Cardinal O’Malley orders inquiry into Boston seminary, places rector on ‘sabbatical’
The head of the Archdiocese of Boston has announced a major investigation into St. John’s Seminary following allegations made by two former seminarians.
Pope Francis talks with Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley of Boston before a meeting of cardinals and the pope at the Vatican in this Feb. 13, 2015, file photo. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)
Boston, Mass., Aug 10, 2018 / 01:57 pm (CNA).- Cardinal Séan O’Malley has announced a major investigation into St. John’s Seminary in the Archdiocese of Boston, following allegations made by two former seminarians. The cardinal also announced that the rector of the seminary, Monsignor James Moroney, had been placed on immediate leave to allow for a “fully independent inquiry.”
The announcement was made by Cardinal O’Malley on Friday afternoon, August 10.
In a prepared statement, the cardinal said that he had learned of the allegations earlier that week, after posts by the former seminarians appeared on social media. The Archdiocese has not confirmed the exact nature of the allegations.
“Earlier this week I was informed that two former seminarians of St. John’s Seminary in the Archdiocese of Boston had posted allegations on social media sites including the Archdiocese’s Facebook page that during their time at the seminary they witnessed and experienced activities which are directly contrary to the moral standards and requirements of formation for the Catholic priesthood,” O’Malley said.
The cardinal, who also serves as the President of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, stressed that he has not yet been able to either prove or disprove the allegations, but that the matter was being treated with the utmost seriousness.
“As Archbishop of Boston, with responsibility for the integrity of the seminary and its compliance with the Church’s Program for Priestly Formation, I am committed to immediate action to address these serious matters.”
In addition to announcing Msgr. Moroney’s “sabbatical,” Cardinal O’Malley said that he has appointed Rev. Stephen E. Salocks to serve as Interim Rector of St. John’s. Father Salocks currently serves as a professor at the seminary.
The investigation into the allegations is being led by Bishop Mark O’Connell, Auxiliary Bishop of Boston, Dr. Francisco Cesareo, President of Assumption College and President of the USCCB National Review Board, which advises the USCCB on matters of child and youth protection policies and practices, and Ms. Kimberly Jones, CEO of Athena Legal Strategies Group.
Laying out the remit of the inquiry, O’Malley said he had directed them to examine “the allegations made this week, the culture of the seminary regarding the personal standards expected and required of candidates for the priesthood, and any seminary issues of sexual harassment or other forms of intimidation or discrimination.”
The inquiry will be staffed by Mark Dunderdale, the director of the Archdiocesan Office of Professional Standards and Oversight.
The cardinal said he had instructed the inquiry team to report back to him “as soon as possible” with their findings and a set of recommendations ensuring proper standards of behavior in accord with Church teaching at all levels of seminary life.
“The allegations made this week are a source of serious concern to me as Archbishop of Boston,” O’Malley said.
“The ministry of the Catholic priesthood requires a foundation of trust with the people of the Church and the wider community in which our priests serve. I am determined that all our seminaries meet that standard of trust and provide the formation necessary for priests to live a demanding vocation of service in our contemporary society.”
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Grounds for hope are not found in institutional reform, psychological analysis, or new programs and protocols, but rather in a return to Jesus Christ. […]
Ricky Reyes dribbles the ball up court as now-Father Peter Schirripa follows behind at the national basketball tournament for seminaries in 2022. / Credit: St. John’s Seminary
CNA Staff, Nov 6, 2023 / 14:40 pm (CNA).
Imagine the scene: The alarm clock starts beeping and it’s 4 a.m. Basketball practice starts in an hour. It’s time for a group of bleary-eyed young men to grab their gear, meet their teammates, and begin a one-mile uphill jog in the middle of New England’s freezing weather to the basketball facility.
Once inside the gym, the work begins: stretching, sprints, layups, scrimmaging, shooting, defensive posture, all with one goal in mind — winning.
This type of intense training is all in a day’s work for one team of men in Boston.
No, it’s not the Division I team at Boston College, Boston University, or Northeastern University.
Rather, it’s how a team of seminarians at St. John’s Seminary in Boston trains. And their goal of winning is twofold: victory in the spiritual life and a championship trophy at the national tournament for seminaries, which is held once a year.
But what does playing basketball have to do with priestly formation? Well, according to the seminarians who play for the St. John’s Eagles, quite a lot.
