St. Francis of Assisi supposedly said, “Preach always, and, when necessary, use words.” In all honesty, there’s no evidence St. Francis ever said anything like that – but even so, it’s a piece of advice popes long have taken to heart.
Over the centuries, popes have always found plenty of ways to speak without using words, especially when words might be inconvenient or hard to take back. Popes speak by gestures, by whom they name to key jobs, by where they put their money and where they chose to travel.
Even a pope’s appointment calendar can be a way of getting a message across, which was certainly the case for St. Francis’s namesake, Pope Francis, yesterday.
Every day the Vatican Press Office sends journalists a list of who’s on the pope’s schedule that day, and rarely does the list make headlines. Mostly it’s people we already knew were coming, or Vatican officials with an obvious reason for seeing the boss.
Yesterday, however, was the list that launched a thousand tweets, because it contained the unexpected name of Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago.
In the abstract, there’s nothing terribly unusual about a pope meeting a cardinal, and Cupich is a member of both the Vatican’s Congregation for Catholic Education and its all-important Congregation for Bishops, so in theory there could have been housekeeping involving one or both of those departments that required some face time with Francis.
However, this meeting came just ten days after Cupich publicly unbraided Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles, president of the US bishops’ conference, for a statement on the inauguration of President Joe Biden warning that the new administration “would advance moral evils and threaten human life and dignity.” Cupich called that statement “ill-considered” and insisted it did not go through the usual collegial vetting process, implying it was overly confrontation vis-à-vis the new administration.
In that context, it’s been difficult for most observers not to interpret the meeting with the pope as a show of support by Francis for Cupich in the dispute with Gomez, and thus, more broadly, for a more positive approach to the new Biden administration.
That interpretation is all the more seductive given that neither the Vatican nor Cupich have offered any explanation of the nature of the meeting, at least so far – leaving the clear impression that they’re content with the gloss pretty much everyone has given it, i.e., as a thumbs-up for the Cupich line.
It won’t do simply to say that Francis wanted to be briefed on the situation in the States. Were that all, there are plenty of other people who could have brought the pontiff up to speed who weren’t themselves a party to the dispute beginning with his own envoy in America, French Archbishop Christophe Pierre.
Nor will it quite fly to say that the pope wanted to promote reconciliation, or to avoid public conflict among bishops. Were that the agenda, the logical move would have been to speak to both Cupich and Gomez together. (Back in 2010, after Cardinal Christoph Schönborn of Vienna publicly accused Italian Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the former Secretary of State under St. John Paul II, of blocking a sex abuse investigation, the two prelates were summoned to Rome for a kiss-and-make-up session under Pope Benedict XVI.)
By meeting just one of the protagonists to the conflict without the other, the inevitable take-away is that the pontiff wanted to send a signal about where his sympathies lie.
That’s the case, by the way, regardless of who actually initiated the meeting. Even if it was Cupich who requested a spot on the calendar, the pope was under no obligation to grant it. When retired Cardinal Joseph Zen of Hong Kong recently came to Rome looking for papal support for his hawkish line on China, for example, he went home without having seen the boss….
The above comes from a Jan. 31 article by John Allen in Crux.
Gossip is a sin.
So is abortion.
Abortion is a grave sin. Gossip is usually a venial sin.
I think you’re just weaponizing the concept of sin to beat up on those you disagree with. In Christian charity you should look for areas of agreement and not make what you disagree with into a preeminent issue. It’s not in the church’s doctrine that you have to point out that others might be gossiping.
Taking a page out of Bishop McElroy’s playbook.
No sir or madam, I was not “weaponizing” sin to beat up on someone I disagree with. This is an article where the person has absolutely no knowledge of what was said in a conversation between two people and speculates as to what was said. And what it is supposed to mean.
It is totally irresponsible.
Gossip is Idle talk, especially about others. The morality of gossip is determined by the degree to which time is wasted in useless conversation, by the failure in justice or charity committed against others, and by the damage done to people’s reputation by those who gossip.
Do not accept an accusation against a presbyter unless it is supported by two or three witnesses.
1 Timothy 5:19
So is undermining the teachings of the Church.
So stop gossiping that others are gossiping!
