Cardinal opposing Pope Francis dies under mysterious circumstances

Started by rmstock, July 12, 2017, 01:08:57 PM

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Cardinal Joachim Meisner (25 December 1933 – 5 July 2017)
Cardinal opposing Pope Francis dies under mysterious circumstances
11 luglio 2017  adm-zagami
http://leozagami.com/2017/07/11/cardinal-opposing-pope-francis-dies-under-mysterious-circumstances/

  "Article by Leo Zagami
   
   As the tension rises in the Vatican, we may have the first victim of
   the internal conflict against the pedophile network, that now rules the
   Church with Pope Francis. His name his Cardinal Joachim Meisner, the
   former Archbishop of Cologne, a strong defender of the Church's
   doctrine and orthodoxy, who suddenly died at the age of 83, on the 5th
   of July 2017. He was considered a leader of the conservative wing of
   the German episcopate, and was one of the four cardinals who orginally
   presented the controversial letter "Dubia" to Pope Francis in September
   2016, seeking up until June 2017, a clarification on the modernization
   of the Church in matters of faith, and the infamous Post-Synodal
   Apostolic Exhortation issued by Pope Francis called, Amoris Laetitia,
   without ever receiving an answer.
     
   In an interview given on the 5th of July by Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig
   Müller, now ex-Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
   Faith, Müller said he spoke with Cardinal Meisner the night before he
   died. As the Passauer Neue Presse reports:
   
   Müller had spoken over the phone with the former Archbishop of Cologne
   [Cardinal Meisner] the previous night [before he died the next
   morning]; and they also had spoken about the non-renewal of his former
   position. Meisner had shown himself to be "deeply saddened" by this
   dismissal. "That moved him personally and wounded him – and he
   considered it to be a form of damage for the Church," as the Curial
   Cardinal [Müller] himself described the reaction of Meisner and l
   well-informed sources within the Vatican say that perhaps Cardinal
   Meisner "died of a broken heart." Or was he killed in traditional
   Vatican fashion with a poison coffee?
   
   In this new interview Cardinal Müller also commented and sharply
   criticized the conduct of Pope Francis with regard to his dismissal
   from the CDF, but it was the phone call with Cardinal Meisner, and his
   sadness for what happened to Müller after the Jesuit take over of the
   CDF, that seems pretty suspicious to me and other Vatican analysts.
   Interestingly enough, Archbishop Georg Gänswein, personal secretary of
   Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, and Prefect of the Papal Household very
   close to Pope Francis, and Obama, and a member of the Congregation for
   the Doctrine of the Faith since 1996, also happened to meet Cardinal
   Meisner shortly before his death. Only a coincidence? Of course not,
   nothing is a coincidence in the Vatican, but a well orchestrated
   maneuver.
   
   According to the Passauer Neue Presse, Gänswein visited Bad Füssing
   (near Passau), on the 2nd of July, in order to give a talk at the "Bad
   Füssinger Gespräche" [Bad Füssing Talks]. Cardinal Meisner had been
   staying in Bad Füssing for a period of time for vacation, as his health
   was not considered at all a problem. So the two influential Vatican
   figures met in person there, but unfortunately, no details have been
   revealed about their conversation that eventually led to Joachim
   Meisner's death, a mystery that needs further investigation, as it
   seems Pope Francis is clearing up the scene from any unwanted
   opposition before his summer vacation, and Meisner was on his hit list
   for a long time.
   
   Leo Zagami is the author of Confessions of an Illuminati, Volume III:
   Espionage, Templars and Satanism in the Shadows of the Vatican you can
   follow this story on infowars.com with Alex Jones on Tuesday the 11th
   of July 2017"


NEWS
Headlines > Müller criticises Pope for the way he dismissed him and offers to help mediate 'deep rift' in the Church
MÜLLER CRITICISES POPE FOR THE WAY HE DISMISSED HIM AND OFFERS TO HELP MEDIATE 'DEEP RIFT' IN THE CHURCH
10 July 2017 | by Christa Pongratz-Lippitt
http://www.thetablet.co.uk/news/7447/0/m-ller-criticises-pope-for-the-way-he-dismissed-him-and-offers-to-help-mediate-deep-rift-in-the-church

  'Church's social teaching must also be applied to the way employees are
   treated here in Rome', Müller told a German newspaper

   
   
   
   Cardinal Gerhard Müller, who was informed by Pope Francis on 30 June
   that his mandate as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
   Faith (CDF) would not be prolonged, has sharply criticised the way in
   which the Pope dismissed him.
   
