Pilgrim's Regress Print E-mail

Editorial 

The disgraceful autobiography of Rembert Weakland 

By George Neumayr | July 2009 issue 

It sounds like an over-the-top Tom Wolfe novel: a successor to the apostles conducts an affair with a male graduate student, is accused of “date rape” and emotional harm by said student, and raids the collection basket of the faithful to hush the student up, then, as the bishop settles into a cushy retirement, he pens a “coming out” memoir in praise of homosexual behavior, all the while retaining the canonical rights and privileges of a retired archbishop and receiving pats on the back from fellow clergy.

Alas, this is no racy and risible fiction; it is the real story of Archbishop Rembert Weakland. The retired archbishop of Milwaukee released June 15 his autobiography, A Pilgrim in a Pilgrim Church: Memoirs of a Catholic Archbishop. In it he admits to several affairs with men, crowns himself the first voluntarily “out” bishop, and argues that the Church should endorse the “physical, genital expression” of homosexuality, as he put it to the New York Times in May.

“If we say our God is an all-loving god,” he said to the Times, “how do you explain that at any given time probably 400 million living on the planet at one time would be gay? Are the religions of the world, as does Catholicism, saying to those hundreds of millions of people, you have to pass your whole life without any physical, genital expression of that love?”

Weakland gave this interview to the Times, by the way, from the “Archbishop Weakland Center, which houses the archdiocesan cathedral offices in downtown Milwaukee.” This small snapshot of episcopal decadence—an openly “gay” bishop spouting heresy while sitting in a diocesan office still named in his honor—would be amusing if it weren’t so sad and scandalous.

If Church officials worried about the corruption and perdition of souls as much as they fret about “tolerance” and “collegiality,” they would end this disgusting farce and suspend Weakland’s faculties. Instead, they sit on their hands as Weakland, outfitted in his priestly collar, grants interviews to news outlets about the glories of mortal sin.

The chutzpah of Weakland is breathtaking. But then, this is a Benedictine monk (he once was head abbot of the order, a footnote that is not likely to be lost on future Edward Gibbons) who could with a straight face spearhead a pastoral letter accusing Ronald Reagan of greed and fiscal irresponsibility while dipping himself into the faithful’s pockets for a $450,000 “loan” to pay off his disgruntled paramour, Paul Marcoux.

In other eras, a disgraced Benedictine monk would disappear into obscure days of prayer and penitential labor; these days he publishes a tribute to homosexuality and anxiously awaits a booking to appear on Charlie Rose and Oprah.

Back in the 1980s and 1990s, when Weakland was riding high in his episcopal saddle, he regarded himself as a sort of modern-day Cardinal Richelieu, a viciously savvy player of progressive Church politics. He knew the rules and how to bend them. But now he presents himself as an innocent waif and victim.

He had no idea that those abusive priests he shuffled from parish to parish were committing a “crime” when they raped children. Also, he “naively” assumed these children would “grow out of” and “forget” the molestation.

Weakland also has the gall to blame Pope John Paul II’s Vatican in part for his payout to the grad student. You see, if only Weakland could have been open about his homosexuality (and the Vatican hadn’t been so secretive), the payout wouldn’t have been necessary, he suggested to the Times:

Archbishop Weakland said he probably should have gone to Rome and explained that he had had a relationship with Mr. Marcoux, that he had ended it by writing an emotional letter that Mr. Marcoux still had and that the archbishop’s lawyers regarded Mr. Marcoux’s threats as blackmail.

But, the archbishop said, a highly placed friend in Rome advised him that church officials preferred that such things be hushed up, which is “the Roman way.”

“I suppose, also, being frank, I wouldn’t have wanted to be labeled in Rome at that point as gay,” Archbishop Weakland said. “Rome is a little village.”

The Roman way? Try the Weakland way. Notice he doesn’t mention the most obvious consequence of coming clean to Rome: he would have had to resign.

