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Weigel's attack is a smokescreen
Norman Mailer advised writers to "learn to kill your little darlings," and "how much you must leave out to get this little bit in."
George Weigel, the not inexperienced author of "The End of the Bernardin Era" amazes the reader with how much he has left out to get so little in and so much wrong.
Why is Weigel so defensive about Bernardin that, a decade and a half after his death, he proclaims the end of what he terms the Bernardin Era and the "Bernardin Machine"?
Chicago has accepted the slurs of outsiders at the civic efficiencies of the Democratic Machine and the Daley Machine but it will not suffer what it has never known, anything ever dubbed the Bernardin Machine. The writer invents a mantra that will fit his preconceptions about Bernardin and erase him from Catholic memory.
He sees a vast Left Wing ecclesiastical conspiracy that was spearheaded by the late Cardinal John Dearden of Detroit who was elected the first president of the National Conference of Bishops after Vatican II. One of his alleged sinister moves, earlier abetted by Atlanta's Archbishop Paul Hallinan who had appointed Joseph Bernardin as his auxiliary bishop in 1966, was to ask Bernardin to serve as the first general secretary of the reorganized bishops' conference.
The author's scenario suggests that the Dearden/Bernardin team created a Vichy-like regime of a leftist/liberal church that betrayed his idea of true Catholicism. What Weigel leaves out is a Council of the church, Vatican II (1962-1965) whose pastoral purpose, as Pope John XXIII intended, was to open the church to the needs of the suffering and searching world and to identify the church as a pilgrim people of God called to serve rather than to conquer it.
What Weigel leaves out to get so little in includes the documents of that council that revived the principle of "collegiality" that affirmed that each bishop, including the bishop of Rome, derives his authority from his consecration as a bishop rather than as a delegation from the authority of the pope. The principle undergirded the Council's establishment of National Conferences of Bishops with authority to deal with problems particular to their region. It is not hard to find this affirmation of collegiality or of the strengthened role of national conferences in the documents of Vatican II.
Dearden and Bernardin shared the task of overseeing the implementation of the council decrees and to guarantee that the national conference fulfilled the vision of Vatican II in serving the needs of Catholics in the United States. Rejecting entreaties to speak out on controversial subjects, Dearden argued that his "first commitment was to make the conference as solid and strong as possible."
Apparently concerned that Vatican II's return to collegiality might weaken the papal centrality of Vatican I, Weigel views Dearden and Hallinan as the architects, with Bernardin the sub-contractor, of a structure ratified by the apostolic delegate, the Belgian Archbishop Jean Jadot, of a collaterally descending network of new bishops, selected like lodge brothers to serve the secret cause of watering down traditional Catholicism with draughts of left-wing liberalism. What they were in fact doing was implementing the teachings of Vatican Council II.
Weigel, however, omits any mention of Vatican II and its documents, illustrating his apparent disregard for what he insists that he reveres, the authority of the church. His selective allegiance makes him a "cafeteria Catholic" who cherrypicks historical information so that he seems uninformed about how bishops have been charged by Rome with recommending future bishops throughout the history of the church. It is impossible to believe that a man so steeped in the accidents of Catholic tradition has not consulted the 1983 Revision of the Code of Canon Law in which canon 377.3 details the process. While bishops may make recommendations, it is the pontifical legate, now papal nuncio Archbishop Pietro Sambi, who composes and submits the list to the Apostolic See.
The true godfather of the 20th century lineage of bishops in the United States was then-Fr. Edward Francis Hoban (1878-1966), who became chancellor of the Chicago archdiocese in 1906. While there and as bishop of nearby Rockford, Ill., he grew close to Archbishop Amleto Cicognani, then apostolic delegate to the United States, who forwarded the Episcopal recommendations to Rome.
Cicognani was instrumental in making Hoban the bishop of Cleveland, Ohio, the smoky city that became the unlikely epicenter of clerical power in the United States. From the priests of this diocese Hoban selected Paul Hallinan for the Atlanta archdiocese and sent John Dearden to Pittsburgh on his way to Detroit as cardinal archbishop.
Hoban also selected John Krol, the first Polish-American to be elevated for an important ecclesiastical career. He later became the cardinal archbishop of Philadelphia and, like Dearden, a president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Weigel is much exercised that when Bernardin became president of the conference of bishops, he recommended, as is the duty of any man in that position, future bishops. What lies behind Weigel's objections to this normal procedure? His unease arises from his hypothesizing ulterior motives and low liberal politics in Bernardin's steady efforts to seek consensus among the bishops on significant issues, including the composition of the pastoral letter on nuclear war. He thinks Bernardin stacked the committee that included the former chief of chaplains, Archbishop John O'Connor of New York, and the well known peace activist, Bishop Thomas Gumbleton of Detroit by also appointing some go-along bishops of little public note.
The peace pastoral
The letter represented a practical example of collegiality, characterized by hard work and a willingness to seek an acceptable document no matter how many hours of meetings it required. Ignoring the preparatory hearings held across the country, Weigel seems more concerned that this pastoral letter was planned to subvert President Ronald Reagan's rearmament policies rather than to explore one of the most explosive issues of a nuclear armed world.
Despite its dismissal by Weigel as missing the point of Reagan's policies, the pastoral letter attracted the attention of the entire country, earning it, for example, a cover story in The New York Times Magazine. The Catholic bishops emerged as perhaps the only cohort in American life with sufficient moral authority to conduct a public meditation on the dread potential of nuclear war and the range of ethical issues connected with that possibility.
The writer indicts Bernardin in his every move, including, in what he describes as, in 1968, Bernardin's "ill-fated attempt to settle the disciplinary situation in the Archdiocese of Washington, where dissent (from Humanae Vitae, Pope Paul VI's encyclical on birth control) was widespread and public." The writer scoffs at Rome's efforts to seek a peaceful detente between Cardinal Patrick O'Boyle and the Washington priests whom he suspended when they published a statement presenting the traditional Catholic theological teaching that people must follow their own consciences.
