The real baby killers are the people who are against gun regulations...they led to the slaughter of real, live babies at Sandy Hook.
And that has to do with this thread . . . or reality . . . how ?
__________________
On the third day he rose again in accordance with the Scriptures;
he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead,
and his kingdom will have no end.
The only people raising their voices loudly and publicly are the victims and liberal nuns.
You are misinformed. But you can do your own research.
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On the third day he rose again in accordance with the Scriptures;
he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead,
and his kingdom will have no end.
As a Catholic, I'm happy to see him go. Unfortunately, his successor is likely to continue the extreme conservative Catholicism advocated by Pope Benedict XVI.
If I were a Cardinal and had a vote, it would go to:
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GO GATORS!!
A man is respected not for how tall he stands, but for how often he bends to help, comfort and teach.
The Vatican’s diplomatic service, it is sometimes said, is the most experienced and capable in the world. This may be an exaggeration, but many ambassadors in Rome do judge the quality of their Vatican counterparts highly. Who are these diplomats?
We all know the key names. After the Pope, there is the secretary of state, now Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, and the "foreign minister," now Archbishop Dominique Mamberti. But there are other effective workers hidden from public view. Monsignor Pietro Parolin is one of them.
When the Pope met with Muslim leaders on September 25, Parolin was there. When the Pope met with Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert December 13, Parolin was there. When there were tensions in Vatican relations with Vietnam and North Korea, Parolin traveled to those countries on delicate diplomatic missions. In short, whether in Rome or abroad, Parolin has in recent years been one of the Church’s most tireless and effective diplomats. And, almost always, out of the headlines. And that is why we honor him publicly here, as one of our "Top Ten" people of 2006. ...
... On a lighter note, Parolin achieved a certain notoriety during 2006 via the internet as a possible future Pope. A note about the papal prophecies of the medieval Abbot Malachy posted on the Wikipedia website speculated that Parolin might be the "Petrus Romanus" ("Peter the Roman") whom Abbot Malachy predicts will be the last Pope before the end of the world. The Wikipedia entry reads: "Because no number is assigned to Petrus Romanus (Malachy’s 112th "Pope"), it is possible that (Peter the Roman) may take on the role of the Pope without putting on the robe of the Pope. Under this possible scenario, a catastrophe at the Vatican (perhaps a terrorist attack) could wipe out the top leadership of the Church during either a consistory or a conclave of the College of Cardinals. As a result, with no viable College surviving to elect a new pontiff, this particular scenario would have a surviving official of the Roman Curia succeeding to the top leadership of the Church but not as Pope. Since he would not rise to the papacy itself but instead would become, in effect, the top caretaker of the Church, he would not need to assume a new papal name such as Peter; thus he would keep the name he has had since his birth in Italy, and that name already would be Peter (or, in Italian, Pietro). Currently (that is, as of March 2006) there is only one such candidate for Petrus Romanus within the Roman Curia. His name is Pietro Parolin..."
In August, 2009 Archbishop Parolin was appointed to be the Vatican's representative in Venezuela. Cardinals are traditionally elected to the papacy but the only requirement stipulated by Canon Law is for the candidate to be an unmarried Catholic male.
The real baby killers are the people who are against gun regulations...they led to the slaughter of real, live babies at Sandy Hook.
Real baby killers, kill real babies. So that woman... Melinda Herman, I think? Saved her own and two children's lives by shooting an adult with a weapon with the verboten capacity? Baby killer. If she were to get pregnant and abort a prospective third child? Not a baby killer.
He's resigning so that the next pope can make him a saint before he dies. (Sort of like getting to be president on condition that you pardon your predecessor.)
How many people do you know who are 86 years old, maintain a grueling schedule, write often and frequently travel to other countries?
Who among us expects to work until we are 86 with a schedule that would make a middle aged man tired? For that matter, who expects to still be working at 86 years old?
The only people raising their voices loudly and publicly are the victims and liberal nuns.
The children and parents of those children have a right to be outraged. However, to assume that all or the majority of priests are molestors is like assuming that all Vietnam vets murdered children or fragged their officers.
We live two house down from the Rector of the Cathedral in Orlando. He is 68 years [as I am}, visits the 33rd street jail, visits the numerous nursing homes in downtown Orlando and is often called one, two or three times a night to visit one of 3 hospitals to comfort the dying. He must sometimes visit hospitals to be with the parents of a dying child. To do so has taken a toll on him. He works harder than almost anyone I know.
About a year ago, I had the honor of meeting a priest who is 82 years old and still tending to his flock in the poorest parts of Appalachia. When he was a young man, he helped his parishioners to build their small houses, many of which have neither running water nor electricity.
He told of a family who had no floor in one bedroom because they had to burn it to keep warm two winters ago. He discovered it when visiting their small house.
He fell twice in one day while he was visiting our Church. Still, he helps his flock.
The Church has taken steps (albeit much too slowly) to curb such abuses.
Nevertheless, the vast majority of priests are good men who have given of themselves to serve others.
The children and parents of those children have a right to be outraged. However, to assume that all or the majority of priests are molestors is like assuming that all Vietnam vets murdered children or fragged their officers.
We live two house down from the Rector of the Cathedral in Orlando. He is 68 years [as I am}, visits the 33rd street jail, visits the numerous nursing homes in downtown Orlando and is often called one, two or three times a night to visit one of 3 hospitals to comfort the dying. He must sometimes visit hospitals to be with the parents of a dying child. To do so has taken a toll on him. He works harder than almost anyone I know.
