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  • 5
    days
    ago

    Unhappy Italian climbs onto dome of St Peter's in protest — again

    Andreas Solaro / AFP - Getty Images

    Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 21, 2013 at the Vatican.

    An Italian business owner began a second day on the dome of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican to protest economic problems in Italy. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Reuters

    A man climbed onto a ledge on the dome of St Peter's Basilica on Monday and unfurled a banner protesting against a "political horror show," an apparent reference to Italy's embattled coalition struggling with recession and high unemployment.

    Identified by police as Marcello Di Finizio, the man unfurled a white banner reading "Stop this massacre!" in English, scrawled in black and red ink, with "Help us Pope Francis" in Italian.

    Di Finizio, who was still on the ledge on Tuesday, has staged similar protests in the past. Last October he stayed overnight on the dome with a banner criticizing multinationals, Europe, and former Prime Minister Mario Monti. Read the full story.

    Filippo Monteforte / AFP - Getty Images

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    19 comments

    Lot of 'witty' comments here. It's easy to laugh at some one else's pain, isn't it? Wait till things start going down here. And with the failed 'trickle down' policy, that won't be too long.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, vatican, economy, europe, protest, world-news, st-peters
  • 2
    May
    2013
    2:02pm, EDT

    Pope Francis pulls no punches on Twitter

    Franco Origlia / Getty Images

    Pope Francis waves to faithful as he arrives in St. Peter's Square in the Vatican City on Wednesday. Marking the feast of St Joseph the Worker and World Labor Day, the pontiff launched an urgent appeal to Christians and men and women of goodwill worldwide to take decisive steps to end slave labor.

    By Elizabeth Chuck and John W. Schoen, NBC News

    Pope Francis took aim at corporations Thursday with a tweet heard round the world:

    My thoughts turn to all who are unemployed, often as a result of a self-centred mindset bent on profit at any cost.

    — Pope Francis (@Pontifex) May 2, 2013

    While that’s not a shocking viewpoint from a former Latin American Jesuit known for his austere lifestyle, the bluntness of the message and the social-media pulpit he used to deliver it gained plenty of attention.

    Asked about the tweet Thursday at a news conference, Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, paused then replied cautiously: "We are...frustrated, yes certainly.”

    The Twitter message came a day after Pope Francis ripped into the "slave labor" conditions at a Bangladesh factory whose collapse last week killed hundreds.  

    The tweet is only the 30th penned by Francis since he became leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics, and was the first time he used a Twitter account followed by millions to convey so sharp a point. (Two days earlier, he tweeted benignly, "How marvelous it would be if, at the end of the day, each of us could say: today I have performed an act of charity towards others.)

    But Thursday’s message is consistent with the one the Church has espoused for centuries, theologians say.

    "Benedict said much the same thing in his final encyclical," said Thomas Groome, a Boston College professor of theology and religious education who has written numerous books on faith. "It's consistent teaching of the Catholic Church: The profit motive alone cannot be unbridled, cannot be uncontrolled, cannot be unchecked. It has to contribute to the common good."

    Not all the faithful on Twitter were quick to see it that way. Among the responses:

    "And what was the revenue generated by the Vatican last year?" 

    "You big lefty."

    "Terrific... you're another empty headed socialist... hell of a job, College of Cardinals."

    And John MacDonald, managing director at the JMAGroup accounting firm in Oakville, Ontario, shot back: “blah blah blah... it's always the capitalist....what about self indulgent employees who never retrain or take control of their options?”

    The pope’s tweet also got nearly 6,000 retweets and was “favorited” more than 2,500 times, a sign that on a day when the European Central Bank announced it would be cutting its key interest rate a quarter-point as employment in Europe still lags, some faithful appreciate an attack on corporate greed from Catholicism's top man.

    “Anyone who has lived in poverty and deep poverty — people are not really enjoying being poor. They are always, every day, thinking about what could take me out of this," said John Taylor, president of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, which helps residents of low-and moderate-income communities get access to banking services. "But they don’t have college degree, they don’t have a rich uncle. They don’t know someone who is about to give them an $80,000 job, and they don’t the contacts or the influence. Self-reliance works well when you have a lot to rely on.”

    Since the global financial collapse of 2008, unemployment rates around the world have surged. In the U.S., the painfully high 7.7 percent unemployment rate is among the lowest in the developed world.

    In Europe, unemployment reached 12.1 percent in March, an all-time high. In Spain, more than one in four are without a paycheck. In the Arab world, rising unemployment – largely among younger job seekers – fueled an “Arab spring” of social unrest in 2010 from Morocco to Saudi Arabia.  Since then, unemployment has continued to rise – to about 16 percent.

    This global surge in joblessness has sidelined a large segment of the generation that came of age during the Great Recession. The Economist magazine recently figured that the number of young people out of work globally is nearly as big as the population of the United States.

    Known for his humility in his own work, Francis has shunned many perks throughout the years. Back in his hometown of Buenos Aires, before he was elected pope, he rode city buses to get around, and lived in a plain apartment downtown as opposed to the opulent mansion he was entitled to as cardinal.

    And shortly after he was elected leader of the Roman Catholic Church, he washed the feet of a dozen inmates in a juvenile detention center in a religious rite as a humble servant of the faithful.

    As the pontiff’s pointed tweet made the rounds, another tweet came Thursday from someone better known for his financial opinions: Billionaire Warren Buffett joined Twitter for the first time, saying simply: "Warren is in the house."