Weakland’s dishonesty is sickening. Here is a bishop who violated his vows grossly, then plundered the hard-earned dollars of Catholic families to conceal his fraud, all so that he could avoid resignation and preserve his power, which he then used to liberalize and corrupt the Church in America for over a generation.

George Neumayr is editor of Catholic World Report. This editorial will appear in the July 2009 issue of CWR.

 

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Rudy  - Are ther more?     |2009-06-15 08:54:19
How many more bishops like Rambert Weakland are out there that Rome knows of but does't do anything to remove or discpline? It is just disgusting. Weakland is truly a wolf in sheep's clothing, out to devour the faithful.
allan frederick   |2009-06-15 10:12:29
It is disgusting as a catholic to read that this kind of venom is being spewed by no less than a Catholic Bishop. Pope Benedict XVI is right to call a Year of the Priest. We need to refocus the Priesthood back to its original roots which is to mirrow the Life of Our Lord Jesus Christ total and unselfish love, obedient to the Father even unto death, death on a Cross.
Tom Amadeo   |2009-07-18 05:40:05
Allan,don't hold your breath waiting for the New Order church to reform itself from within.God,alone can and will restore the new church of V2. The present hierarchy of all ranks is chock full of deviants who perpetuate a perverted hierarchy. A pope is not free to do other than to excomunicate Weakland,BUT HE WILL NOT.
Jack Swan  - The Canonical Penalties   |2009-06-15 10:40:51
Under Canon 1405, penal cases involving a bishop are reserved exclusively to the Holy Father. The penal offense involved in the Archbishop's public comments and his book would be heresy, in a violation of Canon 751, since he publicly reject the Church's teaching on the reservation of Holy Orders to men, and on sexual morality regarding same-sex conduct, both of which are "to be believed by divine and Catholic faith".

A violation of Canon 751 entails automatic excommunication, under Canon 1364. Other penalties under Canon 1336 include dismissal from the clerical state (i.e., involuntary laicization). That is also a possible penalty under Canon 290, which permits it to be imposed on a priest for a "most grave cause".

The Holy Father and Archbishop Burke already know all of this. We should pray that they act promptly.
Rebecca   |2009-06-15 13:06:06
It would be interesting to see an article about how men like this were vetted to become bishops, arch bishops etc. How are they chosen? How are these things missed--they have many years in seminary and then actually practicing their supposed vocation---didn't anyone who notice?
Christoph Rebner  - re: The Canonical Penalties   |2009-06-16 02:40:50
Jack Swan wrote:
Under Canon 1405, penal cases involving a bishop are reserved exclusively to the Holy Father. The penal offense involved in the Archbishop's public comments and his book would be heresy, in a violation of Canon 751, since he publicly reject the Church's teaching on the reservation of Holy Orders to men, and on sexual morality regarding same-sex conduct, both of which are "to be believed by divine and Catholic faith".

A violation of Canon 751 entails automatic excommunication, under Canon 1364. Other penalties under Canon 1336 include dismissal from the clerical state (i.e., involuntary laicization). That is also a possible penalty under Canon 290, which permits it to be imposed on a priest for a "most grave cause".

The Holy Father and Archbishop Burke already know all of this. We should pray that they act promptly.


Put this on social sites such as http://www.gloria.tv/?media=28087!

Good?
Alexis Mauldin  - Speaking of Apologies   |2009-06-15 17:03:19
...I'm a new Catholic, coming from a Southern Baptist background. If Holy Church doesn't start doing something about folks like Weakland, Pelosi, Seblius, Kerry, Biden yada yada yada, then She owes evangelical Protestants at least, an apology and full communion within the Church.

No offense, but no wonder Protestants recoil at the Catholic Church - they see this crap and shudder. `
DN   |2009-06-16 11:31:15
No thanks to the arm-chair popes in this comment thread. The job's filled.

