For Cardinal George, Pfleger's the man

Putting the microscope to the Chicago archdiocese as a pit of corruption:

So much that you need to know about the Catholic Church’s social policy problems can be summed up in one word: Chicago. On race, abortion, guns, immigration and “community organizing,” Catholic Church officials in the Windy City have forged unholy alliances with radical left-wingers and enablers who undermine the faith—and the faithful.

Beginning with the (latest) Pfleger debacle:

Exhibit A: the Archdiocese of Chicago’s Office for Racial Justice and one of its most notorious priests, the Rev. Michael Pfleger. This week, Chicago Cardinal Francis George—who also happens to be president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops—presided over a gala ceremony honoring Pfleger with a “lifetime achievement award” for his “service in pursuit of dismantling racism, injustice and inequalities on behalf of African Americans and all people of color.

Michelle Malkin doesn’t get it:

How, pray tell, has Pfleger achieved the officially sanctioned Catholic vision of “racial justice”? By aligning himself with the nation’s worst racial demagogues and using his pulpit at the St. Sabina Catholic Church on Chicago’s Southside to promote poisonous identity politics.

Read on about Pfleger and Wright, Farrakhan, screaming about Hillary the white woman, raging against the U.S., threatening a gun-dealer, going behind a critic’s back to neutralize him, etc.

Malkin quoted his words back to him in an e-mail.  Pfleger called her “mean-spirited.”

And the amazing Cardinal George goes along with honoring such a great man.  And he’s the top bishop in the U.S.  He came to Chicago, he saw, he was conquered.

Two Holy Thursdays

Had a very good one-two punch Holy Thursday., with attendance first at my Tridentine-mass church, where some 125 or so people huddled in a church that is really a chapel for the potentially long and boring service that turned out rather good and second at my neighborhood RC church, cathedral-like and all Gothic, where I had the same experience.

It helped that I came late to the mainstreamer, missing the ridiculous foot-washing (and no doubt, ahem, problematic sermon) but catching the guts of it — offertory to end of mass — in church with six or seven hundred people.  The culmination was the parade of the Host back and forth up and down aisles, people genuflecting as the main priest carried it past them in their pews.  I had the feeling of that drama that comes when the great man passes the crowd massed at the curbs, waving, little kids held up to see, etc.

This was a good solid boost to faith.  Music fit the situation, etc.  We were all with it, a churchful of attentive, even (quietly) enthusiastic people.  It didn’t hurt any that the priest on parade is a Jesuit I have known since we were novices together in 1950 and, more important, that he is a transparent guy without apparent agenda except to do the work of the moment.

Walked out of there with a sense of having been at worship that works, to use a largely Unitarian expression with wide usage elsewhere, as in this Lutheran publication with the essay fascinatingly titled, “’Blended Worship That Works’ or Cuisinart Worship That Sucks,” which I will have to read.  I attribute my reaction in good part to my few-hours-earlier experience in the severe, almost puritanical atmosphere of the tridentine-mass service, with its overriding sense of the importance of doing things right in matters large and small. 

This tridentine service is serious worship, sans fooling around, improvising, or indulging in casual manner.  And the sermon goes with it.  Not a scolding word in it, but a matter-of-fact discussion of how worshipers are to respond to the mysteries.  He was instructed by “holy mother the church” not only in rubrics for this mass but also in the content of his sermon, the preacher-pastor said.

So he talked about the priesthood and only tangentially noted the current bad situation, making a point that has been made countless times, that one of the original 12 turned out bad.  He also noted that the current situation gives an opening for critics of the pope who don’t like the way he does things anyway.  (It’s occurred to me not that the current situation does not stink but that a John 23rd, lovable and permissive, would not be the same target for mediums around the Western world.)

In any case, the tridentine service supplies something that’s missing in the relatively new liturgy, that is, beginning in the 70s, and not just in the organized nature of foot washing on Holy Thursday, done with dispatch and strictly by the celebrant of a dozen men who are parishioners and not a dragged-out, chaotic affair such as extends the service too much.  It supplies a seriousness and an objectivity about what’s happening.

Current liturgy, on the other hand, is therapeutic.  Our neighborhood mainstream preacher on Friday night, for instance, was at pains to say the day was “not a downer,” that we die daily (implying that we should not fear death, I think: it was metaphor city in that obfuscatory sermon), that we have crosses enough to bear in daily life.  I agree with much of it that I could understand, but the good-natured morale-boosting of it all is thin gruel that insufficiently nourishes people.

