Monday, March 14, 2011

CHURCH’S GREGORY DECLINED OFFER OF LEGAL HELP ON PEDOPHILIA.


         In the midst of another round of pedophilia scandals involving the U.S. Catholic Church…with the archdiocese of Philadelphia putting on leave 21 priests accused of sexual abuse of minors—and this following a blast to Philadelphia ecclesial authorities by a local grand jury which accused the hierarchy of allowing 37 deviate…the only proper word to apply to their behavior… clerics to remain around children despite “substantial evidence of abuse”—came a highly revelatory revelation that turned up in a discussion I had last week with Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke.   Yes, she and I are often to be found on different pages of theology—but this, my friends, is not theology but moral conduct.
        You will remember that she was a leader of the so-called “Board of Review” that was set up by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) following the explosive findings about laxity in handling clerical pedophilia in Boston.   She never made permanent Chair because she refused to be rolled by the ruling prelates.  Instead she and Robert Bennett, the prominent Washington lawyer who had spent $1 million of his own money to ferret out abuses, were stonewalled by the ruling junta installed at the USCCB’s marble palace and went to Rome to interview then Josef Cardinal Ratzinger,  Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
        When she returned Justice Burke was confronted by Bishop Wilton Gregory, bishop of Belleville, Illinois-- then president of the USCCB--for supposedly exceeding her authority.   It doesn’t take a great deal of imagination to appreciate why Burke was never made Chairman of the Board…Gregory having been earlier a Chicago auxiliary bishop skilled soothing the roiled waters of controversy as only a Chicago-inured Squid-influenced operative can.  
       It was Burke who got the lesson of her life in ecclesiastical duplicitousness when she personally interviewed each prelate on his familiarity with deviant goings-on in his diocese.   She interviewed one supposed paragon, who when asked if he knew of any associations with people who were convicted of sexual abuse stoutly declared he did not. When it turned out that one deviant was actually living at the archbishopic mansion… “doing research”…she called him in and said “you lied to me, didn’t you?”
      (I wrote this up at the time in The Wanderer , the nation’s oldest national Catholic weekly).
       No, he said. The man you have reference to was not convicted—but confessed.
      How’s that for parsing?
    The other day she told me flat-out and gave me permission to use it publicly that Bennett who draws $5,000 an hour for his legal services, had offered to make his services available to Gregory for one year free of  charge—but was turned down.
       This Church I love and believe in has survived for 2,000 years because, as convert Bob Novak said, it is divine. Else how could it have managed through eras of bad, intemperate and sacrilegious   popes all the while saints like Francis of Assisi and Thomas Aquinas blossomed in moral and spiritual life…and now is floundering through a cycle of personally dedicated and highly intellectual popes but still inattentive for one reason or another while the seminaries and priesthood have been flooded with lavenders?    A litany of prelates wailing that the system is crying to heaven for vengeance has produced only a laggard tide of lying, deviousness and irresponsibility.
         She has postulated in a series of speeches a rigorous program of penance for prelates—the shedding of royal capes and garments to underscore their high office…the reliance on black cassocks.
        To which I add another possibly very confrontational and controversial one.  Why, I ask, are we rushing through the likely canonization of John Paul II when, regardless of whose fault it has been, so many abuses were allowed to go unpunished and fester on his watch?   When so many weak vessels were appointed to the bishopric despite the fervent pleas of many people in the pews who knew their records?  When it is commonplace that the prelates who were picked came from the casual approval of the top paper on a stack one-inch high…which was attested to me personally by a priest who had been on hand and working at the Vatican—which could signify at the least a disregard for investigation and probity?
         Can it not be seen as a travesty of accommodation when a pontiff appointed to almost supreme position by his predecessor then presides over the elevation to canonization in a remarkably short time after death?  I fully acknowledge the role John Paul II played in the harnessing of the forces of good against Communism. I met him briefly and was edified…but folks we’re not talking worldly honors here—but canonization.
        I have asked this earlier and ask it now: What is the rush? What are the motives behind moving so swiftly?  Is this an attempt to add yet more garish folderol…swinging sweet incense burners…to use all the perfumes of Arabia to sweeten the atmosphere?
       Again…I have the greatest admiration for John Paul II…for his amazing charisma, his undeniable sanctity in the face of so many trials…for his certitude and forbearance.  I accuse him of nothing but possibly in the case of inability to root out deviant sin that indubitably extended far before his time—sin of which he could well have been unaware since he came from a period of persecution in Poland where Communist overlords calumniated good priests—causing him to doubt such charges.
       But I say again…what’s the rush behind what could be a terrible precedent for appearance sake—predecessor names successor…successor leads canonization for predecessor.  The job of canonizing some people of great sanctity who lived in the Middle Ages is on indefinite hold.  Why JPII and why now?   Do we have an assembly line process here?  Have we checked out the appointment of bishops…or are we relying on George Weigel who wrote two authorized biographies about which bishopric appointments are either unmentioned (Vol. I) or glossed over (Vol. II)?
         Okay—now you can douse me with a gallon of Holy Water to chase away this cynicism…and call the exorcists—but I mean it and while I support infallibility of pronouncement on faith and morals… am not impressed with the Holy See’s worldly perspicuity.  After all we still have the same mopes running L’Osservatore Romano don’t we—the paper that either is the official voice of the Church in Rome….some say it is because it gets exclusive crack at publishing all papal pronouncements…and some say it isn’t because it cooks up its own formulae for end-of-life disquisition at odds with theological canons…that and running lists of the great 100 rock-and-roll albums of all time.  Why has that been allowed to go on?  Because some Cardinal’s nephew is in the higher ups?  Don’t be too quick to knock that one in the head.

