News on the Pope's condition?

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Anybody hear anything about the Pope’s condition? The cable news just briefly touched on it today, and it sounded like they were implying a death watch was starting. All I seem to be able to find online are rehashes of the same skimpy report that mostly quotes Cardinal Danneel of Belgium.
 
Talked to a person that met with the Pope not too long ago. He said that the Pope needs constant care, although his mind is still very sharp. Prayers are needed for both the Pope and our church. When the Pope can not handle all of the Vatican business, a lot of delegating results. Also posturing among those assistants for influence on church matters. It has always been this way in Rome. Most of those ,who are carrying on the church business at this time,think as the Pope does on most matters.

May God bless the Pope and our church,
Deacon Tony SFO
 
The press has been reporting the imminent death of John Paul II for over a decade now.

FYI, his Wednesday audiences and Sunday Angelli are normally shown on EWTN. So tune in and see how he looks for yourself. (If EWTN isn’t available on TV then you can get the broadcast via the internet.)
 
By the grace of God, may he live another few years to lead us in our faith.
 
He is planning another trip, this is to Loredo (sp?), Italy to visit the Marian shrine there.

I think that knowing that his health is failing, Pope John Paul II, as supreme pastor, is leaving us one last witness as to the importance of the Blessed Mother in our lives. His past visit to Lourdes and his planned one to Loredo (sp?).

We all need to pray for him.

:gopray2: God bless Pope John Paul II :gopray2:
 

What does this article have to do with the Pope’s health?

ALSO…The cardinal from Belgium said that he felt this would be the Pope’s last trip to Lourdes’s. The cardinal also said the pope could die in one day, one week or whenever. That part of the cardinal’s comments were not reported very much. Thank God the pope has privacy from the media while he is in the Vatican
 
World Youth Day 2002 in Canada was supposed to be his last trip abroad.:hmmm:

GOD BLESS HIM :clapping:
 
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Joanna:
This brightened my spirits:

catholicexchange.com/e3news/

Keep praying!
Joanna,
I’m confused…this article brightened your spirits? :confused:
Enlighten me… Annunciata:)
 
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Joanna:
Sorry that wasn’t the article when I captured the site. Still searching. Here’s a bit of encouragement in the meantime:

cwnews.com/news/viewstory.cfm?recnum=31561
Thanks be to God! He is such an amazement! Long live
John Paull II!👍

BTW, I’m glad you weren’t happy about that other link…I think that is so unfortunate.
Thanks TEE! for pointing me in the right direction.
Annunciata:)
 
It’s not that hard people, just cut and past the article:

**Pope Appears Stronger at Audience
**Thursday, August 19, 2004 12:00:00 AM GMT

Castel Gandalfo, Aug. 18 (CWNews.com) - Appearing at his regular public audience on August 18, Pope John Paul II (bio - news) said that he is grateful for the “profound spiritual experience” of his weekend visit to Lourdes, and thanked the faithful of the world “for having sustained me with your prayers during my pilgrimage.”

The Holy Father, who had appeared extremely frail during his trip to France, was noticeably stronger during his Wednesday audience, which was held at the papal summer residence in Castel Gandalfo. Although he spoke only briefly-- delivering only a portion of his prepared text-- his voice was clear; he had none of the difficulties in speaking or breathing that he encountered while preaching at Lourdes on August 15.

Pope John Paul offered his thanks to all the organizers of the trip to Lourdes, which took place in a “climate of rich welcome and intense prayer.” He prayed that 'the Virgin Mary, the Immaculate Conception, will watch over every one of you."

This article courtesy of Catholic World News. To subscribe or for further information, contact subs@cwnews.com or visit www.cwnews.com
 
From Foxnews.com

Reporter’s Notebook: Rumors of Pope’s Demise Exaggerated

Thursday, August 19, 2004

By Greg Burke

ROME — The pope is dying again. I just read about it yesterday.

Some of my friends heard it on the radio, and called to see if it was true.

By my count, Pope John Paul II has been dying since one Friday afternoon in September of 1994. I was sitting in the Time Magazine office in Rome when I got a call from my boss in Paris.

“Are you seated?” he asked.

“Yeah,” I replied.

“Good,” he told me with a sense of real urgency. “We’re doing a cover story on the pope. ‘Lion in Winter.’”

The word had come from New York. The end had come for the first Polish pope, the first non-Italian pontiff in more than 450 years.

I didn’t think a cover story was a very bright idea. Not that there wasn’t concern about the pope’s health. He had broken his leg earlier that spring, and that week the Vatican announced that his November trip to the United States would have to be postponed.

I think one of the editors at Time in New York had heard a network report declaring in solemn, stentorian tones that this was “the FINAL PHASE of the pontificate.”

Friday night is closing night for Time, so it would have been quite a job to put out the magazine. But fortunately, it never happened. Sanity prevailed, and two hours later my boss called to say it was off.

Now I almost wish it had happened. It would be funny to have a 10-year-old Time Magazine cover on my wall with a picture of Karol Wojtyla under the words, “Lion in Winter.”

All I can say is that it’s been a pretty long “final phase.” Since that September, the pontiff has made 42 international trips.

Granted, many of those trips were not long. One was a 13-hour hop to Bosnia last year, and his recent pilgrimage to Lourdes, France, lasted just 36 hours.

The Pope who liked to ski and swim has stumbled, mumbled and fallen asleep in public as he comes to grips with age, Parkinson’s disease and severe arthrosis in his knees.

It would certainly be interesting to get inside John Paul’s mind and find out how a man who was once all about body language feels when he can no longer even smile and is constantly drooling.

What happened in Lourdes that got everyone so excited?

John Paul started falling over when he was kneeling for a short while on Saturday. Lesson to be learned: The Pope shouldn’t be kneeling.

On Sunday, when he was reading his homily, John Paul was short of breath and said “Help me” at one point in Polish.

He had a glass of water and finished reading the text. After the Mass, he greeted pilgrims in seven languages. Lesson: Make sure he has some water nearby.

The day after the trip, a Belgian cardinal said in an interview that the pope was dying. Oh, your eminence, you don’t want to do that. He’s been outliving those who write about him and those who might succeed him for about a decade now.

By the way, the cardinal has a lot of company. One of his Brazilian colleagues told us years ago that the pope was suffering from bone cancer. It seems to be spreading fairly slowly.

The 1995 book “The Next Pope,” by Peter Hebblethwaite, now seems somewhat quaint, given that some of the front-runners from 10 years ago have since moved on to meet their maker.

There are some people who have a kind of mystical vision of the Slavic pope and think he won’t die until after he’s set foot in Russia.

I’m not among them.

I think the pope could die in two days or two years. But I won’t start thinking the end is near until he’s stopped appearing in public — sick, short of breath, and searching for that line he’s supposed to read.
 
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