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Saturday, April 26, 2025

AND NOW THAT POPE FRANCIS HAS ENTERED HIS FINAL RESTING PLACE, RIP, THE DEBATES ABOUT HIS PAPACY WILL HELP CARDINALS ELECT A NEW POPE AS WE RESET AND GO FORWARD


Francis in Full(press for full article)

Bishop Robert Barron became quite frank about Pope Francis' papacy. He begins his critique with listing the great things Pope Francis accomplished, especially being a pastoral pope and a pope of the streets with the language of the streets.

But then he turns to what needs to be refined and reset:

And yet, what one reads in almost every assessment of the late pope is that he was, at the very least, “controversial,” “confusing,” “ambiguous.” Some commentators would go so far as to say that he was heretical, undermining the ancient traditions of the Church. I do not at all subscribe to that latter position, but I sympathize to a degree with the former characterizations. Pope Francis was a puzzling figure in many ways, seeming to delight in confounding expectations, zigging when you thought he would zag. He famously told the young people gathered for World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro to “hagan lío” (make a mess), and sometimes he appeared to take pleasure in doing just that. 

One of the messier moments of the Francis pontificate was the two-part Synod on the Family, which took place in 2014 and 2015. The fact that Walter Cardinal Kasper, a long-time advocate of allowing divorced and remarried Catholics to receive communion, spoke at the outset of the gathering indicated rather clearly the direction that Pope Francis wanted the synod to take. But he was met with stiff resistance from bishops, especially from the developing world, and when the final document appeared, the famous Amoris Laetitia, the question seemed oddly unresolved, open to a variety of interpretations. When the pope’s apologists pointed to an obscure footnote buried deep in the document as providing the requisite clarity, many in the Church were, to say the least, incredulous. And when four cardinals petitioned the pope to resolve a number of puzzles (dubia­, in the technical jargon) that Amoris Laetitia had raised in their minds, they were basically ignored. 

There are indeed many beautiful insights in Amoris Laetitia, but they were largely overlooked due to the controversy and ambiguity that accompanied the document. Indeed, in the wake of its publication, a sort of “doctrinal anarchy” was let loose, as various bishops’ conferences gave the document varying interpretations, so that, for example, what remained a mortal sin in Poland seemed permissible in Malta. If a primary responsibility of the pope is to maintain unity in doctrine and morals, it is hard to see how Pope Francis met that obligation throughout that synodal process and its aftermath. 

And he oddly did not seem to learn from this situation. In 2023, after the first round of the Synod on Synodality (more on this anon), Pope Francis’s doctrinal chief, Victor Manuel Cardinal Fernández, issued the statement Fiducia Supplicans, which allowed for the possibility of blessing those in same-sex unions. To say that a firestorm broke out in the Catholic world would be an understatement, and the opposition was led, once again, by Catholic leaders from the non-Western sphere. In an astonishing display of unity and courage, the bishops of Africa said that they would not enforce the teaching of Fiducia in their countries, and the pope backed down, permitting them to dissent from the document. That all of this unfolded immediately after a gathering of four hundred leaders from around the Catholic world, who were never consulted on the matter, simply beggars belief. Once again, the pope struggled to maintain the unity of the Church.

At times, too, the pope’s admirably generous instincts appeared to lead him into saying doctrinally imprecise things or countenancing problematic behaviors. An example of the first would be his endorsement, on a number of occasions, of the proposition that all religions are legitimate paths to God, like differing languages speaking the same truth. Now, given his clear enthusiasm for evangelization, I want to be generous in my interpretation of his words, construing them perhaps along the lines of the Second Vatican Council’s assertion that there are elements of truth in all religions. But I think it is fair to say that the pope at least gave the strong impression of religious indifferentism.  

As an example of his countenancing of problematic behaviors, I would point to the (in)famous Pachamama incident at the Synod on the Amazon in 2019. Though there remains a good deal of confusion about the purpose of the placement of the Pachamama statue in the Vatican Gardens during a prayer with the pope, it is certainly fair to say that it generated much controversy and that the various attempts to explain it only made matters worse. Once more, the pope found himself in the middle of a self-created and completely unnecessary kerfuffle, the man supposed to guarantee unity at least implicitly undermining it.

