just.


http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/wo ... 6101697828

John Howard, George Pell cited in Breivik diatribe

Leo Shanahan The Australian July 26, 2011

THE gunman responsible for the Norway massacre described former Australian prime minister John Howard as "one of the most sensible leaders in the Western World" in his rambling 1500-page manifesto.

Anders Behring Breivik, who is believed to be responsible for the deaths of 93 people, also mentioned former treasurer Peter Costello, Catholic archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell and conservative historian Keith Windschuttle in his manifesto released before he embarked upon his violent rampage.

The 32-year-old described Mr Howard as "one of the most sensible leaders in the Western world" and commended the former government on its border protection policy and being "resistant to Political Correctness".

"Luckily, not all Christian leaders are appeasers of Islam. One of the intelligent ones comes from Australia, a country that has been fairly resistant to Political Correctness .

"They have taken serious steps towards actually enforcing their own borders, despite the predictable outcries from various NGOs and anti-racists, and Prime Minister John Howard has repeatedly proven to be one of the most sensible leaders in the Western world," he wrote.

Breivik went on to mention Mr Costello's calls for Muslim leaders to stand up against terrorism, and the "outrage" Mr Howard caused by asking Muslims to speak English and show respect for women.

"Federal Treasurer Peter Costello said Australian Muslim leaders need to stand up and publicly denounce terrorism in all its forms. Mr Costello has also backed calls by Prime Minister John Howard for Islamic migrants to adopt Australian values. Mr Howard caused outrage in Australia's Islamic community when he said Muslims needed to speak English and show respect to women," he wrote.

Writing under the pseudonym Andrew Berwick and describing himself as "Justiciar Knight Commander for Knights Templar Europe and one of several leaders of the National and pan-European Patriotic Resistance Movement", he also cited comments from Sydney Catholic archbishop George Cardinal Pell in the wake of the 2001 September 11 attacks.

"George Cardinal Pell, archbishop of Sydney, tells of how September 11 was a wake-up call for him personally," he wrote, before quoting the archbishop.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby cptmarginal » Mon Feb 24, 2014 10:19 pm

Because I am quoting that first article about Pell from earlier in this thread, I put that last post here instead of in the other Pope Francis one.

From now on, I'll stop adding Vatican-related posts here unless they specifically involve Benedict/Ratzinger. And on that note, allow me to repost for greater visibility that odd occurrence from a few days ago:

Pope Francis appoints 19 new cardinals in Vatican ceremony

Benedict joins Francis as pope installs new cardinals

Image

(CNN) -- Pope Francis created 19 new cardinals Saturday in a ceremony in the Vatican's St. Peter's Basilica -- the first such appointments since he was elected pontiff last March.

The new cardinals come from countries around the world, hailing from as far afield as Brazil, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, South Korea and Haiti.

The pope presented them with the traditional biretta, or red cap, and ring at a formal ceremony called a public consistory.

The scarlet color of the cap symbolizes the cardinals' willingness to die for their faith.

Looking frail, Benedict, the Pope Emeritus, lined up with the existing cardinals for the ceremony in the historic church.

When last year he became the first pope in almost six centuries to stand down, Benedict said he would live a life of seclusion and study.

His presence in St. Peter's Basilica alongside that of Francis and the cardinals who will one day vote for his successor is a highly unusual event.


Francis spoke

Sixteen of the new cardinals are under the age of 80, making them eligible to elect a new pope when the time comes, according to Vatican Radio.
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby semper occultus » Wed Mar 26, 2014 6:30 am

...from Nine Angles to Nine Circles.....( cue spooky music )....

Image

Pope, Jesuits and Anglicans refuse to deny criminal charges made against them – Trial to proceed as shocking new evidence suggests Joseph Ratzinger still wields power at the Vatican – Ratzinger and others are named as members of a child abuse cult

http://itccs.org/2014/03/22/pope-jesuits-and-anglicans-refuse-to-deny-criminal-charges-made-against-them-trial-to-proceed-as-shocking-new-evidence-suggests-joseph-ratzinger-still-wields-power-at-the-vatican/

Trial against Pope Proceeds amidst Shocking Evidence
http://youtu.be/5CH50V3uBp0

Brussels and Rome:

After being publicly charged with child trafficking and criminal conspiracy on March 4 and served a Public Summons, the head officers of the Vatican, the Jesuits, and the Church of England have refused to deny or contest the charges and will therefore face criminal prosecution commencing March 31.

The announcement came today as the deadline to respond to a Common Law Court Summons lapsed on Tuesday without any communication from the primary defendants: Pope Francis, Jorge Bergoglio, Jesuit Superior General Adolfo Pachon, and Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby.

“Their silence is very telling and extremely important legally” said Court Secretary George Dufort from Brussels.

“Our Prosecutor’s Office has the power now to proceed with its case and waive the normal examination procedure, since the defendants are not disputing the charges and are thereby tacitly admitting their guilt. The Court Magistrates will enter a plea of nolo contendere by the defendants into the court record and have every right to rule against them in their absence.”

This startling development occurred as even more shocking news surfaced today in Rome that the allegedly former Pope Benedict, Joseph Ratzinger, actually retains power at the Vatican, and that since at least 1962 has been a member of a child abuse cult known as the Corona Novem, or The Ninth Circle (or Crown).

Francesco Zanardi of the ITCCS affiliate Rete L’Abuso in Savona, Italy said in an interview last week,

“We know from several Cardinals that Pope Francis is a caretaker figurehead who is not actually the Pope. It’s all been a huge deception. Francis doesn’t wear the papal ring and lives in a convent in Rome, not in the Vatican. He is given no official security and wanders about like a private individual. And he makes policy statements which the Curia of Cardinals then disavow, saying Francis doesn’t reflect church doctrine. And all the top appointments have been Germans or those connected to Ratzinger, who continues to speak to reporters like he’s still the Pope.”

Meanwhile, a former member of a child abuse cult known as The Ninth Circle has stated in a deposition that Joseph Ratzinger has been a member of the Circle since at least 1962, and as such has routinely participated in the ritual rape, torture and killing of children.

“The witness claim to have seen both former Pope John Paul the Second, Karol Wotyja, and Pope Benedict, Joseph Ratzinger, participate at Ninth Circle rituals held at Catholic cathedrals and a forest grove in France” said George Dufort of the Common Law court.

This recent statement confirms the account of such a ritual involving Ratzinger made by Dutch eyewitness Toss Niejenhuis last year (see http://www.itccs.org, May 8).

The Court has also received evidence that the Ninth Circle cult is referred to in Vatican documents which describe how the participation of every new Pope in the Ninth Circle cult is mandatory for their assumption of office. The alleged documents refer to the cultic rituals as “The Magisterial Privilege” that involves the ceremonial killing of newborn children and the consumption of their blood at Circle rituals.

The alleged document is translated from Latin and is dated December 25, 1967. This new evidence has been entered into the case records of the Citizen Prosecutors Office of the Court.

Stay tuned for more updates at http://www.itccs.org and http://www.iclcj.com .

Issued 22 March, 2014
ITCCS Central, Brussels
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Re: Pope to resign (first in 600 years)

Postby Lord Balto » Wed Mar 26, 2014 12:15 pm

Ministers deny en masse ‘we are not freemasons’


That would be a double negative?
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