Tuesday, May 3, 2022
‘PROPOSE BETTER METHODS’ NEWS: VIDEO REPORTS...by Martina Moyski • ChurchMilitant.com • May 3, 2022 3 Comments Commission ordered to figure it out
‘PROPOSE BETTER METHODS’
NEWS: VIDEO REPORTS
Commission ordered to figure it out

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TRANSCRIPT
Pope Francis told a Vatican commission entrusted with rooting out clerical sex abuse to develop methods for the Church to protect minors. But, as Church Militant's Martina Moyski explains, many doubt if the commission's plans will be effective.
The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors wrapped up its plenary meeting on Friday. Pope Francis, in an address to the commission, urged, "I would like you to propose better methods to enable the Church to protect minors and vulnerable persons and to assist the healing of survivors."
He tasked the commission with several duties, including the preparation of an annual report outlining "the Church's initiatives for the protection of minors and vulnerable adults." He added, "This might be difficult at the beginning, but I ask you to begin where necessary in order to furnish a reliable account on what is presently being done and what needs to change."
However, people are concerned the commission's work, may be compromised from the beginning, since it has been absorbed into the Vatican's government. The commission's president — Boston cardinal Seán O'Malley — claimed in a press conference Friday the commission would function uninhibited.
Boston cardinal Seán O'Malley: "The Holy Father told us that the autonomy of the commission is meant to ensure the integrity of its expertise and especially its freedom to give advice to the Holy Father on these delicate matters."
Pope Francis' efforts to combat clerical sex abuse have been half hearted at best. The slow release of the McCarrick report and the holy father's support of South American bishops who covered up for abuse give no confidence.
After more than 40 years of clerical sex abuse and its cover up, Pope Francis dedicated only one weekend, in 2019, to discussing the abuse crisis. The issue of sodomite priests and religious was not mentioned.
Johnny Creationist • an hour ago I've said it before but I am going to repeat it. The Bible makes it crystal clear that there is no room for homosexuals in the Kingdom of Heaven. Surely it follows from this that there is no room for them in the Church?
It is time to start recognising that many people in the Church are not Christians by any stretch of the imagination, and they should be expelled. If that leaves us with just a small remnant of faithful Catholics then so much the better.
I could weep for the mess our Church is in.
Michael Aiello • 2 hours ago Sean O’Malley in charge of clerical reform. Sure! Really! You have to be kidding.
The man who has constantly omitted homosexual predation and infiltration of the priesthood as the main cause of clerical abuse.
And he was also one of the heretical clergy who met in Chicago with like minded cardinals Tobin, Cupich and the National Catholic reporter.
We will not see any real reform. Only more efforts by the pope and his minions to whitewash any real investigation as they go along their merry way attempting to make homosexual behavior normal in Church teaching.
It’s like putting the fox in charge of the chicken coop!
Hunter_2 • 2 hours ago I find it a great privilege to be able to listen to those belonging to this website who tell the unvarnished truth. How can anyone applaud the efforts of this Pope when he obviously could not care less about homosexuality in his ranks. He's not a man of God, he's a man of the world, and anyone who refuses to see or dare speak about it, is also not of God.
Johnny Creationist • an hour ago I've said it before but I am going to repeat it. The Bible makes it crystal clear that there is no room for homosexuals in the Kingdom of Heaven. Surely it follows from this that there is no room for them in the Church?
It is time to start recognising that many people in the Church are not Christians by any stretch of the imagination, and they should be expelled. If that leaves us with just a small remnant of faithful Catholics then so much the better.
I could weep for the mess our Church is in.Michael Aiello • 2 hours ago Sean O’Malley in charge of clerical reform. Sure! Really! You have to be kidding.
The man who has constantly omitted homosexual predation and infiltration of the priesthood as the main cause of clerical abuse.
And he was also one of the heretical clergy who met in Chicago with like minded cardinals Tobin, Cupich and the National Catholic reporter.
We will not see any real reform. Only more efforts by the pope and his minions to whitewash any real investigation as they go along their merry way attempting to make homosexual behavior normal in Church teaching.
It’s like putting the fox in charge of the chicken coop!
Hunter_2 • 2 hours ago I find it a great privilege to be able to listen to those belonging to this website who tell the unvarnished truth. How can anyone applaud the efforts of this Pope when he obviously could not care less about homosexuality in his ranks. He's not a man of God, he's a man of the world, and anyone who refuses to see or dare speak about it, is also not of God.
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POPE RAPS NATO FOR ‘BARKING AT RUSSIA’S DOOR’ NEWS: WORLD NEWS...by Jules Gomes • ChurchMilitant.com • May 3, 2022 0 Comments Francis faults the military industrial complex for using wars to test arms
POPE RAPS NATO FOR ‘BARKING AT RUSSIA’S DOOR’
NEWS: WORLD NEWS
Francis faults the military industrial complex for using wars to test arms

VATICAN CITY (ChurchMilitant.com) - The North Atlantic Treaty Organization's "barking at Russia's door" may have triggered President Vladimir Putin to invade Ukraine, Pope Francis told an Italian newspaper Tuesday.