No one doubts that Pope Francis was rhetorically gifted, not in the academic manner of John Paul II or Benedict XVI to be sure, but in the manner of a parish priest adept at popular homilizing. And his speech very often had an edge. Here are a few of his gems: “Mr. and Mrs. Whiner”; “liquid Christian”; “pickled-pepper-faced Christian”; “weak to the point of rottenness”; “Church who is more spinster than mother.” And I believe it is fair to say that his rhetorical venom was, more often than not, directed at conservative Catholics. Here are a few more zingers: “the closed, legalistic slave of his own rigidity”; “doctors of the letter!”; “Rigidity conceals the leading of a double life, something pathological”; “professionals of the sacred! Reactionaries”; and, most famously, “­backwardists.” 

I know that these withering criticisms often deeply discouraged orthodox Catholics, especially young priests and seminarians, whom the pope once referred to as “little monsters.” On one occasion, during the first session of the Synod on Synodality, the pope spoke to the assembled delegates. This sort of direct papal intervention was extremely rare, for, to his credit, the pope did not want excessively to sway or dominate the discussion. He spoke, in a sarcastic tone, of young clerics in Rome who spend too much time at the clerical haberdashery shops, trying on hats, collars, and cassocks. Now, there may indeed be some immature priests and students who are preoccupied with such things, but it struck me as exceedingly strange that this was the topic the pope chose for this rare opportunity to address some of the top leadership of the Church. 

To me, it indicated a curious fixation on, and demonization of, the more conservatively minded. And what made matters even more mystifying is that Francis had to have known that the Church is flourishing precisely among its more conservative members. As the famously liberal church of Germany withers on the vine, the conservative, supernaturally-­oriented church of Nigeria is exploding in numbers. And in the West, the lively parts of the Church are, without doubt, those that embrace a vibrant orthodoxy rather than those that accommodate the secularist culture. Many of the pope’s expressions and stories were indeed funny, but one would be hard pressed to characterize them as invitations to dialogue with conservative interlocutors. 

By way of conclusion, I would like to say a few words about synodality, which I believe Francis himself would identify as his signature theme. I was privileged to be an elected delegate to both sessions of the Synod on Synodality. For two months, I listened to and spoke with representatives from all over the world, and I learned a lot about how Catholics respond to challenges in remarkably diverse cultural milieux. I very much enjoyed the conversations, both those formal exchanges around the table, and even more so, the informal chats during coffee breaks. I came to understand the pope’s Jesuit-inspired process of prayerful discernment. 

I also came, I must admit, to appreciate the limits of synodality. Though every dialogue was lively and informative, very few of them moved toward decision, judgment, or resolution. Most were stuck at what Bernard Lonergan would call the second stage of the epistemic process, namely, being intelligent or having bright ideas. They didn’t move to Lonergan’s third level, which is the act of making a judgment, much less to his fourth stage, which is that of responsible action. So respectful were we of the “process” of conversation that we had almost a phobia of coming to decision. 

This is a fatal problem for Christians entrusted with the evangelical command to announce Christ to the world. The upshot is something that I believe is repugnant to what Pope Francis has consistently said he wants the Church to be: extroverted, mission-oriented, not stuck in the sacristy. I wondered at times during the two rounds of the synod whether synodality represented a tension within the mind and heart of Francis himself. 

Of all of the popes in my lifetime, Francis is, by far, the one I knew the best. I was with him for three Octobers: the two already mentioned, and a third for the Synod on Young People in 2018. During those wonderful months, I saw him practically every day and had a few occasions to speak to him. I also encountered him on an ad limina visit and at a handful of other audiences. I always found him gracious, funny, and approachable; once we had a short but intense spiritual conversation. I considered him my spiritual father and sincerely mourn his passing. Requiescat in pace.

