Sunday, 11 May 2025

PRAY FOR POPE LEO TO BE LEONINE


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Robert Prevost (Pope Leo XIV), with his mother Mildred Martínez and brothers, John and Louis




"Communism has penetrated even Christian circles disguised as solidarity. It is our pastoral duty to expose it." Who said that? Not Cardew the Cad, but one Fr Robert Prevost, Prior General of the Augustinians, now Pope Leo XIV, on May 14, 2010 when addressing the Latin American Bishops' Conference.


True Catholics - the Catholics who prayed novenas and rosaries and offered their Masses for the election of a holy, strong and faithful pope - are now surely on their knees giving thanks for the conclave's choice. Yes, Pope Leo XIV may have made Francis noises in the past. But the tyrant Francis is dead. Deo gratias. And although leopards don't change their spots, the outlook on life of all except diehard priests and prelates of the Bergoglian sect must have vastly improved with his passing and +Prevost's elevation to the Chair of Peter.


Not that the man who rules the Petrine See is as important as he's been cracked up to be since Vatican II. Papolotry and popesplaining alike we hope are a thing of the past. We pray daily that the Pope will get on with the Vicariate of Christ (formally rejected by Jorge Bergoglio) and be truly leonine about its business: guarding the Magisterium of the Roman Catholic Church and saving souls.



Fr Robert Prevost with Pope John Paul




Dr Peter Kwasniewski, posting on Facebook:



 I see a lot of panic and pessimism about Leo XIV out there among traditionalists because of his continuity of mind with Francis. I think this reaction is a mistake, for a few simple reasons.

 

1. We were never likely to get a pope who was not, in many respects, in continuity with Francis and the Vatican II mindset. Yes, we might have dreamt of Sarah or Erdo or Pizzaballa, but when you think about it, the progressives had the majority all along; and even a conservative would have paid at least lip service to his predecessor and to the last Council. Regret it all you want, it's "what they do."

 

2. We were never very likely to escape a Boomer pope. However, there's a huge difference between someone born in 1936 and someone born in 1955. Bergoglio came of age in the delirious ecstasy of Vatican II and was forever stamped by that Woodstock experience. Prevost was only 10 years old when Vatican II ended, and while he too grew up in the post-nuclear wasteland, the relationship to the event was quite different.


 

Fr Prevost with Pope Benedict XVI

 


Let's put it this way: Bergoglio was emotionally codependent on Vatican II, whereas Prevost is only conceptually committed to it. This is a step on the path to the next pope, who will be not quite as conceptually committed as Prevost, until a time comes when a pope arrives for whom Vatican II is just one among many councils, no more. Yes, it's a darn slow process, but that's how human generations work, and we have to remember that instant results are given by computers, not by history.

 

3. A difference in personality and approach can make a HUGE difference on the ground. There are innumerable indications that Prevost is a vastly different personality than Bergoglio, all in positive ways, and that he does not want to go around making enemies and shooting people down.

 

If we could just get some breathing room for a few years, that would be a win at this stage. Moreover, there's no doubt that one reason an American was elected was to clean up the Vatican financial disaster: "Surely an American can raise money and fix problems!" But to do this well, you have to stop waging war on conservatives and traditionalists, who have at least some sway over public perception and the flow of donations. A man who's trying to fix a broken institution is more likely to exercise discretion and welcome different parties to the table.

 

4. We owe it to any man in high office to pray for him, to give him a chance to lead in that office, to let him make some mistakes (as any fallen human being will do), and to refrain from premature condemnation. This is not naivete or wishful thinking; it's a matter of justice and charity, what we owe to our fathers at all levels, in the family, in the parish, in the diocese, in the universal Church.

 

Don't misunderstand me: I'm not saying we should not call out evils when we must. But must we do that 24/7? Can we not exercise some self-restraint, and pray a rosary instead of firing off the next barrage? Might we even consider... ignoring the pope for long stretches of time, so that we don't fall into a subtle papolatry that makes him the be-all and end-all of Catholicism?
The church where little Robert Prevost was an altar boy. By 2011 it was empty. Closed. Sold.


