Issue 100 of What Happens in the Church? by González Guadalix

Jorge González Guadalix

With the following index:

1. The consistory. A bluff. A rip-off. To talk about what matters least: synodality and Evangelii gaudium and not wanting to talk about what really matters: curia and liturgy. 30% of cardinals who didn’t want to attend. Radcliffe and Tucho giving doctrine, weren’t there others? Good vibes and see you in June.

2. The agreement on compensation for victims of abuse within the Church. Bolaños very clear: «The State decides the compensation and the Church pays.» The Church pays and swallows whatever they tell it to.

3. It seems the Belorado soap opera is ending. Throw them out once and for all, damn it.

4. And the cloistered convents suffering from the cold. Good for the Declausura foundation that’s helping

5. FOCUS evangelizes the parishes

6. The priests of Charlotte get angry. They’ve got a dictator bishop and instead of putting up with it, dubia to Rome. It’s about time to end so much silence and cowardice.

7. Pilgrimage to the Holy Land

8. Venezuela, protagonist

Very much in agreement with the bluff of the consistory.

And with the jab at Trucho and Radcliffe. Two cardinal shames, utterly presentable.

Also with your opinion on the pathetic State-Church agreement. The Church swallows and pays whatever they tell it to.

Spot on with the Belorado soap opera. Throw them out once and for all, damn it. And it seems it will be soon.

Another shame is the cold that the cloistered convents are suffering. And that shame is on the Catholics who allow that situation and on the bishops who don’t call for a collection that would resolve, and surely for many years, the case of those venerable elderly women who are dying of cold. That nuns of many years have to put on three pairs of socks so their feet don’t freeze should move all Catholics to ensure such cases don’t happen again.

Very good for Focus.

And the priests of Charlotte indignant with their disgusting bishop.

Pilgrimages to the Holy Land have always been an ecclesial constant.

And Venezuela’s protagonism is obligatory. Although for now very poorly resolved. Except for the arrest of Maduro, which was chapeau. To the wicked and some fool, it seemed very bad. To me, and to the vast majority of Venezuelans, very good.

 

https://www.infocatolica.com/blog/cura.php/2601100844-que-pasa-en-la-iglesia-hemos

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