Nonetheless, it was nice on Thursday to experience the two kinds of Catholic worship back to back, with good results at lease on one day of the holy triduum.  Now for midnight mass tridentine-style.

His eminence strikes back

What’s the good of being a shepherd if you can’t zap a sheep when he gets out of line?  Cardinal George, shepherd of all of us in Cook and Lake counties, spotted a sheep and zapped him.

He’s Tom Roeser, who gives new meaning to the term outspoken and has been first hinting at cardinalatial ignorance of current events and unseeming acquiescence in aides’ advice and more recently criticizing it directly.  He had to be taught a lesson, and the cardinal wrote a letter — to the board of a Catholic organization of which Roeser has been belwether, to use a flock-like term, I mean the Catholic Citizens of Illinois.

To these worthy people, Catholic to a fault and conservative in all things political, his eminence urged getting Roeser to put a sock in it:

Would it be possible for you to use your role as advisor to Catholic Citizens of Illinois to put an end to the hate literature produced by the Chairman? 

The chairman being Roeser and the hate literature being such critique of the cardinal as to wonder where he gets off demonstrating support (unconvincingly denied by an apparatchik, in R’s opinion) for ObamaCare except for its allowing federal expenditure for abortion-producing health care.

Yes.  Read all about it at Roeser’s blog.  See if the cardinal’s status among shepherds has not been diminished.  We (editorially) think so.

Sincerely,

James Bowman, flock member in more or less good standing but moving very carefully

=============

From Reader Nancy, inexplicably blocked from comment mechanism:

No one could ever silence Tom Roeser. He is his own man who is confident and well-schooled in his Catholic religion and is not hesitant to tell those who think of themselves as figures of authority that they are not all-knowing or above criticism. Trouble arises when those in power attempt to tell practicing Catholics how to think and feel, especially about the social issues of abortion and illegal immigration when they become political issues, thereby over reaching and undermining the underlying fundamentals of the Catholic Church.”

Death of a story

The canon lawyer who handled the Father Murphy case in Milwaukee in the ‘90s, Rev. Thomas Brundage, debunks the NY Times and AP articles about it, including the alleged quashing of his church trial and the role they say the Vatican played in that.

With regard to the inaccurate reporting on behalf of the New York Times, the Associated Press, and those that utilized these resources [including Chi Trib and Sun-Times], first of all, I was never contacted by any of these news agencies but they felt free to quote me.

Almost all of my quotes are from a document that can be found online with the correspondence between the Holy See and the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. In an October 31, 1997 handwritten document, I am quoted as saying ‘odds are that this situation may very well be the most horrendous, number wise, and especially because these are physically challenged , vulnerable people. “ Also quoted is this: “Children were approached within the confessional where the question of circumcision began the solicitation.”

The problem with these statements attributed to me is that they were handwritten. The documents were not written by me and do not resemble my handwriting. The syntax is similar to what I might have said but I have no idea who wrote these statements, yet I am credited as stating them.

As a college freshman at the Marquette University School of Journalism, we were told to check, recheck, and triple check our quotes if necessary. I was never contacted by anyone on this document, written by an unknown source to me. Discerning truth takes time and it is apparent that the New York Times, the Associated Press and others did not take the time to get the facts correct. [italics added]

The rest of his article in The Catholic Anchor, of Anchorage, Alaska, severely undercuts the claim that the present pope, Benedict XVI, had anything to do with the matter.  The case was never quashed, but Murphy died a defendant.

Moreover, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which Benedict, then Cardinal Ratzinger, headed, did not handle abuse cases until a few years after Murphy died.

[T]he competency to hear cases of sexual abuse of minors shifted from the Roman Rota to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith headed by Cardinal Ratzinger in 2001. Until that time, most appeal cases went to the Rota and it was our experience that cases could languish for years in this court.

When the competency was changed to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, in my observation as well as many of my canonical colleagues, sexual abuse cases were handled expeditiously, fairly, and with due regard to the rights of all the parties involved. I have no doubt that this was the work of then Cardinal Ratzinger.

Major knockdown here of major Catholic scandal story.

Hat tip: CatholicCulture.Org, to which I was sent by New Oxford Review’s excellent News Link.