 

Some people who read this will no doubt be tempted to say: "Aha! Then why did you not take your own advice with Francis? You were always criticizing him!" Well, actually, in the first couple of years, I tried very hard NOT to do so, and to point out all the good and orthodox things he said and did (you can read that in the first chapters of my "Road from Hyperpapalism to Catholicism," vol. 2).

 

It was only when the errors and wickedness began to cry out to heaven for vengeance that I could no longer keep silent about them; it was time for confrontation and condemnation. With Leo XIV, we are not even CLOSE to that point, so why don't we start off with benevolence and beneficence, rather than antagonism?

 

Lastly, a reminder to one and all:
Not to pray for someone because you think they are hopeless is a form of the sin of despair.

 

Prayer is real, and the grace it asks for is real. A bad pope can become worse if we fail to pray for him, and a good pope can become still better through our prayers for him. That is why I will never stop asking the Lord to send His grace upon this man who bears the weight of the world on his shoulders.


For more biographical details on the new pope go to:  https://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-pope-robert-prevost-pope-leo-xiv/




The then Cardinal Robert Prevost, on X 

 


Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of thy faithful, and enkindle in them the fire of your love 

58 comments:

  1. It will be a couple of years before we have seen enough action by Pope Leo to be able to rate the man as a pope. After 12 turbulent years of Pope Francis we should have learned (again) that you can't trust what some people say, you can only learn their real intentions by what they do. Pray Pope Leo will act as a man of true faith and integrity.

    Pope Leo has a difficult juggling act ahead of him. As he stood on the balcony for the first time facing that cheering crowd, you could hear behind him the different factions sharpening their knives. The progressives, the traditionalists, the feminists, the gays, the socialists, the synodalists, all will be assessing him with a different lens, and making their plans.

    Pope John Paul II kept the faith and unity. Pope Benedict couldn't juggle the factions, they drove him out of office. Pope Francis was a better juggler, he pushed through reforms, and didn't cause the Church to visibly disintegrate, but left a lot of repair work to be done. Pope Leo may prove to be a centralist, trying to keep all the different factions united, maybe even happily united.

    So, after two years of Pope Leo, what can we hope for? That the teachings of Christ have been affirmed and propagated. That the Church will be still unified.

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  2. Valeria Kondratiev11 May 2025 at 20:42


    I think Pope Leo XIV is an intelligen man who has actually read and studied the writings of the pope whose name he chose for himself

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  3. Pope Francis was traumatizing.

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    Replies
    1. Patty Berry he was traumatising, yes, but he wasn't a pope.

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  4. I pray this is the case. Maybe he sees the writing on the wall as Francis never could, if nothing else.

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  5. Time will tell - we live in Hope.

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  6. Keith Verrills11 May 2025 at 20:46


    Beautiful Catholic family.

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  7. Josh Andre Felicita11 May 2025 at 20:55


    "...the tyrant Bergoglio is dead."
    Hail Julia, our judge at the second coming, you were crucified, died, and rose again to save us..., or to condemn us. Hail!

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    1. Josh Andre Felicita I judge deeds by distinguishing good from bad, as we're all called to do daily. I do not judge the doers of those deeds. That's the prerogative of Christ alone.

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  8. Dominick V. Uleano11 May 2025 at 21:37


    The cardinals appointed by a globalist liberal master, himself a stooge of the deep state new world order, have carried their orders well. And they have appointed another modernist to carry the torch…
    Lest we forget, this one also demoted Strickland along with Bergoglio…helped to push vaccines “calling getting them an act of charity”. And his entire USCCB congratulated JOE BIDEN as a catholic president upon his “election”.
    Furthermore, after this guy stepped out in his costume at St Peter’s…James Martin rejoiced, and MANY FACEBOOK pages hosted by DEMOCRATS and leftists hailed him as “a stunning rebuke of Trump on the Vatican front”.
    I really don’t know how much more the masses need to wake up.
    They’d rather point to him and say
    “But look!! He doesn’t support women priests
    “Look! He’s pro-life”
    “BUT SEE! He’s for the poor!”
    “At least he doesn’t want homosexual marriages!”
    My dear friends, if THIS is where we have descended to, where THE ABOVE is the new benchmark for “traditionalism”, we’ve really become to accustomed to eating scraps. So much so…that the mere glimmer or concession to “Catholicism” makes us rejoice. Meanwhile, we ignore the rest.

