Showing posts with label Domus Sanctæ Marthæ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Domus Sanctæ Marthæ. Show all posts

Saturday, August 9, 2014

Jorge Mario Bergoglio advised Tony Palmer not to become a Catholic

From the Boston Globe reporter, Austen Ivereigh, comes the article, Pope’s Protestant friend dies, but push for unity lives, which has several revelations in it. Among the revelations are details of the Anglican church Tony Palmer was a bishop in, tears came to Bergoglio's eyes because Palmer couldn't receive communion in the Novus Ordo church with his catholic family, and Bergoglio advised his friend not to convert to Catholicism!

Reporter Austen Ivereigh with Francis.

Pope’s Protestant friend dies, but push for unity lives
By Austen Ivereigh
LONDON – The English surgeons who fought to save the life of a badly mangled motorcyclist on the morning of July 20 might have guessed he was someone unusual, since the hospital was receiving calls from Rome, from the pope himself, asking for updates.
The silver Audi that slammed into a Protestant cleric named Bishop Tony Palmer in a quiet country lane that morning, however, left little chance of his surviving, and he died after a 10-hour emergency surgery. The news stunned not just his grieving wife and young adult children, but many across the Christian world who were aware that, behind the scenes, the unlikely friendship of Palmer and Pope Francis was the catalyst of an extraordinary historic breakthrough in relations between the Catholic Church and the evangelical world.
An articulate, laid-back, jovial South African in his early fifties, with a penchant for quirky clerical clothes, Palmer didn’t look or sound much like a conventional Anglican bishop. When I first met him in May, at a coffee shop in Bath, close to where he lived with his family, he explained that he had been ordained by the Communion of Evangelical Episcopal Churches, or CEEC, whose presiding bishop is in Florida.
The CEEC, which was formed in the 1990s, is Anglican. Yet unlike the Episcopal Church in the United States, it’s not part of the Anglican Communion loyal to the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Its leaders see themselves as part of a “convergence” movement, seeking to combine evangelical Christianity with the liturgy and sacraments typical of Catholicism.
That convergence, Palmer told me, “is a precursor to full unity between the Protestant and Catholic Churches.”
Born in Britain, Palmer grew up in South Africa where he worked as a medical underwriter and met and married Emiliana, a non-practising Italian Catholic. After a sudden conversion they began worshipping in an evangelical church. Palmer worked for some years in South Africa for Texas-based Kenneth Copeland Ministries, pioneer of the controversial “prosperity Gospel” which claims that God rewards his faithful with material blessings.
On trips back to Italy to visit Emiliana’s family, the Palmers encountered the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, a movement within the Catholic Church which has absorbed the Pentecostal evangelical traditions of praise-style worship, healing, and an expectation of spiritual gifts. Through the charismatics, Emiliana returned to the Catholic Church, and the Palmers with their young children began attending Sunday Mass. In the 1990s they began spending long periods in Italy, where they were invited to speak at Catholic churches.
In 2003 they moved to Italy full-time to work with Matteo Calisi, head of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in Italy. Palmer increasingly felt at home in the Catholic Church but was unable to affiliate an ecumenical group he founded called the “Ark Community” with Rome because not all his members were Catholics.
Palmer instead found a home in the CEEC, which claims about a million adherents and 6,000 clergy. After further study the CEEC ordained him a priest, giving him a particular mission to Christian unity, and later consecrated him as a bishop. Palmer and Calisi began doing joint missions around the world — which is what took him to Buenos Aires in 2006. Its archbishop, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, had overcome his reservations about the charismatic renewal and enthusiastically backed a 6,000-strong joint Catholic-evangelical gathering that year in Buenos Aires’ Luna Park stadium.
Palmer and Calisi and four others went to meet the cardinal prior to beginning their mission in his diocese. When Palmer told Bergoglio that he was an Anglican evangelical with a Catholic wife and children, the cardinal was curious: how did they live that difference? Palmer told him that it worked very well, but that, since he led his family back to the Catholic Church, he was no longer allowed to take Communion with them.
When Palmer told him that his children asked him why he would join a church that separated a family, he said that Bergoglio’s eyes filled with tears.
“His heart broke,” Palmer recalled.
The cardinal asked if they could remain in touch and meet regularly. Over the years, the Buenos Aires cardinal and the evangelical bishop formed a deep bond, staying in touch by telephone and email between face-to-face meetings.
