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What next for Archbishop Georg Gänswein?

Catholic World News January 09, 2023 Oh, to have been a fly on the wall this morning, January 9, when Pope Francis met privately with Archbishop Georg Gänswein. Veteran Vatican-watchers immediately recognized the potential drama in the meeting. Archbishop Gänswein, the longtime personal secretary to Pope Benedict XVI, is now a man without a job. More important, he is the author of a forthcoming book, in which he promises to reveal (among other things) what the Pope-emeritus really thought about teachings and policies of Pope Francis. Advance copies of the book—Nothing But the Truth: My Life Beside Pope Benedict XVI—are already circulating in Rome, raising eyebrows with revelations about private correspondence and conversations between the past and present Pontiffs. During his retirement, t...

‘Catastrophe’: Cardinal Pell’s Secret Memo Blasts Pope Francis as Vatican Prepares for Saturday Funeral Mass…

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis will deliver a final send-off for Cardinal George Pell during a funeral Mass on Saturday, the Vatican said, as revelations emerge of the Australian prelate’s growing concern about what he considered the “disaster” and “catastrophe” of the papacy under Francis. The Vatican on Thursday said the dean of the college of cardinals, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, would celebrate Pell’s funeral Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica. As is custom for cardinal funerals, Francis will deliver a final commendation and salute. Pell, who had served as Francis’ first finance minister for three years before returning to Australia to face child sex abuse charges, died on Tuesday at a Rome hospital of heart complications following hip surgery. He was 81. He had been dividing his time ...

One day — within the next century — Benedict XVI will be declared a saint. Precisely how soon this will happen is uncertain, but it will happen……

First, I will make a prediction. One day—within the next century—Benedict XVI will be declared a saint. Precisely how soon this will happen is uncertain, and it depends on whether the normal five-year waiting period is retained before his cause can be introduced. But it will happen. This is a safe bet partly because it is the way of popes today. In prior centuries, popes may have shown their greatness much the way kings did—by building monuments and winning battles—but these days saintly popes are the fashion. The shift is notable. Of the six nineteenth-century popes, one is a servant of God (Pius VII), and one is a blessed (Pius IX). None is a saint. Of the eight twentieth-century popes, four are saints (Pius X, John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul II), and one is venerable (Pius XII). Even Joh...

It would be hard to find a place in the world more destitute than Malakal, South Sudan. But look at what the Holy Spirit is doing there…..

It would be hard to find a place in the world more destitute than Malakal, South Sudan. The surrounding region defies preconceptions of what the interior of Africa looks like. Watered by the Nile, this is a lush environment which has drawn an eclectic mix of visitors in its history. In 1898, the nearby settlement of Fashoda (now called Kodok, just upriver from Malakal) was the site of a famous standoff between Lord Kitchener’s British forces and a plucky detachment of French troops under Captain Jean-Baptiste Marchand, who had embarked on an epic 14-month trek from West Africa to steal a march on the old enemy who were in the process of conquering all Sudan. It is strange to think that a dispute over this wilderness once came close to starting a great European war. Tumult Malakal’s more re...

The Catholic Church must free herself from this ‘toxic nightmare’…

Shortly before he died on Tuesday, Cardinal George Pell wrote the following article for The Spectator in which he denounced the Vatican’s plans for its forthcoming ‘Synod on Synodality’ as a ‘toxic nightmare’. The booklet produced by the Synod, to be held in two sessions this year and next year, is ‘one of the most incoherent documents ever sent out from Rome’, says Pell. Not only is it ‘couched in neo-Marxist jargon’, but it is ‘hostile to the apostolic tradition’ and ignores such fundamental Christian tenets as belief in divine judgment, heaven and hell. The Australian-born cardinal, who endured the terrible ordeal of imprisonment in his home country on fake charges of sex abuse before being acquitted, was nothing if not courageous. He did not know that he was about t...

Who will step up to replace Cardinal Pell in defending the truth of the Catholic Faith?

COMMENTARY: In his last years of life, the Australian prelate became one of the universal Church’s most prominent champions for doctrinal orthodoxy, a mantle others will need to carry forward following his departure. Immediate reflections following the shocking death of Cardinal George Pell have focused on the Australian prelate’s heroic endurance of false accusations of sexual abuse. And rightfully so.  Cardinal Pell’s fortitude in the face of such ideologically motivated injustices, which included 404 days of solitary confinement in a Melbourne prison cell before the charges were quashed by the Australian High Court in April 2020, were an inspiration to Catholics across the world, a compelling example of faithfully enduring the kind of persecution that Christ foretold those who foll...

