Council of Cardinal Advisors
wrap-up December meeting
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| Pope Francis and the Council of Cardinal Advisors.(Vatican Media) |
The Director of the Holy See Press Office briefed
journalists on the December meeting of the Pope’s Council of Cardinal Advisors
that ended on Wednesday.
By Linda Bordoni
Speaking to journalists at the Vatican Press Office,
Director Greg Burke said the Council of Cardinal
Advisors had concluded their 27th meeting and he
highlighted some of the issues that were addressed.
Burke noted that Pope Francis had been
present for all encounters of the 3-day meeting, excluding Wednesday morning
when he presided at the General Audience.
He pointed out that Cardinal Parolin had not been present
due to his commitments in Morocco at the signing of the Global Compact for
Migration, and also that three other Cardinals are no longer part of the
Council.
Three Cardinals no longer part of the Council
.“In October the Pope had written to three of the more
elderly Cardinals – Cardinal Pell from Australia, Cardinal Errazuriz from Chile
and Cardinal Monsengwo of Congo thanking them for their work,” Burke said, so
they are no longer part of the Council and he specified that the Pope has not
named new Cardinals in their place.
Burke pointed to some important themes of the meeting
including the containment of costs of the Holy See, the February meeting of the
Presidents of Episcopal Conferences, and the new Apostolic Constitution
concerning the Roman Curia and the Dicastery for Communication.
He said Cardinal Reinhard Marx, Coordinator for the Council
of the Economy, “got everybody’s attention in talking about how to contain
costs in the Vatican”.
Containing costs
Marx, he said, mentioned several proposals to help the
various offices plan “multi-year budgets – so it’s not just from year to year”
but with the intention of having a long-term plan that would take them “five to
ten years down the road”.
Burke said Cardinal Marx also voiced the possibility that
all Vatican offices “have job descriptions for each of their positions to see
if there is not some possibility of being more effective, or having more
mobility of jobs within the Vatican” and he laid out the possibility of “people
going into early retirement”.
Burke also reiterated that Marx confirmed that although the
highest cost sustained by the Vatican pertains to personnel, there is no
intention to dismiss anyone.
Dicastery for Communication
The Press Office Director finally spoke of how the new
Prefect of the Dicastery for Communication, Paolo Ruffini, had illustrated at
what stage the Vatican Media reform finds itself, underscoring the importance
of synergy and describing the criteria to be able to guarantee a unified
strategy for communications.
He said that Ruffini also commented on the value of the
different means of communication (radio, TV, web, social media) and on the
unique richness of the Vatican’s multi-linguistic media production.

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