O'Boyle, at heart a gallant progressive who had, for example, desegregated the Catholic schools in Washington long before the famous 1954 Supreme Court ruling, felt that the pope' authority was at stake and, consulting with Jesuit moral theologian Fr. John Ford, issued a letter defending his disciplinary actions and condemning the priests' statement. Many parishioners walked out of church when this was read and Rome felt that O'Boyle's tactics were making a bad situation worse. Weigel apparently wants to leave the impression that Bernardin was in some way the self-appointed mediator who exacerbated the situation and that the fiery O'Boyle was a longsuffering Thomas More.
It was the Holy See, however, that commissioned Bernardin to intervene to effect an honorable peace between O'Boyle and his priests while at the same time defending the teaching of the church. Rome imposed a condition that increased the assignment's difficulty by forbidding Bernardin to divulge to O'Boyle or the priests that he was deputed by the Vatican to resolve the situation. O'Boyle, therefore, resisted and resented Bernardin's efforts to settle the matter and was overheard saying, at the bishops' meeting in 1974 at which Bernardin was elected president, "I only came so I could vote against him."
Weigel acknowledges that Bernardin was not just giving cover to dissenters in his famous Fordham lecture on the consistent ethic of life in which he did not, however, seek "symmetry" between abortion and such varied issues as infant nutrition and the death penalty. Bernardin himself readily acknowledged the differing moral valences of these questions. His aim was to explore the wide range of related concerns to which Catholics must attend if they believe in the dignity of life and the value of the individual human person that supported their strong Pro-Life position. Weigel therefore fails to see how this proposal was an effort to effect a ceasefire in the brutal culture wars so that Pro-Life issues could be presented with a better chance of engaging the pro-choice forces that showed no interest in learning the nature of the pro-life position.
He dismisses as fatuous what he terms Bernardin's efforts to involve the church in events of the day. He does not acknowledge or seem to know that the bishops were applying well-established principles from Catholic theology and papal encyclicals in their pastoral letter on nuclear war and their subsequent one on the American economy.
What, indeed, lies behind this attack on Bernardin if not his need to make other church leaders and their activities less visible to the public? The screen he raises to shield the latter is transparent and readers can see through it to identify the prelates whose inter-relationships and collaborations he is eager to conceal. The writer thereby reveals what he is so anxious to conceal -- the real name of the "machine" that is running out of gas and the prelate whose "era" is coming to an end.
A tactic of misdirection
Weigel's tactic of misdirection is in no place more apparent than when he inspects scandal ridden Boston and identifies Fr. Bryan Hehir as the problem, the sinister eminence grise behind the development of many of Bernardin's initiatives. He cannot distract us from Cardinal Bernard Law who made his way to the lofty eminence of Boston from another surprising center of episcopal power, the tiny diocese of Cape Girardeau- Springfield, Mo., in which he succeeded William Baum, who then succeeded O'Boyle in Washington before going on to a curial post in Rome.
Cape Girardeau-Springfield became the Cape Canaveral of American ecclesiastical culture, the launching site for influential careers in the major dioceses of the country. John P. Cody's measured post-war rise from St. Louis to become a major player in American Catholicism signaled the rise of the Midwest as the source for new leaders in the church. William Wakefield Baum became its third bishop after consecration by John Carberry, the Brooklyn native who had risen, by way of the relatively small dioceses of Lafayette, Ind., and Columbus, Ohio, to become cardinal archbishop of St. Louis. The fussy Carberry, who accused apostolic delegate Jean Jadot of destroying the American church, sat obsessively, worrying that the Eucharist in the hand might lead to hosts stolen for Black Masses, in the middle of a group of bishops who were determined to question Vatican II and the work of Dearden and Bernardin. As Baum set the table for Law to follow him in Missouri so he also arranged his own succession in Washington, D.C. by Archbishop James Hickey, a prelate known, in his dealings with his priests and others, to be as sweetly smiling and controlling as Carberry was with his.
Law came to dominate the group by his careful cultivation of Pope John Paul II who viewed him as his loyal emissary and source in the United States. Bernardin himself recognized that, after Law became cardinal archbishop of Boston in 1984, saying, "Bernie has all the say in Rome now. I intend to continue to do my work as well as I can." Law, who was and remains a member of the council that makes bishops, pleased John Paul II by forwarding only candidates for the bishopric who had never spoken a word on any controversial issue. The resulting crop of generally non-creative but intensely orthodox bishops took their cues from Law on everything, including how to manage, as he thought they could, the already developing scandal of sex abuse by their priests.
Law invited Oblate Fr. Francis George to Boston in 1987 as coordinator of what Law conceived of as a conservative think tank, the Circle of Fellows for the Cambridge Studies of Faith and Culture. In 1990, Law had him appointed bishop of Yakima, Wash.
It was, however, during the 1980s dominated by Law that investigative journalist Jason Berry broke open the truth about the child molesting Louisiana priest Gilbert Gauthe, unwrapping the scandal that had been buried in the ecclesiastical pyramid. Law reassured the pope that it was exaggerated by the press and that it was under control. Weigel criticizes the American bishops for turning to psychology to deal with the sex abuse crisis rather than applying the principles of moral theology. He does not speculate on whether Law had a moral obligation to inform Pope John Paul II fully and accurately about this growing problem.
Nor does he mention that, while Law was downplaying the sex abuse crisis, Bernardin was leading the bishops in developing the first extensive protocol for dealing systematically with priests and other church workers accused of sex abuse. Several bishops followed Bernardin's Chicago guidelines in developing procedures in their own dioceses.
