One could perhaps understand if Australian Cardinal George Pell, who
was tapped by Pope Francis in 2014 as his point man for financial reform
in the Vatican, was content these days to just sort of phone it in.
Pell turns 75 in June, the retirement age for Catholic bishops, and although cardinals often serve well beyond that threshold, the clock is ticking. His efforts to promote accountability have drawn resistance from the Vatican’s Italian old guard, and he’s facing an inquest from a Royal Commission in Australia about his handling of sex abuse cases decades ago.
http://www.newsjs.com/url.php?p=http://www.cruxnow.com/church/2016/02/10/popes-financial-reformer-tells-the-baby-bishops-how-to-manage-money/
Pell turns 75 in June, the retirement age for Catholic bishops, and although cardinals often serve well beyond that threshold, the clock is ticking. His efforts to promote accountability have drawn resistance from the Vatican’s Italian old guard, and he’s facing an inquest from a Royal Commission in Australia about his handling of sex abuse cases decades ago.
http://www.newsjs.com/url.php?p=http://www.cruxnow.com/church/2016/02/10/popes-financial-reformer-tells-the-baby-bishops-how-to-manage-money/