| Legionaries of Christ Apologize for Maciel-magdalene Parallel
By Brian Roewe
National Catholic Reporter
August 28, 2014
http://ncronline.org/news/accountability/legionaries-christ-apologize-maciel-magdalene-parallel
The Legionaries of Christ have apologized for a reflection in a promotional booklet comparing the order’s serial abuser founder to Mary Magdalene.
“I personally and profoundly apologize for my reflections in the booklet, Magdala: God Really Loves Women, published this summer by the Magdala Center in Jerusalem, which is managed by the Legion of Christ,” Legionary Fr. Juan Solana, director of the Magdala Center, said in a statement Thursday.
On Tuesday, NCR reported that the booklet promoting the new $100 million center included a reflection by Solana on Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado -- dismissed from ministry in 2006 by the Vatican after it was discovered he sexually abused seminarians and had fathered children -- in which he compared the Legion founder to Mary Magdalene, the disciple of Jesus who was present at the cross where Jesus was crucified and the tomb after his resurrection.
“The priest speaks his heart,” wrote Solana in the booklet. "Marcial Maciel's initials are also MM, just like Mary Magdalene. She had a problematic past before her deliverance, so there's a parallel. Our world has double standards when it comes to morals. Some people have a formal, public display and then the real life they live behind the scenes.
"But when we accuse someone else and we are quick to stone him, we must remember that we all have problems and defects. With modern communications so out of control, it is easy to kill someone's reputation without even investigating about the truth. We should be quieter and less condemning."
When Legionary Fr. John Connor, North American territorial director, saw the passage in the NCR article, he reached out to Solana and expressed it was offensive to him and concern that others would share that view, according to Jim Fair, the territory’s communications director based in Chicago, who said Solana realized that and agreed to issue an apology.
In a statement included in a letter from Connor to fellow Legionaries and its consecrated and lay members, Solana stated: “The passages in question suggest a comparison between Mary Magdalene and Legion Founder Marcial Maciel, which clearly is inappropriate and poorly chosen.
“I was trying to make a point about compassion and forgiveness in light of the Legion’s history, but realize now that my words were awkward and suggest a reverence for our founder that we clearly reject. Again, I’m sorry for any hurt this has caused,” he said.
Solana added that the Legion will cease distributing the booklet containing the reflection in question.
Fair, a member of the Legion’s lay wing Regnum Christi, told NCR he did not know if those booklets already distributed would be recalled, and that people in the territory had no prior knowledge of the booklet since it was a local project.
While he could not speak to whether Legionaries elsewhere shared the sentiment Solana expressed, Fair said the reaction to booklet “was pretty universal among all of us here, which was that it was an inappropriate statement and a really awful analogy.”
In his letter, Connor noted that “the past five years have been a time of challenge and change” for the Legion and Regnum Christi. Despite an effort to undergo reform, he said the statement from Solana “must feel like a detour from our path forward. It is not. I want to assure you that we are, indeed, determined to stay on course.”
In July, the Vatican named a special adviser to the Legion to support it in its ongoing reform after Pope Benedict XVI in 2009 ordered an apostolic visitation of the order and its lay wings and appointed a papal delegate to oversee its reform. A year later, the Vatican stated Maciel, who died in 2008, was guilty of "seriously and objectively immoral behavior" and that his life was “devoid of scruples and of genuine religious meaning.”
At its first general chapter meeting in 10 years, the religious order in February elected new leadership and approved texts of new constitutions. Pope Francis has not yet given his approval.
Asked how an incident like Solana’s reflection affects reform efforts, Fair said “It’s a reminder that this is a long-term project and that trust is rebuilt one day and one word, one effort, one project, one apostolate at a time and we’re going to continue to do that.
“So when something like this happens, in a world full of human beings, it’s disappointing, but it isn’t going to discourage us on our path to serve the church,” he said.
[Brian Roewe is an NCR staff writer. His email address is broewe@ncronline.org . Follow him on Twitter: @BrianRoewe.]
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