UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter
by Joe Ferullo on Apr. 23, 2012 NCR Today
About twice a month, my wife meets up with a Vietnamese-American nun in a rough part of town, and together they roam in a beat-up white van, scouring the streets for homeless women. It never takes long. The sister knows just where to look: dirty alleys, dark underpasses — they are there.
Many of them are regulars, seeking out the van from their hidden places. The sister and my wife offer to bring them back to a church shelter; if the person refuses, they hand out bags of food and essentials then head on their way.
This slender, slight but fierce nun is apparently a clear and present danger to the Catholic church.
I’m talking, of course, about the now-infamous Vatican report that says the real trouble with the church in America is that our nuns here just can’t seem to toe the line of the bishops, “who are the church’s authentic teachers of faith and morals.”
Funny statement, that — as noted by Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez. He points out that, at the very moment the report was being issued, a child abuse trial in Philadelphia involving the clergy also revealed that a West Virginia bishop was accused of abuse. In Kansas City, Mo., another bishop goes on trial in September for failing to report abuse. And, Lopez writes, last year church officials paid $144 million to settle abuse allegation and cover legal fees — more than a decade after the scandal first broke.
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