St. John’s Seminary’s basketball team at practice. Credit: St. John’s Seminary/YouTube May 18, 2023
A ‘microcosm of the spiritual life’
When 27-year-old Deacon Marcelo Ferrari, the team’s co-captain, first entered seminary, he saw the game as more of an extracurricular activity, “a good opportunity to spend some time with close friends and maybe build some fraternity.”
“But very quickly it became clear that the basketball team is just a microcosm of the spiritual life,” Ferrari, of Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico, said.
Playing the game together imitates the spiritual life in that “you experience a lot of humiliation, especially if you’re not as skilled like me,” said Ferrari, who has more experience in soccer than in basketball.
“But you also just learn a real sense of what sacrifice means,” he said. “Even practice just being at 5 in the morning is enough to demand a lot of the human heart.”
The experience of being on the team aided in Ferrari’s priestly formation in “so many ways,” he said, adding that “it became a critical space for me to recognize especially more of those subtle movements of the heart.”
“There’s nothing like team sports to bring out every part of you,” he said.
An uphill climb
Ferrari had never played organized basketball until he entered St. John’s Seminary. It wasn’t until another seminarian who established the team, now-recently ordained Father Peter Schirripa, asked him to join that he considered it.
“He saw me playing soccer and was like, ‘Oh, this guy’s mildly athletic. Let’s see if we can get him a basketball and see what he can do,’” Ferrari said.
This type of recruiting was par for the course for Schirripa, 30, who grew up in Lexington, Massachusetts, and had the idea for the team when he first entered seminary more than six years ago.
But Schirripa, who had experience in basketball, track and field, and soccer, credits the founder of the media apostle Word on Fire, Bishop Robert Barron, with the conception of the idea.
Schirripa was visiting his alma mater St. Anselm College during its 2017 graduation ceremony, the spring before his entrance to seminary, when he met Barron, who was giving the commencement address. Barron mentioned to him that there was a national basketball tournament for seminaries and encouraged Schirripa to put together a team from St. John’s.
So, Schirripa brought the idea to his superiors at the seminary and got a green light to start building a team for the national tournament.
Deacon Marcelo Ferrari at one of St. John’s Seminary’s basketball practices. Credit: St. John’s Seminary/YouTube May 18, 2023
“The leadership was like, ‘Sure, you can do it if you can pull it off.’ But I was a first pre-theologian. I’d been there for, like, three weeks,” Schirripa said.
“And let’s just say there was not a robust athletic or even really communal culture at St. John’s at the time. And so trying to inspire guys to do this and play on the team, it was like I was just taking whatever warm body I could get,” he said.
Eventually, enough seminarians wanted in, and Schirripa’s idea came to fruition, which culminated in St. John’s taking a squad of 15 guys to the national tournament at Mundelein Seminary in Mundelein, Illinois, and winning two games in 2018.
“We went out to it and we won two games, which is crazy because we were so bad,” he said.
He noted that the games were livestreamed and their brother seminarians were watching.
“The whole common room was watching it and I think people couldn’t believe that we did it,” he said.
“And the rest,” Schirripa said, “is history.”
St. John’s has been sending a team to the national tournament ever since. The best they’ve done is third place in a tournament that typically consists of between 12 and 16 teams.
The future of the church
Part of St. John’s success can be attributed to their volunteer coach, Patrick Nee, 44, a practicing Catholic in the greater Boston area who was a Division I basketball player at Brown University in the 1990s.
Nee had coached on the high school level, on travel teams, and even on his young children’s teams, but what made this coaching experience different was the “shock” of being immersed in seminary culture.
“It’s not an experience like I’d ever had before, just being in a gym with 15 seminarians, being on a bus or being on a plane with them and just realizing how good it was,” he said. “And these guys are really holy guys that are just terrific. Getting to know them all, it has just been really inspiring for me.”
Patrick Nee coaches St. John’s Seminary’s basketball team. Credit: St. John’s Seminary/YouTube May 18, 2023
Nee, a high school state champion from St. Raphael Academy in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, said that he stopped practicing his Catholic faith during his college years and didn’t come back to it until his late 20s.
He said that when he returned to the Church it took him on “a journey.” And over the last five years, that journey has “intensified” even more, he said, adding that “this experience has played a role in that.”