I pointed out the sin because we are supposed to be Christians. Admonishing the sinner is an act of mercy.
As I understand it, nothing in the Vatican is straightforward. Perhaps that is part of how the ‘game’ is played at the Vatican.
Things become clearer now. Our Lady of Akita was right that bishop will be against bishop. That Cardinal Cupich blessed a dragon should tell us all we need to know about him. In this case Our Lady of Guadalupe vs the dragon for those who have eyes to see. (Gomez vs Cupich)
Some people buy idols unknowingly, sometimes jewelry, art pieces or things for their garden. and when they find out what they really do symbolize and try to get rid of them, they face opposition from family members who do not always fully understand their meaning. Lord take away our idols and lead us onto the path of righteousness.
Sauron has the ring.
A wave of darkness from Mordor will descend upon all.
Frodo, we have been chosen to live in times such as these that we may bring light to the darkness. Mordor is strong but not so strong that its darkness can reach to your heart unless you let it.
“And there be dragons.”
From “Questioning the Accused”
By God’s power, St. Michael and St. George,
Slay the Dragon in us all!
End the slaughter of the Innocents.
Lift up the Children of the Fall.
Then, with stainless hands this nation,
Crying out to God above,
Shall be fit for habitation
And be filled with hope and love.
by Theresa Taylor (c)
Cupich has intervened several times on behalf of Francis with the USCCB in their statements and deliberations. Cupich is Francis’ voice to the United States and very powerfully endowed in his Vatican positions to influence and make decisions, advise the pope, and communicate Francis’ ideas.
Vaticanese is not at all plain speak such as we common folk Americans are used to speaking. It is convoluted, masked, open to ambiguity, sometimes non committal, always however with a direction and end that may not be discernible in the immediate words and actions.
It is not at all Christ like to me, but rather holds its Roman and Italian roots regardless of the origin of the pope.
I might say that it has nothing to do with the actual church of Jesus, rather with the institution in which the church is ensconced.
One of the most important things that the Catholic Church can do in our current times is to come to the aid of the dissidents in Hong Kong. especially those who have been jailed for speaking out about the freedoms that are being taken away, and to support the underground Church in the mainland, especially calling attention to hundreds of thousands in labor camps making cheap products that flood markets worldwide, just for their religious or political beliefs, the surveillance state that was helped formed by our own tech companies here in Silicon Valley, such as Google and their social credit system, using people’s cell phones to propagandize and control people, and the alliance between Wall Street, the CCP, and many political leaders in the US who have been compromised. In many ways, the Wuhan virus is a consequence of this alliance. Legitimate investigative reporters, and research scientists who have escaped from Wuhan, have testified that our own NIH, in 2014, helped to fund the research on this very SARS type of virus. Whether it was an accident, or on purpose, part of a “Global Reset”, that Archbishop Vigano speaks of, certainly it is a “Corona Chastisement”, for all of us, for participating in buying cheap products made by virtual slave labor, and for the Church in general, for not speaking out about the oppression and the corruption.
Zen hawkish on China?
Allen’s such an ass. Crux too.
I used to like John Allen’s commentary. Like twenty years ago. Not anymore. Something’s different about him now. Can’t put my finger on it.
Who can blame Archbishop Gomez for braiding his hair during a pandemic, when we are all in lockdown and can’t see a barber? I don’t think Cardinal Cupich ought to have unbraided it. I hope he kept at least six feet of distance and wore a mask.
The difference in not meeting with Cardinal Zen who had travelled to Rome specifically to meet with the Pope about the serious situation in China, and Cardinal Cupich who unexpectedly met with the Pope is that Cardinal Zen is a Traditional Catholic, and we know exactly what the Pope’s feelings are about Traditional Catholics.
Traditional Catholics, like Cardinal Zen and Bishop Schneider, have actually lived under Communism, and saw their people robbed, and murdered. Does Pope Francis really believe all that b.s. about Communist China being better. They seriously pollute yet nothing is said. They make cheap items with slave labor. Most do not last long and not well fitting for larger non Chinese. I have a blender and slicer made in this country that has lasted for decades. Cast iron and Revere Ware that were made here are almost indestructible. No need to keep buying and buying if things are well made. Conservatives conserve.