habemus papam

Habemus Papam. He is an American, was an Augustinian and a graduate of Villanova University. Leo XIV.

I honestly never thought in my lifetime that you would have a Pope from the United States.

He’s 69 years old and actually the sister of someone I know was in his class at Villanova.

I am not a big fan of members of the Augustinian order, but I liked what he had to say when he appeared after he was elected Pope by the Cardinals in conclave.

https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-05/cardinal-elected-pope-papal-name.html

Born in Chicago, Illinois, United States, Prevost now Leo XIV dedicated his early clerical career to the Order of Saint Augustine. The media has reported that he was the least American of the American Cardinals. It has also been reported that he was a long shot.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/08/world/pope-leo-xiv-robert-prevost-wwk-intl-latam

The new Pope has a missionary focus, which I like, and I think is needed in this time.

Gifted New York Times Article

I hope Pope Leo XIV continues a lot of what Pope Francis did.

I also heard an interesting fact the other day that 82% of American Catholics do not go to church. I hope he also as Pope continues to clean up the American Church. And among other things, I hope he gets someone to put the anxious former head of the church in Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput out to pasture for good.

His one brother John was interviewed by ABC News. He seems amiable but unsure as what to say exactly but you know what? The lives of everyone in Pope Leo XIV’s family is also going to change. Will that mean they get things like Secret Service keeping an eye on them or do they just live normal lives? We’ve never had an American Pope, so you have to wonder how does becoming Pope affect the families of the Popes? Especially in a modern world.

His other brother Lou, however, is a cat of a different kind. Sadly.

I’m guessing that is why I have already seen some unpleasant memes from the highly politicized about the new Pope which I think is really sad.

This is kind of a historic moment and I hope he’s a good Pope. I don’t think he’s going to make me more of a devout Catholic per se, but as a catholic, I will be paying attention because he’s the first American Pope.

I hope his tenure is safe for him and his family in the US, and I wonder will he come to the US semiquincentennial next year?

And that is my final thought. Next year this country turns 250 and we have an American Pope for the very first time.

requiescat in pace

Pope Francis has died. He died in the early morning today, Easter Monday, Rome time. He was 88.

AP News: Pope Francis, first Latin American pontiff who ministered with a charming, humble style, dies at 88

BY NICOLE WINFIELD

Now Pope John Paul II died before Easter when he passed away in 2005. I actually met him when I was a senior in high school in 1981 at a private Ash Wednesday service in the Vatican. Private meant 100 people. It was this small like church like reception room in one of the lower levels of the Vatican with an altar.

It was really cool and amazing experience and we got into it because my father’s classmate from Saint Joe’s Prep the late Cardinal John Foley was in Rome back then. He was the voice of midnight mass for years. So for years and years, if you ever turned on midnight mass from Rome on Christmas Eve, it was a Philadelphia guy narrating.

I wouldn’t necessarily say I was anything other than a disillusioned Catholic (versus a lapsed Catholic), although I admit since I came to Chester County, I have not joined to church because I have not found a church I really like. I have my faith, but I spent my formative years in a Jesuit parish, which is probably why I always found Pope Francis so appealing.

The Jesuit order was founded in 1540 by Ignatius of Loyola and six companions, with the approval of Pope Paul III. The Society of Jesus is engaged in evangelization and apostolic ministry in 112 countries. Jesuits work in education, research, and cultural pursuits. Missionary, educational, literary works are their ministry.

The church I was baptized in Old Saint Joseph’s on Willings Alley Philadelphia is a Jesuit Parish. my catechism before I made my first communion was done by aJesuit priest, Father Drain. I still remember his name.

I find the churches in Chester county somewhat impersonal and I don’t like a lot of what I see, especially when it comes to the dead baby posters along Boot Road in West Chester. That is Saints Peter and Paul. The church I have liked the best is Saints Philip and James in Exton, but none of them have struck that cord of belonging or did they even wanted me to belong.

But I’m thinking that the Catholic Church in the United States is more business than anything else these days and I don’t know that a lot of people feel like they belong in their parishes. What I learned living on the Main Line before I moved here courtesy of someone I used to refer to as Monsignor Lexus, was you were only as good as the check you could write.

But Pope Francis was someone I actually admired. He didn’t just talk the talk he walked the walk, but that’s what Jesuits do. He tried to take accountability for past wrongs, including pedophile priests, and those unwed girls homes in Ireland, where they worked them like slaves and abused them, and then stole their babies. He also tried to bring the Catholic Church out of the shadows and into more modern times.