About a year ago, I had the honor of meeting a priest who is 82 years old and still tending to his flock in the poorest parts of Appalachia. When he was a young man, he helped his parishioners to build their small houses, many of which have neither running water nor electricity.
He told of a family who had no floor in one bedroom because they had to burn it to keep warm two winters ago. He discovered it when visiting their small house.
He fell twice in one day while he was visiting our Church. Still, he helps his flock.
The Church has taken steps (albeit much too slowly) to curb such abuses.
Nevertheless, the vast majority of priests are good men who have given of themselves to serve others.
I respect what you have said in your post. I hope you can read/watch this 60 minutes report about this brave Irish Archbishop Diarmuid Martin. Anything short of what he did, is not doing enough.
Quote:
When Martin became archbishop, he provided the Murphy Commission with 65,000 files his predecessor had refused to turn over. In his sermons, he confronted the Church head-on for the behavior that caused the scandal. Now the church is at a breaking point; now is not the time to forget he says. "There's a real danger today of people saying, 'The child abuse scandal is over. Let's bury it. Let's move on,'" he tells Simon. "It isn't over. Child protection and the protection of children is something that will go on...for the rest of our lives and into the future. Because the problems are there," says the archbishop.
Quote:
(CBS News) The child sex abuse crisis and cover-up in the Catholic Church of Ireland has taken a devastating toll on one of the most Catholic countries in the world. Some parishes that once saw 90 percent Sunday Mass attendance are down to 2 percent. A country that once produced so many priests that they were considered an important export now doesn't have enough for its own churches. And, despite the publication of the Murphy Commission's report, a scathing analysis of the abuse and cover-up, the scandal is not over, says Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, one of the highest ranking church officials to openly criticize the Catholic Church.
__________________
Life: Live it
What's slow?
My grandma is slow.
I bet YOU would like it if she was fast?
I bet SHE would like it if she was fast.
GatorCountry is the best Gator Sports board, and also the most conservative.
In August, 2009 Archbishop Parolin was appointed to be the Vatican's representative in Venezuela. Cardinals are traditionally elected to the papacy but the only requirement stipulated by Canon Law is for the candidate to be an unmarried Catholic male.
lacuna, another very chilling possibility is Peter Turkson of Ghana.
If elected pope he becomes a Roman.
Google him and/or check his Wikipedia and note his views on globalism and the establishment of a worldwide economic authority.
__________________ The NCAA in responding to Alabama's textbook appeal called Alabama a "serial repeat violator" with an "abysmal infractions track record" and an "extensive recent history of infractions cases unmatched by any other member institution in the NCAA."
How many people do you know who are 86 years old, maintain a grueling schedule, write often and frequently travel to other countries?
Who among us expects to work until we are 86 with a schedule that would make a middle aged man tired? For that matter, who expects to still be working at 86 years old?
I know people 86 years old and older who still have a sense of humor.
__________________ It takes a lot of time to be a genius, you have to sit around so much doing nothing. – Gertrude Stein
I respect what you have said in your post. I hope you can read/watch this 60 minutes report about this brave Irish Archbishop Diarmuid Martin. Anything short of what he did, is not doing enough.
Well...up until last year, there wasn't any precedent in how to handle this type of institutional corruption. But now we know...
....a reduction of schollies, and a 2 year bowl ban, should do the trick.
OK, there's really no defending the practice of covering up these abuse cases (let alone the actual abuse itself). It was straight up wrong.
But that doesn't make the whole Church wrong, and certainly doesn't serve to reverse or undo centuries of good the Church has done. What's more, the percentage of priests involved in such cases, is diminimus, and the number of victims compared to the Faithful who have been well served, is microscopic. Really, less than a zit on a cow's ass, proportionately speaking.
The Church has taken (and is taking) significant steps to address this issue; but again, wieghing the good of the Church vs. the bad represented by this issue, the Church comes out way ahead--far more so, than so many other institutions, which have even worse percentages, even on this issue (child sex abuse).
e.g.--should we dismantle public education for the very same reason? It has a higher incidence of child sex abuse than the Cat. Church (or most any other church, for that matter). And public education has given us more and worse criminals, than most churches, by far--while churches do way more to fix criminals....
__________________ "Too much sanity may be the greatest maddness of all--to see life as it is rather than as it should be.”
Well...up until last year, there wasn't any precedent in how to handle this type of institutional corruption. But now we know...
....a reduction of schollies, and a 2 year bowl ban, should do the trick.
OK, there's really no defending the practice of covering up these abuse cases (let alone the actual abuse itself). It was straight up wrong.
But that doesn't make the whole Church wrong, and certainly doesn't serve to reverse or undo centuries of good the Church has done. What's more, the percentage of priests involved in such cases, is diminimus, and the number of victims compared to the Faithful who have been well served, is microscopic. Really, less than a zit on a cow's ass, proportionately speaking.
The Church has taken (and is taking) significant steps to address this issue; but again, wieghing the good of the Church vs. the bad represented by this issue, the Church comes out way ahead--far more so, than so many other institutions, which have even worse percentages, even on this issue (child sex abuse).
e.g.--should we dismantle public education for the very same reason? It has a higher incidence of child sex abuse than the Cat. Church (or most any other church, for that matter). And public education has given us more and worse criminals, than most churches, by far--while churches do way more to fix criminals....