Should something be done? Yes. Should you go around denouncing people because what you think ought to have been done wasn't? Nope. You don't know enough to pass judgment here.
AAH   |2009-06-16 12:48:27
News like this strikes deep into the hearts of most fervent, walk-the-line Catholics. The media will have a hay-day with this and declare that true morality and the Catholic faith are dead, and good riddance.

We Catholics trust our leaders to follow the narrow and difficult Way of the Lord. And yet, here is Weakland, Weakness-Personified,touting his immorality and blaming it on Rome.

I know that judgment takes time, but certainly our other leaders should be speaking up, supporting those of us in the pews who are now tethered goats for the media rampage.
John James  - Dr   |2009-06-16 19:02:53
I live in Australia but it is dismaying to see a Bishop, notionally a shepherd of souls, behaving this way.
Anyone trying to love, as Christ asked us, can understand human weakness but to label evil as good is a special level of perversion.
What dismays me is the effect on priestly formation at the seminaries in the diocese that the Archbishop oversaw.
The other question I have is how such a man became bishop? Vice, like virtue, is not acquired overnight. Many of his clerical contemporaries should have been able to sense his character dispositions well before he grasped the 'shepherd's staff'. God may call then to account for their silence.
Anon   |2009-06-17 09:47:48
Protestants have these same problems, but as we see in the Anglican church they do exactly what Weakland wants us to do. You will always find the tares among the wheat. That being said Weakland should be treated exactly as if he were just a regular priest. That would mean dismissal from the clerical state, loss of pension, and a cozy spot to live under a bridge. The law should be the same for all. It is appalling that an Archbishop who devastated the Church should be allowed to continue to spread heresy. It is time for him to go.
Anon
Mary Myers   |2009-06-17 12:14:59
Just one more nail in the coffin of the modern Catholic Church.
Ann  - Communism in the seminary   |2009-06-17 13:02:13
Bella Dodd, a famous Communist in the 1920s and 1930's said publicly that the Communist party had placed 1100 Communists in the seminaries. No reason to doubt her; she was converted back to the true Church by Archbishop Sheen in her later years. Her autobiography is online-read it for free. Something diabolical has obviously happened in the past to allow these men to rule and to exclude truly good men for decades. Yes, we need a Year of the Priest. We could use a DECADE of the Priest. We are all called to pray for our priests, bishops, and the HOly Father EVERY DAY They need these prayers and so do we, to remind ourselves of the attacks from demons they receive in one form or another. Christ was not spared, and neither will they be.
Littleone  - Firmness needed   |2009-06-17 13:48:07
Yes it is awful so what is the solution let us all pray fervently for this weak man and pray that Rome comes out publicly with great firmness If he has a shred of genuine remorse for any of his past behaviour he would welcome the pennance of retirement to a penitential and contemplative location. I would recommend he be appointed live on site chaplaincy with a contemplative order of nuns in a remote location.
If he does not accept that take away his retirement privileges and pension and let him embrace the world he appears to be so fond of-no doubt he will find many friends and anti Catholic groups who would love to show him hospitality.
Dorothy Pedtke  - none or Ms.     |2009-06-17 14:46:59
I wish the Church were not so hung up with sex. It is the most natural instinct in the world. Numerous species demonstrate same sex copulation. The strength of the sex instinct has ruined lots of lives because of guilt and suppression and (according to recorded history) perversion. The Church who has enforced rules about sex has also throughout recorded history had numerous people who didn't keep the rules. The Church is quite selective in which of them it decides to punish or ignore or cover up. I can't help thinking we ought to be more understanding of the role of sex in our lives and work out better rules that more closely fit the real world.

I also suppose the Archbishop is telling the truth about how he saw child abuse in "the old days". Is this not just what everyone thought? It was a common occurrence, people, both laity and clergy, and hierarchy, all felt that the image of the church was more important to protect than some little kids who would "grow out of it".