   "The Pope informed me within one minute of his decision not to prolong
   my mandate. He did not give a reason, just as he gave no reasons for
   dismissing three highly competent members of the CDF a few months ago.
   I cannot accept this way of doing things. As a bishop one cannot treat
   people in this way. The Church's social teaching must also be applied
   to the way employees are treated here in Rome", Müller told the
   Bavarian daily 'Passauer Neue Presse' on 6 July.
   
   He had informed Cardinal Joachim Meisner of the Pope's decision not to
   renew his [Müller's] mandate in a long telephone conversation on the
   evening of 4 July, a few hours before Meisner unexpectedly died in his
   sleep. Meisner had been "particularly upset" to hear of the Pope's
   decision, Müller said. "He thought it would harm the Church".
   
   Meisner had also been most concerned about the current situation of the
   Church, "about the disputes and altercations that were standing in the
   way of church unity and the truth", Müller added.
   
   Asked if Meisner had been upset that Pope Francis had not answered the
   letter he (Meisner) and three other cardinals had written to the Pope
   and later published asking Francis for clarification on whether or not
   remarried divorcees could in certain individual cases receive the
   Eucharist, Müller said it would have been better if instead of
   publishing the letter, the dubia, that is the four cardinals' doubts,
   had been discussed at a confidential meeting.
   
   He recalled that he himself had never taken part in the dubia debate,
   but added, "I must stress with all due clarity that the attempts to
   date to explain how the balancing act between dogma, that is church
   teaching and pastoral practice can be achieved by Cardinals Schönborn,
   Kasper and others, are simply not convincing."
   
   He recommended that Pope Francis discuss the dubia with the three
   remaining cardinals. "And I suggest the Pope entrust me with the
   dialogue as I have the competence and the necessary sense of
   responsibility required. I could moderate the discussion".
   
   He had no intention, however, of allowing himself to lead a movement
   which was critical of Pope Francis. Dialogue and cooperation were
   called for. "Bridges are needed to prevent a schism", he emphasised. 
   
   Asked in the 'Passauer Neue Presse' interview of 6 July on his
   relationship with Meisner and what he thought of Meisner's views,
   Müller replied:
   
   "We were on good terms and I admired his courage to raise his voice
   against certain currents of the zeitgeist. It is easier to swim with
   the current than to speak up for the truth. The Apostles already
   experienced that standing up for the truth meant giving witness, and
   giving witness has something to do with martyrdom – not necessarily
   martyrdom of the blood. There is also martyrdom of the word for which 
   one has to suffer certain disadvantages - especially if one is not part
   of the main stream".
     
   Subscribe now from only £53* for 6 months unlimited access to article
   content.

   
   
   http://www.thetablet.co.uk/downloadpdf/Tablet%208%20Jul%2017%20Full%20issue.pdf




Früherer Erzbischof in Köln  |  05.07.2017  |  16:56 Uhr
Streitbarer Kardinal Meisner gestorben
http://www.pnp.de/nachrichten/tagesthemen/2570961_Kardinal-Meisner-im-Alter-von-83-Jahren-gestorben.html

Bad Füssing  |  05.07.2017  |  09:16 Uhr
Im Urlaub in Bad Füssing: Kardinal Joachim Meisner ist gestorben
http://www.pnp.de/lokales/stadt_und_landkreis_passau/passau_land/2570949_Kardinal-Joachim-Meisner-in-Bad-Fuessing-gestorben.html

