Archive for September, 2023
Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors issues call to action ahead of consistory and synod
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, church reform, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Future of the Church, Pope Francis, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on September 27, 2023
September 27, 2023
On the occasion of the Consistory for the Creation of New Cardinals and the first meeting of the Synod on Synodality (16th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops), The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors has issued a call to action for the Catholic Church finally to say “Enough!” to clergy sexual abuse. The Consistory takes place Sept. 30, and the Synod meeting begins Oct. 4. Below is the text of the Commission’s statement.
Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors
For immediate release, Sept. 27, 2023
A Call to Action on the Occasion of the Consistory for the Creation of New Cardinals and the 16th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops
- Commission urges solidarity with victims and survivors in light of ongoing revelations of abuse.
- Commission calls on Church leaders to increase commitment and resources to promote safeguarding everywhere.
- Commission asks that safeguarding be given a priority in the Synod on Synodality.
Solidarity with those who hunger and thirst for justice
As the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, we express our deep sorrow and unwavering solidarity first and foremost to the victims and survivors of so many despicable crimes committed in the Church. Every day seems to bring forth new evidence of abuse, as well as cover up and mishandling by Church leadership around the world. While some cases are subject to intense reporting in the media, others are hardly known–if at all–leaving many countless people to suffer in silence. All abuse involves the anguish and pain of a terrible betrayal, not only by the abuser, but by a Church unable or even unwilling to reckon with the reality of its actions.
We hear and are disturbed by reports of the actions of individuals holding responsible offices within the Church, the cries of those impacted, as well as the legacy of atrocious behavior associated with lay and other movements and so many areas of the Church’s institutional life. We are profoundly shaken by the immense pain, enduring suffering and revictimization experienced by so many, and we unequivocally condemn crimes and their impunity perpetrated against so many of our brothers and sisters. We reaffirm our steadfast commitment to work to ensure, as much as possible, such heinous and reprehensible acts are eradicated from the Church.
Recent publicly reported cases point to tragically harmful deficiencies in the norms intended to punish abusers and hold accountable those whose duty is to address wrongdoing. We are long overdue in fixing the flaws in procedures that leave victims wounded and in the dark both during and after cases have been decided. We will continue to study what is not working and to press for necessary changes so that all those affected by these atrocious crimes get access to truth, justice, and reparation. We also pledge to use our role to press other Church officials with responsibility to address these crimes to fulfil their mission effectively, to minimize the risk of further transgressions, and secure a respectful environment for all.
A Call for Conversion Among Church Leaders
Our Commission was established shortly after the election of Pope Francis in 2013. In harmony with the Council of Cardinals, the Commission has overseen a series of initiatives that have highlighted the reality of sexual abuse and the need for robust reforms in confronting both abuse and its mishandling by Church leaders. We are now in the process of aligning our efforts more closely with those of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and all those parts of the Roman Curia whose work impacts safeguarding around the world.
However, five years after the 2019 Summit on the Protection of Minors that gathered Church leaders from all over the world, deep frustrations remain, especially among those seeking justice for the wrongs done to them. No-one should have to beg for justice in the Church. The unacceptable resistance that remains points to a scandalous lack of resolve by many in the Church that is often compounded by a serious lack of resources. Pope Francis has warned that the inequalities in the world should not infect the Church.
There can be little effective change in this area without the pastoral conversion of Church leaders. As the College of Cardinals gathers in Consistory, we are encouraged by the Holy Father’s frequent reminder to those called to this special role that the blood they are called to pour out is their own and not that of those under their care. As a model of courageous self-sacrifice, the creation of new Cardinals is an opportune moment for reflection, repentance, and renewal of our unwavering commitment to safeguard and advocate for the most vulnerable, using all means possible.
We call upon all those in the Sacred College to remember victims and their families and to include as part of their oath of fidelity a commitment to remain steadfast in honoring those impacted by sexual abuse by uniting with them in the common pursuit of truth and justice. All bishops and religious superiors should echo this commitment.
Together with all those who are worn down by abuse and its consequences, we say: “Enough!”
A Catholic Call for Change
An important moment in furthering these efforts is found in the upcoming 16th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. The reality of sexual abuse in our Church goes to the heart of the Synod’s agenda. It deals with who we are as a community of faith, founded on Jesus. It permeates discussions on leadership models, ministry roles, professional standards of behavior, and of being in right relationship with one another and all of creation.
We ask that sexual abuse in the Church permeates your discussions as they address teaching, ministry, formation, and governance. As a community of the reconciled, the Church’s sacred worship should also find adequate inclusion and expression of this most intimate of Church failures. While at times it may seem like a daunting set of questions to face, please rise to the challenge so that you may address, in a comprehensive way, the threat posed by sexual abuse to Church’s credibility in announcing the Gospel.
We urge you to dedicate meaningful time and space to integrate the testimony of victims/survivors into your work. Indeed, many if not all of the Synod’s participants have their own experiences of confronting or dealing with sexual abuse in the Church which could become an explicit part of your deliberations.
We urge you to work towards the day when all ministries in the Church become places of welcome, empathy and reconciliation for those impacted by abuse. Join with those who rail against the endemic complacency of those in the Church and society that silence these testimonies, minimize their significance, and stifle hope for renewal.
We urge you to work towards the day when our Church takes full account and full responsibility for the wrongs done to so many in its care.
We urge you to work towards the day when all children are protected by appropriate safety policies and procedures, ones that are known and verified.
We urge you to work towards the day when transparent and accessible systems of redress for wrongdoing by the Church’s ministers’ function well according to acceptable standards.
We urge you to work towards the day when all in our Church understand and take responsibility for robust safeguarding in dioceses and parishes and schools and hospitals and retreat centers and houses of formation and all the other places where the Church is present and active.
That day is yet to arrive. And for many it seems a long way away.
We make our own the message given to us by Pope Francis during our most recent audience. He said:
“[W]here harm was done to people’s lives, we are called to keep in mind God’s creative power to make hope emerge from despair and life from death. The terrible sense of loss that many experience as a result of abuse can sometimes seem a burden too heavy to bear. Church leaders, who share a sense of shame for their failure to act, have suffered a loss of credibility, and our very ability to preach the Gospel has been damaged. Yet the Lord, who brings about new birth in every age, can restore life to dry bones (cf. Ezek 37:6). Even when the path forward is difficult and demanding, I urge you not to get bogged down; keep reaching out, keep trying to instill confidence in those you meet and who share with you this common cause. Do not grow discouraged when it seems that little is changing for the better.
Persevere and keep moving forwards!”
We urge you to work towards these long-overdue goals not just for one or two days during your gathering, but to consider them throughout the entire Synod process. Their achievement will be a singular sign of the Synod’s success, a sign that we are walking with the wounded and the forgotten as disciples of the one Lord, in search of a better way.