The rules of chastity and purity and celibacy are very nice and high-minded, but they have caused generations of us over millennia to commit terrible crimes against our fellow humans. We ought to be paying attention to someone like Weakland who can speak about it so openly, and learn something that will make us more sensible in future generations. The rules we have are simply unrealistic. Nor are even the rules we have applied equally to everyone. This is a huge and very serious question that we should deal with with more open minds. Jesus was against all the judging we do.
It is not true  - re The Church is hung up on sex   |2009-06-19 18:15:15
Dorothy it is the world that has taken sex out of its natural context and turned it into a false God to be appeased at any cost. If you read John Paul 2's Theology of the Body you will see sex placed in a loving and very human context.Yes the Church has not always been quick enough to act on abuse cases but so was the secular world A lack of understanding of the cunning of pedophilia led many large institution to transfer staff to new locations believing the protestations of remorse and the promise that it would never happen again.
Deacon Robert  - Reply to "none or Ms."   |2009-06-18 00:16:09
Re: your comment"I wish the Church were not so hung up with sex":

Try reading the 6th and 9th Commandments and then Our Lord's comments in the Gospels about even "lusting" in the heart being a violation of the 6th Commandment. This explains our "hang up" with sex! You are either with Christ or against Him!

Dn. Robert
Tim V  - Put your money where your mouth is   |2009-06-18 07:10:14
I write this as an evangelical favorably disposed towards the Catholic Church and considering reconciling with it. I can understand that leaders can still do sinful things. However, the part that doesn't bode well for the Church in my eyes is that despite the fact that Weakland admitted in 2002 that he had a homosexual encounter and was being black-mailed and had used funds of the faithful to pay it off. However, it seems the Church never really did anything to address this. Now everyone seems surprised by the contents of his autobiography. And as another convert wrote, this is a big reason why the Protestant world laughs at Catholicism and often doesn't take it seriously. The arguement often seems to be that Catholic doctrine is correct, but that you can't really expect Catholic leaders to live by it. If the Church doesn't discipline then all the nice arguements mean nothing. If the Catholic Church is the true church then it needs to live up to its calling or shut up. Put your money where your mouth is. The arguement that correct doctrine is s separate thing from holy living is only good in theory, but everyone really knows if the two don't go together, then somewhere in our gut we sense that there's probably something wrong with the doctrine as well. Catholic leadership needs to act decisively or if they can't put their money where their mouth is, then they need to quit trying to persuade the world that they are the 'one, HOLY, catholic, and apostolic church.' I'm frustrated because the Church's in action in cases like this (while excommunicating Brazilian doctors who performed an abortion) seems very inconsitent and are a serious obstacle form me in coming into the Church.
Rick Cross  - Qui tacet consentire videtur.   |2009-06-19 02:52:17
Qui tacet consentire videtur. Silence implies consent.... the old maxim of English Common Law seems to summarize Mr. Neumayr's point. I hope he's wrong, but I fear he's right.
HGP   |2009-06-20 05:09:56
Rembert Weakland is a poster child example of why sodomites should not be ordained as priests. They give up nothing since they have no attraction to women and it allows them cover to live as a single male. The other reason they enter this vocation is to have a target victim group(that does not have HIV/AIDS)of young males, to seduce for sodomy. The head of the Legionnaires of Christ was banished and silenced, why can't Rembert Weakland receive the same orders? I hope this is brought to the attention of Pope Benedict XVI.
Anonymous   |2009-06-22 06:37:26