 

Friday, April 25, 2025

AWAITING THE LAST JUDGEMENT AND THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD…

 




MUST WE COUNT? LET ME COUNT THE WAYS…



 I saw a brief video of CNN celebrity Anderson Cooper in Rome. He was completely thrilled as he watched the body of Pope Francis carried in procession through St. Peter’s Square. He said, and I loosely quote, that no Catholics had ever seen anything like this!

All he had to do was google papal funerals from the past to see that every pope, in recent history at least, had had their body processed through St. Peter’s Square and all of them, except for Pope Francis, were processed with the bodies fully exposed, not in a coffin. And all of them at the translation of their bodies had far more people in attendance. Pope Benedict was not afforded the dignity of the translation of his body through St. Peter’s Square. Pope Benedict XVI was scandalously placed in a van under the cover of dark and brought to the Basilica. 

In addition, if Anderson Cooper had compared photos of the number of people in St. Peter’s Square for the translation of the pope’s body to the Basilica, he would have seen just how small the congregation was for Pope Francis compared to other popes. It was a scandalously small group of people.

Now, reporters are gushing that so many people are viewing the body of Pope Francis, with some taking “selfie” photos of the dead pope and mourners. 

As I type this on Friday and the last day of viewing Pope Francis’ body, about 130,000 have passed through the Basilica to view Pope Francis.

How does that compare to the Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI and his abbreviated funeral rites and viewing? Keep in mind Pope Benedict had ceased to be the active pope for over 9 years at the time of his death:

His death ended a nine-year period during which an incumbent pope and a retired pope both lived within Vatican City. Benedict's body lay in state in St. Peter's Basilica from 2 to 4 January 2023, during which around 195,000 mourners paid their respects.

Here are photos of St. Pope John Paul’s and Pope Pius XII’s translations of their bodies, JPII’s in color:




And St. Pope John XXIII:





Thursday, April 24, 2025

JESUIT DAGGERS ARE COMING OUT A BIT TOO LATE BUT OUT THEY COME


Given the fact that Pope Francis has suppressed institutes that had a track record of sexual abuse by its leaders, it is a shame that the Jesuits weren’t suppressed again by a Jesuit pope. Jesuits have a horrible track record of dealing with their own abusers and in fact enabled them to a great extent.

There is a certain now deceased Jesuit from Chicago who I had the misfortune of knowing whose sexual abuse of minors was known by his superiors and Jesuit brothers and who did nothing and in fact ignored the complaints of parents and their cry for help. 

So the head of the Jesuits now, and only now, comes forward to criticize the late Jesuit, Pope Francis on his track record. Press title for Johnny come lately dagger wielding Jesuit superior critique of his brother Jesuit, Pope Francis on sexual abuse:

Jesuit superior: Pope Francis recognized mistakes on abuse

'This is not about giving Pope Francis a medal or giving him a grade, but about learning about potential criticism and mistakes,' said the head of the Society of Jesus

A FAIR, BALANCED, HUMBLE AND PASTORAL CRITIQUE OF THE PAPACY OF POPE FRANCIS

 


In my 45 years as a priest, I never experienced individual Catholics coming to me because they felt guilty about the way they were feeling about a particular pope.  Pope Francis changed that in a way that was personally breathtaking to me. He made many of my parishioners uncomfortable, not so much because of the Gospel message he preached, but the ambiguities he spoke, especially off-the-cuff and what appeared to many as his enablement of sin by offering cheap mercy without repentance and a change of a sinful lifestyle, at least as they understood it. The metaphor of the Church as a field hospital made the Church into a palliative care and comfort institution rather than a true hospital that at times had to give bitter medicine and amputate limbs that were diseased. 

This angst that so many felt, started immediately after Pope Francis' election on 3/13/13.

So, let me offer my opinion on Pope Francis' papacy from the peripheries of Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.

For the most part, I appreciated his pastoral sensitivities. But in this regard, I also felt that St. Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI were very pastoral too, Benedict in a different way than JPII. But neither of them wore their pastoral initiatives on their sleeve in order to tout their accessibility and pastoral concerns. They also understood that much of our pastoral outreach has to be within the context of the internal forum and accepting people as they present themselves.  It's not a one size fits all.