A daring hope for Catholic women / The Boston Globe
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Future of the Church, Synod on Synodality, Voice of the Faithful, Women, Women Deacons, Women in Catholic Church, Women in the Church on September 25, 2023
Catholic women are a cornerstone of their communities. However, there is currently no available path for women toward formal, vocational ministry within the church, despite the integral role many women play in fulfilling unmet ministerial needs of the community.
By Kelly Meraw, The Boston Globe
“Next month, Catholics from around the world will gather in Rome to discuss and discern the future of the Catholic Church. It is part of an ongoing church-wide conversation, known as the Global Synod on Synodality, about listening to the Holy Spirit and renewing the church as a healing presence in communities, particularly in places like Boston, shaken by the clergy sex abuse crisis.
“Catholics in the United States are invited to be part of that ongoing discernment process. Our participation is crucial for ensuring the conversation remains focused on the needs of all Catholics and how we continue to be a community in an increasingly diverse and connected world. Among the many questions that will be discussed at the synod is how we should rethink women’s participation in the church. It’s a question that will have a meaningful impact not only on the lives of Catholic women but on all Boston Catholics.
“Catholic women are a cornerstone of their communities. However, there is currently no available path for women toward formal, vocational ministry within the church, despite the integral role many women play in fulfilling unmet ministerial needs of the community. Those of us who feel a call from God to minister in sacramental ways (baptizing, celebrating marriages, funeral services) and to preach must be flexible in our approach.”
By Kelly Meraw, The Boston Globe — Read more …
Voice of the Faithful Focus News Roundup, Sept. 22, 2023
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Focus news roundup, Voice of the Faithful, VOTF Focus News Roundup on September 21, 2023

Sept. 22, 2023
TOP STORIES
Vatican considers child sexual abuse allegations against a former Australian bishop
“The Vatican is considering the findings of a church investigation into ‘very serious and deeply distressing’ child sexual abuse allegations against a former Australian bishop, a church leader said on Tuesday (Sept. 19). Christopher Saunders, now 73, resigned in 2021 as bishop of Broome, an Outback diocese of northwest Australia larger than France but with a population of only 50,000, after police announced they had dropped a sex crime investigation. He had stood down a year earlier after media reported the allegations.” By Rod McGuirk, Associated Press, in The Seattle Times
- 7NEWS reveals exclusive findings of Varican investigation, By 7NEWS Australian
- Broome Catholic bishop Christopher Saunders faces allegations of ‘very serious’ sex abuse in Vatican report, By Vanessa Mills and Erin Parke, ABC Kimberley Australia
Research reveals over 1,000 cases of sexual abuse by Swiss Catholic Church clergy
“The latest study revealed over 1,000 cases of sexual abuse by Swiss Catholic Church clergy and other employees, with 74% of such abuses involving minors, the University of Zurich said on Tuesday (Sept. 12), describing the cases as the ‘tip of the iceberg.’ The University of Zurich conducted a study commissioned by the Swiss Bishops’ Conference that documented 1,002 cases of sexual abuse committed by Catholic clergy, church employees, and religious in Switzerland from 1950 to the present. The university said in a press statement that this is the first study that has allowed an independent research team to look into church archives for files on sexual abuse in the Catholic Church environment.” By Tino Kirez, Anadolu Agency, on AA.com
- Sweeping study finds 1,000 cases of sexual abuse in Catholic Church since mid-20th century, By Jamey Keaten, Associated Press, in National Catholic reporter
- Swiss bishops pledge action after damning abuse report, By Jonathan Luxmoore, Our Sunday Visitor
- What next after Swiss Catholic Church sexual abuse revelations? By Simon Brady, SwissInfo.ch
- Vatican to investigate six Swiss Catholic bishops for possibly mishandling abuse claims, By Jamey Keaton and Kirsten Grieshaber, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter
- Probe ordered into Catholic Church sex abuse cover-ups in Switzerland, By Agence France Presse on TheLocal.ch
Editorial: Pope Francis, it’s time to release the women deacons report
“By all accounts, Pope Francis has had an eventful papacy. This first pope from the Americas has breathed new life into the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, refashioned the Vatican’s staid bureaucracy, and pushed the Catholic Church to focus on the needs of the environment and global peripheries. One especially interesting turn: Only 22 years after Pope John Paul II claimed the church had ‘no authority whatsoever’ to ordain women as priests, Francis in 2016 created a first-of-its-kind papal commission to study the history of the ordination of women as Catholic deacons. Even more, in 2020, after that commission had wrapped up its work, the pope created another.” By National Catholic Reporter Editorial Staff
Synod 2023: What has Pope Francis said about synodality?
“The Synod on Synodality is set to launch the first of two assemblies on Oct. 4. The global meetings in Rome are the culmination of two years of preparation, and during that time, much has been said about synodality, including by the pope. In some of his more recent comments on synodality, Pope Francis said, ‘speaking of a ‘Synod on Synodality’ may seem something abstruse, self-referential, excessively technical, of little interest to the general public,’ but it is ‘something truly important for the Church.’” By Hannah Brockhaus, Catholic News Agency
TRANSPARENCY & ACCOUNTABILITY
Catholic Church has ‘a lot to learn’ from others about accountability, warns theologian
“A leading theologian has said it is crucial for the Catholic Church to understand the need to learn from other organizations when it comes to accountability. Fr Eugene Duffy, lecturer in theology at Mary Immaculate College in the University of Limerick and All Hallows College, Dublin City University, said, ‘A Synodal Church Needs Accountability. “We need external organizations to offer an evaluation and scrutiny of our performances.’ He noted the role of the National Board for Safeguarding in the Irish Church which was completely independent of the hierarchy and monitors every diocese on a regular basis in regard to their compliance to best practice and standards. Another issue was the need for a reform of mindsets and attitudes, Fr Duffy noted.” By Sarah Mac Donald, The Tablet
Conservative critics of the synod and Francis are embarrassing themselves
“At chanceries and rectories across the land, The Synodal Process Is a Pandora’s Box: 100 Questions and Answers, is arriving with the obvious goal of seeking to undermine the synodal process Pope Francis has begun. I was surprised they did not stop at 95 and nail the text to the doors of St. Peter’s. My colleague Christopher White, NCR Vatican correspondent, explained the source of the volume on Monday. The book is published by Tradition, Family and Property, a reactionary group that started in Brazil in 1960, and distinguished itself for opposition to Vatican II and affinity for right-wing juntas.” By Michael Sean Winters, National Catholic Reporter
Grand jury reports only scratch the surface
“These days I read with a newer lens as an abuse survivor, after finally recognizing/acknowledging the sexual, spiritual, and emotional abuse inflicted by a lay teacher at my Diocese of Allentown school, Msgr. Bornemann Memorial Central Catholic High School in Reading, PA. With the survivor lens in mind, my curiosity was piqued by Kevin Clarke’s article, ‘The Complicated Legacy of State investigations of the Catholic sex abuse crisis.’ I began reading with an open mind; after all, over the last three years, I have come to know numerous survivors whose stories were included in the PA Grand Jury Report (my high school and local parish were hubs for abusive clergy). Their stories laid bare the web of moral and ethical corruption in various Catholic dioceses in PA.” By Paige N. Eppenstein Anderson, on SnapNetwork.org
FOR A SYNODAL CHURCH: COMMUNION, PARTICIPATION AND MISSION
Follow NCR for reports on Pope Francis’ momentous Synod of Bishops
“What is shaping up as possibly one of the most important gatherings in the long history of the Catholic Church is taking place in Rome Oct. 4-29, 2023. Pope Francis is hosting the first of two back-to-back assemblies of the Synod of Bishops to consider questions that have the potential to change the course of Catholicism. Among items on the agenda: the possibility of women serving the church in ordained ministry, how the church can better include LGBTQ Catholics and priestly celibacy. NCR is there in strength to report on this momentous event. Follow along with reports and analysis from Vatican correspondent Christopher White; news editor Joshua McElwee, who covered Francis’ papacy from 2014 to 2021; NCR senior correspondent Heidi Schlumpf; and Rhina Guidos, Latin America regional correspondent for Global Sisters Report.” By National Catholic Reporter
What is at stake at the looming synod in Rome?