    He picked up more than 81,000 followers in an hour.

    NBC's Amy Langfield contributed to this report.

     

    219 comments

    I'm not catholic, but God Bless the Pope! He is humble, caring and compassionate.....and you?

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  • 2
    May
    2013
    6:39am, EDT

    One Vatican, two popes: Benedict's back.

    Samantha Zucchi / EPA

    Workers perform renovations Feb. 20 at the top of convent of Mater Ecclesiae, where Pope Benedict XVI will live starting Thursday.

    By Peter Jeary, Senior Foreign Desk Editor, NBC News

    A new page was written in Vatican history Thursday, when Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI returned to take up permanent residency in the city-state.

    The unprecedented co-location of a reigning pope less than a 10-minute walk from a retired pope occurred as Benedict arrived at the newly renovated Mater Ecclesiae monastery.

    The pope emeritus made the short helicopter flight from the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo, where he had been staying since Feb. 28.

    According to a statement from the Vatican, he was greeted by Pope Francis at the entrance to the monastery and the two men shared a short time of prayer in the building’s chapel.

    In another unique arrangement, the Vatican has confirmed that Benedict will reside with his personal secretary, Monsignor Georg Gaenswein, who accompanied Benedict on his return to the Vatican. Gaenswein will also continue in his day job as head of the papal household, with responsibility for Pope Francis’s schedule.

    As the Vatican enters uncharted territory, experts predict immediate attention will be focused on any differences that arise – or may even seem to arise – between the two men.

    Osservatore Romano / Reuters

    Pope Francis, left, embraces Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI as he arrives at the Castel Gandolfo summer residence on March 23.

    “If Benedict fulfills his pledge to live out the rest of his days ‘hidden from the world’, it will reduce the chance of misunderstandings, or even of drawing contrasts,” Vatican journalist Alessandro Speciale told NBC News.

    The two pontiffs had met at Castel Gandolfo on March 23 for an informal and largely private face-to-face discussion, which a Vatican spokesman described as “a moment of profound and elevated communion.”

    In April, Pope Francis, who had already earned the reputation of a potential reformer,  launched an eight-member review committee to consider the way the Vatican is run.  According to the Vatican’s deputy Secretary of State, Angelo Becciu, advice on how he should proceed is ‘already raining in’, but Francis has yet to meet with the committee members.

    If tension develops tension between pro- and anti-reformists, Alessandro Speciale said it could prove awkward having a former pope in the mix. “What might happen - and would be very embarrassing for the Vatican and a huge problem for the church - is that Benedict might become a rallying point for those who oppose the reforms and simpler style advocated by Francis.  The  traditional trappings and pomp of the papacy was something that Ratzinger was bringing back into favor.”

    Benedict described himself as “a simple pilgrim” as he stood down from the papacy, but he will continue to wear white robes.

    His new accommodation, located inside the Vatican gardens, is a comparatively modern building, having been completed in 1994.

    It was founded under Pope John Paul II as accommodation for a monastic group of nuns and a place of prayer. Refurbishment work on the building started in November; one former resident nun said the basement suffered from humidity

    Related:

    • Popes meet for historic lunch
    • Benedict leaves Vatican for final time as pope
    • Full Vatican coverage from NBC News

    263 comments

    Usually when CEO's resign they have the good grace to leave the company and not be under foot of the new CEO.

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    Explore related topics: italy, vatican, rome, francis, featured, benedict, papacy, new-home, pope-emeritus, mater-ecclesiae
  • 28
    Apr
    2013
    4:05am, EDT

    Pope Francis honeymoon continues: Draws big crowds and new fans

    Alessandra Tarantino / AP

    Pope Francis waves to faithful as he is driven through the crowd in his popemobile during his weekly general audience in St. Peter Square at the Vatican, Wednesday, April 24, 2013. Writing on the banner in the background reads in Italian "We are not afraid".

    By Claudio Lavanga, Correspondent, NBC News

    ROME – More than one month since his election, Pope Francis is winning new fans and drawing big crowds to the Vatican.   

    St. Peter's Square has been filled to capacity during the pope’s public events – like the Wednesday general audience and Sunday blessing. 

    Vendors and shopkeepers have had swift sales of rosaries, candles, pens and even lighters carrying Francis' smiling face since his election. The demand for pope-related goods is even fueling the black market – earlier this week police in Milan seized a million items made in China carrying the image of the Pope illegally smuggled into the country.

    Many Catholics, at least in Italy, have been won over by Francis’ humility. 

    Alberto Pizzoli / AFP - Getty Images

    Pope Francis received a rosary from a young girl as he arrives for his weekly general audience at St Peter's square on Wednesday, April 24, 2013 at the Vatican.

    “He behaves like one of us, he is one of the people,” said 42-year-old Roberto Delantero, a devout Catholic and admirer of the Franciscan order. “He said he is infinitely small, just like Saint Francis called himself. It’s a nice break for the Catholic Church, which in recent years rose above the people.” 

    “He is a man of the people, he doesn’t sit on a pedestal,” said Maya de Roo, a 32-year-old Dutch florist based in Rome who met Pope Francis after helping with the flowers arrangements in St. Peter’s Square for Easter Mass.

    Of course, de Roo brought up a comparison to his predecessor, the now Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

    “After the mass, he came to thank us florists and he was looking at all of us in the eyes. It was clear he was happy to be with us. He was emanating a positive energy that I never felt with Benedict.”

