Biblical shadows hover over that pontificate out of Bergoglio. The pope who brought Franciscan doctrine back to the Vatican was able to hide a kind of original sin so obscure that it endangered the entire work of Christ’s vicar on earth. It all begins in 2013, which revolutionized the lives of billions of believers. “After repeated examination of my conscience before God – he said Pope Ratzinger – I have come to the certainty that my powers are no longer suitable to carry out the service adequately”. It was February 10th when those words froze the whole world. A month later, on March 13, 2013, the figure of Francesco emerged from the white smoke.
Benedict XVI From that moment he held the office of Pope Emeritus, a role that has few precedents in history, none in recent centuries. An event so rare that it deserves to be noted and investigated, and also capable of hiding a background capable of turning the official narrative on its head. The version of the Pope, who resigned because he lacked the necessary energy, does not convince the journalist Andrea Cionci: “It’s been exactly two years since 2020 – he reported live – when I got in touch with Pope Benedict XVI because of the Latin errors in the ‘Declaratio’, the document. resigned in 2013, became suspicious. Then it turned out that this document was not an abdication at all, but a frank and simple announcement that he was retiring to the handicapped seat.
The thesis supported by the author of the investigation – which the author has already presented in direct precedent – frames a captive pope who cannot freely express himself and would therefore try to communicate with the outside world through the renaming “Ratzinger Code”. When he spoke to Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller in 2017: “Your sadness at the end of my pontificate has turned into anger at me and against the end of my pontificate.” A sentence – claims Cionci – in which the pope would reveal the continuation of his office, only on the prevented seat.
The in-depth study with Andrea Cionci at A Special Day, on Francesco Vergovich’s microphones.