“Just over the horizon, one of the most important events to take place in the Church since the Second Vatican Council will convene in Rome on Oct. 4 and conclude on Oct. 28. I am speaking of the much discussed Synod on Synodality, which appears to be the capstone event in the pontificate of Pope Francis. Pope Francis has acknowledged that for most average Catholics, the upcoming synod probably does not mean very much to them on a day-to-day, practical level … Nevertheless, he reiterated his conviction that the synod is ‘something truly important for the Church.’ I agree with that assessment. There is much at stake in the synod which I hope to outline briefly in what follows.” By Larry Chapp, Our Sunday Visitor
10 things to know about October’s Synod on Synodality in Rome
“The eyes of the Catholic world turn to Rome Oct. 4, as the worldwide Synod of Bishops convenes on the feast of St. Francis of Assisi to focus on ‘synodality’ and understanding what it means in terms of “communion, participation and mission” in the church. Here’s what it is, how we got here and what to expect.” By Maria Wiering, OSV News, in The Pilot
Is synodality just another word for collegiality
“In October, the Catholic Church is going to have an international meeting in Rome on the topic of synodality. This is an unfamiliar term to most Catholics, except those of Eastern traditions, whose bishops regularly come together in synods to govern the church. In the Western church, we call such meetings ‘councils,’ not synods. What then is synodality? My own unsophisticated understanding is that it is another word for ‘collegiality,’ a term that became popular after the Second Vatican Council in the early 1960s … But synodality goes beyond collegiality as a practical vision for the church.” By Thomas Reese, National Catholic Reporter
Cameroonian priest: African Synod delegates likely to resist pro-LGBTQ+ ideas
“A Cameroonian priest has suggested that African delegates to the Synod on Synodality assembly next month at the Vatican may be quite resistant to any efforts at being more inclusive of LGBTQ+ people. Writing in The Tablet last month, Fr. Ludovic Lado, S.J. reflected critically about how negatively the church in Africa has been receiving the synodal process, and specifically when it comes to questions of gender and sexuality.” By Robert Shine, NewWaysMinistry.org
Monday starter: UISG plans series of online conversations on synodality
“The first of a three-part series of conversations by the International Union of Superiors General, or UISG, on synodality and the upcoming October Synod Assembly will be held at 2 p.m. Central European time on Sept. 14. The conversation on ‘overview and opportunities’ will have a particular focus on the issue of communion, one of the topics being addressed by the upcoming synod.” By Chris Herlinger, Global Sisters Report, National Catholic Reporter
‘You can count on us.’ Synod organizers attempt to dismiss fears ahead of fall meeting
“As Catholic bishops and lay people prepare to gather in Rome this October to begin discussions on the main challenges facing the church, tensions over the topics — and the stakes — of the summit have grown. Papal allies and organizers of the October 4-29 event — the ‘Synod on Synodality: Communion, Participation and Mission’ — are trying to defuse the tension and reassure faithful that the church has nothing to fear from the discussions even if they will take place behind closed doors.” By Claire Giangravé, Religion News Service
Behind the synod opposition: far-right groups, political activists and Cardinal Burke
“Far-right Latin American groups with deep ties to traditionalist Catholics in the United States, and a long history of defying Vatican II reforms, are driving the opposition to next month’s closely watched Vatican summit on the future of the Catholic Church. Despite efforts to drum up resistance to Pope Francis’ Synod of Bishops, theologians have described their efforts as a ‘malignant force’ in the church, but with waning influence sustained by considerable financial backing.” By Christopher White, National Catholic Reporter
A modest proposal for synod punditry: first accusation of ‘heresy’ or ‘rigidity’ loses
“In just under a month’s time, the curtain will go up on the first of two keenly anticipated Synods of Bishops on Synodality, often styled as Pope Francis’s own miniature version of the Second Vatican Council. The event is destined to draw extensive media coverage, most of which likely will focus on a narrow canon of issues (women clergy, married priests, transgender rights, same-sex unions, and so on) and will play up tensions and conflicts … The concern is that in the media, the synod is going to come off as a sort of ‘brawl to settle it all,’ frustrating hopes for consensus.” By John L. Allen, Jr., Cruxnow.com
POPE FRANCIS
The Pope and the Americans: the U.S. episcopate is unparalleled in its resistance to Francis
“The Vatican and the U.S. Catholic Church have had a special relationship since the beginning of the political and religious experiment called ‘American Catholicism.’ But that relationship has become more complicated—and fraught—over the course of Francis’s papacy. This was demonstrated most recently in late August when remarks the pope made in Portugal during the World Youth Day gathering were published by the Jesuit-run and Vatican-vetted Civiltà Cattolica. ‘You have seen that in the United States the situation is not easy,’ he told a Jesuit who’d spent a sabbatical year in the U.S. ‘There is a very strong reactionary attitude. It is organized and shapes the way people belong, even emotionally. I would like to remind those people that indietrismo [being backward-looking] is useless and we need to understand that there is an appropriate evolution in the understanding of matters of faith and morals.’” By Massimo Faggioli, Commonweal
The Pope’s coming Vatican showdown with American conservatives
“Pope Francis’s ‘apostolic journey’ to Mongolia earlier this month had the unexpected consequence of bringing Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, a singular and controversial French Jesuit scientist who died nearly seventy years ago, into the news cycle. As it turns out, Teilhard’s theology of cosmic spiritual progress is a useful way to understand the challenges that Francis is currently facing, as he and the Church prepare for a global synod next month in Rome. There, three hundred and sixty-three clerical and lay leaders representing two rival conceptions of the Church will encounter one another for several weeks of behind-closed-doors dialogue—a process that is meant to be amicable but may lead to open conflict prior to a second session next October.” By Paul Elie, The New Yorker
BISHOPS
Bishop Flores: Synod hopes to help Catholic Church listen more to lay people
“October’s general assembly in Rome for the Catholic Church’s Synod of Bishops on synodality aims to address human reality — not abstractions — in order to more effectively share Jesus Christ and his Gospel with others, said Bishop Daniel E. Flores, a U.S. member of the global assembly’s preparatory commission. ‘If we do this right … in our own local churches we can develop a style of listening and decision-making that involves more hearing from people ‘in the trenches,’ so to speak,’ he said, such as hearing from ‘people who are struggling and who are dealing with families that are in crisis, or families that are struggling, that are split, because of controversial realities that are affecting their lives.’” By Maria Wiering, OSV News
WOMEN’S VOICES
Synodal discernment and women in the diaconate
“The People of God have asked. The Synod may answer. What about women deacons? The Instrumentum Laboris states, ‘Most of the Continental Assemblies and the syntheses of several Episcopal Conferences call for the question of women’s inclusion in the diaconate to be considered. Is it possible to envisage this, and in what way?’ Persons and pressure groups on both sides of the issue are making their opinions known. But opinion is not fact, and lobbying is not discernment.” By Phyllis Zagano, The Tablet
The synod could change whether women can be ordained as deacons or priests. These women are hopeful.
