Malta’s President George Vella. / Hamed Malekpour via Wikimedia (CC BY 4.0).
CNA Staff, May 20, 2021 / 04:30 am (CNA).
The president of Malta said this week that he would rather resign than sign a bill decriminalizing abortion.
George Vella, a medical doctor who has served as the country’s president since 2019, made the comment to NETnews on May 17.
“I will never sign a bill that involves the authorization of murder,” Vella said, according to the Times of Malta.
“I cannot stop the executive from deciding, that is up to parliament. But I do have the liberty, if I don’t agree with a bill, to resign and go home, I have no problem doing this.”
Vella was speaking after independent MP Marlene Farrugia introduced a bill in parliament May 12 seeking to decriminalize abortion, the first of its kind in the Mediterranean country.
The bill proposes the removal of three articles from Malta’s criminal code, under which anyone seeking or helping with an abortion can be sentenced to up to three years in prison, though prosecutions are uncommon.
Asked if he thought there were cases in which abortion should be permissible, the 79-year-old president said: “You have either killed or not killed, there can be no half death. I’m very clear, there are no ifs and buts.”
The two main parties in Malta, an archipelago in the central Mediterranean with a population of half a million people, have signaled their opposition to the private members’ bill.
The Labour Party said it was open to discussing decriminalization but did not want to put the matter to a parliamentary vote.
The Nationalist Party said it would never favor decriminalization because it upheld the right to life from conception till death.
In 1990, King Baudouin, Belgium’s head of state, declared that he would not sign a bill liberalizing abortion laws. On April 4 of that year, he stepped down while members of the government signed the bill into law, taking up his post again 36 hours later.
More than 90% of Malta’s population are baptized Catholics.
Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta said May 13 that the decriminalization of abortion would be a backward step.
“The womb of a mother is something that is dear and holy, it is there that human life can grow. Let us pray that the womb remains a place of life, not a place where killing takes place,” he said, according to the Times of Malta.
If you value the news and views Catholic World Report provides, please consider donating to support our efforts. Your contribution will help us continue to make CWR available to all readers worldwide for free, without a subscription. Thank you for your generosity!
Click here for more information on donating to CWR. Click here to sign up for our newsletter.
Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, Archbishop of Bologna, Italy, in St. Peter’s Basilica on Oct. 5, 2019. / Daniel Ibáñez/CNA
Rome, Italy, Nov 25, 2021 / 11:00 am (CNA).
No, it does not seem as if Pope Francis is going to resign. Indeed, his dynamism and desire to do things, working to bring the Church closer to the people, should be appreciated.
That is how Cardinal Matteo Zuppi responded when asked if the Pope Francis era was about to come to an end.
The questions, however, were legitimate because they were asked at the launch of a book explicitly addressing the papacy’s future.
Zuppi was on a panel for the Nov. 18 presentation of the book “Cosa Resta del Papato? Il futuro della Chiesa dopo Bergoglio” (“What Remains of the Papacy? The future of the Church after Bergoglio”), by the Italian Vaticanist Francesco Antonio Grana.
The book examines what the institution of the papacy is and what it can become after the resignation of Benedict XVI and the pontificate of Pope Francis.
It reconstructs the last part of Benedict XVI’s pontificate, revealing that among the few people aware of the forthcoming resignation was Italy’s then president, Giorgio Napolitano. The book also offers a glimpse of what the next conclave might look like.
Returning from Slovakia in September, Pope Francis had complained about the prelates who were allegedly already seeking to identify his successor. For this reason, the presence of a cardinal at the launch of a book that also looks at the papal succession risked being viewed as part of a “hidden electoral campaign.”
This is especially the case as Zuppi, the archbishop of Bologna, northern Italy, is seen by many as one of the possible papabili in a future conclave.
A leading figure in the Community of Sant’Egidio, and known internationally also for his role as a peace mediator in Mozambique, Zuppi has nevertheless always maintained a low-key and ascetic profile. This approach made him a beloved parish priest, first at the Rome church of Santa Maria in Trastevere and then in a parish on the city’s outskirts.
