Tuesday, October 13, 2015

( The Lucky Go Happy Poppy Report ) Patcnews: October 10, 2015 The Patriot Conservative News Tea Party Network Reports The Lucky Go Happy Poppy Report © All copyrights reserved By Patcnews



 look At The Good Happy Go Lucky Poppy He is Flipping A Pizza Now That is Funny

 

The Good Happy Go Lucky Poppy came up with Holly Heavenly Boost Maximum Energy Drink 


It's Pope Francis as Mucho Grande
Do you have A Green Card ????


The Catholic Church Sexual Abuse Scandal
God Created Adam and Eve Not Adam and Stave and No Way Did God Create Eve and Sue.


 
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Pope Francis: ‘No effort must be spared’ to prevent Catholic Church abuses

  

Pope Francis Ignoring child sex abuse scandal, the catholic church Loves Pedophiles that is the truth Pure Evilness Catholic leaders call on Pope Francis to resign

   








Ignoring child sex abuse scandal, Pope Francis urges ’emergency’ action to combat ocean litter


 Amid a sexual abuse scandal, Pope Francis calls ocean litter an "emergency." (Buda Mendes/Getty Images)

Amid a child sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church, which Pope Francis has yet to directly address, Francis on Saturday decried the “emergency” of plastic debris littering the Earth’s oceans.

What did Francis say?

Francis issued a message aimed at “galvanizing” Christians to begin working to conserve the Earth’s environment, according to the Associated Press. A more liberal pope, environmental conservation is one of Francis’ most emphasized issues.
“Sadly, all too often many efforts fail due to the lack of effective regulation and means of control, particularly with regard to the protection of marine areas beyond national confines,” Francis said.
“We cannot allow our seas and oceans to be littered by endless fields of floating plastic,” he explained. “Here, too, our active commitment is needed to confront this emergency.”
To combat what he sees as a growing problem, Francis urged Christians to “pray as if everything depended on God’s providence and work as if everything depended on us.”

Why is this a problem?

It’s true that a multitude of Christians worldwide see the environment, and working toward its conservation, as a major issue.
However, the Catholic church is currently facing a destructive sexual abuse scandal after Carlo Maria Viganò, the former papal Nuncio to the U.S., released a scathing letter accusing Francis of essentially covering up sexual abuse allegations against Theodore Edgar McCarrick, the former Archbishop of the District of Columbia, who was forced to resign his position in the Church this year after the Vatican declared allegations against him to be “credible.”
“He knew that [McCarrick] was a corrupt man, he covered for him to the bitter end,” Viganò alleges.
Unfortunately, Francis has yet to address the allegations against him head on. He has said he would address them at a later date. But declaring ocean debris an “emergency” while the Catholic church faces a sexual abuse scandal is a declaration many found distasteful.

Are you freaking kidding me.
How about some emergency action on the demonic abusers & those covering up the abuse who are littering our church?!https://nypost.com/2018/09/01/pope-calls-plastics-littering-oceans-an-emergency/amp/?__twitter_impression=true 

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis wants concrete action to combat the “emergency” of plastics littering seas and oceans.
Francis made the appeal in a message Saturday to galvanize Christians and others to work to save what he hails as the “marvelous,” God-given gift of the “great waters and all they contain.”

 

 I know the Bible says judge not lest ye shall be judged. But I wouldn't want to stand before God on Judgment Day & God ask me, "What did you do when innocent children were sexually abused in my Church?" And my answer be, "My Lord, I spoke out about plastic in the ocean.


Pope Expresses Shame Over Pennsylvania Report on Sex Abuse


In letter to Catholics, pontiff says crimes against more than 1,000 victims over 70 years weren’t handled in a timely manner






ROME—Pope Francis in a letter to Catholics world-wide expressed shame and repentance over the sexual abuse of children by priests, following months in which the escalating scandal in several countries has raised pressure on the Vatican.
The pope in Monday’s letter, his first to all the world’s Catholic faithful about the scandal, vowed to improve efforts to protect children and punish those in the church who commit sex abuse or cover it up.

 Pope Expresses Shame Over Pennsylvania Report on Sex Abuse
In letter to Catholics, pontiff says crimes against more than 1,000 victims over 70 years weren’t handled in a timely manner.