“Advocates for women’s ordination — to the diaconate, the priesthood or both — say they are hopeful about the upcoming synod in Rome, despite some high-profile opposition to the possibility of expanded leadership opportunities for women in the church. While they would like to see concrete proposals that increase women’s participation, those who spoke to NCR said they are also excited about the process of synodality itself and believe the Oct. 4-29 series of meetings will surface fruitful conversation and dialogue.” By Heidi Schlumpf, National Catholic Reporter
Australian Catholic women echo global call for Church reform
“Although Australian Catholic women are frustrated about discrimination, abuse and patriarchy in the Church, a study has exposed a surprising generational divide. Source: Most older women – particularly those aged over 55 – were dissatisfied with the lack of options for leadership, the gendered language in the liturgy, and the ban on remarriage after divorce – but many of those aged 40 and below supported the status quo. The authors of the study – which surveyed 17,200 women from 104 countries, including 1769 from Australia – say the generational difference could be due to life experience, the influence of migration, or the fact young people grew up in a more conservative Church.” By CathNews.com
Surprise split among Catholic women over sex, divorce and patriarchy
“Although Australian Catholic women are frustrated about discrimination, abuse and patriarchy in the church, a study has exposed a surprising generational divide: older women are hungry for reform, but younger devotees have little interest in relaxing rules on sex, contraception and the priesthood. Most older women – particularly those aged over 55 – were dissatisfied with the lack of options for leadership, the gendered language in the liturgy, and the ban on remarriage after divorce – but many of those aged 40 and below supported the status quo.” By Jordan Baker, The Sydney Morning Herald
LAITY & THE CHURCH
Developing the voice of the laity
“The synodal listening sessions opened the door to hearing the voice of the laity in a new way, as parishes across the world were asked to share their stories, hopes, and disappointments about living within the Catholic Church in order to guide where it goes next. Yet, according to the 2023 U.S. National Synthesis Report, dioceses entered the process with ‘a combination of excitement, confusion, and skepticism.’ In fact, ‘several dioceses noted some apprehension and even opposition as they began their synodal listening’—due, in part, to a feeling the process would be futile.” By Kayla August, Commonweal
FUTURE OF THE CHURCH
The Catholic diaspora: independent communities as the church’s ‘research lab’ (Part 1)
“Martha Ligas learned about the Community of St. Peter in Cleveland six months before she ventured into a worship service. She hesitated because she did not want to step over an invisible line that she had straddled for so long, one foot in and one foot out of the Roman Catholic Church. For this young but lifelong Catholic, a product of Catholic schooling from elementary through Loyola University Chicago and an advanced degree in ministry at Boston College, leaving the institutional structure was a difficult decision. ‘Catholic is just how I see the world,’ she said. ‘I knew nothing else than Catholic.’ The Community of St. Peter is an independent community, not affiliated with the Cleveland Diocese, that self-describes as Catholic, eucharistic, and ‘preserving and renewing a living tradition.’” By Tom Roberts, National Catholic Reporter
VOICES
Marginalized by Rome: no room in ‘enlarged tent’ for traditionalist Catholics
“We live in the midst of a ‘synodal renewal of the Church.’ This Church ‘listens’ and ‘accompanies’ God’s people, especially those on the ‘margins.’ Starting in October of 2023, representatives of the Catholic Church begin meeting in Rome for the First Session of the Synod of Synodality. Here, the Church takes the information gleaned from the various ‘listen sessions’ and begins to identify new ways to ‘accompany’ its people, again, especially those on the ‘margins.’ Well, not all marginalized. Some, like the infinitesimally small number of Traditionalists who prefer the Traditional Latin Mass (TLM), get a deaf ear from the Vatican and the Synod of Synodality.” By Dennis Knapp, Patheos
The Church’s costly failures in handling clergy abuse
“Its cover-up is causing many good people to lose faith and trust in the institutional Church. The shocking truth about clerical sexual abuse of minors and women religious was revealed in research by Missio Aachen released in 2020. The pressures on women religious never to complain are immense. They are told by priests that suffering in silence is a great virtue. Complaining of abuse invites retaliation and even expulsion from their congregation, the research reveals. These are secret crimes now being exposed around the world to the shame and embarrassment of the members of the institutional Church.” By Father Shay Cullen, UCANews.com
Opening the door for more victims to sue over sexual abuse
“Criminal sexual assault charges against Theodore McCarrick were dismissed last month after a Massachusetts judge ruled that the 93-year-old defrocked cardinal was incompetent to stand trial. But Mitchell Garabedian, the lawyer who represented the plaintiff in that case, is still pursuing civil lawsuits related to McCarrick filed in New York and New Jersey. He is able to do so because those states lifted statute of limitation restrictions on such cases for a set window of time … A bill filed by (Massachusetts) state Senator Joan Lovely of Salem would do that by entirely eliminating the statute of limitations on civil child sexual abuse cases. But to make that happen, lawmakers must overlook the objections of the Catholic Church, which opposes the measure.” By The Boston Globe Editorial Board
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
Maine AG defends law eliminating statute of limitations on child sex abuse claims
“Maine’s attorney general pushed back Monday (Sept. 18) against a constitutional challenge by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, saying a 2021 law that removed the statute of limitations for victims of childhood sexual abuse is not only constitutional but necessary to give victims time to ‘come to terms with the harm they have suffered.’ In filings to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court on Friday, Attorney General Aaron Frey defended the law against objections from the diocese, which has argued that the law is unconstitutional because it creates new liability and exposes defendants to ‘tens of millions of dollars’ in potential claims.” By Emily Allen, Portland Press Herald