More: Here’s a recent report, by Catholic News Service, of the 2001 switch of abuse cases to CDF:

On March 27, the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, ran the full texts of two landmark documents that in 2001 placed the sexual abuse of minors by priests among the most grave sins, and established that allegations be handled by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, then headed by Cardinal Ratzinger.

Pound, black-beautiful, Orr bleachers, the horrible Father Murphy

* Reading Pound’s Pisan Cantos — p. 39 of New Directions ‘48 edition — I find “the American lady, K.H.” inquiring for d’Annunzio.  Who she?  Who he?  She, I dunno.  He was Gabriele D’A, poet, novelist, war hero, predecessor of Mussolini and for a time his rival for fascist affections.

* “Black Friday,” said a nameless Chi public school coach about two days ago, when lots were fired from CPS sports jobs as deficit kicks in (which ObamaCare will exacerbate).  Oh?  Black is bad?  He’s allowed to talk that way? 

One who was fired or downsized, not from a sports job but from the office that kept its list of clouted applicants for elite schools, was Greg Minniefield, who is black. 

Minniefield

Which means every day is black for him, and beautiful too, as Rev. Jesse J. used to say, when he wasn’t putting big financial squeezes on big companies.  So quite a disconnect here.

Don’t joke about a guy losing his job, you say.  But we assume he’s clouted and will find something else, or someone somebody sent will find one for him.

* Lacking the resources of a Mayor Daley, who plowed up an airport in the dead of night, surprising the air traffic controller on his way to work next morning, Quincy Miller (not the b-baller) had to do his night-time mischief one bleacher seat at a time, denuding the spanking new stands at Orr High on the West Side, from which he lived a block away.  800 of them, over three months, without being stopped.  He also “hacked,” I presume chiseled or sawed, off some of this new stadium’s aluminum facing.

He was chased by a security guard in January, dropping a cell phone which was given to the police, but not till Friday was he caught and charged.  Mayor Daley has never been charged.

* The Rev. Lawrence Murphy abuse case.  Abuse took place at a Milwaukee-area school for the deaf.  150 cases (200, says NYT), from ‘50s to ‘74.  He admitted it, was sent to a retreat house.  Twenty years later the Congregation for Defense of the Faith, which Joseph Ratzinger, now Benedict XVI, then headed, declined to try him, sentencing him instead to do penance.  NYT has the story, reprised by AP in Sun-Times, Manya Brachear and free-lancer Marie Rhode in Chi Trib.

Lawrence Murphy

Rev. Lawrence Murphy

M. died in ‘98 at 72.  Victims’ accounts include his assaulting boys in their dorm beds while others saw or heard it and knew it was going on.  In ‘90s, Cardinal Bertone of the CDF said M. was too old, sick, it happened too long ago.  M. was also forbidden to say mass outside his diocese.  Whistle had been blown in ‘74 by Chicago priest working in deaf ministry, Rev. David Walsh.  He told Archbp Meyer, then of Milwaukee, to whom M. admitted charges.  M. was sent for a time to a retreat house up north in Wis. 

Walsh also told Archbp Cousins, Meyer’s successor, and then the apostolic delegate in Wash., DC.  But what sent M. packing was confrontation with alums of the school with Milwaukee Sentinel reporters.  He denied all, resigned from the school.  In ‘93, more accusations, investigation started in Rome, with results as above.  Card. Bertone, Ratzinger’s #2 man at CDF, gave M. a pass, citing a now defunct one-month statute of limitations on reporting abuse during confession.

God being in his heaven does not mean all’s right with the world, pace the Browning character.  Neither does so much being wrong with the world mean God’s not in his heaven.  Or so I believe.

Health-scare

Beginning to clear out the augean stables of various note pads strewn throughout various pockets, desks, tables including dining room, shelves, and other points of interest:

* Old friend Bob K., Democrat leaning Socialist if not there already, quotes Scripture to his purpose of selling the then in ramming process now accompli Obama-scare, a.k.a.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act

 (not kidding), while dwelling also on plight of poor.  To him I say, as to old friend Joan, who buttonholed me on OP Avenue some months back and recommended my reading the Bible, your unimpeachable motivation should not be confused with strategy. 

