The Valley Catholic November 5, 2013 | Page 13

The Valley Catholic in the church/State November 5, 2013 Pope Francis receives Kenneth Hackett, new U.S. envoy to Vatican By Francis X. Rocca VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Presenting his credentials to Pope Francis, Kenneth F. Hackett officially took over as U.S. ambassador to the Holy See Oct. 21, filling a role that had been vacant for nearly a year. “The United States and the Holy See have converging interests that span a broad range of issues” including “human rights and social justice,” Hackett wrote the same day, in the first post on his official ambassador’s blog. “We both work to make a difference on a range of important global issues such as trafficking in persons, interreligious dialogue, conflict resolution, food access and security, HIV/AIDS and care for the environment,” wrote Hackett, a former president of Catholic Relief Services, U.S. bishops’ overseas relief and development agency. The United States had not had an ambassador at the Vatican since November 2012, when Miguel H. Diaz resigned and left Rome to become professor of faith and culture at the University of Dayton in Ohio. During Diaz’s tenure, relations between Washington and the Vatican were marked by tension, particularly over the Obama administration’s plan to require that all heath insurance plans, including those offered by most Catholic institutions, cover sterilizations and contraceptives, which are forbidden by Catholic moral teaching. “There will be times when the administration position differs from the Kenneth F. Hackett, new U.S. ambassador to the Holy See, presents his letters of credential to Pope Francis during meeting at the Vatican Oct. 21. Hackett, retired president of Catholic Relief Services, began his role Oct. 21, filling a position that had been vacant for nearly a year. (CNS photo/L’Osservatore Romano) Holy See,” Hackett said in August, “But I am going to look for -- as many of my predecessors did -- those opportunities where we can come together and find strength in collaboration, coincidence of interests.” Hackett is a former president of CRS, the U.S. bishops’ overseas relief and development agency, which he first joined in 1972 after a post-college stint with the Peace Corps in Ghana. He retired as president of CRS in December 2011. The new ambassador is also a former North American president of Caritas Internationalis, the confederation of humanitarian agencies of the Catholic Church, and a former member of the board of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum. 13 Pope authorizes leave of absence for German ‘luxury bishop’ VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis has authorized a leave of absence for a German bishop at the center of controversy over expenditures for his residence and diocesan center. “A situation has been created in which Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartzvan Elst currently cannot exercise his episcopal ministry,” said a statement Oct. 23 from the Vatican press office. Pope Francis, after being “continually, broadly and objectively informed” about the situation in the Diocese of Limburg, has authorized “a period of leave outside the diocese,” effective immediately, the statement said. The bishop has been at the center of controversy for months over the remodeling and building project in Limburg, which is estimated to have cost about $40 million. German media have dubbed Bishop Tebart ????????)????q????????????t????????????)A???????????????????????????=????????????????I?????)i??????????????????????????)??????d??????????????????? ????)Q????????????????????=?????()9?? ????????????????????????????)?????????????????????????)M H??58?Q