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  9. Christina Martinez Dominick V. Uleano the funny thing is, I hear he is a registered Republican and voted for Trumo.11 May 2025 at 21:39


    Dominick V. Uleano the funny thing is, I hear he is a registered Republican and voted for Trumo.

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    1. Dominick V. Uleano11 May 2025 at 21:39

      or
      Christina Martinez So is bishop Barron I hear. 🙄 Not that it means much…they can wear costumes, choose fancy titles, go on television, and play pretend all they want.
      It’s their actions that matter.

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    2. Christina Martinez11 May 2025 at 21:40


      Dominick V. Uleano it means something when they didn’t vote Democrat as some princes of the Church do.

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    3. Christina Martinez
      We have plenty of (pretend) Catholics in this group who are democrats. Registering one way or the other doesn’t mean much.

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    4. Dominick V. Uleano Dominick, we must PRAY to Jesus for reparations of evil, pray for hearts, minds words and actions be CHANGED for the good.
      I’m concerned as you are but lest we forget Miracles are to be had by those that pray and believe
      Historically speaking God has always had this

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  10. Let's pray for him & not judge. Give him a chance.

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  11. Lisa Durchholz Wagner11 May 2025 at 21:44


    He didn’t “cover” anything up. 🙄
    There were accusations made, but insufficient evidence found.
    HUGE difference.
    https://dev3.ncronline.org/.../cardinals-former-diocese...
    Cardinal's former diocese denies claim of clerical sexual abuse cover-up
    DEV3.NCRONLINE.ORG

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    1. Mancine Kraemer Patti11 May 2025 at 21:45


      Lisa Durchholz Wagner many accusations of other priests --no eveidence was found because HE NEVER INVESTIGATED THE ALLEGED SEXUAL ALLEGATIONS....we all wanted a moral , honest, God-loving traditional Pope--but he does not check all the boxes

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    2. Lisa Durchholz Wagner11 May 2025 at 21:45


      Mancine Kraemer Patti the Peruvian legal authorities actually DID investigate.

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    3. Mancine Kraemer Patti11 May 2025 at 21:46


      not according to the articles i read--hey I hope they are wrong but in my spirit--my discernment --in his eyes--he is very much like Francis--that must be why they got along so well

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    4. Dominick V. Uleano11 May 2025 at 21:47


      Lisa Durchholz Wagner When they’re all in cahoots with each other, and “ investigate” themselves…of course they’re going to bury it. There’s always insufficient evidence when they’ve had a chance to hide it or alter the story sufficiently.
      Our own American government covers for their loyal globalists well…and they do the same thing. Ol’ Bill and Hillary are still walking free today.
      How do you think some folks get away with things for many years before new evidence “suddenly and shockingly” comes to light.
      It’s all a game.

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    5. Lisa Durchholz Wagner11 May 2025 at 21:48


      The Church is not “in cahoots” with ANY legal authorities.
      If they were no one would ever be prosecuted! 🙄

      Delete
    6. Dominick V. Uleano11 May 2025 at 21:49


      Lisa Durchholz Wagner You do realise, of course, that the new world order deep state (headed by the Soros and Schwabs of the world) own and control the highest echelons of church and state alike, right?
      And that Vatican II was nothing less than the coming out party of the liberal infiltration that they’d been building for years in the “hallowed halls” of Rome.
      Nothing (your government or your church hierarchy) is what it once was. Both are the same den of corruption…with charlatans in costumes on both realms.

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    7. Ann Dorries Prosek11 May 2025 at 21:50


      Lisa Durchholz Wagner Thank you.

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  12. Hope he does well
    But it took years for many to realize what Francis was, including popular commentators
    Some never admitted it
    If similar or worse, he should be given as little runway as possible to "make a mess "

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  13. "tyrant bergoglio?" Julia, this is hardly Christian of you.

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    Replies
    1. Olivia Hall do you recall how Our Lord described the scribes and pharisees? "Hypocrites." "Blind guides." "Whited sepulchres." "Serpents." "Generation of vipers."
      Our Lord was warning the Jews that their teachers and leaders were evil.

