maandag 4 juli 2011

Vatican excommunicates newest bishop illicitly ordained in China

Benedict XVI receives unique gifts from 60 artists to celebrate 60 years of ordination

Vatican City State and Holy See back in the financial black

By David Kerr


Vatican City, Jul 2, 2011 / (CNA/EWTN News).-

The Vatican City State ran up a surplus of $30 million over the past year, after three years of deficit. The figure was revealed in financial results published July 2.

“Both the excellent performance of the Vatican Museums – thanks especially to the increase in visitors, which runs against the current worldwide trend in the tourism industry – and the upswing in financial markets contributed to this positive result,” the report noted.

The figures show that in the last financial year the revenue of the Vatican City State was $371 million, while expenditure was $341 million.

The annual results have been published by the Council of Cardinals for the Study of Organizational and Financial Problems of the Holy See. It’s a committee of senior cardinals drawn from around the world, who have responsibility for financial oversight within the Vatican City State and the Holy See.

The cardinals met in Rome on July 1 and 2 for a meeting chaired by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican’s Secretary of State. Today’s report was issued in the name of Cardinal Velasio de Paolis, President of the Prefecture for Economic Affairs.

According to the report, there has also been a slight decrease in the number of staff working in the Vatican City State. The figure has gone down from 1891 in 2009 to 1876 in 2010.

The Vatican City State is a sovereign territory created in 1929. It is distinct from the Holy See, which has been in existence from early Christian times. It is the Holy See, and not the Vatican City State, which represents the Pope diplomatically across the world. The financial results for both were published on July 2.

They show that the revenue of the Holy See was $356 million in 2010 while its expenditure was $342 million, resulting in a surplus of $14 million.

The past year’s balance review for the Holy See would, in its own words, “seem to confirm the positive tendency of 2009, notwithstanding the elements of uncertainty and instability still present in the world economic and financial situation.”

It also showed an increase in the number of people working for the Holy See, up from 2762 in 2009 to 2806 in 2010.

The balance sheet of the Holy See got a boost of over $67 million from the annual collection held among Catholics around the world for the Pope’s charitable works, a tradition known as “Peter’s Pence.” That number is down from last year, however.

“The Members of the Council express their wholehearted gratitude to all those who contributed, recognizing that their generosity is a real and vital support for and participation in the pastoral and charitable work of the Holy Father, especially in situations of calamity and emergency in various parts of the world,” concluded the report.

L'Osservatore Romano celebrates 150th anniversary

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Pope appeals for an end to arrogance and violence


Vatican City, Jul 3, 2011 / (CNA/EWTN News).-

A “rule of life based on love” is needed if we are to receive the “rest” offered by Jesus Christ to “all who labor and are over-burdened,” Pope Benedict XVI said during his brief Sunday Angelus address July 3.

“For this, we must abandon the path of arrogance and violence used to obtain positions of greater power, to ensure success at any cost,” the Pope told over 40,000 pilgrims in Rome’s St. Peter’s Square.

Pope Benedict said the offer of Jesus, recounted in today’s Gospel reading, testifies to his “compassion for the burdened masses, for they were like a flock without a shepherd.”

“That look of Jesus seems to continue to the present day, to our present world. His kind eyes gaze on the masses burdened by difficult living condition, but also those still searching for a valid reference point, for meaning and for a goal in life,” said the Pope.

He observed that such people are to be found “in the world's poorest countries, tried by poverty” but also “in the richest countries” where “there are many dissatisfied men and women, some even given to depression.” And he gave special mention to “the many displaced persons and refugees, those who risk their lives emigrating.”

“The true remedy for the wounds of humanity,” both material and spiritual, said the Pope, “is a rule of life based on love, brotherly love, which has its source in the love of God.”

This will result in a new attitude towards the natural environment, giving up “the aggressive style that has dominated in recent centuries," and also towards other people - where “the force of truth against every injustice, is one that can ensure a future worthy of man.”

After the Angelus, the Pope’s thoughts turned to the topic of vacations. He is departing the Vatican this week for his July break at Castel Gandolfo, 15 miles outside Rome. He encouraged pilgrims to live the summer holiday period “orientated towards rest and serenity,” and reminded them to take the Gospel with them wherever they go.