Thursday 7 April 2022
1. Churches in Ukraine stand up to Russian abuses in Bucha
2. Opposition to Pope Francis is rooted in a rejection of Vatican II
3. The story of the “Parmureli” that the Pope uses during Palm Sunday
4. The question of the Catholic vote in France as seen from the German part of Switzerland
5. When a Cardinal-poet and a soccer manager discuss transcendence
Churches in Ukraine stand up to Russian abuses in Bucha
The Major Archbishop of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, H.B. Sviatoslav Shevchuk accuses Russian forces of committing “horrific war crimes” in cities near Kiev. Comparing Russian abuses to Nazi crimes during World War II, the major archbishop of Kiev says it is important that “the whole world sees and hears” what happened in Bucha, a town where more than 400 bodies were found after the departure of Russian troops. Metropolitan Epiphanius, head of the Independent Orthodox Church of Ukraine, explains that the ideology of the “Russian world”, carried by the Kremlin, must “be rejected and condemned in the same way that Nazism was condemned”. “Are you with God or with the devil?” the Orthodox metropolitan asks, claiming that the Patriarch of Moscow “has already made his choice in favor of the affairs of the antichrist.” “Open your eyes, look at the poisonous fruits of his teachings, stay away from the lawless, do not be his accomplices,” he asks of “those who still have him as their shepherd.”
The Tablet, English
Vatican II still divides, notes historian of religions Massimo Faggioli in a long column, while emphasizing that this division is felt more under the pontificate of Francis. The pontificate is ” embattled at the theological level” by his detractors whoa re rooted in “the opposition to Vatican II”, the Italian historian analyzes. However the theological crisis did not begin with this pontificate. The author elaborates a retrospective of the reception of Vatican II, especially in the United States: the Council was firstly recognized, received or rejected, followed by a period in 1980s where the Council was reconsidered and enlarged, and finally the Council was historicized and deplored in the 1990s and early 2000s. “Vatican II is not a failed council,” the theology professor asserts, but the reception of a council “takes a long time, at least a century to be fully implemented.”
National Catholic Reporter, English
The story of the “Parmureli” that the Pope uses during Palm Sunday
While most Catholics will receive palm fronds or other local tree branches on Palm Sunday, Pope Francis and the cardinals in St. Peter’s Square will be carrying elaborate palm weavings known as “parmureli.” The Pillar dives into the origin of these hand-braided creations, which are usually sent to the Vatican from the northwestern Italian cities of Sanremo and Bordighera. In 1586 Pope Sixtus V asked for an 85-foot Egyptian obelisk to be moved to the center of St. Peter’s Square. As the massive structure required great concentration to be properly installed, the pontiff ordered for complete silence in the square. As the obelisk was being raised the ropes began to fray under the weight of the artifact. At that moment sea captain Benedetto Bresca yelled at the workers to put water on the ropes to avoid them breaking. Although he violated the order of silence, Pope Sixtus decided to thank him for his help by making him and his descendants the official Vatican suppliers of palms for Palm Sunday. More than four centuries later the “parmureli” are still handwoven in northwestern Italy.
The Pillar, English