A total amateur noticed something about cave paintings that archaeologists had missed. If his bombshell discovery is true, he may have just rewritten the history of human history…..

Screengrab via Bacon et. al.  ABSTRACT breaks down mind-bending scientific research, future tech, new discoveries, and major breakthroughs. In what may be a major archaeological breakthrough, an independent researcher has suggested that the earliest writing in human history has been hiding in plain sight in prehistoric cave paintings in Europe, a discovery that would push the timeline of written language back by tens of thousands of years, reports a new study. Hundreds of European caves are decorated with mesmerizing paintings of animals and other figures that were made by our species between roughly 15,000 and 40,000 years ago, during the Palaeolithic Age when humans were still hunter-gatherers. These cave paintings often include non-figurative markings, such as dots and lines, that ...

Politico reporter Eric Geller exits after ‘inaccurate and offensive’ tweet slamming Benedict XVI…

AP Photo/Thomas Kienzle, File Politico cybersecurity reporter Eric Geller exited the publication after a tweet blasting the late Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI while sharing news of his death on social media. Geller wrote on Twitter, “Homophobic pedophile protector and Hitler Youth alumnus dead at 95,” while sharing a link to a news report on Pope Benedict’s death on December 31st. After Geller’s tweet raised a few eyebrows and made headlines, he took down the tweet and wrote, “I deleted the tweet about Pope Benedict that was offensive and in poor judgment.” I deleted the tweet about Pope Benedict that was offensive and in poor judgment. — Eric Geller (@ericgeller) December 31, 2022 Brad Dayspring, Politico’s vice president of marketing and communications, weighed in after Geller’s tweet stirr...

40 Years After Disappearance of Emanuela Orlandi, Investigation Into ‘Vatican Girl’ Cold Case Reopened Amid Rekindled Public Interest…

In April 2020, a Vatican judge officially closed the case, which had been reopened the previous year after members of Orlandi’s family received a tip that the girl’s remains could be in a Vatican cemetery. That investigation ultimately authorized the opening of two tombs in the cemetery of the Teutonic College, which sits on Vatican-owned property adjacent to the city-state; those graves were found to be completely empty, and in an unexpected twist, Vatican officials discovered “thousands” of human bones — not Orlandi’s — in a previously unknown ossuary nearby.  Scientific tests carried out in July 2019 on bone fragments found in connection to the investigation revealed the bones to be too old to be Orlandi’s remains, according to Vatican statements at the time. The Vat...

Cardinal Pell was talking with nurses after successful hip operation; suddenly went into cardiac arrest and died at 8:50 p.m. Rome time (2:50 p.m. Eastern)…

Cardinal George Pell of Australia died Tuesday evening at the age of 81. The cardinal underwent a hip replacement surgery on Tuesday, several sources told The Pillar, and reportedly died of complications from the surgery at approximately 8:50 p.m. in Rome. The hip operation was initially deemed a success, with sources close to the cardinal saying that he had been able to make conversation with nurses in his recovery room, before he suddenly went into cardiac arrest shortly before he died. Pell was appointed in 2014 the first prefect of the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy, charged with implementing a program of financial reform in the Vatican. He was before that the Archbishop of Sydney, and had been before that Archbishop of Melbourne. Pell was in 2018 convicted in Australia of commi...

The House is voting this week to protect babies born alive after abortion. Urge your representative to vote Yes…..

This Wednesday, the House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act. Please act now to tell your representative to vote “Yes” on this bill. It is a horrific reality in this country that children who are fully born and living after a failed abortion can in many instances be left to die without medical attention and basic needs met. The Born-Alive Survivors Protection Act would require health care professionals to offer the same level of medical care to such children as would be appropriate for a premature baby born at the same age. Please make your voice heard and ask Congress to help save these vulnerable survivors among us. [Guidelines:  Messages in your own words can be more effective. Please consider customizing the Message Body wit...

Church attendance in the U.S. has taken a big hit since the pandemic. A new AEI survey crunches the numbers…..

Nineteen percent of adults changed religious affiliation between March 2020 and March 2022, 6% were unaffiliated before the pandemic but are now affiliated, and 5% had a religious affiliation but now are not. Twice as many adults decreased religious attendance than increased attendance. The observed changes could mean that religious affiliation tells us less about Americans and their religious beliefs and theological commitments, the AEI report said. The changes could mean more polarization between regular attendees of religious worship and their self-identified co-religionists. “Past research has shown that Americans who regularly attend services are more likely to embrace the formal tenets of their faith and share a similar cultural worldview as their coreligionists,” the report said. Th...