Saturday, December 21, 2024

Could the plot twist in ‘Conclave’ actually happen?

 

JesuiticalDecember 20, 2024

(Focus Features via AP)

On “Jesuitical” this week, Zac and Ashley chat with Colleen Dulle, an associate editor at America and co-host of the “Inside the Vatican” podcast, about how realistically the new film “Conclave” portrays the process of selecting a new pope. They praise the film’s historical accuracy but raise eyebrows over the complex theological implications around the film’s twist ending. Warning: This episode contains major spoilers. 

Zac, Ashley and Colleen discuss: 

  • The challenges of translating the complexities of the Catholic Church to a mainstream audience through a cinematic lens
  • Varying reactions to “Conclave” from Catholics, including Bishop Robert Barron’s critique of the film
  • The role and representation of women, including nuns, in the Catholic Church as depicted in the film

In Signs of the Times, Zac, Ashley and Colleen discuss Pope Francis’ new autobiography Hope, which reveals two assassination attempts on his life during his trip to Iraq in 2021; and a recent liturgical debate sparked by Cardinal Blase Cupich’s guidance to parishioners in the Archdiocese of Chicago that discouraged kneeling to receive Communion.

Links for further reading: 

 

 https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2024/12/20/conclave-jesuitical-249550

Beyond dogma

Beyond dogma

US CATHOLIC

To be truly universal, the Catholic faith must recognize the European roots of its dogmas and doctrines, says this Indian theologian.
AN INTERVIEW WITH JACOB PARAPPALLY, M.S.F.S.

 

Trump nominates papal critic as his Vatican representative

 

Trump nominates papal critic as his Vatican representative

Republican President-elect Donald Trump gestures while addressing supporters during his rally at the Palm Beach County Convention Center Nov. 6 in West Palm Beach, Florida, after being elected the 47th president of the United States. (OSV News/Reuters/Carlos Barria)

Republican President-elect Donald Trump gestures while addressing supporters during his rally at the Palm Beach County Convention Center Nov. 6 in West Palm Beach, Florida, after being elected the 47th president of the United States. (OSV News/Reuters/Carlos Barria)

Christopher White

Vatican Correspondent


Brian Fraga


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U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has nominated a sharp papal critic to serve as his next representative to the Vatican.

The incoming president announced on Dec. 20 that he would nominate Brian Burch, president of the political advocacy group CatholicVote.org, as his next ambassador to the Holy See. Burch's nomination will now require U.S. Senate confirmation and agreement from the Holy See before he can officially take up his post.

"He represented me well during the last Election, having garnered more Catholic votes than any Presidential Candidate in History!" wrote Trump in a statement. "Brian loves his Church and the United States - He will make us all proud."

Trump's choice of Burch to represent him here in Rome is certain to raise eyebrows inside the Vatican, as he has long expressed criticism of the Francis papacy.

Following Francis' 2023 decision to allow priests to bless individuals in same-sex unions, Burch blasted the pope for creating "confusion" within the Catholic Church. He went on to predict that the now 88-year-old pontiff would not be in office much longer and that the next pope must "clarify" the confusion of the Francis era.

On other occasions, he has criticized Francis' governance for what he characterized as a "pattern of vindictiveness."

"Burch is an agitator, mostly, the opposite of a diplomat," said Steven Millies, a public theology professor and director of the Bernardin Center at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago.

"In this way, I suppose while Burch will be a good representative of this second Trump Administration, his appointment signals what we already know; a difficult time lies ahead for U.S.-Vatican relations," Millies told National Catholic Reporter.

That Trump chose Burch, a partisan political operative, instead of a Catholic academic or seasoned politician to represent the United States at the Holy See is "very telling," said Massimo Faggioli, a theologian and church historian at Villanova University.

"This is an operative who has been really a campaigner in the trenches for Donald Trump, so I think this appointment says something about the kind of relationship that Donald Trump wants to create with the Vatican," Faggioli told NCR.

This screen grab of the CatholicVote.org homepage on Dec. 20 features the announcement of President-elect Donald Trump's nomination of Brian Burch as his next ambassador to the Holy See. (NCR screen grab)

This screen grab of the CatholicVote.org homepage on Dec. 20 features the announcement of President-elect Donald Trump's nomination of Brian Burch as his next ambassador to the Holy See. (NCR screen grab)

Burch's CatholicVote.org group has been a longtime supporter of Trump, endorsing him early on in the 2024 Republican primary for president. But his advocacy on behalf of the president marks a noticeable pivot from when, in 2016, he signed a manifesto declaring Trump to be "manifestly unfit to be president of the United States."

In a statement on social media, Burch said he was honored to take up the new role.

"I am committed to working with leaders inside the Vatican and the new Administration to promote the dignity of all people and the common good," he wrote. "I look forward to the confirmation process and the opportunity to continue to serve my country and the Church. To God be the glory."

During his first term in office, from 2017-2020, Trump was represented by Callista Gingrich as his ambassador to the Holy See. Faggioli said Gingrich adopted an institutional style that served her well as an ambassador.

"She understood that being an ambassador requires a certain kind of style and ethos," Faggioli said. "I'm not sure if that will happen this time. It remains to be seen if [Burch] adopts an institutional style or he will bring an activist’s energy to the United States embassy."

In 2008, Burch, a married father of nine children, cofounded CatholicVote as a nonprofit with a mission statement to "inspire every Catholic in America to live out the truths of our faith in public life."

Burch is a regular guest on conservative media outlets such as Fox News, Newsmax and BlazeTV.