Weigel further obscures Law's control of American Catholicism in the last part of the 20th century by suggesting that New York's John O'Connor took over the selection of American bishops in the United States. The pope admired O'Connor but his influence in appointing bishops was limited as was evident when Law sent successors to Brooklyn and Rockville Centre, N.Y., dioceses of which O'Connor was metropolitan. Law also eagerly supported the pope's 1993 letter, Apostolos Suos, that gutted national conferences of bishops of any authority in composing pastoral letters on local or regional issues by demanding that the topics and the drafts be first sent for approval to Rome.
Perhaps the best example Law's modus operandi is his reaction to the news, in 1995, that Bernardin had pancreatic cancer and a 25 percent chance of living five years. Law immediately moved his compliant protégé, Francis George, from Yakima to Portland, Ore., where he would be an archbishop and so prepared to be transferred to Chicago after Bernardin's death. All in a cold-blooded day's work in the higher realms of ecclesiastical power and of a piece with the glacial coolness with which Law had operated to prevent anybody's examining the sex abuse crisis ten years before.
In 1985, Law restrained the National Conference of Catholic Bishops from funding a proposal made by a group headed by Dominican Fr. Thomas Doyle to investigate the still covered up sex abuse problems among priests. Law also instructed the then-general secretary of the bishops' conference to return an even more detailed proposal from Bernardin to research the "homosexualization" of the priesthood to the archbishop of Chicago with a letter informing him that he would not submit it because "the bishops won't do anything about it." The bishops uneasily discussed the problem at their spring meeting in Collegeville, Minn., that year.
Had Law acted differently he might have saved grief for thousands of victims and mitigated the most serious scandal the church had suffered since the Reformation but, in fact, he was not about to allow this to become well known and he was confident that the pope would accept his interpretation of any media interest in the matter. The gods of irony shuddered, however, for they sensed that Law's Nixonian bravado was contributing to his own downfall after the sex abuse in his own archdiocese exploded in The Boston Globe just after New Year's Day in 2002 and he was forced to resign before Christmas.
Weigel puts the key to his cabinet of secrets into the reader's hands when he recounts the story of Bernardin's last initiative, the common ground project, which Weigel derides it as another effort to advance liberal views when, in fact, it was the dying Bernardin's deeply felt attempt to heal the polarized state of American Catholicism. The dying Bernardin was convinced that those termed progressives or conservatives could come together and affirm that what they held in common far outweighed what appeared to divide them. The writer here hands the reader the key to his attack on Bernardin. Law immediately attacked Bernardin, claiming that there was no need for dialogue when you had the magisterium of the church. Weigel mentions other critics, such Washington's Cardinal James Hickey and his predecessor, Cardinal William Baum, but he omits the name of the cardinal who spoke up first and whose affected righteousness his followers in crimson adopted and whose words they mimicked in their statements.
Perhaps Weigel omits Law's hurried criticism because Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles responded with a defense of Bernardin and a reminder that cardinals should not criticize each other in public. One understands why Weigel did not want to discuss the sordid affair. After Bernardin's funeral, Hickey shamefacedly asked Bernardin's closest aide, Msgr. Kenneth Velo, what the late cardinal had thought of his criticism. "He said," Velo responded without hesitation, "he would never have done it to you." It was the same answer Law received when he uneasily asked the same question.
Or perhaps Weigel omits Law because two years almost to the day after he criticized Bernardin, Law was swearing an oath that he would tell the truth at his deposition on sex abuse in Boston.
Leaving Law out, of course, allows us to see what makes him so nervous that he must create a sideshow about Bernardin to distract us from learning more about Law, his dubious relationship to Pope John Paul II, and his central role in naming bishops over the last 28 years in the American church.
Law has come a long way along the yellow brick clerical road from Cape Girardeau-Springfield but he now has no place to go and nothing to do but, like a Jamesian ex-patriate character, lives sadly on among the ruins of Rome and of his own career while still trying to run the American Catholic church for whose wounds he bears no small amount of responsibility. It is understandable that Weigel does not want to gauge the depth of this melancholy narrative and chooses to hide it behind prose that seems to have been written off the top of his head rather from the depths of his heart.
No wonder the ghost of Cardinal Bernardin makes him anxious. The truth about the Law Era and the Law Machine would not make pleasant reading.
[Eugene Cullen Kennedy is emeritus professor of psychology at Loyola University, Chicago. He has written three books about Cardinal Joseph Bernardin: the biography This Man Bernardin (1996), the memoir My Brother Joseph: The Spirit of a Cardinal and the Story of a Friendship (1998), and the meditation Cardinal Bernardin’s Stations of the Cross: Transforming Our Grief and Loss Into a New Life (2003).]
Editor's Note: We can send you an e-mail alert every time Kennedy's column, Bulletins from the Human Side," is posted to NCRonline.org. Go to this page and follow directions: E-mail alert sign-up. If you already receive e-mail alerts from us, click on the "update my profile" button to add Kennedy to your list.






Well done, as usual,
Well done, as usual, Eugene.
But does anyone expect anything else from Weigel? The man is a papal apologist, along the lines of John Allen.
Neither of them has ever met a pope they don't think is infallible.
That comment is (1)
That comment is
(1) grotesquely unfair to John Allen, unless you believe no pope by definition can ever say or do anything right
(2) a misreading of Weigel, who cloaks himsef in ultra-loyalty while trying to recast Catholic social teaching to suit the far right of US politics. (Witness, for example, the curious Republican belief that the right to life is sacred in the womb but ceases the minute your are born unless your parents can pay through the nose for medial care.)
Indeed one does not expect
Indeed one does not expect anything else from Weigel. Interesting that Eugene speaks about Weigel leaving a whole lot out in order to get just a little bit in. This is the hallmark of Weigel's wholly unreliable style: look up the scanty references to "Opus Dei" in the index of his biography of You-Know-Who to see what I mean.