Palmer and Bergoglio had intense discussions about Christian separation, using the analogy of apartheid in South Africa. They found common ground in believing that institutional separation breeds fear and misunderstanding. Bergoglio, whom Palmer called “Father Mario,” acted as a spiritual father to the Protestant cleric, calming him (“he wanted to make me a reformer, not a rebel,” Palmer told me) and encouraging him in his mission to Christian unity.
At one point, when Palmer was tired of living on the frontier and wanted to become Catholic, Bergoglio advised him against conversion for the sake of the mission.
“We need to have bridge-builders”, the cardinal told him.
In 2012 Palmer’s family moved to England, to allow their son to prepare to enter university there. Palmer had little idea of Bergoglio’s rising star, but received an email three days before the conclave of March 2013 asking for his prayers. When he saw Pope Francis emerge on the balcony, Palmer was thrilled but assumed that their friendship would be over.
Shortly after the New Year, however, he received a call. Francis wanted to know when he was next in Rome, could he come by? On January 14, Palmer spent the morning with Francis in the Vatican residence where he now lives, the Domus Santa Marta.
“We didn’t have an agenda,” Palmer recalled. “He told me that we are brothers and nothing will change our friendship.”
Palmer told him that the following week he would be addressing 3,000 evangelicals at Kenneth Copeland’s international leaders’ conference in Fort Worth, Texas, and would he like to send a word of greeting?
“Let’s make a video,” Francis replied.
“You want me to pull out my iPhone and record you?” asked Palmer, astonished.
“Yes, exactly,” the pope answered.
When he presented the recording to the Pentecostals in Texas, Palmer said that few Protestants knew that the Catholic and Lutheran Churches had signed a historic declaration in 1999 settling the doctrinal issue of the Reformation.
“We preach the same Gospel now,” Palmer told them. “The protest is over.”
Then he played the video, in which Francis addressed them as brothers and sisters and said that with just “two rules” — love God above all, and your neighbor as yourself — “we can move ahead.” He spoke of the sin of separation, and his yearning for reconciliation. “Let us allow our yearning to grow, because this will propel us to find each other, to embrace one another, and together to worship Jesus Christ as the only Lord of History,” he told them.
The delegates reacted rapturously. After the video went viral Palmer began to be inundated by requests from evangelical leaders to be part of what was happening. “People said: this is a new day, this is what we have been waiting for.” Palmer had to cancel his teaching commitments and his own studies simply to cope with the correspondence. He reported it all to Pope Francis in a meeting in April, who was amazed.
Cosa facciamo? “What do we do?” he asked Palmer.
On June 24, Palmer took a group of evangelical leaders who jointly reach more than 700 million people to meet and lunch with Francis, which he reported to me a few days later, as he left for two weeks in South Africa. The delegates included Copeland, the televangelist James Robison, as well as Geoff Tunnicliffe, head of the Worldwide Evangelical Alliance. They told Francis they wanted to accept his invitation to seek visible unity with the Bishop of Rome.
Palmer handed the pope a proposed Declaration of Faith in Unity for Mission the evangelicals had drawn up, which they proposed would be signed by both the Vatican and leaders of the major Protestant churches in Rome in 2017, on the 500th anniversary of the Reformation and the 50th anniversary of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal.
Palmer told me the draft Declaration has three elements: the Nicean-Constantinople Creed, which Catholics and evangelicals share; the core of the Catholic-Lutheran declaration of 1999 making clear there is no disagreement over justification by faith; as well as a final section asserting that Catholics and evangelicals are now “united in mission because we are declaring the same Gospel.”
The closing section speaks of the importance of freedom of conscience and the need for Catholics and evangelicals to respect each other’s mission fields and treat the other with respect, not as rivals. Francis had taken the draft and said he would think about it. Palmer and I agreed to speak again when Francis got back to him, but that was not to be.
Last Wednesday, in Bath, Palmer’s funeral was a Catholic Requiem Mass at which most of the congregation were evangelicals. He was buried in a Catholic cemetery, united at last with the Church he felt at home in.
Pope Francis sent a message, which was tearfully read out by Emiliana Palmer. In it he said he and Palmer were close friends, and like father and son, “Many times we prayed in the same Spirit.” He praised Palmer as a brave, passionate and pure-hearted man in love with Jesus, who left a precious legacy in his passion for Christian unity.
Francis created the strong impression that the work he and Palmer had begun would continue.
“We must be encouraged by his zeal,” the pope said.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Francis taking July off!


