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Schonborn Calls for Calm in Church Crisis Austrian Times March 13, 2009 http://austriantimes.at/index.php?id=11797 Vienna Archbishop Christoph Cardinal Schonborn has appealed for understanding in a pastoral letter to Austrian Catholics at the end of the meeting of the country’s bishops. Schonborn, who chairs the Austrian Bishops Conference that concluded its annual late-winter meeting in Innsbruck yesterday (Thurs), appealed for understanding in the wake of a turbulent period for the Austrian Church. The cardinal said: "Many people find it impossible to understand recent decisions by the Vatican, which have made some of them angry. I understand their reaction." Schonborn added the Church needed to admit mistakes that had been made. "I appeal to you to remain on our common path," he said. Trust meant sticking together in bad as well as in good times, the cardinal claimed. The cardinal also appealed to Catholics to contribute more money to the Church, noting that parishes, convents, schools and social institutions all needed support during the recession. The Austrian Bishops Conference reportedly addressed the Church crisis at its Innsbruck meeting. The bishops, auxiliary bishops and the abbot of territorial abbey Wettingen-Mehrerau were to discuss the fall-out from the case of Gerhard Maria Wagner, the controversial priest who recently asked Pope Benedict XVI to withdraw his nomination as auxiliary bishop of Linz after a public storm of protest. The Pope formally accept Wagner’s request last week. The conference was also to address the problem of the increasing exodus of Catholics from the Church, "the current situation in the Church and society" and the government’s planned tax-reform, according to Kathpress. The government has reportedly agreed to increase the amount of mandatory Church contributions that can be deducted from Austrians’ taxes. Participants were also to discuss their June meeting with the Slovene Bishops Conference in Mariazell, Styria. The Austrian Bishops Conference has been intensifying relations with bishops in neighbouring countries since "Middle European Catholic Day" in 2004. The bishops at least didn’t have to deal with a possible Vatican investigation of the situation in the Linz diocese. The Vatican announced last week that it would not be sending an apostolic delegation to Linz to investigate the controversy surrounding former auxiliary bishop-designate Wagner. Linz Bishop Ludwig Schwarz’s surprise visit to the Vatican the previous week had prompted speculation he had been summoned as part of preparations for an apostolic visitation or formal Vatican investigation of the situation in the diocese. But diocese communications office head Ferdinand Kaineder denied Schwarz had been summoned to Rome, saying such reports had been "pure speculation." Rather, Kaineder said, Schwarz had gone to the Vatican to discuss ways of calming things down in the diocese with Church officials. The situation in the Linz diocese heated up after the Pope nominated Windischgarsten pastor Wagner as auxiliary bishop of the diocese. Wagner’s controversial public comments led to an exodus of Catholics from the Church in the diocese after the Pope’s nomination. The ultra-conservative priest had hit the headlines with statements labelling the Harry Potter book series "a work of Satanism," homosexuality as "curable" and natural disasters like the 2004 tsunami in Southeastern Asia and 2005 Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans as God’s punishment of human sin. But Wagner is also infamous for hitting out on many other subjects, as Austrian magazine "profil" recently revealed. Speaking about Baptism and the decrease of the Catholic Church’s influence in Austria, Wagner told believers at the Catholic church in Windischgarsten: "If the Church isn’t that important anymore, why is a child brought into the Church to be baptised? Why don’t people take their children somewhere else?" In another sermon, Wagner warned: "I would like to make you aware today that many more people than you might think have made a pact with the devil, with Satan." Speaking about the increasing number of people leaving the Church, Wagner said: "I ask myself: What’s the matter with those who talk badly about the Church, those who have left it? Those who moan when speaking about Catholic Austria? "They make use of Catholic holidays, and that’s something I am protesting against. If someone doesn’t want to have anything to do with the Church, he should go to work on such holidays." Private Upper Austrian radio station "Life Radio" recently reported the Windischgarsten council would formally make Wagner an honorary citizen of the town. People’s Party (OVP) Mayor Norbert Vogerl has confirmed the report, saying he approves of the initiative. |
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