Vatican City, Oct 18, 2018 / 10:52 am
An Italian magazine has raised new questions about a Vatican official mentioned in the August "testimony" of Archbishop Carlo Vigano. The report from L'Espresso, an Italian newsweekly, could be seen to provide support for at least one claim made in Vigano's controversial testimony.
L'Espresso reported Oct. 12 that Venezuelan Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra, 58, who began serving Oct. 15 as "sostituto" of the Vatican's Secretariat of State, might have been dismissed from a seminary where he studied because he was thought by seminary administrators to have a homosexual orientation.
As 'sostituto', the archbishop is tasked with overseeing much of the day-to-day business of the Vatican's Curial offices.
The magazine published a February 1985 letter from Archbishop Domingo Perez, then Archbishop of Maracaibo, the archdiocese in which Parra was later ordained. The letter was written to the rector of the St. Thomas Aquinas Seminary, at which Parra did the first part of his seminary studies before being dismissed.