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Remember the Church's beginnings when electing the pope

Remember the Church's beginnings when electing the pope

Herald Malaysia07-05-2025

From catacombs to cathedrals, the temptations of empire remain May 07, 2025
A church in West Sussex is home to a scale replica of the Sistine Chapel's ceiling
Francis is no longer with us. The cardinals are meeting again under the painted ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. But what's really at stake isn't just continuity or change. It's whether the Church dares to follow the path Francis spent a decade pointing toward — or turns back.
The question is not just who will lead. It's what kind of Church they will inherit — and what kind they intend to become.
The earliest Christian community was an underground movement. The first pope, Peter, led from the shadows, not the throne.
The Church in its infancy was fragile, decentralized and deeply rooted in solidarity with the poor. It had no cathedrals, no state alliances, and no political capital. Its strength came from its witness — its radical commitment to love, mercy, and shared life.
But when Constantine converted in the fourth century, everything changed. The persecuted became privileged. Christianity became the official religion of empire, and with that came new temptations: prestige, wealth, hierarchy.
Over time, the Church began to mirror imperial structures. What had started in the catacombs now occupied marble halls.
The consequences were lasting. The Church's long descent into power came with no shortage of scandal: the Crusades waged in the name of Christ, the Inquisition burning those who questioned, indulgences sold as tickets to heaven, and the Renaissance — an era where beauty and corruption lived side by side.
Even St. Peter's Basilica, magnificent as it is, was funded in part through those indulgences. That abuse didn't just stain the Church. It helped spark the Reformation.Not all responses led to schism. Not everyone broke away. Ignatius of Loyola stayed and reimagined the Church from the inside. Francis of Assisi stepped outside it, barefoot and broke, trusting that the Gospel was enough. His call still haunts us: 'Go, repair my Church, which as you see is falling into ruin.'Pope Francis, elected in 2013, took that summons to heart.From the very beginning, he signaled a different kind of papacy. He refused the trappings of empire — choosing simpler vestments, paying his own hotel bill, riding in a modest car. But these gestures were not cosmetic. They were theological.In a Church long burdened by hierarchy, he emphasized mercy over judgment, dialogue over dogma, and proximity to the poor over protection of privilege.
He named the global peripheries — not Rome — as the Church's new center. He challenged a clerical culture that had often concealed abuse and silenced dissent. While his critics accused him of ambiguity or populism, his true project was clear: to bring the Church closer to the Gospel, and the Gospel closer to the people.
Yet not all welcomed this return.
In the US, a group of conservative bishops pushed back hard. For them, Francis went too far. Raymond Burke, Carlo Maria Viganò, Joseph Strickland, and Robert Barron, all made it clear — this wasn't the kind of pope they wanted. They spoke as if the Church had lost its footing, when it was their grip on control that was slipping.
At its core, their vision is not a return to roots, but to robes.
History teaches that the Church loses its moral clarity whenever it grows too comfortable with temporal power. It becomes a mirror of empire, not a mirror of Christ.
The next pope will face pressure to retreat into tradition, reassert dogma, and mollify political allies. But if the Church is to remain credible, it must once again choose witness over control.
It must remember that its authority never came from pageantry, but from proximity to the suffering.
Pope Francis did not fix everything — he couldn't — but he reoriented the Church toward its origins. He reminded us that faith is not performance — it's presence.
As the conclave decides the Church's next leader, the most crucial question is not how Catholicism will govern itself in Rome, but how it will live out its mission on the margins.
The Church was born in catacombs, not in palaces. And its future — if it is to remain faithful — lies not in reclaiming its throne, but in remembering where it began.--ucanews.com

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'Mass grave' excavation to finally start at Irish mother and baby home
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Tuam Mass Grave Excavation Begins in Ireland Scandal Probe
Tuam Mass Grave Excavation Begins in Ireland Scandal Probe

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Rupnik's mosaics quietly removed from Vatican News
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Rupnik's mosaics quietly removed from Vatican News