What disgusts me even further is that he still retains the title "Archbishop Emeritus." He has disgraced the church and destroyed the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, which is in critical need of healing due to the widespread damage his disobedience (and the disobedience of his cronies, including the priests of MAPA) caused over the past few decades. I pray every day that Pope Benedict will appoint an ultra-conservative Archbishop to clean up the mess in Milwaukee.
John   |2009-06-22 16:05:05
To appoint an ultra-conservative to Milwaukee would be a disaster. The priests, deacons and nuns would be in open rebellion and in the national news on a regular basis.
The Vatican doesn't want that kind of press and it certainly doesn't want an ungovernable situation to arise.
The most likely outcomes is to place a left of center bishop who can gradually nudge things back into place.
John  - Are you serious?   |2009-06-22 15:58:59
If he confessed to Rome he'd have to resign? When has the Vatican ever done that? There's plenty of bishops and cardinals who have had affairs that continue to serve in their roles. The only way a bishop or "higher" would have resign is if the affair became public.
Come on, your a world report, there's plenty of good juicy stories about the hierarch floating around Rome.
M  - forget wings   |2009-06-22 19:13:29
Forget wings left or right or dead centre what we need in our bishops is holiness and a deep deep sense of the Real Presence.
jane donohue   |2009-07-12 19:50:51
I couldnot agree more.....this is the first I have heard of this...and I feel saddened by the news...We just heard several short weeks ago about Father Cutie and his change to the Episcopal Church after his marriage..All of these incidents make headlines.....I guess we have to remember the many holy, faithful priests who daily live the way they vowed ....I pray for them....God Bless
Bob  - Mr   |2009-06-23 04:29:56
What did Archbishop Dolan do about the Weakland situation when he was in charge there? As far as we can tell, nothing. It does not bode well for New York, now that Dolan is Archbishop here. His fat-faced joviality seems to be getting a good reception, but we have heard nothing about what he actually plans to do about dozens of gay and gay-friendly priests here. They encourage gay unions from the pulpit, give outrageously bad advice to same sex attracted penitents in confession, and never preach about what the Church teaches about sexual morality.
Erny  - Prayer for Priests     |2009-06-23 12:10:23
What about interpreting this prayer for priests (by St. Therese of Lisieux?):
O Jesus, Eternal Priest,
keep these Thy Servants
within the shelter of Thy Heart,
where none may ever harm them.
Keep unsullied their lips
purpled with Thy precious blood.
Keep unstained their anointed hands which daily touch Thy Sacred Body. Keep pure and unearthly their hearts sealed with the sublime marks of Thy Glorious Priesthood.
Let Thy holy love surround them
and shield them from the world's contagion.
Bless their labors with abundant fruit, and may the souls to whom they minister be here below their joy and consolation and in heaven their beautiful and everlasting crown.
Amen.
Carolyn Plant  - Thank you for St. Therese's prayer   |2009-07-11 14:41:42
Let us pray for all priests and religious who fulfill their vows of service and celibacy. If we have given our life to God, it is God we betray in the breaking of vows. Celibacy is celibacy even if the person has homosexual leanings. Then to write a book about his actions. This is totally beyond comprehension. How could he do such a thing?
Erny  - Saintsquotes.net     |2009-06-23 12:23:57
The Religious, especially priests should very well take note of St. John Vianney, Cure d'Ars; they should bear in mind all they could read about him because he's a model priest - what about his quotes from the subject title.
God bless them all!
Anzy  - mrs   |2009-06-23 18:44:28
oh the self-deception--chafing at the restraints against expressing genital "love" in a series of affairs...
really the whole sad story is a story of deception on all levels. God bless us
Childrens Writer  - Saint Paul's Words     |2009-07-01 07:09:47
2 Timothy 3-5 warned us of wolves in sheep's clothing like this. I hope and pray that the Vatican will take some manner of appropriate action against this man. His book will surely lead many more souls away from the path to eternal life. A prayer to Saint Paul would seem in order here.

