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You think God likes baseball? (from the film "42") Loves the #WorldSeries! #RedSox #Cardinals pic.twitter.com/GCD3tgpiIB
— Greg Burke (@GregBurkeRome) October 23, 2013
#PopeFrancis we found the enemy: it's us. We're sinners; have to confess our sins #blessed #Catholic
— Greg Burke (@GregBurkeRome) October 25, 2013
He's also good with one-liners. “I actually thought I’d leave Fox [to] go work for a football club,” he told an auditorium full of reporters this year. “Ended up in the Vatican. No free tickets to football matches, but really good seats at Christmas and Easter.” [Pause for laughter.]This jockish humor covers Burke’s deeply-rooted faith. As an 18-year-old, Burke joined the controversial Opus Dei movement and later became an Opus Dei “numerary”: taking a vow of celibacy and singledom and eventually moving into an Opus Dei spiritual center. Opus Dei numeraries traditionally have normal jobs, as Burke did, but give a great chunk of income to the organisation. “Am I being hired because I’m in Opus Dei,” Burke mused, in 2012. “It might come into play.”Indeed, Opus Dei is said to be gaining influence in the Vatican. Non-Catholics perhaps know it best from Dan Brown’s bestselling Da Vinci Code, in which the movement is depicted as shadowy and nefarious. But the real organization was controversially founded in the 1920s: to push the idea that everyone (not just the priesthood) is called to holiness and can “find God in daily life.” It took several decades for the group to gain approval from the Catholic Church, but Opus Dei now is now an official Catholic “prelature,” and boasts about 90,000 members.#PopeFrancis daily dope on the devil #AllSaintsDay Hate comes from the devil Saints try (like hell) to keep devil away
— Greg Burke (@GregBurkeRome) November 1, 2013
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