California Assembly member Dawn Addis bill to address childhood sexual assault clears legislature heads to governor
“Legislation by Assemblymember Dawn Addis (D-Morro Bay) that will end California’s arbitrary civil statute of limitations for minors who have experienced sexual abuse was approved by the State Assembly on a bipartisan basis on Tuesday. The bill – Assembly Bill 452 – now goes to the desk of Governor Gavin Newsom for his consideration.” By Sierra Sun Times
CLERGY SEXUAL ABUSE
Alleged victims of influential Vatican artist left ‘speechless’ after new Rome diocese report
“Women who say they were abused by a once-prominent Jesuit artist said Sept. 19 they had been revictimized by his superiors, saying Pope Francis’ recent gestures and an apparent effort to exonerate him publicly showed church pledges of ‘zero tolerance’ were just a ‘publicity stunt.’ In an open letter published on an Italian survivor advocate site, the women lashed out at a declaration from the Vicariate of Rome, which Francis nominally heads as Bishop of Rome and recently tightened his grip over. The Vicariate reported Sept. 18 that it had uncovered ‘seriously anomalous procedures’ used in the Vatican investigation into Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik.” By Nicole Winfield, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter
Catholic clergy abuse survivors of color endure compounded trauma
“As Kevin Johnson recalled an encounter with an abusive priest, the image of George Floyd on the ground, a knee to his neck, came to mind. Decades earlier Johnson, too, gasped for air during moments of terror. He was 16 then, a Black teen daydreaming in a church-run community pool, when a white, Josephite-order priest who’d befriended him years prior allegedly molested him underwater. ‘He dragged me under, where there was no oxygen, wrestled and assaulted me,’ Johnson told NCR. ‘I would eventually be allowed to return to the surface and breathe. It was not a knee to the neck but a hand down the front of the trunks.’” By Kate Collins Scott, National Catholic Reporter
With Catholic Church foot-dragging comes the chance to evade justice
“After a judge declared him incompetent to stand trial on charges that he sexually assaulted a 16-year-old boy in Wellesley in the 1970s, the Zoom image of Theodore McCarrick showed an old man with a blank face, hunched over a table in a room at the assisted living facility in Missouri that is now his home. Yet when the remote session ended, one could still imagine the defrocked and disgraced cardinal smiling in triumph — just like any other aging gangster who beat the system. The charges against McCarrick, 93, were dismissed last week after two medical experts found he suffered from dementia. That makes him a living symbol of the cost of the decades-long coverup of clergy sexual abuse by the Roman Catholic Church.” By Joan Vennochi, The Boston Globe
CALIFORNIA
Long Beach-based priest charged with possessing more than 600 images of child pornography
“A Long Beach-based priest on Thursday was charged in Ventura County with possession of child pornography, prosecutors said. Rodolfo Martinez-Guevara, 38, was arrested Wednesday (Sept.13) in Long Beach, according to the Ventura County district attorney’s office. He is accused of possessing ‘over 600 images of child sexual abuse material, including images and videos of prepubescent minors under the age of 12.’ ‘As a priest, the defendant is in a position of tremendous power, authority and trust. The alleged crimes deeply violate that trust and involve a disturbing number of sexual images of young boys,’ District Attorney Erik Nasarenko said in a statement.” By Sid Garcia, ABC-TV7 News
LOUISIANA
Louisiana grand jury charges 91-year-old disgraced priest with sexual assault of teenage boy in 1975
“A state grand jury has charged a now-91-year-old disgraced priest with sexually assaulting a teenage boy in 1975, an extraordinary prosecution that could shed new light on what Roman Catholic Church leaders knew about a child sex abuse crisis that persisted for decades and claimed hundreds of victims. The priest, Lawrence Hecker, has been at the center of state and federal investigations of clergy sex abuse and a deepening scandal over why church leaders failed to report his admissions to law enforcement even as they permitted him to work around children until he quietly left the ministry in 2002.” By Jim Mustain, Associated Press
- Louisiana grand jury indicts retired priest on sex abuse charges, By Ruth Graham, The New York Times
- Why it took 48 years to charge a Catholic priest with rape, By David Hammer, WWL-Tv4 News
- Retired priest pleads not guilty to raping child in New Orleans in late 70s, By David Hammer, WWL-TV4 News, in The Guardian
New Orleans archbishop: local Catholic institutions must help with cost of clergy abuse claims
“Contradicting promises he made when his archdiocese declared bankruptcy in May 2020, New Orleans’s archbishop, Gregory Aymond, told the area’s Catholic churches, schools and other ministries that they will now have to share some of the costs of resolving hundreds of clergy abuse claims. Aymond’s notice came in a letter on Friday (Sept. 7), at the end of a particularly bad news week for his organization. One day earlier, a grand jury in New Orleans indicted the retired archdiocesan priest Lawrence Hecker on charges of aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated crime against nature and theft.” By Maya Yang and David Hammer, WWL-TV4 News, in The Guardian
MARYLAND
Catholics condemn Archdiocese of Baltimore for bankruptcy response to sexual abuse lawsuits
“It is with disgust, but not surprise, that I read about the Baltimore archdiocese’s plan to consider bankruptcy as a response to their history of child sexual abuse (‘Archbishop concedes the Baltimore archdiocese is considering bankruptcy; survivors say they’d oppose the move,’ Sept. 5). I would like to particularly respond to two points in Archbishop William Lori’s email to Baltimore archdiocese Catholics …” Reader Commentary in The Baltimore Sun
MASSACHUSETTS
Advocates condemn Mass. judge’s dismissal of Catholic sexual abuse case
“Last week, a Massachusetts judge dismissed the criminal charges of sexual abuse against Theodore McCarrick, a priest who was once one of the most powerful men in the Catholic Church in America. A former cardinal and bishop, McCarrick had been charged with sexually assaulting a teenager nearly 50 years ago. The victim alleges the abuse lasted for about two decades. McCarrick, now 93, reportedly suffers from dementia, and Judge Paul McCallum of the Dedham District Court deemed him incompetent to stand trial.” By Kana Ruhalter and Arun Rath, WGBH Boston National Public Radio
NEW YORK.
