CNS has a nice piece on what B16 will be doing in the coming year.
Incidentally, the story had a bit of Vatican lore that I wasn’t previously aware of:
The "ad limina" visits [that bishops make to see the pope] have undergone a quiet revolution in recent years, and it’s evident in the pope’s 2007 schedule. Canon law says the visits, by heads of dioceses to report on the status of their dioceses, should take place every five years, but that interval is now anywhere from six to nine years; many of the bishops coming in 2007 made their last visits eight years ago.
There are several reasons for the change. One is the simple fact that the number of the world’s bishops has approximately doubled over the last 50 years. Another is that when Pope John Paul II was ill during the last years of his pontificate, he was unable to keep up the pace of "ad limina" meetings, and a backlog developed.
Today, even with a healthy pope, it’s doubtful the Vatican can get back to the five-year schedule, one Vatican source said. The pope would have to meet with 540 bishops a year; last year, he met with 360.
Interesting!
So. What are your hopes for what B16 will do in 2007?