Vatican II or its aftermath emphasized pastoral care of the laity. Seminaries, including my own, had classes for seminarians on how to be pastoral. These were helpful and in the immediate post-Vatican II Church, many Catholics had experienced priests who were not pastoral but rather purely doctrinaire and laying burdens on the laity rather than assisting them. Often the laity were dismissed in their foibles. 

Thus, pastoral care and sensitivity are necessary. But this is an art not a science. Pope Francis had the gift of the art of pastoral care but he dogmatized it and made it too showy. 

The other thing I would mention in this brief essay is that if Pope Francis had blended his pastoral sensitivity with a humble acceptance of the papacy and its trappings, it would have soothed people who have otherwise now experience a great deal of anger toward him. 

Pope Francis, wittingly or unwittingly, used pastoral theology to open the door to changing moral teachings of the Church, a conversion of these teachings rather than a conversion of sinners. He may not have intended it, but liberal, post Catholic Catholics think he was on their side in terms of everything the LGBTQ+++ Catholics envision for the Church and the priesthood. They think he was on their side as it concerns the neutering of Humanae Vitae and an anything goes approach to sexual expression in a guilt free way. 

In some way, if the next pope is more inclined to these post Catholic changes, Pope Francis has begun the processes toward acceptance of these abominations. 

My biggest critique of Pope Francis, which was also my critique of JPII during his pontificate is that too much emphasis is placed on the person of the pope and his personality and how many people showed adulation of them. This is not humility but pride and turns the papacy away from the "cult of the institution of the papacy" to the "cult of the personality." That is not good and needs a true reform with the next pope.

Pope Benedict XVI certainly tried to do this.

 

LET ME BE TRIVIAL FOR JUST A MOMENT…

 Can we pray that our next pope wears a fully lined cassock????



Wednesday, April 23, 2025

TOP SIX POPE FRANCIS' PAPAL DEBACLES....


Crux has a thorough article of Pope Francis' papal debacles. Press the title for the complete article from Crux:

Looking back on Francis legacy, top 6 papal controversies

I. Political Advocacy

II. Amoris Laetitia 

III. Amazon Synod/“Pachamama”

IV. Traditional Latin Mass

V. Fiducia Supplicans

VI.Frociaggine/Faggotry

A POSSIBLE POPE

 Know one knows yet who the next pope will be and he might well be someone no one has heard of. But it could be someone well-known too. 

Here is someone who many believe is electable. We won’t know, though, until shortly after that white smoke bellows from the smoke pipe of the Sistine Chapel.

Please read the Times of Israel bio about the good Cardinal below the photos!

Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa! 🍕 🕺 






From the Times of Israel (a secular paper)

With the death of Pope Francis, announced by the Vatican on Monday, Roman Catholics around the globe have started speculating on who among the red-robed cardinals will succeed him.

Among the candidates to replace Pope Francis at the upcoming conclave, one name familiar to many Israeli officials stands out — Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem.

The Italian priest has lived in Israel for over three decades, and is a fluent Hebrew speaker.

Pizzaballa, 60, was ordained in 1990 and moved to Jerusalem the same year. He received a degree from the Studium Biblicum Franciscanum in Jerusalem, translated liturgical texts into Hebrew and provided pastoral care for the local Hebrew-speaking Catholic congregation.

In 2004, Pizzaballa became Custos of the Holy Land, the head of the Franciscans in Israel, the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Syria, Cyprus, Rhodes and parts of Egypt.

“Jerusalem is the heart of the life of the world,” he said just prior to being made a cardinal. “So, from this heart, we should receive life from all over the world. But also this heart, Jerusalem, wants to bring the perspective and desire of life from Jerusalem to all over the world.”

After the devastating Hamas attacks on Israel on October 7 of that year, Pizzaballa said that he would offer himself in exchange for Hamas’s Israeli hostages if it would help bring children home.

“If I’m available for an exchange,” he said in response to a question from a reporter. “Anything, if this could bring about the freedom of children, no problem. My absolute willingness.”

At the same time, Pizzaballa faced criticism from Israel for the initial response to the Hamas attack by Christian leaders in Jerusalem. The patriarch’s statement made no explicit mention of the Hamas attack, restating in general terms its condemnation of any act that targets civilians.

