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Gerard O’ConnellSeptember 03, 2018
Pope Francis arrives to lead his general audience in St. Peter's Square on Aug. 29 at the Vatican. (CNS photo/Alessandro Bianchi, Reuters) Pope Francis arrives to lead his general audience in St. Peter's Square on Aug. 29 at the Vatican. (CNS photo/Alessandro Bianchi, Reuters) 

During his homily at his first morning Mass at Santa Marta since the summer break, Pope Francis recommended “silence and prayer” when one is confronted “with people lacking good will, with people who only seek scandal, who seek only division, who seek only destruction, even within the family: silence, prayer.”

His remarks on Sept. 3 are being viewed as his first public response to the 11-page letter of Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the former nuncio to the United States. Many have sought to get Francis or the Vatican to respond to Archbishop Viganò’s serious allegations that as pope he covered up the multiple abuses of the former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick after the former-nuncio said he told Pope Francis about these offenses in a private audience on June 23, 2013.

“The truth is meek. The truth is silent. The truth is not noisy," Pope Francis said in his homily.

The archbishop also alleged that Francis had lifted what are now being described as “private” sanctions alleged to have been imposed on Archbishop McCarrick by Benedict XVI in 2009 or 2010. Without providing evidence for these charges, Archbishop Viganò called for the pope’s resignation.

But the pope only urged journalists to look into the archbishop’s allegations and has so far refused to comment further.

“The truth is meek. The truth is silent. The truth is not noisy," Pope Francis said in his homily. He was commenting on the Gospel story of the day from Luke that describes how Jesus reacted when he returned to Nazareth and met with opposition from his former neighbors after commenting on a passage from the prophet Isaiah.

Even in a family, Pope Francis said, there are times when a discussion of politics or sports or money escalates into a truly destructive argument; "in these discussions in which you see the devil is there and wants to destroy—silence. Have your say, then keep quiet.”

“With his silence,” he said, Jesus wins against “the wild dogs”; he wins against “the devil” that “sowed lies in the heart.”

He said the Gospel story helps us “to reflect how to act in daily life, when there are misunderstandings” and “to understand how the father of lies, the accuser, the devil, acts to destroy the unity of a family, of a people.”

He recalled Jesus’ silent composure on that occasion, when people wanted him to do miracles as he had done elsewhere, but when he chose instead to comment on the prophet’s words and they got furious and the atmosphere quickly changed “from peace to war.” Jesus adopted “silence” when confronted with the devil.

Pope Francis said that those who attacked Jesus “were not persons, they were a pack of wild dogs that threw him out of the city. They did not reason. They shouted. Jesus stayed silent. They took him to the top of the mountain to throw him down, but he passed through their midst and went away.”

“With his silence,” he said, Jesus wins against “the wild dogs”; he wins against “the devil” that “sowed lies in the heart.”

Pope Francis said that Jesus’ dignity shines through “this silence that triumphs” over his attackers, as it would also on Good Friday when they shouted “crucify him!” after praising him on Palm Sunday.

He acknowledged that what Jesus did is not easy, but “silence wins, through the Cross.” He emphasized that “the dignity of the Christian is anchored in the power of God.”

Pope Francis concluded by praying,“May the Lord give us the grace to discern when we should speak and when we should stay silent. This applies to every part of life: to work, at home, in society.”

In this way, he said, “we will be closer imitators of Jesus.”

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
John Chuchman
5 years 6 months ago

The mouse being stepped on by the elephant does not appreciate your neutrality.

Daniel Montiel
5 years 6 months ago

I'm curious why you're pretending those who might follow (or scorn) Francis' advice are "neutral".
Why play into the fancy that just because someone bites their lip and keeps opinions private that they suddenly now *have* no opinions, positions, or preferred victors?

Paula Swain
5 years 6 months ago

It has nothing to do with victory. It is about doing the right thing. For over seven decades the men who run our Church hierarchy have preached to us to pray for healing, pray for the abusers, pray for the hierarchy. Where has that gotten us? More and more abuse, more and more abuse covered up. And now this pope, this pope in whom we placed our hopes and dreams for honesty, openness and reform has betrayed us. Even Pope Francis is preaching for us to "pray and be silent". The cardinals and bishops who covered up the abuse are still on the pulpit, the Church coffers that the faithful filled with great sacrifice are being used to pay for the abuse while the abusers are moved around to continue abusing. THAT is the Devil at
work and the Devil is using Pope Francis.