Recently ordained New York priest arrested over charges of sexual abuse of minor
“A Catholic priest ordained just over four years ago for the Diocese of Syracuse, New York, has been charged with several counts of child sexual abuse and removed from ministry. Fr. Nathan W. Brooks, 36, faces four misdemeanor counts of third-degree sex abuse, forcible touching and endangering the welfare of a child for incidents that took place between 2019-2021. According to a news release issued by the Cortland County Sheriff’s Office, the complaint was filed Aug. 22, and Brooks was arrested Aug. 31.” By Gina Christian, OSV News, in National Catholic Reporter
Despite substantiated claim, retired Buffalo priest won’t be charged for abusing minor in the ‘80s
“The Diocese of Buffalo’s Independent Review Board conducted an investigation into a retired priest and found the allegation he abused a minor is true. However, The Rev. Joseph Vatter will not be facing any criminal charges. Erie County District Attorney John Flynn says the alleged abuse happened back in the early 1980s. However, he says the statute of limitations in this incident was only three years, so no charges can be filed.” By Danielle Church, WGRZ-TV2 News
Maryvale district paid $8.4 million to settle child sex abuse claims from 1970s
“Cheektowaga Maryvale Union Free School District paid $8.4 million to settle five Child Victims Act lawsuits alleging sexual abuse of students in the 1970s by a music teacher. The district agreed to separate confidential settlements with the five plaintiffs over the past year, according to legal documents released to The Buffalo News in response to a Freedom of Information Law request. The largest settlement, for $3.5 million, went to a 60-year-old Lockport man identified in court papers as AB 504 Doe, who alleged being repeatedly molested by Stanley K. Bratt, a music teacher at Maryvale East Elementary School from 1968 to 1980.” By Jay Tokasz, The Buffalo News
AFRICA
Shun ‘culture of silence’: Kenyan Catholic nun on safeguarding in South Sudanese dioceses
“The people of God in South Sudan are being cautioned against the ‘culture of silence’ in the face of abuses against children and vulnerable adults. In an interview with ACI Africa, Sr. Jacinta Ondeng spoke about the training on safeguarding that she had been facilitating under the auspices of Solidarity with South Sudan (SSS), an initiative of the International Union of Superiors General (UISG) and the Union of Superiors General (USG), established in response to a request from the members of the Sudan Catholic Bishops’ Conference (SCBC).” By Kerbino Kuel Deng, AciAfrica.org
AUSTRALIA
The Australian portion of a Vatican-ordered investigation into former Broome Bishop Christopher Saunders has been completed
“Extracts from the 200-page report prepared by the Vatican’s investigators detail how they identified 67 Aboriginal boys and men who they said may have been subjected to delictual acts or grooming behaviors by the bishop. The Vatican investigation found Bishop Saunders was a ‘predator’ who sexually assaulted four Aboriginal men and boys and groomed dozens more. The investigation under the Vatican’s Vos Estis Lux Mundi papal inquiry powers also found Bishop Saunders spent thousands of dollars of Church money each month on cash payments, mobile phones, alcohol and cigarettes for ‘vulnerable’ Aboriginal men and boys.” By Australian Catholic Bishops Conference
- WA police want Vatican report on Bishop Saunders, By CathNews.com
Roman Catholic Archbishop Tim Costelloe fronts WA parliamentary inquiry into institutional child sexual abuse
“The difficulties survivors of child sexual abuse face when attempting to pursue justice is a reality of complexities of the church, the Catholic Archbishop of Perth says. Timothy Costelloe made the statements while testifying before the Community Development and Justice Standing Committee’s inquiry into the options available to survivors of institutional child sexual abuse in Western Australia who are seeking justice.” By Briana Shepherd and Keane Bourke, ABC News Australia
CANADA
Deadline looming for abuse survivors to apply for compensation from N.L. archdiocese
“Survivors of abuse at the hands of Mount Cashel’s Christian Brothers and Roman Catholic clergy in the St. John’s Archdiocese have until the end of the month to apply for compensation. And that court-imposed deadline has prompted an influx of new claimants to reach out to lawyers like Geoff Budden, who has spent the last three decades pursuing justice for abuse victims. Budden said at least two dozen people have come forward in recent months; people who say they’ve lived with trauma for decades, and never told their story — until now.” By Terry Roberts, CBC Canada
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This activist is bringing the message of ‘zero tolerance’ for clergy abuse to the doorstep of the Vatican
“For Gemma Hickey, their trip to Italy this week is a mission to demand that Pope Francis sign a proposed zero tolerance law for clergy abuse. ‘Shuffling predator priests around from place to place is unacceptable,’ said Hickey, who founded the Pathways Foundation that addresses the gaps in service for individuals who have experienced abuse within religious institutions. Hickey, along with 10 other clergy abuse survivors and allies, is engaging in a pilgrimage to Rome. They will carry an eight-foot wooden cross and walk 120 kilometres from Montefiascone to Italy’s capital, finishing in St. Peter’s Square during the Pope’s noon blessing on Sept.27.” By William Ping, CBC News Canada
B.C man alleges sex abuse by military priest
“A Surrey man has filed a lawsuit against the federal Catholic military authorities and the government and the Roman Catholic Church in Calgary, alleging sexual abuse by a priest of officer rank. ‘The plaintiff is now 73 years old,’ said the B.C. Supreme Court notice of civil claim filed Sept. 7 by lawyer Sandra Kovacs on behalf of her client, known only as R.C. in the claim.” By Jeremy Hainsworth, Alaska Highway News
CHILE
In Chile, justice eludes victims of Catholic clergy sex abuse years after the crisis exploded
“Soon after she learned what happened, Helmut Kramer’s mother grabbed a pair of scissors and cut the priest out of photographs from her son’s baptism. ‘She kept the photos after that,’ said Kramer, who was sexually abused at age 12 in a Jesuit school in Antofagasta, a city in northern Chile. ‘My mom is still Catholic, but she never attended Mass again. She says that she will never set foot in a church, and she does not trust the pope or any priest,’ the 53-year-old Chilean said.” By María Teresa Hernández, Associated Press, on ABCNews.go.com
Over 30 women with ties to Legion of Christ support claim by alleged victim of gang rape in Chile
“A group of 32 former Consecrated Women of Regnum Christi, lay women who dedicate their lives fully to Christ through their membership in an international Catholic federation that also includes the Legion of Christ, published an open letter on September 5 supporting a Chilean women who alleges being gang-raped by Legion of Christ priests in Santiago (Chile) between 2008 and 2010. ‘We experienced an environment where abuse of power and conscience was prevalent, and where the described sexual assaults in the lawsuit could have taken place,’ stated the signatories of the civil lawsuit filed last June.” By Antonia Laborde, El Pais International
GERMANY
Catholic Church investigates claims against late cardinal
