Home Excerpts Links Blog Ordering
The Apocalypse - Letter by Letter: Vatican calls for rally backing pope in science row

The Apocalypse - Letter by Letter

Blog to discuss the book "The Apocalypse - Letter by Letter: A Literary Analysis of the Book of Revelation" and current events that point to the events described therein.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

 

Vatican calls for rally backing pope in science row

Note: The hostility shown the Pope right in Rome itself portends bigger things to come. This may be a small group of radicals and academics now but their numbers will grow as a sterilized Italy rails against God. In the book, 'Apocalypse - Letter by Letter: A Literary Analysis of the Book of Revelation', the author describes a time when the Church is forced to flee Rome. Watch the signs of the times...

Vatican calls for rally backing pope in science row

Agence France-Presse
Posted date: January 16, 2008


ROME -- The Catholic diocese of Rome called on the city's faithful Wednesday to back Pope Benedict XVI against academics who fault the Church leader for positions seen as anti-science.
A burgeoning protest against a planned appearance by the pope, who is also the bishop of Rome, at the secular La Sapienza university here prompted Benedict to cancel the engagement, which had been set for Thursday.


Lamenting the "sad events" that led to the cancellation, Rome's vicar Camillo Ruini urged "all believers, but also all Romans," to stage a show of support during the pope's Angelus prayer on Sunday in St Peter's Square.

Already on Wednesday some 5,000 pilgrims attended the pope's weekly general audience, many chanting "freedom."

"The Church of Rome expresses its solidarity with its bishop, the pope, and bears witness to the love, confidence, admiration and gratitude of the people of Rome towards Benedict XVI," Ruini said.

Many scientists criticize the intellectual, conservative pope, a respected theologian, for a series of positions he has taken that they say subordinate science and reason to faith.

The protest against the visit was spearheaded by physicist Marcello Cini, a professor emeritus of La Sapienza, who wrote to rector Renato Guarini complaining of an "incredible violation" of the university's autonomy.

Sixty-seven professors and researchers of the sprawling university's physics department, as well as radical students, joined in the call for the pope to stay away on Thursday, the start of the university's academic year.

Students opposed to the visit kicked off "an anti-clergy week" on Monday by showing a film on Galileo, the 17th-century physicist who ran afoul of Church doctrine by insisting that the Earth orbits the Sun.

Prime Minister Romano Prodi led unanimous denunciations of the protest by Italy's political class, echoed widely Wednesday by the country's main dailies.

Radical students launched a series of protest events, showing a film on Monday about Galileo, the 17th-century physicist convicted by the Inquisition -- the predecessor of the Vatican's doctrinal watchdog that the pope formerly headed as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.

It was the first cancellation in the pope's diary since his election in April 2005.

The daily La Repubblica devoted its front page to the issue, bemoaning the fact the pope "can no longer speak to his home-town university in this mediocre Italy of 2008."

Benedict's predecessor John Paul II was loudly heckled when he spoke at La Sapienza in 1991.

Labels: , ,


Comments: Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link



<< Home

Archives

August 2006   September 2006   October 2006   July 2007   August 2007   September 2007   October 2007   November 2007   December 2007   January 2008   February 2008   March 2008   April 2008   May 2008   June 2008   July 2008   September 2008   October 2008   November 2008   December 2008   March 2009   May 2009   September 2009   November 2009  

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Egyptian EmpireAssyrian EmpireBabylonian EmpireMedo-Persian EmpireGreek EmpireRoman EmpireBeast
Send us your questions or comments via e-mail to: info@stevenpaul.org We'll do our best to respond to each request.