Carlos Poblet
5 years 6 months ago

Thank you for sharing what is so self-evident that only wifull ignorance can argue against. Francis has to resign. He is an imposter

Jong Ricafort
5 years 6 months ago

Carlos Poblet
Better read Matthew12:37
and ponder 8th commandments.
An attack on Pope Francis the Vicar of Christ is a direct attack on Jesus Himself.
(Acts9:4)
"Carlos,carlos why are you persecuting me?"
VRS!3x

Hilde W
5 years 6 months ago

I wonder whether those shouting for the Pope’s resignation have bothered to carefully read Vigano’s accusations?
Vigano wrote that, when he was asked by the newly elected Pope Francis on 23 June 2013 what Cardinal McCarrick was like, he told the Pope that McCarrick “corrupted generations of seminarians and priests”. This wording is often used in Catholic circles to refer to unorthodox doctrinal teaching. By his own account, Vigano's words to Pope Francis made no mention of sexual abuse. And by his own account, Vigano did not clarify his misleading statement to the Pope. And yet Vigano goes on to claim that Pope Francis knew from that conversation on 23 June 2013 that “McCarrick was a serial predator”!? How does the latter logically follow from what Vigano says he told the Pope?
Pope Francis has said that Vigano’s letter speaks for itself. Indeed, Vigano’s own words prove that he failed in his duty as Nuncio to properly inform the newly elected Pope, in unambiguous terms, of the very grave allegations against McCarrick. In addition, the many speculations in Vigano’s letter regarding the Pope’s motives and intentions demonstrate that Vigano somehow believes himself to be able to read another person’s mind. The nature of these speculations exposes Vigano as a complex person full of suspicion and intrigue, consumed by hostility against our (and his) Holy Father.

gerald nichols
5 years 6 months ago

The Pope hasn't been attacked as some assert; he has been accused. For the Pope, and some following him, to appropriate scripture verses and misuse them to infer Jesus would approve the Pope's silence now seems blasphemous to me, and maybe worse.

Tim O'Leary
5 years 6 months ago

Pope Francis talks off-the-cuff all the time about everything. So, now is not the time to go silent. Pope Benedict XVI had to retire to get that option. "Cardinal Joseph Tobin told a journalist on Friday that he heard rumors shortly after his 2017 arrival in the Archdiocese of Newark about the sexual misconduct of Archbishop Theodore McCarrick. He said he did not investigate those rumours because he found them unbelievable." So, he stayed silent. Yet, he is seen as a protege of McCarrick and has said recently he never heard about a gay lobby, after six priests in his diocese described how active it was there. Mike Kelly of the North Jersey Record reported: “Tobin told me that soon after arriving in Newark, he heard ‘rumours’ about McCarrick’s beach house. But he never bothered to check them out. He says he thought the story was too ‘incredulous’ to believe.” “Shame on me that I didn’t ask sooner,” Tobin reportedly told Kelly.
https://cruxnow.com/cardinals/2018/09/02/cardinal-tobin-reportedly-declined-to-investigate-mccarrick-misconduct-rumors/

J Rabaza
5 years 6 months ago

“ So, now is not the time to go silent”

If only Tim, if only, you would do as Pope Francis does....be silent

Henry Brown
5 years 6 months ago

Guillermo,

You comment more than anyone else.

If Bishop Tobin heard the rumours and did not investigate then he needs to resign.

Why did it take so long for Mccarrick to be disciplined, if what he was doing was so well known ?

Gay Timothy O'Dreary
5 years 6 months ago

"Henry" how many accounts do you use to comment on America Magazine?

You'll have to ask Pope John Paul in prayer why he did nothing about the "lavender mafia" as you often call them since all he did when he called the US Cardinals to Rome after the Cardinal Law mess was have lunch with them.

John Chuchman
5 years 6 months ago

Silence in the face of abuse is Complicity.

Danny Collins
5 years 6 months ago

Well said.