Nee said that it’s overwhelming “in the best way” when he is at the tournaments and “every guy you meet is this on-fire guy who’s studying to be a priest.”
One of those men on fire for the faith is Brian Daley, a member of the St. John’s team, Ferrari said. He recalled an incident at practice one day when a newer seminarian began to indulge in “light mockery” of the other teams they would be playing in the tournament.
Ferrari said that Daley reminded his teammate: “No, these men that we’ll be competing against are all giving their lives for Christ and they’re great examples for us.”
Ferrari called it a moment of “deep fraternity” for the team, who were all inspired by the wisdom Daley shared.
The deacon also said that as a team that fire is seen at every practice through prayer.
At every practice, each player is handed a sheet of prayer intentions to offer up their labor on the court so that all of their work is “done with an eye that sacrifice is fruitful.”
Seeing all of the hard work the teams put in for one weekend showed Nee that they care a lot about winning, “but they never lose track of the bigger picture.”
St. John’s Seminary basketball coach Patrick Nee guides his players during the 2022 tournament. Credit: St. John’s Seminary/YouTube May 18, 2023
He said that being a part of the team has strengthened his faith and added that the whole experience inspired him to tell Schirripa that “we need to share this with people.”
“I wish other people could see this. I mean, if you know anyone who is negative about the future of the Church, it’s like, well, walk into this gym for five minutes and you’ll change your mind immediately,” he said.
Nee’s vision for sharing the experience with others became a reality five months ago when St. John’s Seminary released “Souls in the Game,” a documentary that “highlights priestly formation beyond the study of philosophy and theology.”
The 28-minute documentary follows the team’s journey from the early morning practices to the recruiting and training of the seminarians to the final tournament.
“There is no pressure at all. Go out and play. We have brought life to St. John’s Seminary. God has used this team and let’s go out there and show everyone that we love each other, we love our vocations, and we’re going to represent St. John’s,” Schirripa says to his team during a pregame speech in the documentary.
Viewers might be surprised by how competitive the games are, especially in the scene where 6-foot-4 Schirripa is shown slamming it down during the tournament, which resulted in a technical foul for the team.
Despite the penalty, the team was roaring with excitement at Schirripa’s slam dunk, a feat that not many players ever get to experience on a 10-foot hoop.
“We were ready to storm the court,” Ferrari said in excitement in the documentary.
That documentary can be seen below.
Physical exercise such as can be had playing on a basketball team is something that every seminary should “absolutely” have, Schirripa said.
“I think it’s absolutely essential because you need a physical outlet and you need to obviously have a healthy body, mind, and soul. But it also teaches you to work towards something that’s bigger than yourself, which ultimately is the apostolate,” he said.
“And so it’s such a great venue for formation,” he said.
The independent commission needs to be both lay and above reproach. They should pay no attention to what the official standards of conduct are but what the true standard, as enforced, is. Lastly, if the rector is found guilty, Cardinal O’Malley needs to step down for either neglect of the seminary or collusion. (Such a penalty is the only way to ensure that a bishop will take care of his seminary.)
Lastly, every seminary in the United States also needs to be investigated by a similar panel.
Rod Dreher at American Conservative reporting the death of Richard Sipe, at 85.
Sipe, reknowned expert on sex abuse investigations in the Church for 30-40 years, sent letter to Bishop McElroy in 2016, asking for an audience to discuss the abuse and coverups recounted in the letter, describing among other things possible criminal neglect and perjury by Cardinal Mahony. The letter itself is damning and horrible. McElroy refused to meet Sipe.
The catch: the letter to McElroy had a confidential list of Bishops compromised and/or complicit in sex abuse. Dreher is hoping that Sipe may have a will directing that the list be published after his death.
Also, watch out for this investigation run by Boston Archdiocese…no credibility after the disclosure that Cardinal O’Malley and his staff buried The McCarrick allegations.
I am a faithful Catholic Bostonian with 5 children and a husband. We have three young sons and pray for their life vocations which may include the priesthood. This is a cause for righteous anger towards the nauseating incompetency and hardness of heart by the Archbishop of Boston and his staff. Negligence in God’s house comes at a high price. May God Have mercy on the Archdiocese of Boston and the seminarians who have been victims of homosexual predators in the church.