“The German Dioceses of Essen and Paderborn have separately announced an investigation into sexual abuse allegations brought against Cardinal Franz Hengsbach (1910-1991) in 2011 and 2022. Hengsbach is accused of having sexually assaulted three individuals, at least two of whom were young women, one a minor, throughout his career. The first of these alleges that he abused a 16-year-old girl in 1954 while he was an auxiliary bishop in the city of Paderborn. The alleged victim originally came forth with the accusations in 2011, 10 years after Hengsbach’s death.” By Deuschte Welle
GREAT BRITAIN, SCOTLAND AND WALES
Personal injury sheriff allows proof in case detailing sexual abuse in Catholic care home in 1973
“Pursuer GD sought solatium damages for abuse she said occurred over three weeks in the summer of 1973, when she was aged 11 … Together with her three sisters and two brothers, the pursuer was a resident at the defender’s care home, Nazareth House, for three weeks in July and August of 1973. She averred that, during this time, she was sexually abused by a male priest in the shower, with the knowledge of the Sisters that looked after their group. It was further averred that the Sisters, particularly a Sister Y, had physically assaulted her, often for seemingly no reason.” By Mitchell Skilling, Scottish Legal News
IRELAND & NORTHERN IRELAND
Kenneally abuse one of most serious cases of pedophilia in Ireland
“The garda in charge of investigations into convicted child abuser Bill Kenneally has agreed with the chair of an inquiry into the abuse that it was one of the most serious cases of pedophilia discovered in Ireland. Chair Mr. Justice Michael White, a retired High Court judge, said the children who came into contact with Kenneally were at risk and defenseless.” By Orla O’Donnell, RTE.ie
PHILIPPINES
Vatican dismisses Filipino priest for alleged child abuse
“Pope Francis has dismissed Filipino Catholic priest Pio Cultura Aclon for sexual abuse involving minors, announced the Diocese of Borongan where the priest is based. Aclon is ‘no longer a cleric and cannot exercise priestly ministry in the Church,’ Borongan diocese said in a circular on Sept. 17. ‘The laicization process of the priest underwent due process, and Aclon was given the opportunity to defend himself against the allegations of his alleged victims,’ diocesan chancellor Father James B. Abella told UCA News.” By UCSNews.com
SWITZERLAND
Swiss abbot says he is target in sexual abuse investigation
“A high-ranking Catholic cleric indicated on Wednesday (Sept. 13) that he was being investigated by the Conference of Swiss Bishops in connection with allegations of sexual abuse and their cover-up. Jean Scarcella has withdrawn from his role as father-abbot of Saint-Maurice until the end of the investigation. ‘The investigation also concerns an accusation that was made against me,’ Scarcella wrote in a press release. He indicated that he took the decision to suspend his office in agreement with the Abbey Council and the President of the Conference of Swiss Bishops (CES) to guarantee the independence of the investigation.” By SwissInfo.ch
THAILAND
French missionary priests suspected of child sexual assault in Thailand
“According to France 24 news agency, two members of the Paris-based Foreign Mission Society of Paris, a part of the Catholic Church’s mission, were involved in sexual abuse against former students at a boarding school in Thailand. One of these two missionaries has passed away, and the other, whose name is not mentioned in the report, continues to serve within the Foreign Mission Society of Paris. This report marks the fourth case of sexual abuse by Christian missionaries in the past two months, raising concerns about the safety of children in religious institutions.” By Fidel Rahmati, The Khaama Press News Agency
- Paris’ Catholic Foreign Missions Society under fire over alleged sexual abuse, By Karina Chabour and Julie Dungelhoff, Fance 24
- “A Deafening Silence,” By France 24
The synod could change whether women can be ordained as deacons or priests. These women are hopeful / National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Pope Francis, Synod on Synodality, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful, Women Deacons, Women in Catholic Church, Women in the Church on September 19, 2023
Discerning Deacons co-directors Ellie Hidalgo and Casey Stanton told NCR they would like to see proposals about women’s participation emerge from the October meetings, especially since the topic surfaced in listening sessions around the world.
By Heidi Schlumpf, National Catholic Reporter
“Advocates for women’s ordination — to the diaconate, the priesthood or both — say they are hopeful about the upcoming synod in Rome, despite some high-profile opposition to the possibility of expanded leadership opportunities for women in the church.”Advocates for women’s ordination — to the diaconate, the priesthood or both — say they are hopeful about the upcoming synod in Rome, despite some high-profile opposition to the possibility of expanded leadership opportunities for women in the church.
While they would like to see concrete proposals that increase women’s participation, those who spoke to NCR said they are also excited about the process of synodality itself and believe the Oct. 4-29 series of meetings will surface fruitful conversation and dialogue.
“My hope is in the commitment of all of us to be a synodal people,” said JoAnn Melina Lopez, director of faith formation at St. Basil Parish in Toronto, who will travel to Rome for a Sept. 30 ecumenical prayer vigil ahead of the synod. She will be part of a 17-member delegation of young adults affiliated with Discerning Deacons, a group that advocates for the restoration of women to the diaconate in the Catholic Church.
Documents summarizing two years of listening sessions in advance of the October series of meetings have included previously taboo topics, including women’s ordination, LGBTQ relationships, married priests and clergy sex abuse. In addition, for the first time in history, lay men and women will be included as full voting members of the synod.
By Heidi Schlumpf, National Catholic Reporter — Read more …
Editorial: Pope Francis, it’s time to release the women deacons report / National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Pope Francis, Voice of the Faithful, Women Deacons, Women in Catholic Church, Women in the Church on September 18, 2023
The courageous young adults who took part in the 2018 Synod of Bishops on young people pushed the 267 voting bishops at that assembly to say together that it was a “duty of justice” for the church to better include women in its all-male decision-making structures.
By National Catholic Reporter Editorial Staff
“By all accounts, Pope Francis has had an eventful papacy.
“This first pope from the Americas has breathed new life into the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, refashioned the Vatican’s staid bureaucracy, and pushed the Catholic Church to focus on the needs of the environment and global peripheries.
“One especially interesting turn: Only 22 years after Pope John Paul II claimed the church had “no authority whatsoever” to ordain women as priests, Francis in 2016 created a first-of-its-kind papal commission to study the history of the ordination of women as Catholic deacons. Even more, in 2020, after that commission had wrapped up its work, the pope created another.
