The following article has just been posted on the Lifesite webpage
BREAKING: Pope Francis removes Cardinal Burke from
Vatican post, demoted to ceremonial role
Putting the official stamp on months
of rumours and what LifeSite had confirmed on Sept. 17, the Vatican
announced today that Pope Francis has removed Cardinal Raymond Burke from his
position as prefect of the Vatican's Apostolic Signatura - the highest court of
the Catholic Church.
Instead, the cardinal, who until
today was the highest ranking American at the Vatican, will be sent to serve as
the patron for the Order of the Knights of Malta.
The move to the largely ceremonial
position is almost universally being reported as a demotion for the outspoken
cardinal, who is widely viewed as the number one English-speaking defender
of the Catholic Church's teaching on life and family issues.
However, the move by Pope Francis
comes as little surprise to observers of Cardinal Burke's career. Within months
of the pope's election, he removed the cardinal from his position as a
member of the Congregation for Bishops, where he had been able to exert
considerable influence on bishops' appointments worldwide. Instead, Burke was
replaced by cardinals with a more leftist reputation, including Cardinal
Vincent Nichols of Westminster, and Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington.
Pro-life and pro-family leaders reacted
to that lesser demotion at the time with dismay, expressing concerns that
it had the flavor of a purge aimed at lessening the cardinal's influence.
Vatican experts, including Crux's
John Allen and Catholic News Service's Francis Rocca, are reporting that it is
rare for a cardinal in such a high position at the Vatican to be removed
without being assigned similar responsibilities.
For years, the pro-life and
pro-family movements have looked to Cardinal Burke as their strongest champion
at the Vatican.
In recent weeks, he led the charge
against the push by some prelates, most notably Cardinal Walter Kasper, to
liberalize the Church's pastoral practice relating to divorced and remarried
Catholics, and the issue of homosexuality.
In a series of interviews he
strongly defended traditional Catholic teaching on marriage, and criticized the
way the Vatican's recent Synod on the Family was conducted. Some of those
interviews were also perceived as being critical of Pope Francis himself -
although Cardinal Burke has decried such interpetations, saying, "I don't ever
put myself in opposition to the successor of St. Peter."
The cardinal is perhaps best known
for his staunch insistence that ministers of communion have a duty to
withhold the Eucharist from public and obstinate sinners - in particular
Catholic politicians who have supported abortion or same-sex
"marriage."
Replacing Cardinal Burke at the
Apostolic Signatura will be French Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, currently the
pope’s foreign minister.
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