“In my opinion, it would be wonderful if he were elected, not just because he comes from here and he understands us, but because he’s such an exceptionally bright and good person,” Rabbi David Rosen, former American Jewish Committee international director of Interreligious Affairs, told The Times of Israel.

Farid Jubran, an adviser to the Patriarchate, declined to offer any speculation on Pizzaballa’s chances.

“Cardinal Pizzabala is under the age of 80 and will participate in the conclave,” he said. “But we really pray for a pope who is best for the church. And that’s the most important thing.”

BACK TO THE FUTURE!

 Taken out of 12 years of mothballs, the splendor of Pope Benedict’s cope is used for the translation of Pope Francis’ body to St. Peter’s Basilica! Pope Francis, as we can see, did not turn in his coffin!




SAINT POPE JOHN PAUL II’S BODILY TRANSFER TO ST. PETER’S…AS A COMPARISON OF HOW MANY FAITHFUL GATHERED IN THE SQUARE…

ABRIDGED VIDEO OF THE TRANSFER OF POPE FRANCIS’ BODY TO SAINT PETER’S BASILICA

Pope Francis lying in state within his coffin at St. Peter’s:


Pope Benedict XVI lying in state in St. Peter’s Basilica:


The video below showss the splendid cope that Cardinal Farrall wore for this procession as well as the deacons. The procession is very beautiful.

The video also shows how few faithful are in the piazza.

I prefer the tradition way to display a pope’s body for viewing. It appear’s that Pope Francis’ body is crammed into the coffin and the coffin appears to be bigger than most Italian coffins. 

IT WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE FOR THE CARDINALS TO HAVE MISSED THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THIS!

 Pope Francis’ body was transferred to St. Peter’s Basilica at 10 AM Rome time. It was a beautiful procession with Cardinal Farrell wearing a very ornate cope, not seen at a Vatican Mass in 12 years. The deacons wore matching dalmatics, very ornate and Roman in style!

But, Saint Peter’s Square was almost empty of the Faithful. Yes, you can see that. It is very sad but sums up the last 12 years.

When Pope John Paul II’s body was transferred to Saint Peter’s, the crowd extended almost to the Tiber!







This is the transfer of St. Pope John Paul II’s body to St. Peter’s in 2005. Please note the crowd size!



Tuesday, April 22, 2025

WHY I NORMALLY DESPISE THE GENERAL INTERCESSIONS OF MASS, AKA, UNIVERSAL PRAYER OR BIDDING PRAYERS…

 


Let me count the ways why I despise the Universal Prayers of the Mass:

1. They are composed by people with an ideological agenda and normally we don’t know who that person is.

2. They are like mini homilies pointing out to God what He should do and why or what the composer thinks we should be doing and why and presented in a manipulative way to get the result the ideologue who prepared the interecessions wants.

3. They are too wordy.

4. Did I say they become ideological homilies? 

5. They are too long.

From the center right ideology, here are some intercessions from Fr. Z that I despise because these are ideological and preachy:

Let us pray that he will be truly holy and faithful, zealous to fulfill God’s will in sacrificial love in keeping with Office and sacred Tradition entrusted to him.

Let us pray for a Pope who will bring healing and justice to those who are strongly attached to the Church’s ancient liturgical and doctrinal Tradition.

Let us pray for a Pope who will be a consistent point of reference for the unity of all the Churches aligned with Rome.

Let us pray for a Pope who can facilitate unity with separated Churches.

Let us pray for a Pope who will bring crystal clarity to the burning questions of our day regarding faithful and morals.

Let us pray for a Pope who will shine forth in his words and deeds, as well as in his silences and patience, Christ, whose Vicar he must be.

From the center left ideology, Deacon Fritz Bauerschmidt offers these preachy ideological intercessions:

For the Church,
called by God to be the field hospital
in which wounded souls find healing,
let us pray to the Lord

For the growth in our Church and our world
of a culture of encounter,
rejecting the globalized indifference
that comes from disillusionment
and a withdrawal into private interests,
let us pray to the Lord.

