- Feb 5, 2002
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Father Robert Sirico discusses 'Pell Contra Mundum,' for which he served as editor.
VATICAN CITY — Cardinal George Pell was “prescient” in identifying “all the key issues” about the current Synod on Synodality, but what troubled him most was “the attack on divine Revelation” with the resulting possibility that development of doctrine would have no safeguards, Father Robert Sirico has said.
The co-founder and president emeritus of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty said the late Australian cardinal was not just concerned about “the disregard for the tradition of the Church,” but the consequences of obscuring divine revelation at the synod so that “the Holy Spirit can tell you something in the first century and tell you the opposite in the second, in the third, or the 21st century.”
Continued below.
VATICAN CITY — Cardinal George Pell was “prescient” in identifying “all the key issues” about the current Synod on Synodality, but what troubled him most was “the attack on divine Revelation” with the resulting possibility that development of doctrine would have no safeguards, Father Robert Sirico has said.
The co-founder and president emeritus of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty said the late Australian cardinal was not just concerned about “the disregard for the tradition of the Church,” but the consequences of obscuring divine revelation at the synod so that “the Holy Spirit can tell you something in the first century and tell you the opposite in the second, in the third, or the 21st century.”
Continued below.
New Book: Cardinal Pell’s Main Concern About the Synod on Synodality Was Its Attack on Divine Revelation
Father Robert Sirico discusses 'Pell Contra Mundum,' for which he served as editor.
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