"3For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. 4They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths. 5But you, keep your head in all situations, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, discharge all the duties of your ministry."
ExCatholic  - Response   |2009-07-01 18:05:58
Judge not lest thee be judged. Why is it that so-called "christians" are holier-than-thou by condemning anyone not in-line with their way of thinking? THAT is what's disgusting!
Judgements necessary all the t   |2009-07-02 16:18:19
We have to make rational and spiritual judgements as individuals all the time eg when you drive a car you have to check your rear view mirror before pulling out into traffic from a parking spot that is using your rationalality and you might have a deep attraction to a married person but you recognise this temptation to adultery and don't give in to it because you respect the marriage vows of a couple.
The phrase judge not does not mean the daily individual judgements that are necessary in life but judging another person for their individual decisions Thus we both might accept that it is moraaly wrong to kill someone but it is not our place to sit in judgement on an individual who has done such a deed Only God reads the heart and knows every circumstance surrounding an action. Another example would be abortion an intrinsically evil act but God will be merciful knowing some poor souls were frightened and misled into taking this action thus I can abhor abortion but do everything in my power to assist women who are suffering following an abortion.Ex Catholic come home Jesus is waiting for you remeber the good thief and the Prodigal son.
john bertram  - Pilgram's Regress     |2009-07-03 04:16:57
Mr.Weakland is an abomination in the eyes of our Lord and our church and his reward is one that has already been predetermined by God and has been expressed in scripture and his coming out is useless. Our Lord has known his transgressions all along and Mr. Weakland can have no excuses to satisfy the breaking of God's law. His plea of being ignorant of God's law will find him no grace. I need not damn the man for his actions, God already has. The pension the man has obtained has been obtained under false pretenses and the church should revoke it along with his excommunication from the faith.
Warren Anderson   |2009-07-06 23:30:05
(Archbishop) Weakland is conformed to the world. I feel for the many Catholics who are hurt because of this man's actions. Our wayward brother needs a canonical time out. Should he repent, he should be put under a gag order so there's less danger to the faithful.

RE: Matthew 7:1 (Judge not...). A blurb from Peter & Paul Ministries. "The purpose of this verse is to caution one not to be self righteous and never to determine the ultimate guilt that someone incurs before God.

