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Tension
over Maciel Legacy Complicates Legion Election
By John L. Allen Jr. National Catholic Reporter
January 28, 2014
http://ncronline.org/blogs/ncr-today/tension-over-maciel-legacy-complicates-legion-election
As the embattled Legionaries of Christ continue trying
to chart a new course during a general chapter meeting that
began Jan. 8, there are signs the order is far from unanimous
about what that course should look like.
The general chapter is intended to end a three-year
period of papal receivership after Pope Benedict XVI imposed a
delegate to take control of the order in 2010. That decision
followed revelations of sexual abuse and misconduct by the
founder, the late Mexican Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado, as well
as defections by several high-profile Legionaries and
speculation that the order might be suppressed.
Legionaries taking part in the chapter meeting who
spoke to NCR in January insist there's widespread
agreement on several fronts, including the need for less control
from Rome and more autonomy for local Legionary operations, a
greater tolerance for interval diversity, and a new commitment
to transparency. They also say they've made progress toward
defining a post-Maciel charism, or mission, for the Legion,
focusing on a commitment to evangelization, meaning a missionary
drive, and the Legion's partnership with Regnum Christi, its lay
movement.
Yet they say it's also clear there's a range of
opinion inside the order over just how far reform ought to go.
Some Legionaries, these sources say, believe that much
about their older ways of doing business retain value, citing
what they see as the "spiritual fruits" the Legion has produced
over the years.
One ex-Legionary told NCR on Monday that this
wing worries about "throwing the baby out with the bath water"
if change goes too far.
At the opposite end of the spectrum, there are other
Legionaries anxious to see reform reach more deeply and move
more quickly. Some priests in that camp have already left, and
privately, Legionaries concede that others may yet do so.
One focal point for this tension, Legionaries say, is
the Maciel legacy.
Fr. John Connor, a Legionary priest based in New York,
told NCR that the current general chapter meeting is
committed to upholding a 3-year-old policy that Maciel will no
longer be referred to as "Our Father," that pictures of him will
be removed from Legionary facilities, and that his writings
won't be used in formation programs.
"We all understand that he can't be a model of
Christian life, religious life or Legionary life," he said.
Yet Fr. John Bartunek, a Cleveland native now based in
Rome, said there's disagreement over other matters, such as the
extent to which Maciel's spiritual writings retain value.
"A lot of the fathers fed their hunger for spiritual
reading with the writings of the founder," Bartunek said.
"Today, a lot of these guys are doing great work and are
spiritually mature priests, and they ask, 'How can we say it's
all trash?' "
"We're not going to resolve [that tension] quickly,"
he predicted. "We're going to have to live with it for a while."
Privately, Legionaries say those tensions form part of
the politics of choosing a new leader. Sources told NCR
that participants in the general chapter may seek a compromise
candidate, meaning a figure acceptable to Legionaries along the
spectrum from wanting immediate change to going it slow.
The order posted a notice on its website on Jan. 20,
stating that the general chapter had moved into the elections
phase, but there's been no indication of the results. Before
making any announcement, the Legion has to wait for Pope Francis
to sign off.
In the meantime, the general chapter is continuing to
work on a new set of constitutions for the order, with a Tuesday
web post by the Legion indicating much of the work on the first
two sections has been completed. An official told NCR
Tuesday that once the constitutions receive Vatican approval,
they'll be released to the public.
The general chapter meeting is being presided over by
Italian Cardinal Velasio de Paolis, the official appointed by
Benedict and confirmed by Francis to oversee the reform effort.
Italian Jesuit Fr. Gianfranco Ghirlanda, the former dean of the
canon law faculty at Rome's Jesuit-run Gregorian University and
later the university's rector, is also on hand, providing advice
on matters of church law.
Though the general chapter has no firm end date, it's
expected to last into February. Sixty-one priests from 10
countries are taking part, including seven Americans.
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