    
         

8 comments:

  1. While I agree that the rush to canonize the late Pontiff is more than a little unseemly, I tend to believe that the "santo subito" push really is coming from the popularity of John Paul II with a lot of ordinary Catholics.

    I fear somewhere down the road, the rush to canonize JPII will be used against the Church.

    I tend to believe that JPII's missteps were mostly the result of the limitations of human nature, incomplete and unreliable knowledge of particular situations, being too nice for his own good, and in the later years of his pontificate, ill health.

    OTOH, remembering the 1970s, and who else was considered papabile in 1978, John Paul II really was probably the best man available for the job. Most of the others would probably not have been able to put the breaks on the downward spiral the Church was in back then, let alone reverse it. And JPII put a number of things, and people, in place which will make future reform possible.

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  2. Of course there’s corruption in an institution created and operated by man -- there always has been corruption, there always will be corruption. There is no god/s; no loving god/s, no hating god/s, no judging god/s; there’s just no god/s. You know it to be so, but are too entrenched in the ideology to admit it to be true.

    Go over to Japan and tell them about your omnipotent god, then tell them why the Earth vomited the ocean upon their lands, and shook their civilization into a living nightmare.

    Explain Jesus/Paul/Aquinas/Assisi/Augustine to the victims of child abuse. Explain why you knowing about child abuse for decades continued to participate, promote, and fund that institution. Of course you’re not responsible, only the men in the robes are to blame. Hahaha (excuse my laughter)

    The Earth is the Earth, Man is Man, and god is god; one has nothing to do with the other two, for one is non existent.

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  3. I think that the reason for the quick sainthood is to appease the liberal left with in the Church in return for the Traditional Mass (EF).

    I am so in agreement with you on this and other things, but at the same time it is so sad. What are we ignorant mutts supposed to do?


    Jim Dorchak
    http://qm2ss.blogspot.com/

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  4. Cardinal Ratzinger blocked and shelved the truth about many high churchman when he headed the CDF, but JPII was weak in lowering the boom on his friends.

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  5. Is it the pope that makes a man saint, or the od that gives the pope his two miracles required for the deed? God has spoken for JP2. God has said "NO" to your request for more time.

    Now for Mother Theresa, God's giving you more time. Remember - holiness makes a saint, not successfulness in their job. Yes, I paraphrase her. God wants us to pray more for her so His message through her about poverty will effect more.

    Seal of confession. If the bishop said "yes", the hunt would be on for the pervert. Once found, the bishop would be defrocked long before charges against the priest.

    So - bishops can be as sinful as the worst of our politicians and bloggers? What's the NEWs?

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  6. @o:

    Canonization is a declaration that a soul is in Heaven, and that the Church recognizes the person canonized as being of "heroic" virtue, and worthy to be held up as an example to all the faithful.

    Because canonizations are public declarations by the Church, made after an established process, and because the person being canonized is being proposed by the Church as an heroic example, it behooves the Church to act carefully, if for no other reason, than to avoid giving scandal to those, not being privy to all the facts, would be troubled by such a declaration.

    In the case of a very popular Pope like John Paul II, the Church would be well served if the process were observed to the exactest detail, and that few, if any requirements waived, so that no one can claim the process was carried out carelessly or rashly.

    God can work around any obstacle, and he can draw good from evil, but humans in the Lord's service still must act prudently, and with a view to how their actions appear to the wider community.

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  7. @Jim Dorchak:

    John Paul II was never a darling of the "liberal left," who are probably more appalled by the late Pope's canonization than even Mr. Roeser is. JPII's fans are mostly conservative Catholics of the Wanderer - National Catholic Register - EWTN school.

    JPII took the first steps toward liberating the Traditional Latin Mass in the early 1980s when he had the Congregation for Divine Worship survey the world's bishops about demand for the Old Mass's return. In spite of obstructionism by the CDW and the bishops, JPII issued an indult in 1984 allowing bishops to permit the Old Mass.

    When Abp. Lefebvre lapsed into schism in 1988, JPII authorized the founding of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter for those of Lefebvre's priests who wished to remain in full communion with the Church. When the Pope issued Ecclesia Dei, it gave a lot of those conservative Catholics "permission" to be traditionalists, and the Old Mass began to reappear regularly in places (like Cardinal Bernardin's Chicago), where it was feared it never would.

    [It was at this time that Cardinal Ratzinger celebrated the Traditional Mass, and told the world he had forgotten "how God-centered" the Old Mass was.

    By contrast, Rembert Weakland accused John Paul II of "derailing the liturgical reform"(sic) by allowing the Old Mass even under the restrictions of the 1984 Indult.]

    I submit, there would have been no Summorum Pontificum without the 1984 indult and JPII's encouragement in 1988.

    On the other hand, the liberal leftists found much to hate in JPII besides his acts in favor of the Old Mass. The accusations that the Pope was trying to "repeal Vatican II" were made early on, and for some of those folks, JPII's death couldn't have come soon enough. A read through back issues of liberal publications from the 1980s and 1990s should bear this out.

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  8. A lot of the distaste institutional churchmen of the old left had for JPII was based on their contempt for the papacy itself, an institution they felt mired in the contemptible Medieval and which they've spent their entire ecclesiastical carriers patiently undermining. It mattered little that JPII acquiesced to and covered for them when they went too far.

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