According to an article in the International Business Times (Pope Francis Cancels July Appointments, Raises Question If Vatican Is Hiding Declining Health by Esther Tanquintic-Misa), Francis has cancelled his popular Wednesday general audiences in July as well as suspended his daily Novus Ordo Missae in Domus Sanctæ Marthæ until after August.  Edward Pentin writing for News Max (Pope Curtails Schedule, Health Concerns Raised) speculates that Francis' health is on the decline.  We here at Call Me Jorge... are glad to hear of Francis slowing down his schedule and taking some time off.  We hope he makes good use of  this time to reflect on his life.  We pray Francis will find the Faith during this hiatus!


THE HOLY FATHER'S PROGRAMME
FOR JULY AND AUGUST
Vatican City, 14 June 2014 (VIS) – The Holy See Press Office published further information on the Pope's engagements during the months of July and August 2014.
During the month of July, all Wednesday general audiences will be suspended. They will resume on the first Wednesday of August in the Vatican, taking place on 6, 20 and 27 August. 
On Wednesday, 13 August, there will be no general audience as the Pope will travel to Korea (from 13 to 18 August). 
The Angelus prayer will continue to take place in the Vatican every Sunday in July, except during the days of the Holy Father's absence during his trip to Korea (Sundays 15 and 17 August). 
The morning mass at the Domus Sanctae Marthae will be suspended during the summer, from early July until the end of August, and will resume at the beginning of September.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Francis gives a shout out to a heretic?



This past Friday, 4 April 2014, in a homily at the Domus Sanctæ Marthæ, Francis had some interesting remarks.  Quote from Radio Vatican, Pope Francis: Friday Mass in Santa Marta :

The prophets, said Pope Francis, “are all persecuted or misunderstood,” pushed aside – a situation that does not cease to repeat itself after Christ’s death and resurrection, but continues even in the Church. “When we read the lives of the saints, Pope Francis said, “how many misunderstandings [have there been], how many of the saints have suffered persecution… because they were prophets.”:

"Many thinkers in the Church were persecuted, as well. I think of one, now, at this moment, not so far from us: a man of good will, a prophet indeed, who, in his writings reproached the Church for having lost the way of the Lord. He was summoned in short order, his books were placed on the index [the list of works that were banned or restricted to experts because of their problematic, erroneous and even heretical content], they took away his teaching positions – and thus, this man’s life ended – and it was not so long ago. [Now] time has passed, and today he is Blessed. How is it, though, that he, who yesterday was a heretic, is today a Blessed of the Church? It is because yesterday, those who had power wanted to silence him because they did not like what he was saying. Today the Church, who, thanks be to God knows repent, says, ‘No, this man is good!’. Moreover, he is on the way to sainthood: He is a Blessed.”
“All the people whom the Holy Spirit chooses to tell the truth to the People of God suffer persecution,” said Pope Francis – and Jesus “is precisely the model, the icon.” The Lord took upon Himself “all the persecutions of His people.” The Holy Father went on to note that Christians continue to suffer persecution even today. “I dare say,” he added, “that perhaps there are as many or more martyrs now that in the early days,” because they tell the truth and proclaim Christ Jesus to a worldly society in love with ease and desirous of avoiding problems.”

Who was Francis referring to?  Any guesses?  We here at Call Me Jorge... believe we know whom Francis was thinking of - none other than Antonio Rosmini-Serbati, an interesting character to say the least.  Rosmini was always at the center of some controversy whether, it was the success of his religious order, his political intrigues as prime minister of the Papal States (which saw the loss of them), his theological disputes, or his writings.