His hierarchical ascent began with his appointment as an auxiliary bishop of Rome in 2012. He was then called by Pope Francis to be archbishop of Bologna, a major Italian see, in 2015, receiving the cardinal’s red hat in 2019.
Cardinal Matteo Zuppi receives the red hat on Oct. 5, 2019. Daniel Ibanez/CNA.
Zuppi’s presence at the book launch was all the more striking because he is a cardinal loved by Pope Francis, who gives little indication of wanting to detach himself from the legacy of the reigning pope and always defends his pastoral activities. (The one exception might be his decision not to clamp down severely on the Traditional Latin Mass in his archdiocese following the motu proprioTraditionis custodes.)
The 66-year-old cardinal’s words at the book launch were cautious. He began by reflecting on the book’s title. He then focused on the Statio Orbis of March 27, 2020: the solitary prayer in St. Peter’s Square in which Pope Francis asked for an end to the pandemic. Zuppi said that on that occasion, “for the first time, Ecclesialese — the language spoken among us priests — became the common language.”
Speaking of the crisis in the Church, Zuppi said that “we can spend a lifetime arguing among ourselves, fueling an internal conflict. But the point is that it is a crisis, generative of something new.”
He stressed that John XXIII was considered “a simpleton, who seemed to impoverish the greatness of the Church,” and that Benedict XVI “defined himself as a humble worker in the Lord’s vineyard.”
In short, Francis is not, according to Zuppi, a pope who is diminishing the institution’s importance. Rather, he is giving it a new impetus. So much so, that there is “anything but an air of resignation,” Zuppi said. “In the many decisions he has made, and in the processes he has initiated, there is a great awareness and sense of the future.”
He added: “Pope Francis tells us that there is so much to do now, and he helps us not to have a renunciatory attitude, as a retreating minority. His significant reform is pastoral and missionary conversion.”
“He allows us to place ourselves in an evangelical, straightforward way, close to the people, and shows us some priorities for a Church that speaks to the heart. He helps us to be more Church, in a world that makes identity fade.”
There was also talk of the Zan bill, a proposed anti-homophobia law discussed in the Italian Senate. The Holy See presented a formal diplomatic note to the Italian state, highlighting that the bill violated the Concordat between the Holy See and Italy as part of the freedom of education.
It was not an opinion of the Holy See, but rather a diplomatic initiative to avoid the violation of a treaty. One of the panelists, Peter Gomez, director of IlFattoquotidiano.it, suggested erroneously that the Holy See expresses an opinion and the secular state is free to make its own decisions. But this was not the focus of the discussion.
Zuppi has repeatedly refused to address the controversy publicly. Many have interpreted this as a tactical move. The general assembly of the Italian bishops’ conference is currently discussing who should be its next president. Zuppi is one of the leading candidates to succeed Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti of Perugia-Città della Pieve.
Then there is the question of the next conclave that continues to hang over Zuppi. It was the author of the book himself, Francesco Grana, who sought to damp down any speculation. He explained that, despite its arresting title, the book was not presenting a manifesto.
He referred to a book recently published by Andrea Riccardi, founder of the community with which Zuppi is closely associated.
“Andrea Riccardi, the founder of the Community of Sant’Egidio, wrote the book ‘The Church burns.’ And if the Church burns, how can we not ask ourselves about the papacy of the future?” he asked.
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Sep 17, 2024 / 16:50 pm (CNA).
Senate Republicans blocked a bill on Tuesday that would have forced insurance companies to cover in vitro fertilization (IVF) and would have created an … […]
Pope Francis has appointed Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline, archbishop of Marseille, France, as the Holy See’s special envoy for the Quebec Archdiocese’s jubilee celebrations to take place Sept. 20–22, 2024. / Credit: Laurent Coust/SOPA Images/LightR… […]
5 Comments
I immediately thought of Belgium’s King Baudouin when reading this headline. Recently, I have come across information that the king’s wife, Queen Fabiola, suffered several miscarriages and never did successfully bear children. It must have been painful for the king when his country went down the road it did. That road is even more deadly today with Belgium having some of the most “progressive” laws on euthanasia. Bravo to Malta’s president.