Francis was a peacemaker and he literally tried so hard. As an American, I am embarrassed one of his last visitors was the current Vice President. Here’s hoping he taught Vance something.

So now the process starts of choosing a new Pope. Conclave. So within 20 days of the pope’s death, a conclave consisting of 120 cardinals out of the 138 who all must be under age 80 and can vote will gather at the Vatican to pick his replacement. They will vote four times a day until they choose a new Pope.

https://nypost.com/2025/04/21/world-news/who-will-be-next-pope-after-francis-vatican-conclave/

https://www.reuters.com/world/after-pope-francis-death-focus-turns-cardinals-who-will-choose-his-successor-2025-04-21/

It was announced a little while ago that Pope Francis died of a stroke and heart failure, the Vatican’s press office said in a statement.

https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-04/pope-francis-death-due-to-stroke-and-irreversible-cardiocircula.html

Requiescat in pace.

ciao 2020. may you be a year not to be repeated.

I can’t take credit for that funny cartoon above as it is circling the Internet. But it is too perfect to ignore and just sums up this strange year we’ve survived.

Yes I thought about a week ago I had written my last post for 2020 and then things happened. I learned those who claim to be Christian and pious aren’t always pleasant on social media. And while I really appreciate the pastoral leadership at Covenant Presbyterian Church sending me an email to acknowledge my concerns, well, some of us discovered that we got word for word as in yes verbatim the same email. That made me a little disappointed in them, but it also made me realize that they just don’t get it (or don’t want to.) I still hope they abandon the fakakta idea for a 12 foot high LED sign in front of a historically charming church on Lancaster Avenue in Frazer. (And isn’t fakata just the most perfect word to describe so many things in 2020?)

And if we’re going to talk about giant electronics signs that look like movie screens and giant TVs come to life, it is worth remarking that West Whiteland has a planning commission meeting next week where yet another one of these giant digital billboards is being proposed. Yes, January 5th. And I predict much like East Whiteland and their “settlement agreement” which will face East Whiteland with a Sophie’s choice of where to put signs residents don’t want. And then there is Upper Merion Township. They have their own giant digital billboards issues. Same billboard company and same solicitor as East Whiteland. There is still a petition circling for them if you agree with all of the residents who don’t want zoning changed in parks to accommodate billboards. And in West Whiteland what is with the other billboard related LLC very close by to the one being discussed January 5th?

Other things on the hit parade of 2020 include another year of unending issues with the pipelines. Energy Transfer, Sunoco Logistics, pick a name they spent another year making a mess, putting residents at risk. One of my late fall favorites? Was seeing photos on social media of workers’ trucks parked in fire lanes at local shopping centers like they were big important people that couldn’t park in a spot, and what’s up with that FU to the community?

As we head into 2021 there is a story out of Lower Merion that no one’s talking about. It’s about that property adjacent to Stonleigh that Lower Merion School District “acquired” for playing fields after they bought the property on Montgomery Avenue (what once was the Clothier Estate) for the new school. OK so everybody knew that the County Line Road property was going to become playing fields. That’s not news at this point. But what bears pondering is exactly how many hundreds of trees is the Lower Merion School District going to take down in the end for these fields? This is a sizable property and it has heritage trees doesn’t it? It’s over 10 acres isn’t it? So that is a big chunk of property to deforest isn’t it?

Now I’ve heard neighbors over there in both Lower Merion and Radnor Township are very concerned about the trees of it all because this road straddles both municipalities in spots. Lower Merion School District’s Superintendent should give a rat’s fanny about the environment as involves the future of his students, right? One thing I have always wondered about this set of projects both for the school and the playing field is how is this going to affect skinny hilly windy County Line Road and some of the surrounding small streets near these projects? And aren’t first responders a little far away from both of these new education locations? So what does that mean in the future? Once again I reiterate how glad I am no longer on the Main Line and feel for my many friends who are still there.

Other things I won’t miss in 2020 is the conflicting ways people treat each other online in the same communities. Maybe it was because so many people were home and they spent way too much time on social media, but I think people have spent a lot of 2020 being miserable to each other in as much as others also have tried to lift each other up. I can tell you personally I am closing out 2020 feeling completely less patient with people. It is something I am going to work on for 2021, but I’m telling you right now it might be a struggle at times.