 Pope Francis delivers a blessing during the Angelus noon prayer in St. Peter's Square, at the Vatican, on Sunday. (Gregorio Borgia/AP)

Pope Francis said in an unprecedented letter to the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics on Monday that the church has not dealt properly with “crimes” against children and must prevent sexual abuses from being “covered up and perpetuated.”

“We showed no care for the little ones; we abandoned them,” Francis wrote.

The 2,000-word letter, the first by a pope addressed to the world’s Catholics on the topic of sexual abuse, amounted to a direct response by Francis to a rekindled crisis that has engulfed his papacy and eroded the credibility of the Roman Catholic Church.

But after years of high-level pledges to end abuse, the letter renews questions about whether Francis will be able to follow through with a more concrete plan to overhaul the Vatican’s handling of sexual offenses.

His letter touched off mixed reactions from across the Catholic world, with some noting that Francis did not outline any specific new steps the church should take. But others said that Francis is coming to grips with the scale of the crisis and has increasingly described the problems as systemic or cultural, not simply the result of isolated priestly behavior.




On Aug. 20, Vatican Spokesman Greg Burke commented on the letter from Pope Francis addressing “crimes” against children in the Catholic Church.

“Looking ahead to the future, no effort must be spared to create a culture able to prevent such [abuses] from happening, but also to prevent the possibility of their being covered up and perpetuated,” Francis wrote.

The letter was issued at a time when revelations in the United States and around the world are roiling the church — and prompting new scrutiny over how the institution’s hierarchy handles abuse cases. A Pennsylvania grand-jury report released last week documented seven decades of abuse by 300 priests. It detailed cases of children who were allegedly raped, manipulated with alcohol and “brushed aside” by church leaders.

This weekend, Francis will travel to Ireland, a country scarred by decades of sexual abuse in parishes and in Catholic-run schools. In Dublin, many have demanded that Francis acknowledge during his trip the role church higher-ups played in silencing victims and helping to keep pedophile priests on the job.



The Catholic Church has been dealing for more than three decades with publicly known cases of abuse. But the latest wave has caused anger among Catholics who say the Vatican has been slow to make meaningful reforms.

“The public, and Catholics in particular, are truly fed up with this. It’s beyond frustration,” said Peter Isely, a founding member of Ending Clergy Abuse, a global survivors and activists group. “They’ve had decades to do something. What it appears to look like is that nothing has significantly changed.”


Isely said that Francis is beginning to “correctly describe” the problem.

Popes have previously written letters on sexual abuse, but they were directed at individual countries — not at the broader Catholic world. In 2010, Pope Benedict XVI, in a letter to the Catholics of Ireland, told victims of abuse and their families that he was “truly sorry” and that the church in Ireland needed to acknowledge the “serious sins committed against defenseless children.”


Earlier this year, Francis sent a letter to the people of Chile describing a culture of “abuse and coverup.” That move was particularly notable, coming just months after the pope, in a much-criticized move, had defended a Chilean bishop facing accusations of abuse.

“He has shown the capacity to change, and I think that’s the single most important lesson he has given us about himself,” said Jason Berry, a reporter and author who has covered sexual abuse for decades. “If he can evolve on this issue forcefully, he might have a chance at achieving some kind of genuine reform.”

Berry said that Francis’s letter was a first step — but that to go further he would have to contest a “calcified power structure that is honeycombed with secrecy.”

“He does not have a brain trust around him that is focused on systemic reform,” Berry said. “Right now they’re putting out fires.”

 In his letter Monday, Francis specifically mentioned the Pennsylvania grand-jury report, but he did not reference other scandals in the United States, Chile or Australia. Francis said the Pennsylvania report reflected “abuse of power and of conscience.”
“The heart-wrenching pain of these victims, which cries out to heaven, was long ignored, kept quiet or silenced,” Francis wrote. “But their outcry was more powerful than all the measures meant to silence it, or sought even to resolve it by decisions that increased its gravity by falling into complicity.”


The U.S. church has also reeled from revelations about Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who resigned last month amid allegations that he abused seminarians and minors. McCarrick was able to climb the church’s hierarchy, becoming one of the U.S. church’s most powerful figures, even after two New Jersey dioceses paid out settlements in response to his alleged misconduct.