The move is seen as an overdue sign of hope and healing for survivors of his alleged decades-long abuse Jun 10, 2025 A mosaic designed by Father Marko Rupnik's studio Centro Aletti at the Basilica of the Sanctuary of Lourdes, France. (Photo: UCAN Files) By Paulina Guzik, OSV News In a quiet but powerful move, Vatican News has begun removing artwork by Father Marko Rupnik -- the once-renowned mosaicist now accused of abusing over two dozen women -- from its website. His mosaics, long used to mark major feast days online, were recently replaced or left blank -- a shift many survivors say is long removed mosaics include one for the June 9 memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church, and one that illustrated the feast of the Assumption Aug. 15."I can't tell you how hopeful of a sign it is for me," said Weronika, whose name was changed and who is a victim of abuse by a Polish Dominican priest. "I saw it immediately and simply felt relieved," she told OSV News, adding: "you don't even know how much this gesture means to me. That the victims' pain was heard at last." Since the allegations were revealed, calls to remove the priest's artwork have grown, including from victims who said the mosaics were a painful reminder of the abuse they suffered. One victim, identified as Sister Samuelle, recounted that she was abused by Father Rupnik while installing one of his mosaics. A number of shrines that featured his work have taken steps to either cover or limit the public display and use of Father Rupnik's mosaics since the abuse revelations were made public. The St. John Paul II National Shrine in Washington as well as the Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary in the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes, France, opted to cover or partially cover the mosaics out of respect for his victims. OSV News asked the Vatican's Press Office whether removing Father Rupnik's art from Vatican News is a coordinated effort and is awaiting an answer. Mosaics to be or not to be? In June 2024, on the final day of the Catholic Media Conference in Atlanta, the prefect of the Vatican's Dicastery for Communication addressed questions posed by America's Colleen Dulle and OSV News about the dicastery's regular practice of posting art by Father Rupnik on the Vatican News website and social media, especially to illustrate church feast days. "As Christian(s), we are asked not to judge," Paolo Ruffini said to a room full of communications professionals after giving an address at the CMC June 21, 2024. He explained that while the process of a Vatican investigation into Father Rupnik is still ongoing, "an anticipation of a decision is something that is not, in our opinion, is not good." "There are things we don't understand," he said. Ruffini also added they "did not put in any new photos" of Father Rupnik's art, but rather have been using what they had. "We didn't decide what was not on our charge to decide," he Father Rupnik's art from public space "is not a Christian response," Ruffini said. "We are not talking about abuse of minors," Ruffini said at the CMC. "We are talking (about) a story that we don't know." "I don't think we have to throw stones thinking that this is the way of healing," the prefect added."Do you think that if I put away a photo of an art (away) from … our website, I will be more close to the victims? Do you think so?" he pressed journalists at the end of his answer. When an answer was given in the affirmative, Ruffini responded: "I think you're wrong." Five days later, in a separate June 26 communication, Cardinal Seán P. O'Malley of Boston, president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, told the dicasteries of the Vatican Curia that Father Rupnik is currently under Vatican investigation and entitled to the presumption of innocence. However, he made clear that "pastoral prudence would prevent displaying artwork in a way that could imply either exoneration or a subtle defense" of a person alleged to have committed abuse, "or indicate indifference to the pain and suffering of so many victims of abuse." Father Rupnik's case investigated for over 500 days Father Rupnik, a former Jesuit, was briefly excommunicated by the church in 2020 for absolving an Italian novice with whom he had sex. The excommunication was lifted after he repented. The Jesuits disclosed in December 2022 that it had suspended the Slovenian artist after allegations of abuse had surfaced. In June 2023, Father Rupnik was expelled from the Jesuits for refusing to obey restrictions imposed upon him related to the sexual, spiritual and psychological abuse of some two dozen women and at least one man over the course of 30 years. Despite the credibility of the accusations and his dismissal from the Jesuits, the Diocese of Koper in the priest's native Slovenia announced it had incardinated Father Rupnik in its diocese. After the diocese confirmed in October 2023 that the priest had been there since August, the Vatican announced that Pope Francis had lifted the statute of limitations, allowing the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith to proceed in its investigation and eventual case. In a statement published in October 2023, the Vatican said the decision was made after "the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors brought to the pope's attention that there were serious problems in the handling of the Father Marko Rupnik case and lack of outreach to victims."The canonical process of Father Rupnik is ongoing. "The sentence is expected in the not too distant future," a source told OSV News in the retired bishop of the Diocese of Koper, where Father Rupnik was incardinated in August 2023, told OSV News in February that the priest 'continues his work all over the world.'Father Rupnik's case is one of the most urgent cases on the table for the new pope to handle in canonical terms, abuse experts Father Hans Zollner, director of the Institute of Anthropology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, and a top expert on the abuse crisis, told OSV News upon the election of Pope Leo XIV: 'I do hope that, as soon as possible, we will have a verdict. Many of us are looking forward to hearing about that, because it has been a very long time, especially for those who have brought forward the allegations -- so that finally there will be clarity about this,' Father Zollner said. For any pope, he added, the issue of abuse is critical, as it becomes "a question of the credibility of our existence and our message."--ucanews

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