Arthur Sullivan
5 years 6 months ago

Staggered that he would say this. Suddenly I feel it just will never get better.

Daniel Montiel
5 years 6 months ago

Interesting! The above comments are so, so furious that Francis recommends *not* playing into either a media firestorm or a stacked deck/public jury.
Man, they are *PO'ed*, aren't they, that Francis recommends not launching pitched battles with people who buy ink by the barrel. 😆

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

Daniel, I’m not entirely sure what is going on internally with those who commented above and are upset with Pope Francis’ silence. It’s hard to discern others motivations and emotions. I can only speak for myself in saying that my heart is broken by our father who is for whatever his reasons may be, unwilling to speak truth into a serious situation which is directly leading to the division of the church, against which he mentioned in his homely. A father speaks truth. A father reassures his frightened children. A father apologizes if it is necessary. A father does not remain silent when his strength is needed. It was God in the genesis account who spoke into existence truth, Which brought about order from chaos. Our church is in a chaotic and divided place and desperately in need unity which is order. We are in need of a leader who will use his words to heal. Instead I’m afraid we may be seeing a situation not unlike the shortcomings of our first father, Adam, who remained silent when his strength was imperative.

Jong Ricafort
5 years 6 months ago

Sarah Dolski
Pope Francis Wisdom is so great, he said 'fake news" is satan snake tactics back in the garden of eden.
So, before we believe evrything satan presented to us as truth...we discern first first as satan can deceived us like Eve.
The fruit of SILENCE is prayer...and satan cannot beguile nor deceive a prayerful soul.
Gobless

gerald nichols
5 years 6 months ago

Well worded! Either PF cannot respond because the accusations are true, or he is depending on the incredulity of the main part of the Church, and hopes to "ride it out."

john collins
5 years 6 months ago

Silence is golden. It has the result—in the present case of Francis’ detractors, the most immediate of whom is Vigano—to ferret out PRECISELY one’s detractors. Silence in this case is laudable because it imitates Jesus by revealing not evading the truth (that there are detractors whose intentions are pernicious and whose words are poison).

John Collins

Francis Gentry
5 years 6 months ago

Thank you Daniel Montiel and John Collins! I despair of the Church many times while reading comments by "professed" Catholics. Where has the humility gone, I wonder?

Paula Swain
5 years 6 months ago

I assure you, Mr. Gentry, I am as much of a faithful Catholic as you are. I love my faith, my Church and my God. I will continue to demand truth, honesty, transparency.

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

Could it be possible that the questioning is not motivated by the professed Catholics lack of humility? Perhaps for some, but I am willing to give many the benefit of the doubt and believe them when they say that the questioning is grounded in a search for truth because of their profound love of the Church. Dialogue brings order out of chaos. God SAID to the darkness let there be light and it was created and it was good. Therefore our words, since we are co-creators with the divine, bring about goodness- life, unity, order and truth. I’m sorry, I didn’t mean for this reply to sound like I’m getting on a soap box of anything, and I’m sorry if it came across that way. I just wanted to offer another perspective.

Chris Puckett
5 years 6 months ago

it's a brilliant strategy considering his position.

rose-ellen caminer
5 years 6 months ago

Pope Francis gets it; ""when I think of McCain my emotional response is; bitter!; in case the animus was water off this ducks back, the bullying piled on and escalated [take note sociologists of the internet,out there.lol]; "McCain seethed bitterness in his every pore".Anyone can say anything about anyone.Such Emotional outbursts, accusations uncorroborated by evidence, is devilish work. Whether emotional, or biased no unsubstantiated attack needs to be answered. If a homophobic or right wing Vigano is after the Pope because of the Pope's[left leaning] political beliefs, Francis is right to not address unsubstantiated charges against him regarding sexual abuse scandal.This scandal [ first it was the abuse itself by predator priests, now finally we are getting comments that recognizing the humanity of the abusive priests in the institutionalized asexual church setting they were immersed in, which mitigates their crimes, and so the goal post has shifted and its now the cover up by the powerful bishops who are most to blame] is now being used as a weapon by right wingers and left wingers.each with their own agenda.; ban gays from the priesthood, ordain women , abolish the celibate, clergy , abolish the clergy itself, abolish the hierarchy, the pope!Pope Francis does not need to take the bait of mere unsubstantiated accusations, in the name of transparency.A lesson for all?Certainly for me as a predictable bait taking online "commenter" .[ i got ptsd; thought i was back on that other catholic blog].God bless you Pope Francis.