So how about the mask of it all? I am not going to get into the argument that has been almost the totality of the year of what stays open and what closes due to COVID-19 (including schools), but I am going to comment about what crap it is I think the people complain they have to wear a mask. I live an immunocompromised life. Elderly relatives live immunocompromised lives. I know so many people at this point personally and indirectly from all over the place (as in just not this area) who have gotten COVID-19 in 2020. And these were all people who were careful and wore masks.

I also think it’s crap with regard to the people who can’t keep their kids at home who then turn into super-spreaders of coronavirus at all ages and stages of life. No one has liked feeling as confined as we all have during the year 2020. No one has liked how it has affected our economy, our personal psychology, our sense of freedom. It has been a difficult year emotionally for everyone. Some people feel so isolated and alone. Even those of us who live with our families can have different times during the year where they could pinpoint feelings of loneliness and isolation.

We close the year with vaccines….finally. That will start up all the anti-vaxxers I’m sure, but I would remind them gently that this is no ordinary virus. And we have already seen in the past few years what an uptick of measles and other childhood diseases has done across the country. All I’m saying is, people please try to keep it together so we can get out of these various stages of quarantine and get back to life. It won’t be life as we once knew it as we are forever changed by 2020, but hopefully we can get there.

Another thing I will be glad to see in the rearview mirror is the ugliness of politics in the United States of America during the calendar year 2020. We have a new president to look forward to and that serial narcissistic sociopath who’s been living in the White House the past few years? I guess he’s going to be Florida’s problem isn’t he? He has continued throughout the holidays (including today) to try to make his case for anarchy and civil war while he discusses his imaginary voter fraud and “rigged elections”. Dude doesn’t get it that he was FIRED by the American people. FIRED. Here’s hoping that America’s political parties get their crap together so we don’t come this close to a dictator ever again, especially the Republican Party because they ALLOWED this to happen.

2020 was also the time of no longer tolerating racial injustice in this country and great sadness and anger as a result from coast to coast. People came together in the midst of a global pandemic over it. We should all offer up a prayer for a peaceful 2021 and meaningful resolution to some of these weighty issues. We the people as in all the people deserve as much.

2020 was a year of personal sadness for me. I said goodbye to people I really didn’t want to say goodbye to. And they didn’t lose their lives to COVID-19, but because of COVID-19 you couldn’t see anyone to say goodbye to those who were dying.

Other friends of mine faced heath crises that had to have been extra stressful every time they had to go in and out of a hospital setting. I know the two skin cancer procedures I dealt with had me holding my breath in and out and through the COVID tests before each procedure.

Now 2020 wasn’t all bad. I got to garden a lot and work on restoring my old quilts and that makes me happy. Fortunately for me I am more of a homebody than not so I have gotten through not seeing a ton of anyone at all but I do miss my friends and my family. FaceTime and Zoom just isn’t the same, but I will say I am grateful for the technology because being able to see someone when you’re catching up is a wonderful thing.

In 2020 we saw extremes all year long. Exhausting extremes at times. But hey, you know what? We are still standing. And that’s a good thing. We can do this. We can survive and get past this. We can see 2021.

For most this year, it will be a quiet New Year’s Eve. For us, pretty normal as we generally stay in. I keep seeing reality TV stars like Sonja Morgan flitting across Twitter and Instagram asking what we’re wearing for New Year’s at home. Not sequins. But I live in Chester County so I don’t think it would be sequins ever…haven’t really seen any live sequins since I moved here.

In my final reflection of 2020, I will freely admit that if we are honest with ourselves, 2020 taught us all things about ourselves and others. Some good things, some unflattering things. It’s all about human nature.

As we bid adieu to 2020 for sure it won’t be a fond, lingering goodbye. It will be an enough already move along nothing more to see here kind of goodbye.

Pope Francis said something this afternoon which has stayed with me: “We thank Good for the good things that have taken place during the pandemic, for the many people who, without making noise, have tried to make the weight of this trial more bearable.”

And for something else fun, click HERE for a lovely rendition of Auld Lang Syne from my lovely friend, Mindy Rhodes.

Wishing all of you a peaceful and happy New Year’s Eve as my 8th year writing this blog draws to a close. Cheers to 2021 and new and healthier beginnings for this country and around the world.

holy porta potty

My cousin posted this earlier this morning. Papal Porta Potties lining Market Street in Philadelphia.