What a frightening article.
What a frightening article. I've known that Weigel's view of the Church and it's doctrine was warped after listening to himon NPR providing a just war argument about Iraq prior to the start of that war. His point of view has been shown a hundred times over to be wrong in every way. I also knew a bit about Cardinal Law, especially in the immediate aftermath of the sex abuse scandal exploding in the Boston press as he fought to hold on to his job. But I had no idea of the depth and breadth of the hatred both held and continue to hold against Cardinal Bernardin. How in the face of such academic dishonesty and lack of Christian charity can either of them boast to speak on behalf of the Church and the magisterium? Weigel actively foments dissent within the Church encouraging disunity and hatred for anything and anyone he considers liberal. He is nothing but a Tea Party Catholic.
I would add the word "kettle"
I would add the word "kettle" between "tea" and "party". When these folks become heated all they let off is a lot of steam
absolutely!
absolutely!
"All in a cold-blooded day's
"All in a cold-blooded day's work in the higher realms of ecclesiastical power and of a piece with the glacial coolness with which Law had operated to prevent anybody's examining the sex abuse crisis ten years before".
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Thank you, thank you Professor Cullen for this terribly revealing and shocking story.
So, why should we think anything has changed since the mockery and deliberately deceptive "Zero Tolerance" policy of the U.S. bishops? If anything their shocking treachery has become even more a part of their modus operandi as administrators, and more deeply ingrained in their episcopal psyche since the Dallas initiative of 2002. We see they still don't get it and either can't or refuse to learn.
We're seeing additional evidence the entire U.S. hierarchy must resign and their resignations be accepted, or the people have no choice but to remove themselves and their support from their jurisdiction. To throw off the omophorion, to borrow an old eastern church word for episcopal authority.
The revolt against the revolting is proceeding in full force. The inescapable fact becomes more apparent, only B16 and his army of episcopal apologists stepping down, and a blanket of popularly appointed bishops replacing them can begin to heal the divisions. The fissures are getting wider by the day in all areas of Church life.
Don't you think Weigel has
Don't you think Weigel has been a little old, a little boring, a little cliched, a little tired....for a long, long time now?
A friend of mine, who is
A friend of mine, who is solidly conservative about the Church and society, and who is an admirably principled person, once told me that he finds Weigel "creepy."
I sometimes wonder what he meant. Could it be the snide, self-serving, partisan motivation of his opinions that makes one feel that there is an agenda being pushed that does not have God's kingdom and God's love as its goal?
One cannot be both "solidly
One cannot be both "solidly conservative about the Church and society" and also "admirably principled."
One of the best ways to
One of the best ways to appreciate Weigel's 'creepiness' is to watch him and the irritatingly smug Raymond Arroyo glory in their mutual admiration society on EWTN's 'The World Over', which purports to be a 'news' programme.
While EWTN is often
While EWTN is often informative and downright pleasurable too, I find a disturbing trend of late. It has hunkered down to being little more than our national Catholic apologist for the status quo, kissing the ring of just about every reactionary prelate you can imagine, and clearly certain never to bite the episcopal hands that feed it.
Unfortunately, Catholics are not receiving the balanced news they deserve covering their church. Not to discuss head on the scandals and the fact the Church is facing the greatest threat to it's moral authority since Martin Luther, is, IMHO comparable to showing a year's worth of Julia Child re-runs from PBS without ever showing her preparing so much as one dish.
I enjoy Raymond Arroyo's shows, but please. His sycophancy, especially when he has some reactionary on as his guest, is terribly annoying. I'm surprised he doesn't offer to carry the train to Cardinal Burk's cappa magna when he's being interviewed.
AlbantheOutraged, Do you have
AlbantheOutraged, Do you have any idea how weird your comment is? EWTN used to be the Non Catholic Reporter of television, but now it has become "reactionary"?
Yes, I remember well Richard McBrien's great, long-running series "Railing against John Paul II." What a great sign off line he had: "I'm mad as heck and I'm not going to take it anymore." Every week for twenty-five years. And what about Leonard Swidler's show "Hans Kung: His Life is Our Example"? (My favorite part was that nine episode special: "The Mercedes 1963 190SL, The Greatest Automobile of All Time.") Who can forget the daily "Call to Action Update"? You, of course, remember Mother's energetic defense of Roger Mahony and all his works against all comers. I remember like it was last night her calling his Cathedral "the most beautiful church in all the world."
Why EWTN now supports every act and initiative of this Ratzinger guy is beyond me. They treat him like he was Pope or something. So different from the way they treated Wojtyła.
AO, if you're leaving EWTN for NCR, your leaving a living faith for a dying one.
Roger Conley
A little old, a little boring
A little old, a little boring .... Actually my take is different. Several years ago I accompanied a friend to a talk given by Mr. Weigel. I found him to be not a little arrogant, intolerant not only of contrary opinions but even of anything not enunciated by himself. And yes, he was and is a Pope's Yes-man.
Thank you, Professor Kennedy, for your courageous expose' of attempted manipulation of unknowing minds and hearts.
Courageous? Eugene Kennedy
Courageous? Eugene Kennedy has been viciously attacking orthodox Catholic for 45 years. It's what he does for a living. Don't you think that he knows that if it would result in anything bad happening to him, it would have happened a long, long time ago?