Jim Lein
5 years 6 months ago

Vigano is certainly Trump-like in tone but with more words. He may have some valid points but he is overplaying his hand with his shrillness. He is definitely not Christ-like.

rose-ellen caminer
5 years 6 months ago

Yes.Thanks.

Jack Feehily
5 years 6 months ago

This attempted coup against the Successor of Peter is being justified by an archbishop who has appointed himself the prosecutor of the Roman Pontiff. We already know that McCarrick in no way acted as if canonical sanctions had been levied against him by Pope Benedict. So “the prosecutor” amends his comments by calling them private actions. We already know that in the alleged encounter with Vigano and Francis neither knew of the credible and substantiated charge of the sexual abuse of a minors by McCarrick while a priest in NYC. We should also know that while a thousand persons may have referred to “things going on at the beach house”, this is not the same as testimony of eye witnesses. When actual charges were made by two adults about sexual misconduct by McCarrick were made they were adjudicated and resulted in financial settlements. Present canon law does not regard sexual acts between a cleric and an adult as a crime. It is, of course a serious violation of the promise of chaste celibacy and one would not expect that such a person would receive ecclesiastical promotions. That is a true scandal and can be resolved by a new process of vetting nominees for episcopal appointments, No pope has done more to address the issue of sexual abuse and episcopal coverups than Francis. He has accepted or requested the resignations of more than a dozen bishops either for sexual misconduct or for covering such matters up. The resignations of more than thirty additional Chilean bishops are still on his desk. The resignation of Cdl. Wuerl is also on his desk as is those of any bishop over 75 years of age. The response we should be looking for from. Francis is the further work he has vowed to end this mess. I have confidence that he will do so. Long live pope Francis!

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

I’m not sure what the motive of every individual who is asking for answers and clarification regarding these serious allegations directed towards Pope Francis are. I’m not sure why the pope is remaining silent. All I’m sure of is that I , like many Catholics, are simply afraid and need to hear our father speak into this situation to reassure us. For me it is not politically motivated. It’s a more a matter of human relationship built upon the foundation of trust which seems to be for many crumbling. This needs to be acknowledged if unity and healing is to occur. I don’t know if Pope Francis is guilty of what he is accused of. Because I love him, I would like to believe he is innocent. But I and many others will live in a state of constant questioning until our leaders acknowledge our concerns by addressing this situation head on. The solution may only come about through dialogue and honest speech.

Beth Cioffoletti
5 years 6 months ago

Profound leadership and example from our Holy Father.

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

Hi Beth! I’m curious to hear what specifically you found profound regarding our Holy Fathers Response. Do you feel comfortable in elaborating?

J Rabaza
5 years 6 months ago

Sarah, to answer your question perhaps these words can help you understand holiness and our Holy Father. Does this look familiar to you?

“Love is patient, love is kind. It is not jealous, [love] is not pompous, it is not inflated,it is not rude, it does not seek its own interests, it is not quick-tempered, it does not brood over injury, it does not rejoice over wrongdoing but rejoices with the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things”

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

Thanks Guillermo for your response. That passage of scripture is so beautiful and meaningful. It’s one of my favorites! I love the last line which addresses hope. Sometimes it feels hard to hold onto that. I’m also particularly struck by the part in which it speaks about rejoicing in the truth. My prayer right now is that the truth will come out so the rejoicing can begin!

J Rabaza
5 years 6 months ago

"It’s one of my favorites!"
Sarah, are you a Catholic fundamentalist? The chapter is beautiful on so many levels, yet you only took one phrase of it.
You are welcome, Sarah. I'm here to evangelize the lost and humble the proud in heart by showing them Jesus. Does that name sound familiar?

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

I’m sorry. I don’t want to engage in dialogue with you anymore. You don’t know me, and I’m not going to invest in conversation with someone who makes broad and judgemental assumptions about people they have never metand their theology. Thank you for your offer to evangelize me on the grounds that my heart lacks humility. However, I will take the Holy Fathers advice on this one and remain silent.