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  14. I hope that quote is true
    Benedict somewhat addressed this as the "dictatorship of relativism"
    Which would attack Catholicism, western society, and any notion of enduring principles or absolute truth. Even gender
    So, I'm hoping the language about dialogue, building bridges, and synodality don't turn into the same thing. Even though already somewhat baked in post V2

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  15. Matt Pag - I’m praying for Pope L14. We will eventually learn who he is. And I’m going to remain hopeful unless he gives me cause not to.
    Honestly, we are so blessed that Tagle, Fernandez, McElroy, etc didn’t walk out there!!! 🙏🏼
    Impossible to know just yet how many of L14’s past statements were his alone, vs statements of a man under a vow of obedience.
    And we forget that Bishops and Cardinals, though certainly successors to the Apostles, are still bound (at some level) to obedience to the Pope.
    And we all know how mean-spirited and vindictive Francis was when anyone “crossed” him. 😢
    We need to pray for his soul, as well. 🙏🏼

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    1. Thomas Landry, yes I too was praying for the soul of Francis. But I felt uncomfortable doing it. Then I learned that St Thomas Aquinas in "Summa Theologica" says we should not pray for unbelievers, schismatics, heretics or apostates.
      So better to pray for all the Holy Souls in Purgatory (which I'm sure you do, anyway).

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  16. Suzanne Cooper Dillon11 May 2025 at 22:20

    Some people cannot feel alive unless they're complaining. Oh, look...

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  17. Strickland’s response was rather measured. A wait and see attitude, said Leo 14 made a few bad decisions as Cardinal but on the other hand if there is hope to get him reinstated he’s certainly wise not to go on an angry rant. That might be the case too with other internet traditionalists. They’re hopeful, guarded, they know he’s not Burke, Sarah, or Vigano, but they want a pope who might be more sympathetic, any rash labeling of the guy would make Latin Mass people look bad and less likely to get listened to by Rome???

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  18. Jeanette Lawrence Ghioto11 May 2025 at 22:32


    He was also endorsed by Cardinal Burke. We need to pray the Petrine graces upon him !

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  19. As a new Catholic convert and a proponent of TLM, I'm shocked at how much American Catholics find so much wrong with the Pontiff and he's only been a Pope for barely 2 days, but they make excuses for Trump. Makes you wonder who your allegiance is to.

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    1. Thyda Sieng Thank you for saying that. I truly struggle to understand how Catholics can place more trust in Trump over someone who has dedicated his life to God and strives to live a holy life. Have they lost faith in God's divine providence? A serious examination of humility seems much needed.

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    2. Tracy Grabinski Attar11 May 2025 at 22:34


      Exactly - he was hand picked by the lavendar mafia. If we had a Holy Spirit conclave, we would have gotten Sarah or Burke. Realize the smoke of satan entered the Church awhile back. Obviously, God is allowing this to happen, though.

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    3. Tracy Grabinski Attar have you any evidence for the claim that he was hand picked by the lavendar (sic) mafia, please?

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  20. Praying to St. Paul for him.

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  21. Maryrose Sanchez11 May 2025 at 22:42


    Note he look the name of Pope Leo X111 who wrote the powerful prayer to Saint Michael the Archangel ( invoking prayer for protection in the face of evil and spiritual warfare).
    Pope Leo XIV, may he go back to tradition. First Mass was in Holy Latin very spiritual & sacred.✝️
    He mentioned not being modernity. Christ is King.👑Jesus 🌟is Lord.✝️✨🕊️💫
    Pray.🙏

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  22. Luzaideth Schulte11 May 2025 at 22:43


    A friend pointed out how Our Lord chose Peter instead of John to be his Rock. Peter who denied him 3 times who had short temper instead of his beloved disciple? God chooses broken vessels. I will give him a chance and pray. One wrong move could cause schism and he knows it. Let's see how things develop.

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  23. Do your only part! Pray!

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    1. Julia du Fresne yeah watch, not judge and when you don't like what you see, you pray more

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    2. Gina Nagy Our Lord requires that we discern good from evil in deeds, but not in the doers of those deeds. And "when you don't like what you see" is a good example of judging deeds as Our Lord requires of us.