You assume Obama-scare is good for poor people, even as public school and other public budgets are slashed because of a dearth of public money.  Tax more, you say, but there’s an end to that somewhere, as businesses cut back under tax burdens and the nation heads for big fiscal trouble. 

Bob, Joan, all you good Christian and other kind-hearted people, consider what you want done to the common weal.  Your commendable impulses are getting us all in big trouble, especially the poorest among us, as I told you, Bob, in our recent email exchange.  I won’t say “repent” — I’m not one to offer or demand that alternative — but I do say rethink your position.

* More later from the stables . . . .

On the road to Rome

The Canadians are coming, the Canadians are coming!

A group with three churches in the Ottawa area has taken up the Vatican’s offer of a special legal structure enabling disillusioned Anglicans to return to Rome.

The Anglican Catholic Church of Canada — a denomination already closely aligned with Catholic precepts — is the first in Canada to approach the Vatican like this.

As with the others, they keep their liturgy, their prayer books, and their married clergy, operating under “a separate set of rules for the group, much as [has been the case] with Eastern Rite Catholics.”

For the latter, in Chicago go to the Ukrainian Catholic church just off Chicago Avenue, in Ukrainian Village, and have a chat with the Roman Catholic priest, as #2 Son and I did a few years back on Father’s Day, until he begged leave to get back to wife and kiddies at home, it having been a long day at the office, I mean in the sanctuary.

That’s Sts. Volodymyr and Olha, 2245 W. Superior, 312–829-5209.  There’s also St. Joseph the Betrothed, 5000 N. Cumberland, 773–625–4805.

The advantage of such a liturgy, behind giving a chance to brush up on your Cyrillic alphabet, is you don’t have to listen to a priest spelling everything out but can surrender yourself to the mystery of it all, mystery being the lost child of liturgical practice in the wake of Vatican Two.

Sunday afternoon at the Church of Nice

Caught Rev. Donald Senior yesterday at Catholic Theological Union.  Was one of 200 (I’d guess) devotees at this multi-religious-community seminary-cum-religious-ed-degree-granter to some 415 men and women, 115 of whom are men headed for priesthood.  It’s in Hyde Park, blocks from U. of Chicago.  Senior is a longtime New Testament scholar, president of CTU for 22 years, member of the Passionists.  Hence C.P. after his name, for Congregation of the Passion.

Genial fellow to beat all, clearly an excellent front man for an institution sponsored and supported by 32 religious communities, including his own, the Passionists — which has a paltry five seminarians in attendance, none of them American.  The Passionists have no American candidates for the priesthood, a fact that the priest (whose name I didn’t get carefully enough to give it to you), whose task is to ride herd on their CTU sems, was at a loss to explain.  In Latin America there are bumper crops, he said, standing in a third-floor reception area in CTU’s new building.

I noted that some conservative organizations and dioceses are loaded with candidates while the Chicago archdiocese, for instance, has very few Americans and fewer Chicagoans in its ordination classes.  But the Latin Americans are not conservative, this priest said, agreeing with me about Americans. 

Letting his hair down a bit, he complained somewhat about the new Passionists, who haven’t the same kind of dedication to religious obedience he and other older priests take for granted.  They have their preferences as to where they might be stationed and announce them, whereas the older ones generally have been willing to try something they hadn’t thought of at all, in the process learning they can do things they hadn’t thought of at all.

We visitors, lay people and religious sisters, average age 70 (Fr. Senior’s age) as a rough guess (with Irish faces everywhere: you’d think the boat had just landed, except for the evident prosperity), had heard Senior lecture in an hour of utter charm about the bodily resurrection of Jesus.  He shot down early in his talk the ballyhooed “Lost Tomb of Jesus” documentary contention by James Cameron, of “Titanic” and “Avatar,” fame, citing an Israeli archeologist who said the bones he found (for filming) of Jesus, Mary Magdalen and the kids, while gladdening the heart of Dan Brown of DaVinci Code fame, were anything but, then addressing the question, what if we had the bones of Jesus?  What if he didn’t rise?  (A hotter question than Senior admitted: some years back, a chair-holding Jesuit theology teacher at Loyola U., whom I knew quite well, hedged on the question in a telephone conversation — the last he and I had, unfortunately.)