For political leaders who will care
for those on the margins
and resist the throwaway culture
that threatens the unborn and the elderly,
the weak and the helpless,
let us pray to the Lord.

For hearts that are open
in listening and responding
to the cry of the Earth,
our common home,
and the cry of the poor,
who bear the image of Christ
who became poor for our sake,
let us pray to the Lord.

For migrants and refugees,
that we might always remember
that they are faces, not numbers:
people who cannot simply be categorized,
but need to be embraced,
let us pray to the Lord.

For Pope Francis,
who proclaimed the joy of the Gospel,
that the merciful Lord may accompany him
to our heavenly homeland,
let us pray to the Lord.

There are examples of the Universal Prayers found in the Roman Missal that are more preferable than the examples above, but even these, though, tend to be wordy and chatty. 

May I plead with the next pope, Pope Whatever Your Name Will Be, to mandate that on Sunday only the Roman Canon be used which has all the general intercessions that the Mass needs, no additional ones, made up by ideologues, need be recited. 

For the other Eucharistic Prayers, not as brilliant in petitions as the Roman Canon, and mandated by Pope Whatever Your Name Will Be in the future for daily Masses where the Roman Canon is not used, there should be three choices of litanies for the Easter Season, for Ordinary Time after Christmas, for the Lenten Season and for Ordinary Time after Pentecost. 

Here’s a model that I recommend as a form of the litany:

For the Holy Church of God, we pray to the Lord.

For world leaders and the peace in the world, we pray to the Lord.

For all who suffer in any way, we pray to the Lord.

For all the Faithful Departed, we pray to the Lord.

I would suggest that others for the various seasons be as brief, as general and as succinct. Let us pray to the Lord. 

AND THE SPECULATION CONTINUES

Pope Francis' Requiem Mass will be on Easter Saturday.


 ⚜ The most important Papabili:


Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller , 77, 

(Germany): 

The former bishop of Regensburg is appreciated for his intelligence, down to earth and above all his abilities as a decorated theologian. Since the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. however, German clergymen in the Vatican have lost their influence altogether.


Cardinal Matteo Zuppi , 69, 

(Italy): 

As president of the Italian Bishops' Conference CEI, the Archbishop of Bologna is already automatically one of the favorites at the Pope election. He is the Pope's special envoy for peace in Ukraine.


Cardinal Pietro Parolin , 70, 

(Italy): 

The current Vatican Secretary of State is considered a powerful man in the Vatican and could even lead the conclave.


Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa , 60, 

(Italy): 

Pizzaballa is valued as a decorated diplomat in the politically tense Middle East, his approach is considered unconventional. He has an open dialogue with Jewish, Islamic and Christian Orthodox religious leaders.


Cardinal Peter Erdö , 72, 

(Hungary): 

Erdö should have the best chances with conservatives who expect a departure from Francis' progressive course. The President of the Council of the European Conference of Bishops is considered to be deeply traditional.


Cardinal Willem Eijk , 71, 

(Netherlands): 

He is not in favor of reforms. In the fall of 2024 he told the media that the world church must learn from the mistakes of the Dutch church, which has failed with its liberal positions.


Cardinal Anders Arborelius , 75, 

(Sweden): 

He is valued as a wise man and enjoys great popularity among both conservatives and progressives.


Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline , 66, 

(France/Algeria): 

Aveline also enjoys recognition outside the ecclesiastical circles as a "man of outstanding intelligence". 

On controversial church topics such as women ordination or celibacy, Aveline remained rather modest in the past, allowing him not to position himself publicly, nor create an opponent.


Cardinal Robert Sarah , 79, 

(Guinea): 

Even after the resignation of Joseph Ratzinger, he was treated as a potential candidate for the papal office. However, his prospects among Pope Francis' followers may have been clouded by the fact that in January he expressed strong criticism of the blessings of homosexual believers.


Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle , 67, 

(Philippines): 

He is one of the most influential confidants of Pope Francis and is considered one of the most promising non-Italian candidates for his possible successor.




Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith , 77, 

(Sri Lanka): 

He stands for conservative values. In 2024 he spoke out clearly against two legal initiatives to recognise same-sex marriage in Sri Lanka.


Cardinal Charles Maung Bo , 76, 

(Myanmar): 

Bo is the Archbishop of Yangon and executes significant influence as President of the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences. 

In addition, he is vice-president of the NGO "Religions for Peace", which is dedicated to promoting peace through interfaith dialogue.

Especially a Pope from the African continent or the Far East would be a novelty for the Catholic Church.


Source : Focus Online

Monday, April 21, 2025

THE GREAT VIGIL OF EASTER AT SAINT ANNE CHURCH, RICHMOND HILL, GEORGIA, APRIL 19, 2019…

 I had forgotten that this video existed. But today, someone posted it on their facebook. So here it is!

INTERREGNUM! WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

 


Silerium non Possum has this:

1. The Congregations of Cardinals: General and Particular

With the official observation of the death of the Pontiff opens the time of the Congregations of Cardinals, which are distinguished in General and Particular.

- The General Congregations involve the entire College of Cardinals, even the cardinals over 80 years old who do not have the right to vote in the conclave. Everyone must participate, except for serious impediments. However, cardinals over eighties can decide not to participate.

- The Particular Congregations are composed of the Camerlengo and three electorate Cardinals, one for each Order (bishops, presbyters, deacons), chosen by sall among those who are already in Rome. These three "Assistants" remain in charge for three days, then they are replaced with a new draw.

The Particular Congregations deal with ordinary and daily affairs, while the most important issues are delegated to the General Congregations. A decision taken in a Particular Congregation cannot be modified by another of the same type, but only by a General, with a majority of votes.

The first General Congregation will take place tomorrow, April 22, 2025, at 9 a.m. in the Synod Chamber.

2. The first acts of the College of Cardinals

During the first General Congregations (which are held every day), the most urgent acts are carried out. In particular:

- Establish when and how the Pope's body will be exhibited in the Vatican Basilica, for the tribute of the faithful.

- Organize the funerals, which will last nine consecutive days (the so-called novendials) and set the date of the funeral, to be completed by the fourth or sixth day, except for special reasons.

- Prepare the Domus Sanctae Marthae to welcome the electing Cardinals and prepare everything necessary in the Sistine Chapel, where the Conclave will take place. (here an in-depth study)

- Entrust two meditations to ecclesiastics of proven wisdom, to help the Cardinals to reflect on the problems of the Church and on the choice of the new Pontiff.

- Approve the expenses related to the vacancy period.

- Read any documents left by the deceased Pope at the College of Cardinals.

- Cancel the Fisherman's Ring and the Lead Seal, symbols of papal authority.

- Draw the rooms of the Domus Sanctae Marthae for the electing Cardinals.

- Establish the day and time of the beginning of the Conclave.

3. The Dean of the College presides

The General Congregations will be chaired by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the oldest elector by order.

4. Where the Congregations are held

The Congregations are held in the new Chamber of the Synod in the Vatican City State.

Towards the Conclave

All these steps prepare the decisive moment: the Conclave, the election of the new Pope, which will take place behind closed doors in the Sistine Chapel. But first, the College of Cardinals will have to make a long and deep discernment. Now begins a time of prayer, silence and historical decisions for the universal Church.


P.L.S.

ARCHBISHOP CHARLES CHAPUT, WRITING FOR FIRST THINGS, ENUNCIATES A JUDGEMENT ON THE PAPACY OF POPE FRANCIS


As Catholics we believe that at the moment of our death we experience our particular judgement. We pray for Pope Francis as he undergoes this experience at the Throne of Almighty God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Given Pope Francis’ state in life and that much was given to him as pope, we can be sure that the particular judgement will be thorough. However, and in the spirit of hope, Pope Francis will have a perfect Lawyer, Advocate, the Crucified and Risen Lord! What could go wrong?

Retired Archbishop Charles Chaput has penned a kind of obituary of Pope Francis, which seems unkind, but is within the realm of what Pope Francis might experience at his particular judgement. 