    Osservatore Romano / Reuters

    Pope Francis receives Inter Milan captain Javier Zanetti's soccer jersey during their private audience at the Vatican on Thursday, April 25.

    And while Francis hails from Buenos Aires, which is almost 7,000 miles away from Rome, Italians welcomed him as one of their own overnight. (Francis joked after his election, “the cardinals found me at the end of the world.”)  

    His Italian roots – his parents come from the northern Italian Piedmont region – provided an instantaneous familiarity that was missing with Benedict, who was perceived as “too German” for many in Italy.

    But that hasn’t stopped Francis, who is a big soccer fan, from connecting with some of fellow Argentine transplants. He had an “emotional” hour-long audience with Inter Milan’s captain Javier Zanetti, also originally from Buenos Aires, and received an autographed jersey from Barcelona star Lionel Messi, an Argentine considered the world's best player. 

    The new pope is also winning fans stateside, as many as 84 percent of U.S. Catholics view him “favorably” according to a  Pew Research Center survey conducted at the end of March. That’s compared to just 67 percent of American Catholics who viewed his predecessor Pope Benedict favorably about three months into his papacy.

    Small gestures
    More than ethnicity and bloodline, his humility has impressed many. Through many gestures since his election, the new pope has showed an effort to live up to the name he took in honor of Saint Francis of Assisi, a saint renowned for renouncing the life of wealth he was born into for one of poverty. 

    The list is long: he boarded the shuttle bus back to the basilica from the Sistine Chapel among other cardinals on the night he was elected, refusing to take the Vatican “limo” fit for a pope. He insisted on paying the small hotel he stayed in before entering the conclave after he was elected pope.

    Dmitry Lovetsky / AP

    A souvenir vendor sells portraits of Pope Francis at the Vatican on March 18, 2013.

    Perhaps most shockingly of all, he has refused to move into the lavish papal apartment, allegedly saying, “you can fit 300 people here!” Instead, he has chosen to sleep in a simple room in Domus Santa Martha, the same hotel-style residence he stayed in during the conclave that elected him on March 13. 

    The only people who might not be so impressed by his humbleness, ironically, may be the Vatican employees. The pope announced last week that the approximately $2,000 bonus workers at the Holy See traditionally receive every time a new pope is elected must go to the poor instead.

    Related links:

    NBC News coverage of Pope Francis

    Pope Francis: Hypocrisy 'undermines Church's credibility'

    'It was a sign': Lapsed Catholics lured back by Pope Francis

    Riding in style: The evolution of the popemobile


     

     

    184 comments

    Go Pope Frank :) Love this guy.

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    Explore related topics: vatican, rome, st-francis, conclave, pope-francis
  • 15
    Apr
    2013
    12:19pm, EDT

    Pope Francis reiterates 'radical feminist' criticism of US nuns' group

    Max Rossi / Reuters

    Pope Francis, shown Sunday, reaffirmed the church's official criticism of the group representing most U.S. nuns as having 'radical feminist' doctrine.

    By Philip Pullella, Reuters

    VATICAN CITY -- Pope Francis has reaffirmed the Vatican's criticism of a body that represents U.S. nuns that the Church said was tainted by "radical" feminism, dashing hopes that he might take a softer stand with the sisters.

    Francis's predecessor, Benedict, decreed that the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), a group that represents more than 80 percent of the 57,000 Catholic nuns in the United States, must change its ways, a ruling that the Vatican said on Monday still applied.

    Last year, a Vatican report said the LCWR had "serious doctrinal problems" and promoted "radical feminist themes incompatible with the Catholic faith," criticizing it for taking a soft line on issues such as birth control and homosexuality.

    The nuns received wide support among American Catholics, particularly on the liberal wing of the church, as LCWR leaders travelled around the United States in a bus to defend themselves against the accusations.

    On Monday the group's leaders met Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, the new head of the Vatican's doctrinal department, and Archbishop Peter Sartain of Seattle, who has been assigned by the Vatican to correct the group's perceived failings.

    "Archbishop Mueller informed the (LCWR) presidency that he had recently discussed the doctrinal assessment with Pope Francis, who reaffirmed the findings of the assessment and the program of reform, " the Vatican's statement said.

    The Vatican reminded the group that it would "remain under the direction of the Holy See," the statement said.

    It was the nuns' first meeting with Mueller, who succeeded American Cardinal William Levada as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Levada, who retired last year, oversaw the Vatican's investigation of the U.S. nuns.

    A statement from the LCWR said the "conversation was open and frank" and added: "We pray that these conversations may bear fruit for the good of the Church."

    In April 2012, the doctrinal department criticized the LCWR for challenging bishops and for being "silent on the right to life," saying it had failed to make the "Biblical view of family life and human sexuality" a central plank of its agenda.

    The nuns supported President Barack Obama's health-care reform, part of which makes insurance coverage of birth control mandatory, while U.S. bishops opposed it.

    Many nuns said the Vatican's report misunderstood their intentions and undervalued their work for social justice.

    Supporters of the nuns said the women had helped the image of the church in the United States at a time when it was engulfed in scandal over sexual abuse of minors by priests. They were praised by many fellow Catholics and the media for their work with the poor and sick.

    Monday's Vatican statement expressed gratitude for the "great contribution" American Catholic nuns had made in teaching and caring for the sick and poor.