Under Burch's leadership, CatholicVote has at times courted controversy. In 2020, the nonprofit harvested the cellphone data of churchgoing Catholics and evangelicals in a failed effort to reelect Trump.

In 2022, CatholicVote suggested that Catholic agencies assisting undocumented migrants were contributing to the "chaos" at the U.S.-Mexico border. The nonprofit sued the Biden administration for communications records between federal agencies and Catholic nonprofits in southern Texas.

"American Catholics deserve to know the full extent of the U.S. government's role in funding and coordinating with Catholic church affiliated agencies at the border, and what role these agencies played in the record surge of illegal immigrants over the past year," Burch said in a separate prepared statement that year.

CatholicVote's lawsuit drew sharp responses from Catholic observers, including Bishop Daniel Flores of Brownsville, Texas, who accused CatholicVote of framing the relationship between Catholic humanitarian agencies and the federal government "in a distorted way."

More recently, CatholicVote in September launched an ad campaign in several contested battleground states that accused Vice President Kamala Harris of supporting taxpayer-funded gender reassignment surgeries on children. LGBTQ advocates accused the nonprofit of using misleading and inflammatory terms for partisan political purposes.

On the social media platform X, CatholicVote described Burch’s nomination as “a testament to the importance of Catholics to the United States.” The nonprofit also credited Burch with launching "influential campaigns exposing violence against Catholic churches and uncovering government overreach targeting Catholics and pro-life advocates."

The National Catholic Reporter's Rome Bureau is made possible in part by the generosity of Joan and Bob McGrath.

Scorsese's 'The Saints' affirms legacy of the great Catholic filmmaker

 

"Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints" premiered Nov. 17 on the streaming service Fox Nation and concludes with an additional four episodes next April. Hosted and narrated by Scorsese, episodes follow the lives and deaths of Sts. Joan of Arc, John the Baptist, Sebastian and Maximilian Kolbe.

Scorsese's 'The Saints' affirms legacy of the great Catholic filmmaker

ncr

Fourth Sunday of Advent: Blessed are you who believe

 

Friday, December 20, 2024

Dear Catholic Boomers: Don’t get too comfortable during Trump’s next four years

 

Valerie SchultzDecember 19, 2024

President-elect Donald Trump takes the stage before he speaks at the FOX Nation Patriot Awards, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2024, in Greenvale, N.Y. (AP Photo/Heather Khalifa)

“The newspaper…comforts the afflicted and afflicts the comfortable,” Finley Peter Dunne, a Chicago humorist, wrote in 1902. Until recently, I mistakenly thought that these words originated from Dorothy Day—and that she was speaking about people of faith, followers and lovers of Jesus, not newspapers. The statement seemed in perfect keeping with Catholic social justice tenets. It still does. As someone who is Catholic and also writes for a newspaper, though, I take this quote to heart.

In light of this year’s presidential election, I have been confronting the comfort of my own life. I am a straight white American citizen, a privileged Boomer. In light of the threatened policies of the incoming administration, I am about as comfy as I can get without adding “male” to my description. I would like to keep my Medicare, but I suspect the collective fury of a lot of old people who vote (like me, a card-carrying A.A.R.P. member) will keep that program off the chopping block for a while. I will not be deported, unlike many other grandmas and dreamers. I am not a prominent enough writer for my columns to be investigated by the Department of Justice under some corrupt flunky. I can probably bury my head in the sands of my comfortable circumstances and turn to gardening as I mourn the demise of decency in government.

Should you stand or kneel to receive communion? Cardinal Cupich stirs debate after weighing in

 

Should you stand or kneel to receive communion? Cardinal Cupich stirs debate after weighing in

Kevin ClarkeDecember 19, 2024

A pilgrim crosses herself after receiving Communion on her knees July 20, 2024, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis during the National Eucharistic Congress. (OSV News photo/Bob Roller)A pilgrim crosses herself after receiving Communion on her knees July 20, 2024, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis during the National Eucharistic Congress. (OSV News photo/Bob Roller)

A recent missive from Cardinal Blase Cupich to parishioners in the Archdiocese of Chicago provoked an unusually vitriolic response this week after the cardinal addressed issues regarding proper liturgical practice on Communion lines.

“It is important to recall that processions have been part of the liturgy from the earliest days of Christian practice,” Cardinal Cupich wrote on Dec. 11 in a commentary for Chicago Catholic. “They give us a sensible experience of what it means to be a pilgrim people.... This is why we process into the church, process up to bring the gifts, process to receive Holy Communion and process out at the end of Mass to carry the Lord into the world.

A Sick System

A Sick System

On the killing of a health insurance CEO
Luigi Mangione, 26, a suspect in the New York City killing of UnitedHealth executive Brian Thompson, arrives for an extradition hearing (OSV News photo/Matthew Hatcher, Reuters).

When Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, was shot to death on his way to an investors’ meeting in midtown Manhattan on December 4, politicians, law-enforcement officials, and members of the media were taken aback at the public outpouring of anger—directed not, for the most part, at the fugitive killer, but at the private health-insurance industry. Social-media platforms were swamped with testimonials from people who had been denied coverage for life-saving medical treatments. Of course they did not condone murder, but…there was almost always a “but.” In addition to all the expressions of raw anguish and resentment at the system Thompson represented, there was also a striking eruption of gallows humor: “Prior authorization needed before thoughts and prayers,” read one online comment. When authorities arrested the twenty-six-year-old Luigi Mangione as a suspect in the case, he was immediately celebrated as a folk hero, with admirers selling “Free Luigi” t-shirts and showing off tattoos of the words Mangione allegedly wrote on shell casings found at the crime scene: “Deny,” “Defend,” and “Depose.”