(Portrait of Antonius Rosmini-Serbati)

His writings Of the five wounds of the Holy Church and The Constitution of Social Justice were condemned in 1849 and placed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum  only to be "dismissed" shortly before he died in 1855.  To this day there is argument over what exactly "dismissed" meant.  The controversy which surrounded him in life continued on after his death when Leo XIII in 1887 condemned forty of Rosmini's propositions contained in his writings.  John Paul II in his 1998 work Fides et Ratio in paragraph #74 mentions Rosmini as one of the "great Christian theologians."  In 2001 Cardinal Ratzinger under John Paul II wrote the NOTE on the Force of the Doctrinal Decrees Concerning the Thought and Work of Fr Antonio Rosmini Serbati, which summed up (we are paraphrasing here) says, "Leo XIII's condemnations were good for their time but today we are smarter than Leo XIII and understand what Rosmini was trying to really say."  So keen on Rosmini was Ratzinger that in 2007 as Benedict XVI he had him beautified.  Since then, not much was heard about Rosmini until Francis' cryptic remark in his homily.  Interestingly, what Francis left out is that Rosmini submitted to the Holy See's decree which placed his two works on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum and he died piously.  In other words, he retracted his errors!  This is can be read in Denzinger's The Sources of Catholic Dogma under the section Errors of Antonius de Rosmini-Serbati in footnote #2.  The forty errors of Rosmini were contained in works published after his death and are proto-Novus Ordo.  It is little wonder John Paul II, Benedict XVI, and Francis think highly of him.

 Below are the condemned forty errors of Rosmini from the book, Denzinger's The Sources of Catholic Dogma.


for more information on Rosmini :

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Jorge and the Swiss Guard


The Pontifical Swiss Guard goes back to the 15th century and Sixtus IV.  They are responsible for the safety of the Pope and the security of the Apostolic Palace.  The Swiss Guard is the de facto military of the Vatican City State.  Since Jorge has declined to live in the Papal Apartments and has chosen to live in the Domus Sanctæ Marthæ (Vatican’s hotel) they are to protect him there.  Sometime in late April 2013, Jorge left his room in the hotel and was surprised to see a Swiss Guardsman standing watch at his door.  The conversation was as follows*:
Jorge: Have you been up all night?
Guard: Yes.
Jorge: Standing? Aren’t you tired?
Guard: It is my duty, your Holiness, for your safety.
 Jorge paused went back into his room and returned with a chair.
Jorge: At least sit down and rest.
Guard: No, the rules do not allow it.
Jorge: The rules?
Guard: My Captain, your Holiness.
Jorge: Well I’m the Pope, and I’m asking you to sit.
Jorge leaves but returns later with some ham and bread which he gave to the bewildered guard.
Jorge: Bon apetit, my brother.
Jorge then turned and left.


Is Jorge trying to stop this Swiss guardsman from doing his duty or is he simply showing compassion for a fellow human being?  A further look at the behaviors of Francis should tip one off as to which is the case.


Notes 

*The original story Fuera del protocolo: Francisco obligó a un guardia a sentarse y le llevó comida appeared online at lanacion.com on 24 April 2013.

Friday, March 28, 2014

"I spy with my little eye something hidden..."

(Francis at the infamous 'Last Lunch' in the Vatican.)
Have you ever played the childhood game I Spy?  "I spy with my little eye something hidden..."  What is Francis hiding in the above photo?  OK, we'll give you a hint...it is something Francis is very fond of.  Any guesses?  Yes, you guessed it correctly his pectoral cross is hidden.  Remember when immediately after he was elected Francis rejected the gold pectoral Crucifix his master of ceremonies had chosen for him and instead kept the silver pectoral cross he wore as a bishop in Argentina?  He was so proud to show it to the world and have the mainstream media gush over how it showed he was humble.  So why is he hiding it now?  Always the politician and wanting to be a ger toshav to his Talmudic friends, Francis slyly tucked his cross into his fascia at the kosher 'Last Lunch'.  See our dear readers, the shape of the cross is offensive to the rabbis. Is the Vatican now a yeshiva?

We will soon have more to say on the kosher 'Last Lunch' which took place at Domus Sanctæ Marthæ in the Vatican City State on 17 January 2014.  Until then, here are a few more photos where you can play I Spy? the hidden... pectoral cross.

(Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois sleeping while playing 'I Spy' at the lecture of Rabbi Jacobson.)
(10 May 2010, 14 Cardinals playing hide the pectoral cross at Jewish Children's Museum.)
(24 March 2009 Cardinals Turkson & Vingt-Trois at New York Museum of Jewish Heritage.)
(Bergolgio & his fellow prelate played hide the pectoral cross in Argentina!)