This exercise on the part of
This exercise on the part of Weigel and Kennedy of seeking to defend specific bishops just seems silly and pathetic to me. The fact of the matter is that American Catholicism in the postconciliar era has been plagued by widespread episcopal failure (across the ideological spectrum). While bishops like Law and Rigali engaged in cover up to protect "the good of the Church," bishops like Mahony and Weakland did the same out of self-interests. The real heroes of the postconciliar period are the countless number of lay men and women, priests, and religious who have faithfully served the needs of others away from the corridors of power and with little or no fanfare. I imagine there might also be a few less well-known bishops have also quietly and humbly engaged in Gospel work. Unfortunately, their witness has been all but obscured by the abject malfeasance of their brother bishops.
Weigel is your classic
Weigel is your classic Cafeteria Catholic, reading out of the Church anything he doesn't like--from the current Holy Father's encyclical to Caridinal Bernardin.
"The pope admired O'Connor
"The pope admired O'Connor but his influence in appointing bishops was limited as was evident when Law sent successors to Brooklyn and Rockville Centre, N.Y., dioceses of which O'Connor was metropolitan."
O'Connor was dead by the time Law foisted his toady, Murphy, on Rockville Centre. O'Connor wanted (and got) McHugh, who ended up dying before O'Connor. Murphy wanted Rockville Centre because he thought it was a stepping stone to NY, but Rome already saw enough of Murphy when he worked there and decided, OK, send Murphy to the 'burbs (where he has been a disaster).
O'Connor got episcopal orders for his friends and lieutenants: O'Brien (now Baltimore) and McCarthy (Retired).
Eugene Kennedy: You are the
Eugene Kennedy: You are the greatest. This answers a lot of questions about the recent installation of his spokesman, Christopher Coyne, as auxiliary bishop of the Indianapolis archdiocese. Our concern is that he has learned from Law how to participate in the coverup and will continue in these crimes forever and wherever he is sent. He has another teacher in the current archbishop of Indianapolis, who will be another influence in his life to continue the sins of the hierarchy that have plagued the church for eons. Thank you for your candid honesty, integrity, transparency, and accountability. If only the "faithful members/contributors" of the church could wake up and wise up to the truths their "beloved men of God" have been spreading are only lies. Where has and is god during all this mess they have created in the name of religion.
The current Archbishop of
The current Archbishop of Indianapolis, Daniel Beuchlein, was a little-known monk at St. Meinrad Archabbey until he preached a retreat in New York in which he greatly impressed Cardinal O'Connor who saw to it that Beuchlein was plucked from his monastery to become Bishop of Memphis, TN. When the Archbishop of Indianapolis died a few years later, O'Connor over-ruled Cardinal Bernadin (who as Cardinal of Chicago should have made the call for nearby Indianapolis) and had Beuchlein elevated to the Archbishopric of Indianapolis. In his 20+ years there, he has quietly demoralized what had once been a stong and progressive presyterate and proven his worth to Rome as a powerful and successful fund-raiser. His own protege, the young conservative, Paul Etiennne, is now Bishop of Cheyenne, WY. It will be interesting to see his career unfold from there.
You are partly right. As
You are partly right.
As ordinary in Chicago, Bernardin should have had no say over who would next head the Indianapolis archdiocese. That Indianapolis and Chicago are in the same regional conference is of little importance.
As de facto head of the Church in the US in the early 80's, however, Bernardin had a lot to say about any new American bishop. That changed with the nomination of O'Connor in NY. Bernardin had pushed his boy, Archbishop Kelly of Louisville, to take over from Cardinal Cook. The pope said no, and O'Connor got the job. From that day on the Bernardin power began to wither. In fact, during the last year of his life, he knew he was toast and went to Rome to try to name his successor (all the while saying publicly in Chicago that he was cancer free). He was told at the Vatican, "Thanks, but no thanks."
After Bernardin's death the Chicago job was turned down by a handful of bishops.
Sorry, but no one turned down
Sorry, but no one turned down Chicago. George had it sewn up from the start.
Law had made that clear in Rome, where I was studying at the time. He'd also made it really clear that Bernardin's homilist, Velo, would not get the ring and hat as lang as BF Law was on the Bishops' Cong.
Keep up this kind of good
Keep up this kind of good reporting Gene!
The responses to Weigel's
The responses to Weigel's article o the First Things website were eye-opening for me. I was surprised by the overwhelming criticism of his article in what I always thought was a very conservative, right-wing, "in the pocket of the Republican Party" website and periodical.
Dislaimer: I have always thought that Bernardin is a saint and have,in fact, prayed to him.
This article makes clear to
This article makes clear to me the comments made during the inauguration of our present Bishop here in Springfield-Cape Girardeau: now Cardinal Burke, then of St. Louis, castigated us and rebuked us at the inaugural mass for our new Bishop. I couldn't understand his moralistic tone with us as we had a beloved Bishop who seemed to follow Christ's teachings to love one another and follow the Social Justice teachings of the Church. Then as the new Bishop took over, he put Weigal's column in our paper and his own writings took on a moralistic tone as if we were children who needed correcting. The loving, more Christ like tone of our old bishop was replaced with one reminiscent of the old church. Of a church circling the wagons to take us back in time to pre-Vatican II days. Thank you for this column as it makes the changes more understanding. It also explains why, for me, it is harder and harder to remain a catholic these days. I was and am an admirer of Cardinal Bernardin; he epitomized for me all that was good about the Catholic Church. Now it is as if the far right wing of the Republican party has taken over our church.
If I found it difficult to be
If I found it difficult to be a Catholic, I would walk out of the Church and join the nearest Anglican church. I cannot understand why people remain in a church in which they are not happy.
Three words: lack of
Three words: lack of integrity.
CWG, I think your reply shows
CWG, I think your reply shows a lack of humility
Not at all, and how
Not at all, and how short-sighted if not judgmental in the worst way of you. It is clear you know nothing of what is transpiring in the hearts of many of the faithful.
It's really our church, not
It's really our church, not theirs, which they are intent on destroying while we sit by and watch.
