79°F
weather icon Clear

Pope names three new saints, man disrupts Mass

VATICAN CITY -- Pope Benedict XVI has created three new saints for the Catholic Church during a Mass in St. Peter's Square that was disrupted by a man who climbed up to the colonnade surrounding the square and burned a book.

Vatican gendarmes, a bishop and the pope's own bodyguard eventually talked the man down from the upper reaches of the colonnade after he shouted, "Pope, where is Christ?" in English.

The disruption came toward the end of a two-hour Mass Sunday to canonize three 19th-century founders of religious orders: Italian bishop and missionary Monsignor Guido Maria Conforti, Spanish nun Sister Bonifacia Rodriguez de Castro and an Italian priest who worked with the poor, the Rev. Luigi Guanella.

Benedict appeared unfazed by the disruption.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Food Network star Anne Burrell dead at 55

Chef Anne Burrell, best known for her many appearances on Food Network over the years, passed away on the morning of Tuesday, June 17. She was 55 years old.

 
NYC comptroller and mayoral candidate arrested outside immigration court

Brad Lander’s detainment comes a little more than a month after Newark, New Jersey, Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested on a trespassing charge outside a federal immigration detention center in his city.

‘Razor blade throat’ on the rise as new COVID subvariant spreads

COVID-19 appears to be on the rise in some parts of California as a new, highly contagious subvariant — featuring “razor blade throat” symptoms overseas — is becoming increasingly dominant.

MORE STORIES