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

Thanks Guillermo for your response. That passage of scripture is so beautiful and meaningful. It’s one of my favorites! I love the last line which addresses hope. Sometimes it feels hard to hold onto that. I’m also particularly struck by the part in which it speaks about rejoicing in the truth. My prayer right now is that the truth will come out so the rejoicing can begin!

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

Thanks Guillermo for your response. That passage of scripture is so beautiful and meaningful. It’s one of my favorites! I love the last line which addresses hope. Sometimes it feels hard to hold onto that. I’m also particularly struck by the part in which it speaks about rejoicing in the truth. My prayer right now is that the truth will come out so the rejoicing can begin!

Henry Brown
5 years 6 months ago

Guillermo,

Two points:

a) That is what the Catholic Faithful did when they put their trust in Priests/Bishops/Cardinals who took advantage of them.

b) Your closing remark belies what you claim we should all be doing.

Beth Cioffoletti
5 years 6 months ago

Hi Sarah - I'm just getting back to this. Francis says: "The truth is meek. The truth is silent. The truth is not noisy." This conveys to me a man who knows what it is to wrestle with truth can complex relational issues. I am going through something in my family that is riddled with defensiveness and accusations. I recognize how much wisdom is in his insight of backing off, being silent, and allowing the truth to reveal itself. Entering the fray adds to the turmoil, the accusations - "You are wrong!", "no YOU are wrong!" Most times we all are more or less "wrong" and what is needed for healing is much deeper than more rhetoric. Silence can allow that deeper insight and healing to happen. The truth. Francis gets this and models it for us.

Beth Cioffoletti
5 years 6 months ago

THe human need to blame "the other side" is out of control. Francis, wisely, does not take part in this. Anything that he says would ratchet the crisis up a notch or two.

Sarah Dolski
5 years 6 months ago

Hi Beth. Thanks for your response. I came to this forum very heartbroken and looking for conversation with other Catholics who are responding to this situation in their own ways. I felt sad that the Holy Father was remaining silent because I don’t understand it. I’m really grateful for your response, because honestly it brought me some peace to hear you explain it the way you did. Like you said, there is so much arguing and yelling that people on opposite sides can’t hear one another. I even on this forum, I’ve been accused of being a religious fundamentalist who needs to humble her heart and actually get to know Jesus, perhaps because the person accusing viewed me for whatever reason an enemy. I think we’re afraid, but the Popes suggestion regarding silence as a source of contemplation is very profound and counter cultural in a good way. It goes against our instincts to try to make things better in a reactive way. Perhaps he is suggesting that we all need to take a breather, remembering we are all one body and let the Holy Spirit move our hearts in a more loving direction. Maybe then at that point we could have more constructive and healing dialogue. I don’t know the intricacies of this situation, but I’m going to trust that God is still in control and actively working through our Holy Father even if he isn’t giving explanations the way I would like. After all, he is the Holy Father and I am not! Lol. Thanks again Beth!

John Keenan
5 years 6 months ago

“Have your say, then keep quiet.” That is fair; yet these are serious questions that need a factual non-emotive response, then quiet. Silence in response to the alleged facts that plague the USA Church deems consent. Something needs to be done.

C Walter Mattingly
5 years 6 months ago

Such a disheartening response from the Holy Father. It's silence before darkness that has brought us to this point. The way now can only be the truth and the light. And it needs to begin at the top. Most Catholics want answers and consider them long overdue.
At the onset of Vatican II, St John 23rd said the church needed to open the windows and let in fresh air. The light along with it.

bill carson
5 years 6 months ago

Francis recommended “silence and prayer” when one is confronted “with people lacking good will."

People lacking good will? Didn't he really just mean, the people asking questions?

The pope is adopting that same strategy that got the Church into trouble in the first place. The lousy priest and the lousy bishops REFUSED to tell their parish or diocese about the criminal sinners. They used the power of their position to discourage any question asking. I'll bet a lot of American businessmen caught up in scandal with this or that woman wish they could respond like the pope: "I ain't gonna answer your stinking questions because you have bad faith!"

gerald nichols
5 years 6 months ago

Agree! Hear hear!