I agree Frank, it's OUR
I agree Frank, it's OUR Church, not just the Church of the hierarchy and their supporters. I don't think though that we can do much to stop them destroying it, but the main reason I stay is precisely because I think it IS a broad Church and I'm not going to walk away and let it become the Church of a narrow minority!
I don't think though that we
I don't think though that we can do much to stop them destroying it. . ."
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CathyT, That is what the bishops think too. You and they are dead wrong. As you will be discovering in very short order.
You have your pronouns mixed
You have your pronouns mixed up. It is NOT "our church", and it is NOT "their church". The Church belongs to Christ. It is HIS Church. And because it is His Church, the world, the flesh and the devil will never destroy it. Remember His promise concerning His Church: "the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it. Remember the pronouns.
No, it is God's church.
No, it is God's church.
nor anonymous
nor anonymous
Taking nothing away from the
Taking nothing away from the Anglican Church, it always looks greener on the other side. They've got mountains of difficulties as Rome has.
To walk out is exactly what the arrogant and pompous court jesters around B16 want you to do. It only solidifies their hold on the reins of power and gives their Pontiff Paymaster more excuses to make his church smaller and, of course, more "orthodox".
If I found it difficult to be
If I found it difficult to be a Catholic, I would walk out of the Church and join the nearest Anglican church. I cannot understand why people remain in a church in which they are not happy.
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Catholics are doing exactly that. Anglican, Lutheran, and Eastern Orthodox churches are reporting big conversions rates from Roman Catholicism. Of course, all of this while Benny's Twilight Zone in Rome blithely marches on pretending all is well, and asks, "reformation? What reformation?".
They stay not because of the
They stay not because of the hierarchy (in fact in spite of the hierarchy) but because of the Church: the people who are the chruch. Equally important, because of the Sacramental life of the Chruch, not avaiaable elsewhere. WE are the Church. Don't leave because of THEM, the hierarchy. They are not the Church, they are only a fraction of one percent of the Chruch. Let's not lose site of this!
It is difficult for an
It is difficult for an octogenerian like Kennedy to realize that he is no longer in the Church of the seventies. Newly ordained men are happy to be priests and to proclaim the orthodoxy of the Church. Young women are joining traditional communities, wearing a habit and praying in community. The Papist has four hundred and fifty thousand members, all youn Catholics, who follow the magisterium of the Church. I know it must be difficult for Kennedy, who is in the twilight of life, to accept that the Church he knew forty years ago had rightened itself and is prclaiming the word of God.
Anonymous on Mar. 16,
Anonymous on Mar. 16, 2011.
You stated:
"It is difficult for an octogenerian like Kennedy to realize that he is no longer in the Church of the seventies. Newly ordained men are happy to be priests and to proclaim the orthodoxy of the Church. Young women are joining traditional communities, wearing a habit and praying in community. The Papist has four hundred and fifty thousand members, all youn Catholics, who follow the magisterium of the Church. I know it must be difficult for Kennedy, who is in the twilight of life, to accept that the Church he knew forty years ago had rightened itself and is prclaiming the word of God."
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You have forgotten that our current pope is an 'octogenerian' who wants to turn the Church back to the world that he knew as a young man----the Church of the late 1950' and early 1960's.
Only, the world has changed since then----the vast majority of people don't care to return to that world----and don't want a church that drives by looking into it rear-view mirror. Popes JP II and Benedict both were/are frightened men----who said "Do not be afraid," but were/are plenty afraid. They cannot deal with the world as is---the way that Vatican Council II---stated that the Church MUST deal with secular society.
As far as the younger priests are concerned, they are so full of theology, their cassocks and vestiments, that they are woefully empty of such things as politics, sociology, psychology, and most of all a deep spirituality that can reach out in a pastoral concern for their people.
The young sisters in traditional communities---have run away from God's people---behind cloistered walls. They think that they will find God---apart from their own humanity and that of their brothers and sisters in Christ.
But if you check Christ's words----care and concern for others (whom Christ loves so much that he identified them with himself) is the hallmark of Christ's disciples----not acting like members of the Catholic Essenes---escaping from the evil world!
Also, there are fewer and
Also, there are fewer and fewer priests and nuns. Priests seem to be getting older as I get older.
This reminds me of the old joke about St. Peter and the new arrival in heaven. St. Peter gave the new arrival a tour of the various people there. When they got to high walled area with loud noise, the new arrival asked who was there. St. Peter whispered, "Catholics, they think they are the only ones here." The traditionalists may be in for a surprise.
Wrong!! The majority of newly
Wrong!! The majority of newly ordained priests are college graduates, have had relationships with women, are politically astute and function well in society. The young woman are not cloistered. They are in the classromm teaching God's word. Can you explain why the validictorian of her class at Harvard joined the Sisters of Mary?
Anonymous on Mar. 18,
Anonymous on Mar. 18, 2011.
You stated:
"Wrong!! The majority of newly ordained priests are college graduates, have had relationships with women, are politically astute and function well in society. The young woman are not cloistered. They are in the classromm teaching God's word. Can you explain why the validictorian of her class at Harvard joined the Sisters of Mary?"
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Young priests college graduates? Then why are we sending reading specialists to the undergraduate seminaries to help seminarians with their reading difficulities?
One gal joining the Sisters of Mary doesn't a nun make. The validictorian has eight years (or more) to go before she pronounces final vows. Then we will see what we will see.
And even those in traditional teaching orders----do not have enough members to swell the teaching staff of Catholic schools. There are also the financial problems that parishes face in trying to keep them open. But that's another whole issue.
There are now 61 men in
There are now 61 men in troubled Boston studying to be priests in the diocese.
The undergraduates are sent to Providence College who would not admit them if they could not read.