Some will say it is too soon for this kind of critique, but in eternity it has already happened and our prayerful hope is that Pope Francis, even if purgatory is needed, will experience the Divine Mercy of Jesus and eternal life in heaven. (My opinion, and it is only that, is that one’s particular judgement that leads to heaven is a form of purgatory that everyone experiences.)

This is copied from First Things:

The Church After Francis

I have personal memories of Pope Francis that I greatly value: a friendly and generous working relationship at the 1997 Synod on America when we were both newly appointed archbishops; his personal welcome and warmth at Rome’s 2014 Humanum conference; and the extraordinary success of his 2015 visit to Philadelphia for the Eighth World Meeting of Families. He devoted himself to serving the Church and her people in ways that he felt the times demanded. As a brother in the faith, and a successor of Peter, he deserves our ongoing prayers for his eternal life in the presence of the God he loved.

Having said that, an interregnum between papacies is a time for candor. The lack of it, given today’s challenges, is too expensive. In many ways, whatever its strengths, the Francis pontificate was inadequate to the real issues facing the Church. He had no direct involvement in the Second Vatican Council and seemed to resent the legacy of his immediate predecessors who did; men who worked and suffered to incarnate the council’s teachings faithfully into Catholic life. His personality tended toward the temperamental and autocratic. He resisted even loyal criticism. He had a pattern of ambiguity and loose words that sowed confusion and conflict. In the face of deep cultural fractures on matters of sexual behavior and identity, he condemned gender ideology but seemed to downplay a compelling Christian “theology of the body.” He was impatient with canon law and proper procedure. His signature project, synodality, was heavy on process and deficient in clarity. Despite an inspiring outreach to society’s margins, his papacy lacked a confident, dynamic evangelical zeal. The intellectual excellence to sustain a salvific (and not merely ethical) Christian witness in a skeptical modern world was likewise absent.

What the Church needs going forward is a leader who can marry personal simplicity with a passion for converting the world to Jesus Christ, a leader who has a heart of courage and a keen intellect to match it. Anything less won’t work.

POPE FRANCIS HAS DIED ON EASTER MONDAY


 Eternal rest, O Lord, grant unto Pope Francis, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon him. May he rest in peace. Amen. May his soul and the souls of all the faithful departed rest in peace. Amen. 

I can’t think of a better way for a dying pope to die. He was able to give his final Easter Urbi et Orbi blessing to the world and say his last words to the Church and all people.

He was able to ride in the pope mobile into St. Peter’s Square and greet the faithful including children to whom he gave candy. 

What a heroic Holy Week he had. A visit to a prison on Holy Thursday, meeting with Vice President Vance on Sunday and the Urbi et Orbi blessing and ride in Saint Peter’s Square!

Death on Easter Monday!

Prayer for a Deceased Pope (from the Roman Missal)

God, Who, in Thine ineffable providence, didst will that Thy servant N... should be numbered among the high priests, grant, we beseech Thee, that he, who on earth held the place of Thine only-begotten Son, may be joined forevermore to the fellowship of Thy holy pontiffs. Through the same Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end.
Amen.

Sunday, April 20, 2025

A BEAUTIFUL LATIN EASTER SUNDAY MASS IN SAINT PETER’S SQUARE

The full Mass with Urbi et Orbi by Pope Francis: 


Pope Francis designated the aging Cardinal Angelo Comastri to be the main celebrant of the outdoor Easter Sunday Mass.

He wore a beautiful bejeweled gold vestment. The deacons wore very nice gold dalmatics almost as ornate as the Eastern Rite deacons who read the gospel. At Easter Sunday’s papal Masses, the Gospel is read in Latin and in Greek. The Latin Rite deacon actually chanted the Gospel in Latin, not Italian, thanks be to God!

Cardinal Comastri also chanted his parts of the Mass. Pope Francis never chants any of his parts of the Mass.

This morning’s Easter Sunday Mass brought us forward to the way Pope Benedict XVI celebrated papal Masses. Thanks be to God!


Pope Francis offers his Easter “Urbi et Orbit” blessing, but his voice is inaudible. It appears he also rode through the piazza in the pope-mobile!