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Angelus News | July 12, 2024 | Vol. 9 No. 14

On the cover: A PBS series recently suggested purgatory was the “invention” of 14th-century Italian poet Dante Alighieri. Could it be true? Does such a place — somewhere between heaven and hell — really exist? On Page 10, contributing editor Mike Aquilina details purgatory’s biblical roots in the Old and New Testaments, all of which point to the hope and forgiveness God promises “in the age to come” to believers.

On the cover: A PBS series recently suggested purgatory was the “invention” of 14th-century Italian poet Dante Alighieri. Could it be true? Does such a place — somewhere between heaven and hell — really exist? On Page 10, contributing editor Mike Aquilina details purgatory’s biblical roots in the Old and New Testaments, all of which point to the hope and forgiveness God promises “in the age to come” to believers.

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Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò,<br />

then-apostolic nuncio to the United<br />

States, during the departure of Pope<br />

Francis from Philadelphia International<br />

Airport following the pope’s<br />

apostolic visit to the U.S. in 2015. |<br />

CNS/GREGORY A. SHEMITZ<br />

He’s not<br />

with us<br />

The schism charges<br />

against Archbishop<br />

Carlo Maria Viganò<br />

are a reminder that<br />

criticism of Pope<br />

Francis comes in<br />

different colors.<br />

BY JOHN L. ALLEN JR.<br />

ROME — When news broke<br />

last month that the Vatican, at<br />

long last, had formally charged<br />

Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò with<br />

schism, the exultation on the Catholic<br />

left was entirely predictable. What has<br />

been perhaps slightly more surprising<br />

has been the public support the move<br />

has drawn on the Catholic right.<br />

Here in Italy, the country’s most<br />

prominent political fixer, and a man<br />

long linked to conservative parties and<br />

politicians, and perhaps the country’s<br />

most influential conservative newspaper,<br />

came out June 21 backing the<br />

schism charge, and in both cases the<br />

reaction could best be summed up as<br />

“it’s about d*** time.”<br />

Consultant Luigi Bisignani, a onetime<br />

confidante of the late Italian<br />

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, characterized<br />

Viganò with open contempt<br />

— among other things, calling him<br />

a “ferocious family bureaucrat” and<br />

suggesting his anti-Francis campaign<br />

may be at least as much about money<br />

as principle.<br />

Meanwhile, an unsigned editorial in<br />

the newspaper Il Foglio was even more<br />

caustic, complimenting the pope for<br />

taking action and saying the Catholic<br />

Church is too serious a thing to<br />

tolerate the sort of “trash” propagated<br />

by Viganò.<br />

To be clear, this is not the first time<br />

mainstream conservatives have attempted<br />

to distinguish themselves from<br />

the former papal envoy to the U.S. Two<br />

years ago, for example, after Viganò<br />

issued a statement on the Ukraine war<br />

largely echoing Russian propaganda,<br />

George Weigel publicly wrote that<br />

Viganò had “written the obituary for<br />

what remained of his once-considerable<br />

religious and moral authority.”<br />

The fact that conservatives apparently<br />

are so eager to toss Viganò under the<br />

bus again now, however, underlines a<br />

20 • ANGELUS • <strong>July</strong> <strong>12</strong>, <strong>2024</strong>

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