Bad Füssing  |  05.07.2017  |  09:16 Uhr
Im Urlaub in Bad Füssing: Kardinal Joachim Meisner ist gestorben
http://www.pnp.de/lokales/stadt_und_landkreis_passau/pocking_bad_fuessing_bad_griesbach/2570949_Im-Urlaub-in-Bad-Fuessing-Kardinal-Joachim-Meisner-ist-gestorben.html

Altötting  |  05.07.2017  |  17:36 Uhr
Kardinal Meisner "war ein echter Freund Altöttings"
http://www.pnp.de/lokales/landkreis_altoetting/altoetting/2571332_Kardinal-Meisner-war-ein-echter-Freund-Altoettings.html



Pope Francis and  fired Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller
Pope Francis: YOU ARE FIRED!

2 luglio 2017  adm-zagami
http://leozagami.com/2017/07/02/pope-francis-you-are-fired/

  "Article by Leo Zagami
   
   After the scandal broke out in the Palace of the Holy Office involving
   Monsignor, Luigi Capozzi, Secretary of Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio
   Pope Francis received in a private audience, Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig
   Müller
, who served as the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine
   of the Faith (CDF), his appointment made by Pope Benedict XVI in 2012.
   
   Müller was prepared for anything, and Bergoglio reminded him that on
   the 2nd of July 2017, his five-year term as Prefect of the Congregation
   for the doctrine of the faith would end , and would not be renewed. He
   basically told him in apprentice style manner: You are fired! The
   Cardinal remained silent until the Pope proposed another assignment in
   Rome. Obviously the former Holy Office is the most important dicastery
   of the Roman Curia, and Müller was the second successor of Joseph
   Ratzinger in this key office of the Vatican, but Cardinal Müller made a
   fatal error when he gave his internal support to four conservative
   Cardinals, who wrote a letter to Pope Francis dated September 19, 2016,
   questioning the doctrinal soundness of his position on divorce:
   
   https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/pope-fails-to-reply-to-4-cardinals-urgent-plea-for-clarification-so-they-go
   
   The four Cardinals; Walter Brandmüller, Raymond Burke, Carlo Caffarra,
   and Joachim Meisner; who wrote that historic letter to Pope Francis in
   which they pleaded with him for clarity regarding his Apostolic
   Exhortation Amoris Laetitia, warning the Pope of the "uncertainty,
   confusion, and disorientation among many of the faithful", are now more
   isolated than ever. Steve Bannon's friend Raymond Burke, was sent to a
   remote island in Guam, to preside over a trial of a local archbishop
   accused of sexual abuse by former altar boys, to avoid his presence in
   the Knights of Malta. However, after not receiving an official answer
   from the Vatican, the four Cardinals tried again with no luck at the
   end of June 2017:
   
   https://cruxnow.com/vatican/2017/06/22/four-cardinals-press-pope-francis-clarify-divorce-remarriage-stand/
   
   The latest news on this twisted story is that Müller always close to
   Pope Ratzinger was fired as an act of retaliation. An inside source of
   the Vatican told me that because of this internal war,  Müller was the
   one who called the Commander of the Vatican Gendarmerie, Domenico
   Giani, and instigated the raid on the gay orgy that took place in the
   Palace of the Holy Office, that led to the arrest of the Pope's
   supporter and close collaborator, Monsignor Luigi Capozzi, creating an
   unwanted scandal for the Vatican Gay Lobby protected by the Jesuit Pope.
   
   
   "I'm not able to understand all," Cardinal Müller said when asked why
   Francis sent them away. He added, "He's the pope."
   
   A few minutes after Bergoglio fired Müller on the 1st of July 2017,  he
   named the Jesuit Luis Ladaria Ferrer to succeed Mülller as Prefect of
   the CDF. The Jesuit take over of the Catholic Faith is now complete.
   
   
   Leo Zagami is the author of Confessions of an Illuminati, Volume III:
   Espionage, Templars and Satanism in the Shadows of the Vatican

   
   Tune in for more on Infowars on Monday, July 3, 1pm EST when Leo Zagami
   will be interviewed by Alex Jones.
"

``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778