The ninety percent of religious women to whom you refer have the average age nearing eighty. The other ten percent which is growing rapidly have an average age of just under thirty. In two religious orders of women last year, there were over fifty young women who entered.
In ONE Dominican province twenty one novices entered. That had not happened since 1966.
the local Church he knew as a
the local Church he knew as a young man supported the Nazi party, and he himself was a member of the Nazi Youth. His predecessor as well was in the least a collaborator, a comfortable double agent, and virulent anti-Marxist, like the Nationalist Socialists that sheltered him in wartime. And so we see Holocaust denying schismatic arrogant priests pardoned without their request, without their repentance, while good priests like Miguel D'Escoto, MM, they cast outside. We see monarchists and Opus Dei Franconistas promoted while the People of God get oppressed, not liberated, and thus march on to survive the pilgrim path to the Reign of God, leaving these lost clerics behind . . .
You do realize that you
You do realize that you comment makes no references to any inaccuracy of the article written by Mr. Kennedy, which I find very telling about your priorities.
You respond by offering an
You respond by offering an "ad hominem" comment about Professor Kennedy. And you choose anonymity for yourself. Nothing wrong with the latter, but it suggests that you are afraid of personal involvement with Kennedy's issues, just as your attack on Kennedy's age also allows you to avoid any of his issues.
Vincent of Valley Forge
Yeah, after 33 years of
Yeah, after 33 years of conservative rule the church is in ruins. When Pope Paul VI died in 1978 after about 15 yrs of Vatican II, attendance in the US was around 68-70%. Now with conservative rule it is down to 38%, the church in Ireland is on life support and attendance in Europe down to under 10% and Poland has the highest abortion rate in Europe. To quote one faithful Catholic in Poland, why should I exchange the chains of communism for the chains of Pope John Paul II? And then there is the conservative Maciel...
Yeah those "successful" conservatives!
Wake up dead head and smell the coffee.
Beware,"boiler plate" Trad
Beware,"boiler plate" Trad talking points that you see everywhere. Where do they get these fabrications?
...Newly ordained men are happy to be priests and to proclaim the orthodoxy of the Church
(a recent study showed almost 45% of all new priests have reading disabilities and difficulty with language skills)
...Young women are joining traditional communities wearing a habit ( only a minority are traditional, 90%+ are not)
...The Papist all young Catholics, who follow the magisterium (I assume Peters blog? That's the biggest blooper yet!)
Just LOL!
You forgot to put in a link
You forgot to put in a link to support any of your claims. Try again and let's see if your comments hold water.
Thank you Eugene for a
Thank you Eugene for a well-written, well-thought article. It is sad that Weigel and some of the current hierarchy "condemn" the church in the early 60s for carrying out the wishes of Pope John XXIII by attending and writing the documents of Vatican II. I wonder sometimes if the seminaries, particulaly those in the USA, make the Documents of Vatican II mandatory reading, study and discussion. I doubt it since we seem to be seeing the recent ordinations of those who I feel are Papists in the most negative way.
Thank you, Professor Kennedy,
Thank you, Professor Kennedy, for your road map highlighting so much of the personalities and the politics of America's post-World War II Catholic hierarchy. Although your article is intended as a rebuttal of the weak and biased writing of Mr. Weigel, and a fine rebuttal it is, the information can serve as part of a skeletal outline of how the various episcopal officers interrelate and how they are motivated.
Lay people, both Catholics and non-Catholics, who are caught up in various roles of the priest scandal and ecclesiastical coverup (together, the Scandal) will benefit from your writings, as they ponder the otherwise-invisible webs behind the Scandal.
Enlightened, where they are attorneys, they may be better equipped to draft pre-trial discovery requests, pose better questions at depositions, and identify additional defendants and expand the counts in their civil and criminal pleadings. Grand jury investigations' subpoenas and questions might reach further, with such background awareness.
Enlightened, where they are in the media, they might pursue more expansive investigations and stories.
Enlightened, where they are wealthy contributors to Church, they might dare to initiate actual dialogue with the ecclesiastics who are used to receiving donations with only serene chatter -- dialogue either on the Scandal itself or at least on the ambitions of (other) bishops.
Again, thank you.
Vincent of Valley Forge
Is anyone tired of the
Is anyone tired of the "Wiegels" of the world - late in life converts to RCC, telling us what our Church is all about and missing, or misleading, people? They study a little, definitely seem to bring a bias and profess to be the gurus of our faith.
I'm pretty sure that Weigel
I'm pretty sure that Weigel is a cradle Catholic.
and never crawled out
and never crawled out
Imagine, going after the
Imagine, going after the saintly Bernadin. When Cardinal Cody, Bernadin's conservative predecessor died, a collective sigh of relief went up that he was gone, especially after finding millions of dollars in Cody's bank account belonging to him and his cousin. Weigel goes after Bernadin because he isn't here to defend himself. Typical Weigel the weasel.
would he defend himself?
would he defend himself?
when Kennedy does here so admirably and completely . . .
Read this Lent the many published writings of Cardinal Bernadin, including The Gift of Peace, and recall his public and generous forgiveness of much more calumnious matters, and ask
would he defend himself?
Charles, you're probably
Charles, you're probably right. When he was wrongly accused he forgave. Because of his integrity, the accuser eventually admitted he falsely accused him based on incorrect "repressed memory". Bernadin forgave him, invited him to Mass and had him stand by his side at the altar and I would not be surprised if the accuser returned to the church and was saved.
Bernadin exemplified "Blessed are the Peacemakers".
You are right, Dr. Dale, and
You are right, Dr. Dale, and bless you for bringing that example into the discussion. It takes a lot (of anger) to vilify Bernadin - a truely sainted man. His writings are so expressive of that. If only we had just a few more of him.....a real example for Lent.
Would his accuser(s) consider
Would his accuser(s) consider him "sainted", do you suppose?