    Related:

    Pope: Hypocrisy 'undermines church's credibility'

    Lapsed Catholics lured back by Pope Francis

    Pope orders church to act 'decisively' to stop abuse

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    475 comments

    It never ceases to amaze me how oppressive the Christian religion continues to be toward women when Christ was revolutionary in his behavior toward women. He defended women and it was a woman who first saw him after he arose from the dead. The patriarchy this primitive ape driven governance structur …

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  • 10
    Apr
    2013
    4:14am, EDT

    'It was a sign': Lapsed Catholics lured back by Pope Francis

    Gregorio Borgia / AP

    Pope Francis waves as he is driven through a crowd in St. Peter's Square prior to the start of his weekly general audience on Wednesday.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Twenty million Americans consider themselves lapsed Catholics, but Pope Francis is convincing many to test the holy waters again with his bold gestures and common touch.

    After years of disenchantment with the church's hierarchy and teachings, former members of the flock say they are willing to give the Vatican a second chance under new leadership.

    Dallas teacher Marilyn Rosa is one of them.

    "He's being studied very closely," Cardinal Edward Egan of the Archdiocese of New York said of Pope Francis, added that wherever he goes, priests want to know how the Pope will change the Catholic Church and what the implications will be. Cardinal Edward Egan is interviewed by TODAY's Lester Holt.

    "It was a sign," Rosa, 57, said of the Argentine Jesuit's election as pontiff last month. "It was like a miracle."

    Born and raised Catholic, Rosa attended parochial schools and had a church wedding for her first marriage. Over the years, she drifted away from the religion that had been such an integral part of her Puerto Rican family's life.

    She questioned the relevance of church policies in the modern world. As a divorced woman, she felt cast out. The pedophile-priest scandals disgusted her.

    Three years ago, she quit going to Mass and joined an evangelical church. But she didn't feel at home and she started to wonder how she could fill the void.

    "The day the pope got elected, I turned on the TV and when I learned he was Latin, I went crazy at home," said Rosa.

    "When they started to talk about how he lived by himself and didn't move into the archbishop's residence, how he took the bus to work, I said, 'I know God is talking to me. This is the man we needed.'"

    On Palm Sunday, she and her second husband "reverted," attending services at Dallas' St. Pius X Catholic Church.

    "It was packed. I had to stand up the whole time. But I felt so happy. It was like a revival," she said.

    Ron Feldman

    Father Peter Mussett of St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Center in Boulder, Colo., had five people tell him they were returning to the faith in a week because of Pope Francis.

    Rosa has kept going to back to St. Pius, encouraged by what she's seen of the pope: from the simple white robe he wears to his rejection of the opulent papal apartment in favor of a spartan guest house.

    "He's not letting himself be controlled by the rest of the church," Rosa said. "He's his own man."

    Embrace of poor, emphasis on service
    It's unknown how many others have joined Rosa around the country and globe and the vast majority of lapsed Catholics have not been enticed back. In the U.S., that's a huge pool of potential "new" members for an institution challenged by secularism and rival religions.

    A 2009 report by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life estimated one in 10 adults in the U.S. was raised Catholic but has broken with the church. Its teachings on abortion, homosexuality, birth control and treatment of women were often cited as reasons.

    Pope Francis hasn't given any hint of radical change on those issues, but his man-of-the-people persona is appealing to some of the unfaithful.

    Tom Peterson, president of Catholics Come Home, which airs ads aimed at the lapsed, said his website traffic tripled the day of the election, adding several thousand visitors. It's been double ever since.

    Some interest could stem from the hubbub surrounding the selection of any pontiff, but Peterson thinks Francis' "love for the poor and his humility is exciting people to a great extent."

    Father Peter Mussett, pastor of the St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Center, which serves the University of Colorado at Boulder, agrees.

    Slideshow: Pope Francis: His life before the papacy

    Marcos Brindicci / Reuters

    Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina was elected to lead the Catholic Church following the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. 

    Launch slideshow

    "I had five people in a week who were saying, 'Pope Francis has inspired me to return to my faith,'" he said. "It's pretty remarkable."

    Brian O'Neill, 48, an Irish-American cop from Washington State, went to Catholic elementary school and a Jesuit high school but hasn't practiced since graduating from a secular college. He says that could change soon.

    The Vatican's stance on social issues, along with the gilded lifestyle of some higher-ups previously drove O'Neill away. Francis' embrace of the poor and his background as a service-minded Jesuit might bring the father of two back.

    "I was shocked and amazed when he started doing those things -- you know, 'No Popemobile for me,'" said O'Neill, who wrote a column for his local newspaper about possibly returning to Catholicism.

    He said that while Francis' views on church teachings might still be far from his own, his election heralds change.

    "When the church says that's the guy we're going to put on St. Peter's throne, that says enough about where the church wants to go," O'Neill said. "Will I go back? I'm planning on it -- if I can find a good service."

    'He's another retro pope'
    Last weekend, when he was formally installed as bishop of Rome, the pope used the opportunity to appeal to defectors, urging them to come back to the fold.

    The News Tribune (Tacoma)

    Brian O'Neill, a cop and father of two from Washington state, is a lapsed Catholic who is considering returning to the church because of Pope Francis.

    It will take more than an invitation for Kathy Budreski, though. The 70-year-old left Catholicism after the abuse scandal and has been attending a Unitarian church in Cape Cod.

    She was heartened to see the cardinals pick a pope from South America, and loved seeing Francis hug a little boy with cerebral palsy after Easter Mass but says he's not a progressive.

    "He has a big heart and he loves the poor people, but he's not going to do anything to change the stance of the church on birth control and gay rights," she said.

    "I don't see him as a mover and shaker. He has some wonderful qualities but he's another retro pope."

