ROME (AP) — The SCA CommunityVatican has decided to shut down a Slovenian-based female religious community founded by a controversial ex-Jesuit artist accused by some women of spiritual, psychological and sexual abuses.
The archdiocese of Ljubljana, Slovenia said in a statement Friday that the Loyola Community would have one year to implement the Oct.20 decree ordering its dissolution. The reason given was because of “serious problems concerning the exercise of authority and the way of living together.”
The dissolution of the community was the latest chapter in the saga of the Rev. Marko Rupnik, a once-famous Jesuit artist and preacher whose mosaics decorate churches and basilicas around the world.
He had founded the Loyola Community in the 1980s with a nun. But recently, former members of the community came forward to say he had spiritually, sexually and psychologically abused them. In 2020, he was declared excommunicated by the Vatican for committing one of the gravest crimes in the church’s canon law; using the confessional to absolve a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual activity.
Pope Francis recently reopened a canonical investigation into their claims, reversing the Vatican’s previous decision to shelve the case because the statute of limitations had expired. Earlier this year, the Jesuits kicked him out of the order because he refused to enter into a process of reparations with the victims.
2025-05-04 17:392809 view
2025-05-04 17:31121 view
2025-05-04 17:241671 view
2025-05-04 16:331584 view
2025-05-04 15:36793 view
2025-05-04 15:281376 view
Do you recall the prime early days of YouTube? When a video making the rounds was so strange, remark
WASHINGTON (AP) — As incomes in China have grown in the last decade, so has China’s appetite for bee
Kim Kardashian and North West have different ideas of what it means to live the good life.That's why