Pope Francis Protecting Pedophile Priests As Vatican Bars Action by U.S. Bishops On Sex-Abuse Reforms at Annual Conference
The Vatican told Cardinal DiNardo about the directive only Sunday
night, according to a bishop familiar with the situation. Most of the
bishops in the hall didn’t learn that the votes on sex abuse had been
canceled until Cardinal DiNardo announced it from the dais, said Bishop
Christopher Coyne, of Burlington, Vt. Many appeared shocked when they
heard the news.
|
PROTECTOR OF PAEDOPHILES |
Roman Catholic bishops from around the nation have been ordered by
the Vatican not to take any actions at their annual meeting to address
the sex-abuse crisis that has rocked the church this year.
At the annual meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, they were all set to address the escalating crisis of
one third of bishops in America
covering up for pedophile priests.
But before they could take any sort of action on that subject, the
Vatican sent word that that were under no condition to discuss or act on
it. You heard that correctly. Pope Francis banned the bishops from
doing anything to address the very scandal that is about to collapse the
entire foundation of sand that the Catholic Church is built on.
READ Revelation 2:6 (KJV)
Pope Francis is doing
his level best, by sheer virtue of his will, to somehow make the entire
Catholic priest pedophile sex scandal pop like a soap bubble and
disappear into thin air, never to be seen or heard from again. But
someone should tell the pope that, in spite of the impressive size of
Vatican City, there are not nearly enough closets in which to hide the truth he so desperately wants to keep from view.
Vatican Bars Action by U.S. Bishops on Sex-Abuse Reforms at Conference
FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL:
Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops, announced the news in his opening remarks at the conference,
surprising many attendees for whom the topic was a top concern.
The
Vatican told Cardinal DiNardo about the directive only Sunday night,
according to a bishop familiar with the situation. It demonstrates the
continuing rift between Pope Francis and U.S. bishops over how to
address the abuse crisis, the latest iteration of which began with an August report by the Pennsylvania attorney general documenting
the abuse of more than 1,000 children by more than 300 priests.
The
Vatican has insisted that any official actions on the sexual-abuse
crisis will have to wait until a global summit on the issue planned for
February, Cardinal DiNardo announced.