    Slideshow: The election of Pope Francis

    /

    Cardinals from around the world gathered in the Vatican to elect the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    Sex-abuse crisis: Experts draft to-do list for Pope Francis

    'Peace to the whole world': Pope urges unity in Easter Sunday address

    Pope chooses simple residence over regal papal apartment

    Full coverage of Pope Francis from NBC News

    610 comments

    The Holy Spirit is hard at work through this new pope to bring home wandering Catholics. For all you misguided people who still insist the Catholic Church conform to your errors such as the acceptance of abortion - ordination of women to priesthood - homosexual lifestyle and gay marriage - and other …

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    Explore related topics: vatican, religion, pope, featured, catholicism, lapsed-catholics, pope-francis
  • 6
    Apr
    2013
    4:59pm, EDT

    Solving the sex abuse crisis: Experts draft a to-do list for Pope Francis

    Stefano Rellandini / Reuters

    Pope Francis waves as he leads the weekly general audience in Saint Peter's Square, at the Vatican on April 3.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Pope Francis ordered the Vatican this week to act "decisively" in protecting children from sexual abuse and punishing predator priests, but his brief statement contained few specifics on how to stem the crisis that has roiled the Catholic Church for a decade.

    The new pontiff directed the Vatican office known as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to "continue the line" on the anti-abuse policies set by his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI.

    Observers say that to restore the church's credibility and ensure the safety of children worldwide, Francis will have to back up his words with actions. Here they offer some recommendations:

    Heads should roll
    The pope should demote or discipline a few bishops who were found to have covered up misdeeds, said David Clohessy, executive director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, noting that Bishop Robert Finn of Kansas City has held onto his diocese even though he was convicted of a misdemeanor for failing to report a pedophile priest.


    Although others said the pope was just being polite, Clohessy was incensed that he greeted scandal-scarred Cardinal Bernard Law during the traditional visit to St. Mary Major the day after his election. "Actions speak louder than words," he said.

    Gabriel Bouys / AFP - Getty Images

    David Clohessy, left, of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests with outreach director Barbara Dorris.

    Name names
    "The church needs to be open about the names of offenders who have been found to be abusers," said Kathleen McChesney, a former FBI official and ex-director of the Office of Child Protection at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. "If you're a diocese and you know that these 10 clergy members abused children, you should put those on the website."

    Church officials may be rightly concerned about the danger of naming a priest who is falsely accused. Thomas Reese, a Jesuit priest and senior fellow at the Woodstock Theological Center, said that to build trust that no coverup is going on, victims' groups should be included in the process of deciding which allegations aren't strong enough to make public.

    Meet with victims
    The pope has been accused of giving the cold shoulder to abuse victims while he was archbishop of Buenos Aires. Whether that's true or not, he needs to give victims plenty of face time now, Reese said. 

    "He has to listen to their stories, reach out to them and apologize -- and do it again and again, and the sooner the better," Reese said. "You don't understand it until you've sat down and talked to these victims. When you hear their stories, it just tears you apart."

    Nancy Wiechec / Catholic News Service via AP file

    Rev. Thomas Reese

    World Youth Day in Brazil in July would be the perfect moment for Francis to sit down and hear those stories first-hand.

    Get new advisers
    Francis should make sure his inner circle includes people who understand the gravity of the crisis. Thomas Groome, chair of the Department of Religious Education at Boston College, said he hopes the pope recruits Cardinal Sean O'Malley, who had to clean up Law's mess, to assist him in Rome.

    The pontiff is less likely to act on Groome's other suggestion: making women, grandmothers in particular, cardinals. He noted that lay cardinals existed centuries ago and that wise old Catholic women with children and grandchildren might bring a new perspective on youth-protection to a church run by childless men.

    Crunch the numbers
    A decade ago, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops commissioned a survey of every diocese in the country that collected data about the extent of the sex-abuse problem. Even though victims' groups claimed there was under-reporting, McChesney said, "people in the church were stunned at the numbers" -- more than 4,000 priests accused of molesting children.

    But predatory priests are not just an American problem. The Vatican should undertake an international survey that would help it identify other regions where abuse is happening, McChesney said.

    Shake up the bureaucracy
    The Vatican should create a new office in charge of the protection of childen, separate from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which would continue to investigate individual abuse claims, McChesney said.

    "They have enough on their plate," she said of the CDF, which needs to plow through a large backlog of complaints against priests.

    The new office, McChesney said, would serve as a sort of professional board of directors -- helping dioceses across the globe replicate anti-abuse programs that have been successful in the U.S. and making sure the world's bishops and religious communities are complying with Vatican guidelines.

    Benedict ordered every diocese in the world to establish policies and procedures to deal with abuse. Two years later, many dioceses have not followed through.

    Related:

    Pope: Stopping sexual abuse key to church's credibility

    New pope packages lure pilgrim tourists

    Pope Francis urges unity in first Easter Sunday address

     

     

    225 comments

    I would also add to the "to do list" controlling human population here on planet Earth. Regardless of whatever else we do or don't do in this world, if we fail to control the exploding human population here on Earth, mankind is totally finished before this century is out, together with most other co …

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  • Updated
    5
    Apr
    2013
    11:05am, EDT

    Pope: Stopping child sexual abuse key to 'credibility' of Catholic Church

    Franco Origlia / Getty Images

    Pope Francis said that the church must "act decisively" to stop child sexual abuse by priests.