Lucie Johnson
5 years 6 months ago

I do like Pope Francis' response. Silence, peace, and prayer are important as a response gets ready to emerge. We tend to want instant responses, instant comments, and that is often not a good idea.
We don't need more angry tit-for-tats. We need the accusations of Msgr Vigano carefully researched, and a full, well supported and documented response put together. I would imagine this takes at least a couple of weeks.
This is all very painful.
So I am wondering can we de-canonize John Paul II, if it turns out he covered up not just abuse, but even the corruption of seminarists and religious?

lynne miller
5 years 6 months ago

I have the same question about John Paul II - it seemed to me a too hasty canonization. There's good reason to wait a while and see what comes of his actions.

Tim O'Leary
5 years 6 months ago

An excellent summary by the centrist John Allen of Crux https://cruxnow.com/news-analysis/2018/09/02/drama-unleashed-by-pope-cover-up-allegation-probably-isnt-over/. His conclusion: "And that, in the end, is why the “it’s already over” strategy may not quite hold up. There’s obviously going to be an investigation on McCarrick. The main thrust of DiNardo’s August 16 statement was to call for the Vatican to launch an Apostolic Visitation, suggesting a principal focus on the American end of things, but inevitably it would also involve queries as to what the Vatican knew and when it knew it - whether that trail ultimately leads to the pope or not." and "One hopes that by now, everyone involved in the situation appreciates that to announce an investigation and then artificially limit its scope, giving the appearance of yet another cover-up, would be the public relations equivalent of mass suicide."

Tim O'Leary
5 years 6 months ago

More from Allen and Bishop Barron's most popular youtube ever. "For the “not so fast” group, the approach is to treat the Viganò charge as one would any other accusation regarding sexual abuse and misconduct - meaning that if it has even a surface appearance of credibility, it can’t just be dismissed no matter what reasons there may be at the beginning to be skeptical. That seemed the spirit of a take by Auxiliary Bishop Robert Barron of Los Angeles, speaking in a video from his “Word on Fire” ministry. (Two videos Barron did during the week, one a Q&A on the crisis and another on “Why Remain Catholic?”, together drew more than one million views, making them the most popular videos Barron has ever produced for YouTube.) “Is it worth looking at? Yeah, you bet,” Barron said of Viganò’s accusation. “This is not some minor player, this is the former Apostolic Nuncio to the United States … He’s making some serious claims, and I’d say look into them. Let’s take an honest, objective look at what’s being claimed here.”

Anthony Noble
5 years 6 months ago

I think some commentators are mixing things up. Pope Francis was talking about keeping silent in response to false accusations and he directed journalists to investigate the matter in which they found the allegations against the Pope to be unfounded. A tit-for-tat argument would be unseemly and set a precident that any allegation from anyone would need a similar response. Since the early 2000's the Church has been vocal in not keeping silent about child abuse. However, a blind spot emerged on the Pope's trip to Chile. While the pedophile priests were dealt with, some bishops who covered it up were not punished. The Pope initially couldn't believe such a cover up but did follow through with a papal investigation, resulting in pastoral care for the abused at the Vatican and a meeting with all the Chilean bishops leading to all their resignations. At least 5 resignations were accepted.

The silence that the Pope spoke of was not to keep silent about abuse
The Pope said in arguments with family, speak your truth, then remain silent - you said what you needed to and any resulting screaming match will be a pointless mess. The most effective way to diffuse a provocateur is not to rise to the bait and let the heated air fall flat. It's a virtue I wish I had more regularly.

Paula Swain
5 years 6 months ago

No mix up. Since the early 2000s the hierarchy of the Church has been (falsely) telling us that there was going to be transparency. Yet the cover up continues. The Church has to open the books. How much has each parish spent to pay the abused. Which priests by name (dead or alive). How much has the Vatican spent? This is our money that we gave in good faith to help our Church do good work. Instead it was spent on covering up crimes. No more silence. If the questions are too much for our Holy Father then he can step aside. But whoever takes his place will get no safe haven. The laity wants answers and we deserve answers and a say in how our Church runs the business side. Because make no mistake, the Catholic Church is a business. The consecrated can run our spiritual guidance but now it’s time for the laity to have the larger influence on our business dealings.

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