BishopAccountability.org
 
  Author Jason Berry Takes Critical Look at How Catholic Church Hierarchy Handles Money and Power

By Bruce Nolan
The Times-Picayune
June 27, 2011

http://www.nola.com/religion/index.ssf/2011/06/author_jason_berry_takes_criti.html

Author Jason Berry speaks to a group at the Garden District Book Shop in New Orleans on Wednesday.

Jason Berry, the New Orleans writer who in two prior books laid bare clerical sexual abuse of children and its cover-up in the Catholic church, is touring the country in support of a third book investigating the church’s management of its finances, which he describes as chaotic, opaque and occasionally corrupt.

He sketched the themes Wednesday at the Garden District Book Shop, where he told an audience there and on Book TV that the church’s core problem is cardinals’ and bishops’ lack of accountability, whether for protecting criminal priests or mismanaging church treasuries.

“The church does not have, and desperately needs, a coherent system of justice,” Berry said in an interview. “The oversight one would expect to see layered into the world’s largest organization is simply not there.”

Berry in the early 1990s published the first extensive investigation of the sexual abuse scandal that exploded publicly a decade later.

In 2004, with co-author Gerald Renner, he uncovered evidence that the Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, a charismatic Mexican priest and founder of the Legionaries of Christ, had molested his own seminarians but cultivated popularity with the Vatican hierarchy with his fundraising prowess. The order at first condemned Berry and Renner, but later learned the charges were true — and that Maciel had secretly fathered several children as well.

In his new book, “Render Unto Rome,” and in interviews, Berry, a practicing Catholic, acknowledged the church’s vast charitable works, its force for good among the world’s poor, and the spiritual nourishment it provides to millions at the level of parish life.

But he looks critically from several angles at how the church hierarchy handles money and power.

For instance:

*Globally, money given to Peter’s Pence, the annual Vatican collection done nominally for the pope’s charitable use, are veiled from donors’ view and in past years propped up Vatican operating expenses, he said.

*Fewer than two dozen of the 195 dioceses and archdioceses publish annual audited financial statements fully describing income and expenses.

*In cities like Boston and Cleveland, Berry charges that church leaders closed financially stable parishes to seize their assets and prop up their budgets, over the protests of parishioners. (Berry briefly describes former Archbishop Alfred Hughes’ tumultuous post-Katrina closings and mergers of New Orleans parishes. Archdiocesan officials here have always maintained that their assets still belong to parishioners in the merged parishes.)

Berry writes that in Rome, Cardinal Angelo Sodano watched an American real estate company that prominently employed his nephew trumpet its ties to the Vatican, implying that it had inside knowledge on closed church properties coming on the market. Its president, Raffaello Follieri, pleaded guilty to federal charges of cheating investors in 2008. Berry says the FBI found that before his fall, Follieri paid two Vatican employees $800,000 for their assistance. No Vatican employee was charged by civil authorities, nor were any disciplined by the church.

Finally, Berry claims that for years Maciel, the abusive Mexican priest, cultivated Cardinal Sodano with gifts. In turn, Sodano spiked a Vatican inquiry into allegations about Maciel, until they were finally confirmed under Pope Benedict XVI.

In his associations with Maciel and his nephew’s real estate company, “I think he’s betrayed the church egregiously,” Berry said of Sodano. “It’s appalling to me that he’s the Dean of the College of Cardinals and has suffered no loss of esteem in his position.”

In the Catholic church, bishops and archbishops are accountable only to the pope, who rarely removes them.

American bishops who collectively pledged reforms after the sexual abuse scandal have no mechanism to enforce them on each other, relying instead on peer pressure or “fraternal correction.”

But recently a grand jury in Philadelphia found evidence that more than three dozen credibly accused priests were still in ministry in that city in violation of the reforms.

“Fraternal correction is a myth. It will never work,” Berry said. “There has got to be a basic structure for justice to ensure accountability. We see that in not only in the abuse crisis but also in these financial convulsions.”

Berry credits Benedict XVI for dealing more aggressively with the sexual abuse scandal than his predecessor, John Paul II.

“And yet (Benedict) could not go far enough in dealing with the central problem, which is that bishops and cardinals are immune from punishment under the doctrine of apostolic succession,” the tradition that each exercises authority in an unbroken line back to the original twelve chosen by Christ.

But, Berry said, “We have amnesia on the story of Judas, the apostle who was a betrayer.”

 
 

Any original material on these pages is copyright © BishopAccountability.org 2004. Reproduce freely with attribution.