it just froze over
it just froze over
Pope picks Burke to serve on highest Roman Catholic court
Thursday, July 13, 2006
When you have finished reading the story below Click Here.
emphasis added.
More later.
Tim
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
Below is the link to the story.
Pope Benedict XVI has named St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke to the Roman Catholic Church's supreme court, its highest judicial authority.
The Vatican's Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature, as it is called,
hears appeals of select cases that cannot be settled in the church's lower
tribunals.
"It's a very prestigious position to be named to," said Rocco Palmo, U.S.correspondent for The Tablet, a British weekly that reports on the Vatican. "It says the archbishop of St. Louis is still a national leader in the eyes of the church."
Many of the cases the dozen or so judges hear deal with disputes between
Vatican departments. The tribunal also hears appeals of other cases - for
instance, in parish closings, or the removal of priests for allegations of sexual abuse of minors.
Burke, a canon lawyer by training, has worked for the court before. He was
the first American to serve as the tribunal's defender of the bond - the
equivalent of the U.S. solicitor general - from 1990 to 1994.
Burke will serve the court from St. Louis, although he might have to travel
to Rome for hearings, said Monsignor John B. Shamleffer, the St. Louis
archdiocese's judicial vicar, or head canon lawyer.
Burke, 58, was named to the court Saturday. He was out of the country and
unavailable for comment Monday.
Shamleffer said Benedict was "recognizing the archbishop's qualities" and believes he can help settle disputes.
One case that could come before the Supreme Tribunal is that of St.
Stanislaus Kostka Parish, just north of downtown St. Louis. Late last year,
Burke declared excommunicated the parish's lay board members and a priest they hired from another diocese.
"Given what happened with St. Stanislaus, this is a vindication of sorts," said Palmo. "It's a signal he's in good graces in Rome."
Shamleffer said that if the St. Stanislaus appeal ever went to the Supreme
Tribunal, Burke would have to recuse himself.