"I have no way of telling whether his rage has been provoked," Francis mused, "but I suspect it was perhaps facilitated by the West's attitude," Francis told Fiorenza Sarzanini, journalist and deputy editor of Corriere della Sera.
"In Ukraine, it was other states that created the conflict," the pontiff noted. "What's clear is that, in this land, arms are being tested. Wars are fought for this — to test the arms we have made."
"The production and the sale of armaments is a disgrace, but few are bold enough to stand up against it," he lamented.
Francis, however, evaded the issue of the West's escalating the conflict by supplying arms to Ukraine: "I don't know how to answer — I am too far away — whether it is right to supply the Ukrainians."
The pope acknowledged that "the Ukrainians were outraged" at his attempt to bring together "a Russian [woman] and a Ukrainian [woman] to read the prayers" — at the 13th station during the Good Friday "Way of the Cross" at the Colosseum in Rome.
"I spoke with [Cdl. Konrad] Krajewski, who was there with me, and he told me, 'Stop them; don't let them read the prayer together.' He was right, of course. We can't really understand them. So the two ladies remained silent," Francis said.
"They are very touchy, the Ukrainians, maybe because they were defeated and demeaned after the Second World War, and they paid a very heavy price. So many lives lost: They are a martyred people," he added.
Ukraine's major archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk had blasted the pontiff's symbolic gesture of reconciliation as "incoherent and even offensive," noting that "such an idea is untimely, ambiguous" and "does not take into account Russia's military aggression against Ukraine."
The pope revealed he was prepared to fly to Moscow to meet Putin to appeal for peace, but the Kremlin hadn't responded. But he was not yet ready to travel to Kiev, even though he had sent Cdl. Michael Czerny and Cdl. Konrad Krajewski as his envoys to Ukraine.
"First, I must go to Moscow; I want to meet Putin first of all," Francis emphasized, praising Vatican secretary of state Cdl. Pietro Parolin as a diplomat par excellence "in the tradition of Agostino Casaroli" (who served as the Vatican foreign minister under five popes, from 1967 to 1990).
Nicknamed "Kissinger in a Cassock" by Vatican watchers, Cdl. Casaroli is said to have worked secretly in collaboration with Pope John Paul II and the United States to weaken the Soviet Union. Parolin, on the other hand, has both signed and renewed a secret Vatican concord with the Chinese Communist Party, leading to increased persecution of Catholics in China.

Speaking of a possible end to the war, the pontiff revealed that Hungarian president Viktor Orbán had told him that "the Russians have a precise plan, and that the war will end on May 9," which, he said, "would explain the speed of the military operations in the last few days."
"Now the Russians have taken not just the Donbass region, but Crimea, Odessa, the ports on the Black Sea — everything. I have a bad feeling about it all, I'll admit; I'm very pessimistic. However, it is our duty to do all we can to stop the war," Francis stressed.
The pontiff said he had spoken to Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church for "for 40 minutes on Zoom" but "for the first 20 minutes, he read from a piece of paper he was holding in his hand all the reasons that justify the Russian invasion."
Regarding the conversation, Francis reported:
I listened to him and then replied: "I don't understand any of this. Brother, we are not state clerics; we shouldn't speak the language of politics, but rather the language of Jesus. We are shepherds of the same holy flock of God. For this reason, we must look for a path to peace; we must stop the fighting."
"A patriarch can't lower himself to become Putin's altar boy. I had a meeting with him, scheduled for June 14, in Jerusalem. It would have been our second face-to-face, nothing to do with the war. But we called it off; we agreed that it could send the wrong message," the pope added.
Criticizing the hierarchy of Italian church for "an old-fashioned mentality that pretends to be open and modern," the pope said he was looking for a bishop "who is willing to introduce significant changes" as the new head of the Italian Episcopal Conference when the current CEI president Cdl. Gualtiero Bassetti retires in May.