I find it amusing that some
I find it amusing that some people think we have to choose between Cody and Bernardin. I didn't have much respect for either.
Have you ever noticed that
Have you ever noticed that George Weigel attacks people after they die. What a coward. He did a number on our dear Father Robert Drinan a few years ago in our diocesan newspaper, and my 98 year old aunt did not contribute to the Archbishop's Annual Appeal that year in retaliation.
Except for Bernard Law
Except for Bernard Law himself, no living American has done more damage to the Catholic Church than Weigel. He has the incredible talent to be wrong about everything. Before the start of the most recent Iraq War he said only an idiot would claim Saddam Hussein did not have weapons of mass destruction. Idiots 1, Weigel 0.
Weigel aside, Bernardin's
Weigel aside, Bernardin's charge of pedophilia was never truly cleared. I myself know someone personally whom, as a child, he molested.
It's clear that Bernardin's public accuser, Steve Cooke, was bought off, as so many victims have been, the latest being the women that HLI president molested during exorcisms this year.
We Catholics need to stop wearing rose-colored glasses.
Liberal or conservative labels do not apply to sex criminals - they don either hat if it suits them, and play their roles as saviors to the hilt - that's what narcissistic pscyhopaths do.
Don't be sucked into their illusions of grandeur and sweet, pacific faces. Look under the masks.
RIGHT ON!
RIGHT ON!
Really? And your proof? Names
Really? And your proof?
Names and dates please.
Or I will consider your posting calumny. Furthermore, don't hide behind "Anonymous" if you're going to post that sort of stuff.
Anonymous, this is an area
Anonymous, this is an area never made mention of, the molestation of women during 'deliverence' sessions is more frequent than Catholics care to realize.
With the claim of 'mental instability' against the woman, (never the priest), she doesn't have a hope in Heaven ever being believed.
The art of 'auto suggestion' is well and truly alive too, but the Church would never open up that can of worms either.
Your right about wearing rose coloured glasses.
Another anonymous contributor
Another anonymous contributor afraid to give his name. If in fact, there is someone who was molested - has he gone to the civil authorities to report this? You pull gossip out of the air as though it were fact - including alleged payoff.
Talk about rose-colored glasses - methinks thou dost protest too much - and sounds like a lot of projection myself.
Seems like there is a lesson from Scripture about not spreading malicious comments about people - even if there is a shred of truth. You know, don't cast the first stone without looking at the plank in your own eye? Mixing Scripture, but think you may be able to get the point.
I too think Bernardine was a prophetic saint who tried his best to use conversation to heal the divisions and ruptures within our faith - what Rohr calls the dualistic mind. Until we become non-dualistic, there will be no peace. It is not either/or but both/and - about most topics.
If you have provable facts, state them and their proof, but please do
quit spreading unprovable slander.
Dr. Kennedy, Gene, Many
Dr. Kennedy,
Gene,
Many thanks for a most incisive and insightful analysis of Weigel and others like him. You have cut to the heart of these matters.
Additionally, I am totally disgusted by Weigel and all of the rest of the Catholic Straussian Neocons,PNACers, etc, including: Jeb Bush, Vin Weber, Armitage, Bennett, Weyrich(now dec.) and some others, ad nauseam. For me these people are nothing but Catholic killers, war mongers, fear mongers and hate mongers who have helped to bring what is left of our religion and our democracy to the brink of schism.
In short, they degrade all of us by their crude, un-nuanced and totally simplistic views of everyone who is Not, just like them!! They have a totally biased pov about everything. Listening to them is like listening to the likes of Hannity, O'Reilly, Beck, Limbaugh, D'Souza, to name just a few.
Without a scintilla of doubt, they are the very ones who brought all of us two very deadly and very costly wars and the current fiscal crisis, that has engulfed America and the world.
There should be room in our church for ALL of us, but with people like Weigel that does not seem to be the case. They are all about no dissent, no discourse, no thought and no analysis. In short it's Galileo(Lysenkoism-Michurinism) all over again, and again, and again, ad inifinitum. I guess that is what they papacy seems to be about anymore!!
It's all very deeply saddening.
As you may know there were two fMRI studies done near the end of the Bush-Cheney-Repub-Religious Right debacle. They revealed that there really are Left Wing and Right Wing peoples. Also a study at the Univ. of Penn(Newburg, MD)has shown the same. That Right Wing people view God very differently than we Center-Left people. We prefer to think, they to follow. We see a loving God. They see a harsh, judgmental, recriminative and punitive God.
I guess they have decided to stand in HIS stead. Amazon. com has Newburg's books. I have not yet read them. If you do, please offer/publish your thoughts on Newburg's research, on this forum.
Gene-- keep writing and I'll/We'll keep reading your always insightful and well supported analyses.
Again, many thanks. Keep up the good work.
All the best to you and yours--
bob
Dear Friends, Between
Dear Friends,
Between the two of them George Weigel and Eugene Kennedy reveal the extent to which the Church is shackled to "the Old Boys Network." For Weigel, the network was manipulated by Dearden, Jeam Jadot, and Bernardin. For Kennedy, the arch manipulator is Bernard Law. I personally believe that Kennedy has his facts straight, and for years now have taken Weigel with a grain of salt. But all this is beside the point. I see a deeper level to all of this.
How does a big organization keep itself from being enslaved to group-think and the Old Boys Club? One obvious help would be term limits. I do not mean the current system in which a bishop is supposed to retire at a certain age. I mean after 8 years as an archbishop or above, you are gold-watched and pensioned off. Including the Pope.
Also, we need a system in which the people choose their bishops. Period. And we need checks and balances. At the very least, in this day and age we need a General Council of the Church, a la Vatican II, on the schedule for every 25 years. Again, Period.
NJ Citizen
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