Jerry
Slevin on Jennifer Haselberger's Affidavit...
By William D. Lindsey Bilgrimage July 16, 2014
http://bilgrimage.blogspot.com/2014/07/jerry-slevin-on-jennifer-haselbergers.html
Jerry Slevin on Jennifer
Haselberger's Affidavit: "It Underscores That
Francis' Calculated and Ineffective Approach to Facing the
Catholic Church's Greatest Challenge in Centuries Will
Likely Be a Failure"
Her affidavit provides detailed evidence of how a major diocese
covered up numerous cases of priest sexual abuse that continued
even after Pope Francis' election and may still be going on.
It underscores that Francis' calculated and ineffective
approach to facing the Catholic Church's greatest challenge
in centuries will likely be a failure.
Not a single bishop to date has been removed for covering up for
child predator priests.
The affidavit includes revealing and disturbing looks at some of
the US hierarchy's key players: (1) Archbishop Harry Flynn,
one of the leaders of the US bishops' purported child
protection "reform program", (2) Archbishop John
Nienstedt, a top anti-gay marriage culture warrior subject now
also to an investigation of alleged earlier hypocritical gay
relationships, and (3) Fr. Kevin McDonough, a former Minneapolis
vicar general and older brother of President Obama's Chief
of Staff, Denis McDonough.
Jerry's absolutely
correct. He argues that Pope Francis's decision to
prioritize the Vatican's financial scandals while dragging
his feet on the abuse crisis has been a serious mistake, and
that his vague, half-hearted, ineffectual gestures to date in
the direction of accountability and transparency in addressing
the abuse crisis suggest that "he hasn't changed much
from when he exhibited a clearly underwhelming approach to
curtailing priest abusers in Argentina."
In Jerry's view,
unless Francis wakes up soon and begins to deal with the mess on
full display in Jennifer Haselberger's affidavit (and, as
Jerry notes, we can reasonably infer from abundant evidence that
the crimes are continuing even now throughout the Catholic
world), his papacy will have been a failure.
As
Frank Cocozzelli reminded us several days ago, convicted
criminal Robert Finn still sits on his episcopal
throne in Kansas City. Frank suggests that, even for
people who hold great hope for the papacy of Francis, his
failure to act in the case of Finn is creating a
"credibility problem" for this pope.
As Jerry points out, many
people continue to suffer due to the "hierarchy's
insatiable 'will to power'" which is at the very
heart of the abuse crisis, and which, many of us suspect more
and more, is also at the heart of Francis's apparent refusal
to address this crisis head-on and effectively — since
addressing it in those ways will require him to deal with the
deep, well-nigh intractable problem of clericalism from which
the abuse crisis stems. The sexual abuse of minors is part of a
winder, deeper system of abuse of the lay members of the church
by its ordained members, due to the way in which power is
allocated within the Catholic system due to clericalism.
Meanwhile, as Jerry reminds us, those who suffer as a result of
the insatiable will to power of the clerical elite in the
Catholic system include "[d]efenseless children, abandoned
survivors, disrespected women, desperate poor couples seeking to
plan their families, sincere gay persons and divorced couples,
et al."
And how, I ask myself, can a pope be applauded everywhere as a
great pastoral success when he does not address — from the
top of the church and directly — the pastoral needs of all
those members of his flock, who continue to experience serious
pain due to the unchecked arrogance of clerics that is built
right into the very foundations of the abuse problem in our
church? What does Francis, and what do his defenders, intend for
all of their fellow Catholics who are seemingly simply written
out of the Catholic picture and the human community as long as
the abuse crisis goes unresolved, unaddressed, treated as a
minor priority of this pope as he claims that only 2% of priests
worldwide are guilty of abusing minors?
As he has consistently done in many other statements (click his
name in the labels below this posting for links to them), Jerry
argues that, when the rulers of the Roman church appear
unwilling or unable to address this serious systemic problem of
ongoing abuse within their church, it becomes the responsibility
of secular governments, secular courts, and secular criminal
authorities to do so. And they will do so, he
suggests, if Pope Francis won't.
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