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    3. Keith Verrills11 May 2025 at 22:50


      Gina Nagy It isn’t your only part! That’s a cop out. ACTION! Christians who can are OBLIGED TO ACT TO SEE THAT THE RIGHT THING HAPPENS.

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  24. Helen McFarlane11 May 2025 at 22:58


    Religion causes war! Cant see what the Catholic Church is doing for anyone apart from money grabbing. After visiting far too many of the palatial, extravagant churches through Europe over the years, obviously the poor were supplementing a few at the top. In fact we were quite disgusted and sad hearing about all the poor parishioners starving in the gutters & the ‘men only’ heirachy living like kings in gold bejeweled castles.
    Sick of Pope stories, he’s just a man! It was last weeks news.

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    1. Helen McFarlane men cause war, not religion.
      Pope Leo XIV isn't "just a man". He is Christ's VIcar on earth.
      Please cite your evidence for the 'poor parishioners starving in the gutters' and the heirachy' l(sic) 'lving like kings in gold bejeweled castles'.
      The Catholic Church is the world's largest institutional charity. And the churches you complain of were built for the honour and glory of God.

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  25. The catholik cherch is responsible for sending millions to Hell.
    A CHRISTIAN religion.......it is NOT!!!

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    1. Ross Burr you're clearly privy to information the rest of us can't access. Could you cite your references please as we'd be so interested to know just who is in Hell.

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  26. Alicia Jmj Victory12 May 2025 at 00:53


    Jason Mills I like your run-down of our newly elected Pope! I hope Strickland and Pavone will be reinstated. I believe our ‘dear’ Cardinal from south Omaha, Cupich, (smile or no smile) has evil intent and pushes pro gay/trans agenda which (to me) is like advocating for Sodom & Gomorrah behavior. AND we must eradicate homosexuality among our priests ( shame on Ryan, Bernardin, McCarrick & others for what they did to young seminarians & others). As for Peru, I heard various stories and the truth is somewhere in there. I hope Pope Leo xiv doesn’t send mixed messages like I believe our former Pope engaged and no pachamama in our blessed churches, ever. God bless and keep our Pope Leo!!!

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  27. Jason Mills
    Catholicism has always taught that the death penalty is sometimes permissible to defend the common good. Even John Paul II said it should be rare yet permissible
    Francis inserted a fallible line in a catechism that said it's not admissible due to modern prison systems.
    Even the veracity of the statement is questionable, as there are still attacks and murders in prison.

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  28. Silvia Schnitzer13 May 2025 at 23:40


    He is a Holy man!

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  29. Waiting to see fruits from the holy spirit…..but….. just what if….removing strickland and a few other things-that he was just going along with francis et al—— playing the long game?? Maybe? Maybe it’ll be better than his past tweets and actions. We really need to pray a lot so the holy spirit help him be a christ-centered pope and reverses some of these “liberal-ish” past actions. Pray pray pray

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  30. Sharon Juenemann13 May 2025 at 23:42


    Born in America but only spent 1/3 of his life in America. I heard about protecting the predator priests. I think the Synod should be cancelled. The church is not a Democracy. Praying when he was elevated the Lord woke him up to the fact we need to backtrack and go back to fix the errors post Vatican II. Vatican II did not stop the Latin mass. I am studying that directly and they said the Vatican II documents said the preferred language is Latin. Organ and chant are the preferred instruments. It is the errors that were not corrected that put the Catholic church into this two church mode. Post-Vatican II some churches removed the Crucifix and removed the high altar, removed the communion rail and moved the Tabernacle away from the center of the church behind the altar. These errors need to be corrected.

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  31. Jonathan Robert Schwartzbauer13 May 2025 at 23:42


    Regarding the Strickland issue, that was all Francis. As prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, he didn’t really have say on the issue. Francis told him what to do and he had too.
    The real test will be whether or not Cupich gets promoted to prefect of that selfsame dicastery.

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  32. Agnes B. Bullock13 May 2025 at 23:44

    Agnes B. Bullock

    If he were staunchly pro life he would not have helped remove Bishop Strickland, nor would he have protected a single pedophile priest

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    1. Agnes B. Bullock not sure he had a choice-probably had to go along with francis

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