Malta’s President George Vella and Archbishop Charles Scicluna do not have to “serenely dialogue”, consensus, discern and “move ahead cautiously” all to appease the god of faux unity among their peers. They know their ground, recognize the faces of good and evil, therefore, they can speak without hesitation by fostering truth and rejecting falsehood displayed by the evil one.
American Politicians and American Bishops take notice, this is what real backbone looks like:
“I will never sign a bill that involves the authorization of murder,” Vella said, according to the Times of Malta.
Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta said May 13:
“The womb of a mother is something that is dear and holy, it is there that human life can grow. Let us pray that the womb remains a place of life, not a place where killing takes place,” he said, according to the Times of Malta.
It just just now occurred to me what the most likely reason is why American Bishops have been soft-balling the anti-life issue around the block for decades. It’s the money! Bishops, with their lobbying, receive over a billion federal dollars a year to fund programs for both legal and illegal immigration. They get NO monies for pro-life activities. This has been going on at least since the 1980s, with the involvement of Bernardin, O’Malley, Gregory, McCarrick, then, Frs. Lynch and Cupich to name a few.
Presently a bishop in California has garnered over a million dollars in funds for his online ministry from the Templeton Foundation which supports Planned Parenthood to the tune of three billion dollars. It is shocking that a bishop would stoop to apply for a dirty grant from a foundation that supports the killing of baby Americans. This is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to how the money god has the American bishops by the throat. Cultivating the money managers for funds keeps the prelates rolling in the dough and blind to the fate of 66 million and counting persons who have been robbed of their future.
America needs righteous bishops and politicians like Malta’s President George Vella and Archbishop Charles Scicluna. Please God!
I was just looking into Malta’s “citizenship by investment” policy the other day when casting about for a country to retire in where the obligations of temporal rulers towards God are recognised. I am very happy to read this news and I pray that Malta’s leaders stay committed to this course.
I immediately thought of Belgium’s King Baudouin when reading this headline. Recently, I have come across information that the king’s wife, Queen Fabiola, suffered several miscarriages and never did successfully bear children. It must have been painful for the king when his country went down the road it did. That road is even more deadly today with Belgium having some of the most “progressive” laws on euthanasia. Bravo to Malta’s president.
Bravo to Maltas president for sure!
Amen!
Malta’s President George Vella and Archbishop Charles Scicluna do not have to “serenely dialogue”, consensus, discern and “move ahead cautiously” all to appease the god of faux unity among their peers. They know their ground, recognize the faces of good and evil, therefore, they can speak without hesitation by fostering truth and rejecting falsehood displayed by the evil one.
American Politicians and American Bishops take notice, this is what real backbone looks like:
“I will never sign a bill that involves the authorization of murder,” Vella said, according to the Times of Malta.
Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta said May 13:
“The womb of a mother is something that is dear and holy, it is there that human life can grow. Let us pray that the womb remains a place of life, not a place where killing takes place,” he said, according to the Times of Malta.
It just just now occurred to me what the most likely reason is why American Bishops have been soft-balling the anti-life issue around the block for decades. It’s the money! Bishops, with their lobbying, receive over a billion federal dollars a year to fund programs for both legal and illegal immigration. They get NO monies for pro-life activities. This has been going on at least since the 1980s, with the involvement of Bernardin, O’Malley, Gregory, McCarrick, then, Frs. Lynch and Cupich to name a few.
Presently a bishop in California has garnered over a million dollars in funds for his online ministry from the Templeton Foundation which supports Planned Parenthood to the tune of three billion dollars. It is shocking that a bishop would stoop to apply for a dirty grant from a foundation that supports the killing of baby Americans. This is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to how the money god has the American bishops by the throat. Cultivating the money managers for funds keeps the prelates rolling in the dough and blind to the fate of 66 million and counting persons who have been robbed of their future.
America needs righteous bishops and politicians like Malta’s President George Vella and Archbishop Charles Scicluna. Please God!
I was just looking into Malta’s “citizenship by investment” policy the other day when casting about for a country to retire in where the obligations of temporal rulers towards God are recognised. I am very happy to read this news and I pray that Malta’s leaders stay committed to this course.