The McCarrick allegations, coupled with the report from Pennsylvania, have prompted American bishops to reckon with their failure to deal more forcefully with alleged abusers — whether they are priests or prelates.

One of the leaders whose actions have raised questions is Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, who during a previous posting in Pittsburgh disciplined some accused priests but reassigned others who were under scrutiny to new parishes, according to the grand-jury report.

Wuerl has defended his record and said the report shows that he acted “with diligence.” An Archdiocese of Washington spokeswoman said Wuerl has canceled a planned trip this week to Ireland, where he was scheduled to give a keynote speech at the World Meeting of Families.

Last week, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the U.S. church should give a wider role to lay people in holding clerics accountable.


In his letter, Francis said he was aware of efforts in parts of the world to “come up with the necessary means to ensure the safety and protection of the integrity of children and of vulnerable adults, as well as implementing zero tolerance and ways of making all those who perpetrate or cover up these crimes accountable.”

“We have delayed in applying these actions and sanctions that are so necessary,” Francis wrote, “yet I am confident that they will help to guarantee a greater culture of care in the present and future.”

Francis also criticized the culture of clericalism — which some outsiders say creates a chasm of power between clerics and laity. Francis wrote that clericalism “helps to perpetuate many of the evils that we are condemning today.”

Kathleen Cummings, director of the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame, said Francis’s critique of clericalism gives her hope for reforms to come.

“He spoke about clericalism far more forcefully and explicitly in this letter,” she said.

More important, though, she said, is that church leaders welcome further investigations like the grand-jury report in Pennsylvania.

The Catholic Church “should not be waiting for the attorney general to come knocking but saying ‘Come in,’ ” Cummings said. “The only way to move past this crisis is to understand its magnitude.”

The bault reported from Washington. 

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Lincoln Bishop's home burglarized, cross stolen


 

 
Posted By: Sarah Fili, Courtesy J.D. Flynn spokesman for the Diocese of Lincoln.

sfili@klkntv.com


According to Police, on Saturday, October 10th,
Lincoln Bishop James Conley’s home was burglarized at approximately
1:30 in the afternoon.  A tripped alarm alerted diocesan officials, and
the Lincoln Police Department, to the break-in.  Conley was not in the
home at the time of the burglary.
According
to the Diocese of Lincoln, the sole item stolen from the home was a
pectoral cross; the large ornamental cross Catholics bishops wear as a
symbol of their position in the Church.  The diocese reports that other
items of value were not stolen.
The
Lincoln Police Department has begun an investigation into the
matter.  In the meantime, Bishop Conley has asked all Catholics to “pray
for the conversion of this burglar.”
“I
pray, quite sincerely, that the thief will discover that Christ died
for him, loves him, and desires to bring him eternal joy.”
According
to Conley: “One of Christ’s last acts on the Cross was the forgiveness
of a repentant thief.  Certainly, the Church forgives the person
responsible for this crime.  God offers his mercy as well.  I ask all
Catholics to join me in praying that the thief will experience a
conversion of heart, and seek the mercy of God.”
Conley
noted that stolen cross was a personal gift given by Pope Benedict XVI
in 2012.  Because the cross was a gift, it cannot be replaced, the
diocese reported.  
Conley
asked Catholics to pray that the pectoral crosses might be safely
returned.  “The cross is a treasure for the whole Diocese of
Lincoln.  It signifies the unity of our Church in Christ.  Let us pray
together that it might be returned.”
JD
Flynn, spokesman for the Diocese of Lincoln, noted that the Diocese of
Lincoln is cooperating fully with law enforcement’s
investigation.  “Forgiveness does not exclude accountability,” Flynn
said.  He also noted that the stolen cross could be returned to any
Catholic Church—even left anonymously. 
Bishop
Conley pointed out that the Diocese of Lincoln offers counseling,
shelter, food, employment training, and emergency assistance to those in
financial need.  Conley expressed hope that the Church might assist the
thief.  “We care a great deal about the poor, because Jesus Christ was
poor,” Conley reported.  “I hope no one will resort to stealing because
of some poverty.  I hope people, including this thief, will know that
the Catholic Church stands eager to help in whatever way we can.” 



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