Rev. Davide Pagliarani
Coverage of Rev. Davide Pagliarani in the Nexus archive.
- Pope Leo pleads with breakaway Catholic group not to commit 'sin of extreme gravity'
Pope Leo XIV urged the Society of St. Pius X to abandon plans to consecrate four bishops without Vatican approval, calling it a 'sin of extreme gravity' and warning it risks deepening a decades-old split with the Church. The group, which rejects post-Vatican II reforms, claims a 'state of necessity' requires the consecration, echoing a 1988 schismatic act that led to excommunications.
- Pope issues last-ditch appeal, begs breakaway traditionalist group to back off bishop consecrations
Pope Leo XIV urged the Society of St. Pius X to cancel its planned consecration of four bishops without papal approval, calling it a schismatic act and a 'sin of extreme gravity.' The Vatican warned of automatic excommunication for those involved, marking a crisis for the pope's efforts to maintain church unity.
- Pope begs breakaway traditionalist group to back off plan to consecrate its own bishops
Pope Leo XIV urged the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) to abandon its plan to consecrate four bishops without papal approval, calling the act a schismatic sin. The SSPX, a traditionalist group opposing Vatican II reforms, has a history of consecrating bishops without consent, leading to excommunications in 1988. The Vatican warned of automatic excommunication for those involved in the upcoming consecrations.
- Pope begs breakaway traditionalist group to back off plan to consecrate its own bishops
Pope Leo XIV urged the Society of St. Pius X to abandon its plan to consecrate four bishops without papal approval, calling the act schismatic and a 'sin of extreme gravity.' The Vatican warned that proceeding would result in automatic excommunication for those involved.
- Pope begs breakaway traditionalist group to back off plan to consecrate its own bishops
Pope Leo XIV urged the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) to abandon its plan to consecrate bishops without papal approval, calling the act schismatic and a 'sin of extreme gravity.' The SSPX, opposing Vatican II reforms, previously faced excommunication in 1988 for a similar action and risks renewed excommunication if the planned consecrations proceed.