    By Philip Pullella, Reuters

    VATICAN CITY -- Pope Francis wants the Catholic Church to "act decisively" to root out sexual abuse of children by priests and ensure the perpetrators are punished, the Vatican said on Friday.

    Francis, in a meeting with the Holy See's doctrinal chief, Archbishop Gerhard Mueller, had declared that combating sexual abuse was important "for the Church and its credibility", a statement said.

    Francis inherited a Church mired in problems and a major scandal over priestly abuse of children. It was believed to be the first time he had taken up the issue of sex abuse with a senior member of his staff since his election on March 13.

    Mueller is head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican department which includes the office of the "promoter of justice", or sex crimes prosecutor, which investigates cases of sexual abuse and decides if priests are to be defrocked.

    Slideshow: Pope Francis: His life before the papacy

    Marcos Brindicci / Reuters

    Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina was elected to lead the Catholic Church following the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. 

    Launch slideshow

    Francis said the department should continue to "act decisively as far as cases of sexual abuse are concerned, promoting, above all, measures to protect minors, help for those who have suffered such violence in the past (and) the necessary procedures against those who are guilty," a statement said.

    It said the pope wanted Catholic bishops around the world to promote and put into place "directives in this matter which is so important for the witness of the Church and its credibility".

    A victims' group, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) said the statement did not go far enough and criticized it for saying that the Church's stance against sexual abuse was "a continuation" of the line wanted by Francis' predecessor, Pope Benedict.

    "Action, not discussion, is needed," SNAP said in a statement.

    "We can't confuse words with actions. When we do, we hurt kids. We must insist on new tangible action that helps vulnerable children protect their bodies, not old vague pledges that help a widely-discredited institution protect its reputation," it said.

    SNAP and other victims groups say there is much still to be discovered about how the Church behaved in the past and want more bishops who were aware of abuse to be held responsible.

    The Catholic Church's crisis began in Boston in 2002 when media began reporting how cases of abuse were systematically covered up and abusive priests shuttled from parish to parish instead of being defrocked and handed over to civil authorities.

    Since then, the Catholic Church in many countries has set up new guidelines to deal with cases of past abuse, prevent new cases, report abuse to police, and stop potential abusers from entering the priesthood in the first place.

    Related:

    Pontiff urges peace in first Easter address

    Pope Francis washes feet of detainees

    Full Vatican coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Fri Apr 5, 2013 8:28 AM EDT

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    135 comments

    I guess refusing to shield and protect child abusers is a good start.

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  • Updated
    31
    Mar
    2013
    10:40am, EDT

    'Peace to the whole world': Pope Francis urges unity in first Easter Sunday address

    In his first Easter Sunday since his election, Pope Francis led an open-air Mass in front of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, offering a message of peace. He called for an end to violence across the world and an easing of tensions in the Korean peninsula. NBC's Claudio Lavanga reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Pope Francis called for worldwide efforts towards peace in his first Easter Sunday address, urging leaders to find diplomatic solutions in Syria and North Korea.

    In his first "Urbi et Orbi" message from the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica, he also asked for reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians solutions to conflicts in several African countries.

    Earlier this month, the former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina stood on the same balcony after being elected as the first pope from the Americas in more than 1,300 years.

    Francis, who has emphasized a humbler style to the papacy, said: "Peace to the whole world, torn apart by violence linked to drug trafficking and by the iniquitous exploitation of natural resources! Peace to this our Earth! May the risen Jesus bring comfort to the victims of natural disasters and make us responsible guardians of creation.”

    Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

    Pope Francis greets the faithful prior to his first 'Urbi et Orbi' blessing from the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica, Sunday.

    He added: “Peace in Iraq, that every act of violence may end, and above all for dear Syria, for its people torn by conflict and for the many refugees who await help and comfort.  How much blood has been shed!  And how much suffering must there still be before a political solution to the crisis will be found?”

    Slideshow: The election of Pope Francis

    /

    Cardinals from around the world gathered in the Vatican to elect the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

    Launch slideshow

    Earlier, the pontiff strode onto a flower-bedecked esplanade facing St Peter’s Square, into which tens of thousands of faithful had gathered from early Sunday, to lead the traditional open-air Mass.

    Francis bowed his head in reflection as the Gospel was sung in Latin, The Associated Press reported, recounting what Christians believe is the central mystery of their faith — the resurrection of Jesus after this death by crucifixion.

    "Let the risen Jesus enter your life,” the pope told worshippers before the service via his Twitter account. "He will receive you with open arms."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related: The evolution of the Popemobile

    This story was originally published on Sun Mar 31, 2013 5:08 AM EDT

    338 comments

    His simplicity is refreshing.

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  • Updated
    31
    Mar
    2013
    1:56pm, EDT

    Riding in style: The evolution of the popemobile

    Slideshow: Riding in style: The evolution of the popemobile

    Alessandro Di Meo / EPA

    Images of the automobiles that have transported popes over the years.

    Launch slideshow

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Comes outfitted in protective bullet-proof glass. Draws a crowd wherever it goes. A driver is included; gold trim is optional.

    Popemobiles also include such amenities as a handrail to let the pope easily stand and wave while in motion, a built-in stereo and arctic-cool air conditioning.

    Eight popes have had their own set of holy wheels since Pope Pius XI got a stretch 460 Nurburg edition Mercedes-Benz in 1930, but the eighth, Pope Francis -- known for taking the bus to work before he was named pope -- may not want all the frills and custom built-ins that popemobiles offer. 