So doing, he raised from the dead (and criticized the life out of) a controversy from newspapers of a few years back, along the way staking out more or less scholarly claims to what theologians once called “incarnational” theology.  By now, however, you’d think we Catholics, even septuagenarians with time for and interest in Sunday-afternoon mass and lecture, would be fully aware of ours being a religious faith that takes matter, i.e., this life, seriously.

But his was less a scholarly dissertation than a meditation on data and belief, a riff on various Scripture passages and commentary, ancient and recent, in no way bringing coals to Newcastle for his eager audience.  It didn’t hurt that he had the nicely timed quip down cold as can be, which with his winning smile (never far from his Irish face beneath perfect white hair) drew many laughs and smiles — “Holy mackerel!” he threw into a description of the risen Jesus cooking fish for the apostles.  On old joke, I’m sure, but the timing was perfect.

For the same scene, he had Jesus proffering “tender” forgiveness to Peter, who had denied him three times, three times asking him at this lakeside barbecue if he loved him.  Tenderness suffused Senior’s account, in the lecture and in  the 20–minute-or-so homily during the mass that followed, so much so that one drew from his depiction a near-feminine Jesus.

Indeed, the mass, at a simple table next to a makeshift pulpit which had earlier been his lectern, featured extended vocal performances by a young woman and flute accompaniment by another.  The service, which moved at a funereal pace, seemed geared toward softening any rampant masculinity that might still be lurking in the hearts of Catholic worshipers, as did the lecture, delivered as it was smoothly, even soothingly.  This was the very much the Church of Nice.

Decline & fall of a sermon-time doze

I was neither flummoxed nor gobsmacked when the preacher tossed off a reference to “Captain Grimes in Decline and Fall” this morning.  I was, however, wakened from that pious semi-slumber that too often attends sermonizing.

Of the Roman empire? I wondered, distracted from my fascination with the family of mother, father, and seven kids aged an estimated six months to 10 years old in the pew in front of me.

No, I quickly decided.  Decline and Fall as by Evelyn Waugh.  Said and done.  Without explaining, as in saying, “I was reading a novel the other day called Decline and Fall, by the English Catholic writer Evelyn Waugh, and in it he said . . .”   Blah, blah, and blah.  What you hear in your average parish.

So it goes.  Point he was making would not have been lost, however, on the listeners who got not the reference: Captain Grimes enuntiated the wild “liberal” claim that freedom (and contentment) lay in doing whatever one wants to do, wherever, at any time.  Didn’t work that way for him in the novel, my priest said, going on to point out what should be obvious but isn’t: things don’t work that way.

So.  I was out of my reverie and on my way to a contented half hour or so of doing what I wanted to do, where and when I wanted to do it: hear the rest of mass and let the mystery of it wash over me, not to mention an edifying drama in which two young parents worshiped on Sunday in the company of their seven perfect youngsters.

Not bad, and I had only to walk a half mile to find it.

The St. Patrick's thing

St. Patrick’s message “often gets drowned out by the parades, the plastic shamrocks and the green-dyed beer,” says Brother Colmán Ó Clabaigh, OSB, in The Catholic Spirit of the St. Paul & Minneapolis archdiocese.  Bold words, verified by reality.

He wrote two letters in the fifth century as a missionary to Ireland, in which (a) he condemns a chieftain for enslaving converts and (b) tells about himself and his work.

He’d been captured himself from his posh family villa in Britain and ended on a hillside herding sheep.  In desperation he turned to God and Jesus.  Escaping, he made it back to Britain and became a priest.  Could have enjoyed life as a pastor but decided to go whole-hog and return to Ireland to see what he could do for and with his erstwhile captors.

Altruistic, to be sure, but he had a skeleton in his closet, some crime committed when he was 15 that might have disqualified him for the ordination.  He admitted it to a friend, who betrayed his trust.  Patrick was attacked by “men of letters, sitting on your estates.”  He defended himself in his “Confession.”

He made an unlikely bishop, he admitted, “rustic, exiled, unlearned” as he was, “like a stone lying in deep mud.”  But “he that is mighty” had picked him up and made him part of a wall of the sort that lined the Irish countryside.

Bishop material or not, he recognized “the Gospel’s power to transform, transfigure and uplift,” Brother Ó Clabaigh, of Glenstal Abbey in Ireland, concludes.  Recognizing this was the secret of his success, “and this is as true for us in the 21st century as it was for him in the fifth.”

End of St. Patrick thought for the day.