Sunday, October 6, 2019

Pope Francis Appoints New Chrislam-Friendly Cardinals


Pope Francis Appoints 13 New Chrislam-Friendly Cardinals Who Will Help Guide The Roman Catholic Church



The Chrislam appointments, which can be compared to the selection of cabinet ministers upon a new government, come from countries such as Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Indonesia, Morocco, Cuba or Guatemala -- representing "the Church's missionary outreach and universal character," according to Vatican News. 

Among his picks, Pope Francis appointed Cardinal Miguel Guixot, the President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue.   

Guixot has a long history of working with Muslim leaders on religious cooperation, having spearheaded talks with Grand Imam Ahmed el-Tayeb of Cairo's Al-Azhar mosque, and represents Pope Francis' push for interreligious dialogue between Catholics and Muslims.


What started as a trickle has turned into a full-on prophetic flood of activity surrounding the moves in 2019 by Pope Francis to create the One World Religion of Chrislam as foretold in the book of Revelation.

Just last week we told you that construction had been approved on the new Chrislam headquarters in Abu Dhabi that sent prophecy shock waves around the world.


So here we see Pope Francis appointing new cardinals, 13 of them to be exact, nothing new about that, right? Happens all the time, right? Wrong. What is different about the appoint of these 13 cardinals is that every, single one of them are in agreement with the pope on the covenant of ‘mutual brotherhood’ signed back and February, and on adding the LGBTQ+ as ‘members in good standing’ to the Catholic Church


The appointments, which can be compared to the selection of cabinet ministers upon a new government, come from countries such as Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Indonesia, Morocco, Cuba or Guatemala — representing “the Church’s missionary outreach and universal character,” according to Vatican News. Among his picks, Pope Francis appointed Cardinal Miguel Guixot, the President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue.

Guixot has a long history of working with Muslim leaders on religious cooperation, having spearheaded talks with Grand Imam Ahmed el-Tayeb of Cairo’s Al-Azhar mosque, and represents Pope Francis’ push for interreligious dialogue between Catholics and Muslims.

As does Cristobal Romero, archbishop of Rabat, is representative “of the church in North Africa,” Vatican News writes. British citizen Michael Louis Fitzgerald has worked with people “from other faiths, especially from the Arab culture,” and Indonesian Ignatius Suharyo Hardjoatmodjo, who will work as a bridge to South East Asia and to Indonesia, a country “with the biggest Muslim following in the world,” Vatican News says.


The creation of 13 new Cardinals, from St. Peter’s Basilica, 

Vatican City. Presided by Pope Francis. 

The new Cardinals are as follows:




    1. Miguel Ángel Cardinal Ayuso Guixot, M.C.C.J. (Spain), Titular Bishop of Luperciana, President of Pontifical Council for Inter-Religious Dialogue and Prefect of Commission for Religious Relations with Muslims, as Cardinal-Deacon
    2. José Tolentino Cardinal Calaça de Mendonça (Portugal), Titular Archbishop of Suava, Librarian of Vatican Apostolic Library and Archivist of Vatican Secret Archives, as Cardinal-Deacon 3.
    3. Ignatius Cardinal Suharyo Hardjoatmodjo, Metropolitan Archbishop of Jakarta (Indonesia), Military Ordinary of Indonesia, as Cardinal-Priest
    4. Juan de la Caridad Cardinal García Rodríguez, Metropolitan Archbishop of La Habana (Cuba), as Cardinal-Priest
    5. Fridolin Cardinal Ambongo Besungu, O.F.M. Cap., Metropolitan Archbishop of Kinshasa (Congo-Kinshasa), as Cardinal-Priest
    6. Jean-Claude Cardinal Hollerich, S.J., Archbishop of Luxembourg (Luxembourg) and President of Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Community, as Cardinal-Priest
    7. Álvaro Leonel Cardinal Ramazzini Imeri, Bishop of Huehuetenango (Guatemala), as Cardinal-Priest
    8. Matteo Maria Cardinal Zuppi, Metropolitan Archbishop of Bologna (Italy), as Cardinal-Priest
    9. Cristóbal López Cardinal Romero, S.D.B., Archbishop of Rabat (Morocco) and Apostolic Administrator of Tánger (Morocco), as Cardinal-Priest
    10. Michael Cardinal Czerny, S.J., Titular Archbishop of Beneventum, Undersecretary of Migrant and Refugee Section of Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, as Cardinal-Deacon
    11. Michael Louis Cardinal Fitzgerald, M. Afr., Titular Archbishop of Nepte, Apostolic Nuncio emeritus to Egypt and Delegate emeritus to League of Arab States (LAS), as Cardinal-Deacon
    12. Sigitas Cardinal Tamkevičius, S.J., Metropolitan Archbishop emeritus of Kaunas (Lithuania), as Cardinal-Priest
    13. Eugenio Cardinal Dal Corso, P.S.D.P., Bishop emeritus of Benguela (Angola)

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