    By retiring, Benedict XVI has passed along a white armored Mercedes SUV, which has a white leather interior with gold trim and a white leather turret that can be raised by hydraulic lift high enough for crowds to see the pope, if he wants to sit. (For longer trips around Italy, Benedict enjoyed his own helicopter.) Bullet-proof Plexiglas that's strong enough to withstand explosions surrounds the turret on three sides. There's an emergency oxygen supply built in, according to The Telegraph. 


    "The pope must feel comfortable. People must be able to see him. People have traveled very far; they want to be able to get a good look at him," said Christoph Horn, Director of Global Communications of Mercedes-Benz, from Stuttgart, Germany. "This is about creating a comfortable and safe environment for the pope to travel in and be seen in.”

    The pre-mobile
    Popes didn't have to wait for the invention of automobiles to be mobile. For centuries, popes traveled by throne when going out on local outings. The popes were carried by 12 bearers (representing the 12 disciples of the church) as they moved through crowds, Ronald Rychlak, a University of Mississippi law school professor who has written numerous books on religion, said.

    Daimler

    The first car used by a pope.

    All that changed when Pope Pius XI got his Benz. The limousine was a gift from the car company, which would provide vehicles for many popes after that.

    "Usually more than one vehicle was provided, especially for the popes in the 1930s," Horn said. "They were traveling a lot, so many popemobiles were built for them."

    Back then, popes traveled in limousines with open tops, he said. Over the years, more than 12 different models of cars and trucks would be provided for popes. Pope John XXIII ushered in a new era of pope cars in 1960 with a Mercedes 300D Landaulet, which had a throne that rose high in the back, The New York Times reported. His successor switched to a 1964 Lincoln model before he went back to the preferred Mercedes brand a year later.

    But don't call it 'popemobile'
    When popes travel abroad for state visits, it's not always possible for the vehicles they use at home to make the journey with them. Instead, customized cars are prepared ahead of the visit, submitted for Vatican approval from the country he will visit.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "The primary level of security is assigned to the host nation," Rychlak said. "If they want to have something like a popemobile for a major parade, let's say they're doing Mass at Yankee stadium or something like that, they would have to make arrangements to ship something over, or that's the kind of situation where there may be a gift made to the pope" by a major car company.

    That was how the car that officially became known for the first time as the "popemobile" came into existence: Pope John Paul II had visited Ireland in 1979, and a boxy yellow Ford Transit van awaited him as his chariot. Last November, The Telegraph reported an Irish businessman had acquired the van from the Dublin Wax Museum, where it had been since the papal visit, and was transforming it into a party bus.

    Many other popemobiles have stayed in the countries they were used in. In 2008, Newsweek got a peek at the popemobile Benedict used for his U.S. tour, describing it as "by far the fanciest and sleekest papal car ever built ... The papal handlers can shift their passenger from zero to 60 in less than eight seconds, but the drivers probably won't exceed 10 mph along the parade routes."

    In 2002, John Paul II asked the media to stop using the term "popemobile," insisting it sounded "undignified."

    A clear need for better security
    John Paul II survived an assassination attempt in 1981 while in St. Peter's Square. A Turkish man was later convicted of firing the shots, which punctured the pope's car and struck him four times. John Paul II survived, but it was clear his wide-open truck wouldn't suffice to protect him. From then on, bulletproof glass has encased popemobiles, although popes have occasionally ridden around without covering for brief periods.

    Arturo Mari / AP

    A 1981 assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II in St. Peter's Square.

    Since adding bulletproof glass, popemobiles have added other necessary features, including ultra-powerful air conditioning to cool down the glass dome that popes sit in, reports The Telegraph.

    Other protection measures include heavy-metal reinforcement on the bottom of the vehicle as well as the other sides, and the driver is always a trusted longtime Vatican employee. There's no partition between the pope and his driver; a microphone enables him to broadcast messages to crowds through speakers outside the popemobile.

    The current weighs five tons and was just presented to Benedict last December by Mercedes-Benz.

    "We work with the members of the Vatican and with the people in charge of the garages of the Vatican," Horn said. "These are all individual vehicles that are built to specifications."

    The new pope's desire to get up close and personal with his faithful has presented challenges for his security detail.

    "The pope's going to want to be up close hugging and touching and meeting people and that's going to be a tremendous concern for his security people," Rychlak said. "His security forces have taken him aside, or probably already have, and are going to say, 'Holy Father, you're putting us in a horrible situation if you don't go along with these things.'"

    They're used to having to say that, though: Benedict didn't always like the feeling of a "shield between him and the people," Rychlak said. Most popemobiles are designed so the glass can be lowered, though.

    This story was originally published on Sun Mar 31, 2013 4:36 AM EDT

    69 comments

    It seems to me that the Popemobile, with all it's bulletproof glass, displays a real lack of faith...

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  • 28
    Mar
    2013
    1:51pm, EDT

    Pope washes feet of young detainees in Holy Thursday ritual

    Osservatore Romano via AFP - Getty Images

    Pope Francis washes the feet of a young offender during a mass at the church of the Casal del Marmo youth prison on the outskirts of Rome as part of Holy Thursday on March 28.

    By Claudio Lavanga, Correspondent, NBC News

    ROME – Since he was elected leader of the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Francis has proved many times over that he wants to break away from clerical privilege, come down from St. Peter’s throne and act as a humble servant of the faithful.

