SCOTLAND
The Tablet
21 March 2015 by Elena Curti
Pope Francis must hope that his swift, decisive action against Cardinal Keith O’Brien will draw the line under a scandal that done great harm to the Church in Scotland and beyond.
The Pope’s personal intervention lies behind the announcement last Friday that O’Brien is surrendering the duties and trappings of a cardinal and the repetition of his profound apologies for sexual misdemeanours. It is an appropriate sanction against the breathtaking hypocrisy of a church leader who made advances to seminarians and young priests yet nevertheless felt entitled to rail against homosexuality and gay marriage in the most blunt terms.
A story such as O’Brien’s is a reminder of the human weakness that is common to us all. It is hard to find it in our hearts to forgive someone who has betrayed our trust. As Christians we have to be merciful but it’s tough. Mercy must be accompanied by justice. Forgiving him does not mean the full implications of what he did should remain hidden.
We still don’t know whether O’Brien was someone who sporadically shed in his inhibitions when he’d had a few drinks and then felt profoundly ashamed or whether his was a pattern of coercive behaviour and abuse of power and patronage.
The quote from one of O’Brien’s accusers saying that the report prepared for Francis “is “hot enough to burn the varnish” off the Pope’s desk” suggests the latter but we cannot be sure without seeing this report for ourselves. The report was prepared by Archbishop Charles Scicluna, previously chief prosecutor at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, someone who has the drive and determination to uncover the truth. That is apparent from his work in exposing the sickening corruption of Marcial Maciel, founder of the Legionaries of Christ.
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