A candidate for the priesthood needs to get an endorsement or recommendation from a pastor as a part of the application process, does he not? How many pastors know their flock well enough that he can confidently say that someone does not have same-sex attraction or has not engaged in a homosexual relationship? And should the families of potential candidates also be interviewed as a part of the process? Those seeking security clearance have to go through such a process — why shouldn’t candidates for the priesthood be subject to something that strict and thorough?
Again, the Roman Catholic Church needs to deal with the problem of scale.
SOL,
It’s my understanding that a candidate for the seminary receives a psychological evaluation that includes an estimate of the candidate’s sexual orientation.
This panel seem to be all close friends and associates that work with O Malley and stand to lose significant business if the Cardinal goes down the tubes, etc etc. Cover up is in place. The panel’s remit is vague and could mean anything, and makes no mention of rooting out homosexuality in the seminaries.
You know, so many of the bishops that you thought you could trust are very recently attempting to circle the wagons, and in fact Bishop Barron seems to me to have told us laity to shut up already and stop talking about this homosexuality stuff. Wuerl made his laughable statement, Di Nardo hemmed and hawed on EWTN nightly news, saying that he could not say much at this point in time. Now O Malley sets up this fake investigation into things he surely must have known about. Boston has long been the home base for homosexuality in the church. Forgive me if they strike me as a bunch of liars all scurrying for cover
The independent commission needs to be both lay and above reproach. They should pay no attention to what the official standards of conduct are but what the true standard, as enforced, is. Lastly, if the rector is found guilty, Cardinal O’Malley needs to step down for either neglect of the seminary or collusion. (Such a penalty is the only way to ensure that a bishop will take care of his seminary.)
Lastly, every seminary in the United States also needs to be investigated by a similar panel.
Huge breaking story on Bishops:
Rod Dreher at American Conservative reporting the death of Richard Sipe, at 85.
Sipe, reknowned expert on sex abuse investigations in the Church for 30-40 years, sent letter to Bishop McElroy in 2016, asking for an audience to discuss the abuse and coverups recounted in the letter, describing among other things possible criminal neglect and perjury by Cardinal Mahony. The letter itself is damning and horrible. McElroy refused to meet Sipe.
The catch: the letter to McElroy had a confidential list of Bishops compromised and/or complicit in sex abuse. Dreher is hoping that Sipe may have a will directing that the list be published after his death.
Huge event…
Also, watch out for this investigation run by Boston Archdiocese…no credibility after the disclosure that Cardinal O’Malley and his staff buried The McCarrick allegations.
I am a faithful Catholic Bostonian with 5 children and a husband. We have three young sons and pray for their life vocations which may include the priesthood. This is a cause for righteous anger towards the nauseating incompetency and hardness of heart by the Archbishop of Boston and his staff. Negligence in God’s house comes at a high price. May God Have mercy on the Archdiocese of Boston and the seminarians who have been victims of homosexual predators in the church.
A candidate for the priesthood needs to get an endorsement or recommendation from a pastor as a part of the application process, does he not? How many pastors know their flock well enough that he can confidently say that someone does not have same-sex attraction or has not engaged in a homosexual relationship? And should the families of potential candidates also be interviewed as a part of the process? Those seeking security clearance have to go through such a process — why shouldn’t candidates for the priesthood be subject to something that strict and thorough?
Again, the Roman Catholic Church needs to deal with the problem of scale.
SOL,
It’s my understanding that a candidate for the seminary receives a psychological evaluation that includes an estimate of the candidate’s sexual orientation.
This panel seem to be all close friends and associates that work with O Malley and stand to lose significant business if the Cardinal goes down the tubes, etc etc. Cover up is in place. The panel’s remit is vague and could mean anything, and makes no mention of rooting out homosexuality in the seminaries.
You know, so many of the bishops that you thought you could trust are very recently attempting to circle the wagons, and in fact Bishop Barron seems to me to have told us laity to shut up already and stop talking about this homosexuality stuff. Wuerl made his laughable statement, Di Nardo hemmed and hawed on EWTN nightly news, saying that he could not say much at this point in time. Now O Malley sets up this fake investigation into things he surely must have known about. Boston has long been the home base for homosexuality in the church. Forgive me if they strike me as a bunch of liars all scurrying for cover
Note when Boston “acted.” Only when former seminarians had to post publicly on “Facebook.”
And the Cardinal and “his staff” who buried the McCarrick story are now declaring their sincerity?
I guess they think we are all just cattle.