    And on Holy Thursday he reinforced the idea that he will champion social outcasts and the poor by washing the feet of a dozen young inmates in a juvenile detention center.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The washing of feet is an important religious rite on Holy Thursday -- the day Christianity celebrates Jesus’ Last Supper ahead of his crucifixion -- as it re-enacts Christ’s humble gesture toward his disciples before the meal.

    He washed their feet to show that “no servant is greater than his master, nor is a messenger greater than the one who sent him,” according to Gospel of St. John 13:16.  

    But while in the past Francis’ predecessors washed the feet of priests in the Basilica of St. John in Lateran -- the most important of the four major basilicas in Rome -- Francis chose to kneel down before young offenders at the Casal del Marmo Penitentiary Institute for Minors.  


    The group of 12 young people who had their feet washed and kissed by the pope included two young women - the first time a pope included females in the rite. The ceremony has traditionally been limited to men, since all of Jesus' apostles were men.

    Pope Francis took the traditional feet washing ritual a step further today as he washed the feet of dozen young offenders at a detention center in Rome today. ITV's Juliet Bremner reports.

    The young people were aged between 16 and 21 and chosen from different nationalities and religious backgrounds - including two Muslims, according to a Vatican spokesman.   

    “It is a gesture of humility and service,” Father Tom Rosica, a Vatican Press Office spokesperson, said before the ceremony.

    “It teaches that liberation and new life are won not in presiding over multitudes from royal thrones nor by the quantity of bloody sacrifices offered on temple altars, but by walking with the lowly and poor and serving them as a foot-washer along the journey," he added.

    'Viva Papa Francesco!'
    As surprising as the decision by the pope might have seemed, Alessandro Speciale, a Vatican correspondent for Religion News Service, said he was just continuing a tradition he started in Buenos Aires.

    “He has washed the feet of the poor and inmates on most Holy Thursdays as a cardinal and archbishop in Argentina,” Speciale said. “What’s surprising is that, as a pope, he is the one going to the inmates, and not the other way around.”

    Speaking to about 1,600 priests who packed St. Peter’s Basilica for Mass on Thursday morning, Francis talked about the need to concentrate on the people they are ministering to.

    “We need to go out, then, in order to experience our own anointing (as priests)… to the outskirts where there is suffering, bloodshed, blindness that longs for sight, and prisoners in thrall to many evil masters," he said.

    The simple, personal, no-frills style of Pope Francis seems to have won over many Catholics, even jaded believers.  

    Slideshow: The election of Pope Francis

    /

    Cardinals from around the world gathered in the Vatican to elect the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

    Launch slideshow

    "It almost feels like the Vatican found itself a very good marketing and communication adviser,” said Valeria Angela Montis, a 38-year-old Roman.

    “But I must say I am happy to see a pope who doesn't think he is God on earth and teaches what Jesus taught 2,000 years ago…teaching the church seemed to have forgotten years ago. Francesco is an honest pope!" she added.

    Others think the church should look, and learn.

    “The humility Pope Francis is showing is comforting,” said 40-year-old Roman Patrizia Melillo. “This is how the rest of the Church should be: normal, humble, without flaunting its privileges and richness, just like St. Francis taught. Viva Papa Francesco!”

    Related links: 

    Pope chooses simple residence over papal apartment

    Crowds pray with Pope Francis at start of holy week 

    'We're brothers': Pope meets ex-pope for historic lunch

    Pope Francis spoke of being 'dazzled' by girl, possible change of celibacy rule

    582 comments

    I'm a non-believer, but I really like this guy!

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  • 26
    Mar
    2013
    8:29pm, EDT

    Pope chooses simple residence over regal papal apartment

    L'Osservatore Romano via AP, file

    The bedroom of the suite at the Vatican's Santa Martha hotel where Pope Francis is living even though renovations on the papal apartment in the Apostolic Palace have been completed.

    Pope Francis wants to stay for the time being in a simple Vatican residence instead of moving into the spacious and regal papal apartments, the Vatican said on Tuesday.

    The former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina is still living in the Domus Santa Martha, a modern hotel-style residence inside the Vatican City where he stayed during the conclave that elected him on March 13.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Although the papal apartments in the Apostolic Palace - which consist of more than a dozen rooms as well as quarters for staff and a terrace - are available, he shows no desire to move in any time soon, Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said.

    In the past few days Francis has moved out of a single room in the residence, which has some 130 rooms, into a suite so he could have more space to work and to receive people, Lombardi said.

    Francis has set a more austere tone for the papacy than his predecessor Benedict XVI, who gained a reputation for sumptuous costumes. Lombardi says the new pope enjoys the residence's community atmosphere where he lives alongside other clergy.

    L'Osservatore Romano via AFP - Getty Images

    Pope Francis prays with Vatican employees before leading a mass at the Santa Martha chapel at the Vatican on March 23.



    The pope says Mass in its chapel every morning and invites Vatican workers and other guests to attend.

    "I can't make long-term predictions, but for now it seems he is experimenting with this type of simple co-habitation," Lombardi said.

    "It is still a period of getting used to things, of experimentation. Certainly in this phase he has expressed the desire to stay where he is," he said.

    Lombardi said the pope will be using the offices in the Apostolic Palace and its grand, frescoed reception rooms to meet heads of state and delegations, and will continue to appear each Sunday to deliver a blessing from the window of the papal apartments overlooking St. Peter's Square.

    Reuters

    388 comments

    It'll be hard for the church to convince a Jesuit to give up his vows of poverty. I feel like he will probably attempt to stay as long as they'll allow him too.

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