"The Catholic Church has always taught that one of the spiritual works of mercy is to admonish the sinner. We are to judge the moral worth of human actions. The Ten Commandments and all the moral teachings of the Bible are judgments of behavior, and it is the responsibility of believers to make these divine judgments known to themselves and to the world at large. The New Testament declares, "Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them." (Eph. 5:11) So faithful Catholics must correct their neighbors in love and kindness in order to help them from the wickedness and snares of the Devil because the Word of God also states, "When a man knows the right thing to do and does not do it, he sins." (James 4:17)"
Mel   |2009-07-11 13:42:12
If our Lord was disgraced and even ridiculed by the Sadducees because "one of his own"..."one of the twelve" betrayed him...and it even cost Our Lord a series of brutal tortures...plus a vilolent and degrading death on a cross...why should we be spared "a Archbishop Weakland"...he is just another one of us sinners who claim to be disciples of Our Lord Jesus...and betray him in so many ways...I pray for him and our Holy Mother Church...and especially for all my sins of being a disciple in name only! Lord have mercy on us all!
Charles G Healy   |2009-07-12 12:45:18
I have read most of the above comments. I agree that Rembert Weakland should be immediately remove from the priesthood and his pension forfeited. He is making a fool of the Church.
The Holy Father should take a firm stand on this issue and the numerous other issues requiring swift correction.
Johnnie   |2009-07-17 10:50:13
In City of God, St. Augustine directly rebutts heresies to his beloved Catholic Church but continued to love and tried to educate the heretics. I am grateful to read so many people chastising Archbishop Weakland's behavior while continuing to pray for his eternal soul. After all, Jesus suffered the Passion in order that ALL might have salvation.
Thank you, Erny, for the Prayer for Priests.
Mary Jane Geisert  - Weakland   |2009-07-20 15:42:33
I have just read the article by George Neumayr about the FORMER Archbishop and I wonder if I missed something? The word is Celibacy. Men go into the priesthood knowing this and on ordination day promise in a vow to abstain not entertain physical genital expression. Heresy, disguesting, anti-Catholic teaching are only some of the words that express how I feel. The article was to the point and by a very gifted writer. Mj
Father Michael J. Newman, SDS  - Retired   |2009-07-23 09:03:58
I was disappointed by your editorial on Archbishop Weakland. Where are you when all the Mother Angelica priests are removed from ministry? Aren't we redeemed? Forgiven? I am also disappointed you rely on headlines from newspapers to form some opinions. Archbishop Weakland was my professor in the department of Music in 1962-63 at Catholic University. And by the way, isn't it common knowledge that those who are victims of sexual improprieties are "paid off" by the diocese or religious community? Do you know anyone who has paid it back? The Archbishop did! We are all sinners... in need of forgiveness. After all that is the ultimate test of one's Catholic faith.
Little One  - Forgiveness is the Divine consequence of repentanc   |2009-07-23 15:54:03
Father MichaelYpur fond memories of Archbishop Weakland make your defence of him understandable but you are condemning the editorial wrongly. What upsets the writer is that the Archbishop shows no repentance but attempts to justify his actions and even continue to undermine the Church's teachings in regard to sexuality.
I pray for this priest because I believe that there but for the grace of God could go any one of us and I have no doubt that if and /or when he is truly repentant then our ever merciful ever just God will forgive him and myself for our sins but you cannot be forgiven till you acknowledge that you have sinned and the book the Archbishop has published gives no evidence that a clear admission of his own behaviour as having been seriously sinful emerges but instead there remains a sense that he is saying the Church continueas to call some sexual behaviour as sinful and I believe it to be natural and okay between consenting adults.
If the Archbishop was truly repentant he would come out with a clear statement endorsing the Truth of the Church's teaching and urging anyone facing sexual temptation towards impurity to seek the help of confession and mass and join an organisation like Courage if the problem is same sex attraction.
Nancy  - Mrs. John C. Roth, M.A.T.   |2009-07-30 13:45:59
I think the archbishop should be defrocked immediately and given a cell at the Vatican to contemplate his eternal fate until his earthly demise.
Jack  - And they call us rebels?   |2009-08-05 15:08:15
As an SSPX'er i find it audatious when its claimed that we are not 'in good standing' with the Church while filth like this is supposedly 'in good standing'
Marilyn   |2009-08-07 11:06:09
On a related topic, it is unnatural for heterosexual priests to NOT be allowed to marry. This proscription stems from centuries ago when the Catholic Church was worried that priests' children would inherit property & land which the Church wanted to keep for itself. The Church could begin to fix this injustice by allowing priests over 50 to marry ONLY women over 55. Then it wouldn't have to worry about having to raise salaries to help support a family. Also, many women bring in money to the family nowadays.
commish_17   |2009-08-08 15:49:52
A story from the life of St. Francis of Assisi illustrates how the awareness of a priest’s hands can help bring about a deeper purification in the
heart. The saint was close to the end of his life, unable to walk and suffering from an eye disease and the stigmata. As he was brought through a region, some people from a nearby town came
to ask for his help with their parish priest. They had discovered that their priest was involved in a scandalous relationship with a woman of that
town. The saint was brought to the town and placed before the priest in front of everyone. They thought that the saint would upbraid and seriously chastise the fallen priest for his sinful ways. St. Francis instead fell to his knees, took the priest’s hands into his own stigmatized hands, kissed them
and said, “All I know and all I want to know is that these hands give me Jesus.” It was said that the priest was converted.
Donald Martin   |2009-08-10 06:21:08
I wonder did he put his imprimatur on it. Nihil Obstat?
trumocom6  - what?!   |2009-08-10 07:10:21
did anyone actually read this book lol. This is the craziest thing I have ever read?!
Will   |2009-10-27 19:47:42
Hunthausen, Weakland, Utener and Lucker. 2 down and two to go.
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