“For an institution known for thinking in terms of millennia, this is something akin to lightspeed. And Francis deserves special applause for listening to the voices of Catholic sisters, long neglected, or, worse, mistreated by the Vatican, who bravely asked him to create the first commission.
“What’s particularly frustrating, then, is the near-complete lack of transparency about the work of the commissions.”
By National Catholic Reporter Editorial Staff — Read more …
Is synodality just another word for collegiality? / National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Future of the Church, Pope Francis, Synod of Bishops, Synod on Synodality, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on September 14, 2023
But synodality goes beyond collegiality as a practical vision for the church. The instrumentum laboris (“working paper”) prepared for the synod delegates describes synodality not as a theory but as “a readiness to enter into a dynamic of constructive, respectful and prayerful speaking, listening and dialogue.”
By Thomas Reese, National Catholic Reporter
“In October, the Catholic Church is going to have an international meeting in Rome on the topic of synodality. This is an unfamiliar term to most Catholics, except those of Eastern traditions, whose bishops regularly come together in synods to govern the church. In the Western church, we call such meetings ‘councils,’ not synods.
“What then is synodality?
“My own unsophisticated understanding is that it is another word for “collegiality,” a term that became popular after the Second Vatican Council in the early 1960s.
“At the council, bishops became conscious of their collegial responsibility with the pope for the governance of the church. It was wrong, they realized, to view the church as an absolute monarchy with bishops as vassals of the pope. The college of bishops, as successors of the apostles, has an important role to play.
“After the council, the term “collegial” became an adjective describing a new style of church leadership that envisioned consulting the laity on important issues facing the church. It was applied to not only bishops and their conferences, but dioceses and parishes.
“This widespread use of collegiality soon came under attack from the Vatican, with then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) leading the charge. He insisted that collegiality in the strict sense applied only to the college of bishops under the pope. He made distinctions between ‘affective’ and ‘effective’ collegiality — the former saw bishops’ meetings as little more than mutual support; the latter considered them authoritative.”
By Thomas Reese, National Catholic Reporter — Read more …
Sweeping study finds 1,000 cases of sexual abuse in Swiss Catholic Church since mid-20th century / Associated Press in National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on September 13, 2023
‘The situations identified surely amount to only the tip of the iceberg,’ said historians Monika Dommann and Marietta Meier in a statement.
By Jamey Keaten, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter
“A sweeping, year-long study of sex abuse by Catholic priests and others in Switzerland published Sept. 12 has turned up more than 1,000 cases since the mid-20th century, as the Swiss church becomes the latest in Europe to reckon with the abuse scandal.”A sweeping, year-long study of sex abuse by Catholic priests and others in Switzerland published Sept. 12 has turned up more than 1,000 cases since the mid-20th century, as the Swiss church becomes the latest in Europe to reckon with the abuse scandal.
“With few exceptions, those accused of wrongdoing were all male. Nearly three-fourths of the documents examined showed the sexual abuse involved minors.
“The report, commissioned by the Swiss Conference of Bishops and led by two University of Zurich historians, offers a deep look at sexual abuse and harassment that has confounded the Catholic Church across the globe in recent decades — upending the lives of many victims and their families, and tarnishing the image of the institution.
“The authors said in a statement that they identified 1,002 “situations of sexual abuse,” including accusations against 510 people. The abuse, they wrote, affected 921 people.
“‘The situations identified surely amount to only the tip of the iceberg,’ said the historians Monika Dommann and Marietta Meier in a statement.
“Among other findings, which were admittedly not exhaustive, over half — 56% — of the cases of sexual abuse involved men or boys. Some 39% of victims were women or girls, while sourcing did not allow for the remaining 5% percent to be identified by gender, according to the study.”
By Jamey Keaten, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter — Read more …
Vatican to investigate six Swiss Catholic bishops for possibly mishandling abuse claims / Associated Press in National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Voice of the Faithful on September 11, 2023
According to the (Swiss) bishops’ conference, the Vatican received a letter with the allegations in May and subsequently appointed Swiss Bishop Joseph Bonnemain to head a preliminary investigation in June. Bonnemain has a history of investigating sexual assaults around the church, the statement said.
By Jamey Keaten and Kirsten Grieshaber, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter
“The Vatican has ordered an investigation into high-ranking Catholic clerics in Switzerland in connection with sexual abuse, the Swiss Bishops’ Conference said on Sept. 10.
“The group said in a statement that there were allegations against several active and retired bishops as well as other clergy for their handling of abuse cases.
“Specifically, they are accused of covering up abuse cases. There are also accusations that some committed sexual assaults themselves in the past.
“‘There are accusations against some of them of having committed sexual assaults themselves in the past,’ it said.
“According to the bishops’ conference, the Vatican received a letter with the allegations in May and subsequently appointed Swiss Bishop Joseph Bonnemain to head a preliminary investigation in June.
“Bonnemain has a history of investigating sexual assaults around the church, the statement said.
“Fr. Nicolas Betticher, a priest at the Bruder Klaus church in the Swiss capital Bern, confirmed to The Associated Press that he had written the letter, which first came to light earlier Sept. 10 in report by the newspaper Blick.”
By Jamey Keaten and Kirsten Brieshaber, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter — Read more …
Voice of the Faithful Focus News Roundup, Sept. 8, 2023
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Focus news roundup, Voice of the Faithful, VOTF Focus News Roundup on September 7, 2023

Sept. 8, 2023
TOP STORIES
Pope Francis blasts reactionary American Catholics who oppose church reform
“Pope Francis blasted what he described as groups of ‘very strong, reactionary’ American Catholics, warning against becoming ‘backwardists’ who oppose change in the Catholic Church. ‘The situation in the United States is not easy: There is a very strong, reactionary attitude. It is organized and shapes the way people belong, even emotionally,’ said the pope. ‘I want to remind these people that backwardism is useless, and it is necessary to understand that there is a correct evolution in the understanding of questions of faith and morals.’” By Christopher White, National Catholic Reporter
- Pope Francis speaks out against his critics in he U.S. Catholic Church, By Gerard O’Connell, America: The Jesuit Review
- Pope Francis laments when ‘ideology replaces faith’ in segment of U.S. Catholics, By Hannah Brockhaus, Catholic News Agency
- Pope says a strong U.S. faction offers a backward, narrow view of the Church, By Jason Horowitz and Ruth Graham, The New York Times
How dark money is influencing the Catholic Church
Some conservative Catholics like to disparage social changes. They say these changes are the work of worldly and sinful forces antithetical to the church’s values … The irony is that elite donors (and the wealth they control) are enabling contemporary conservative causes in the United States. Mary Jo McConahay’s Playing God: American Catholic Bishops and the Far-Right (Melville House, 2023) examines the growing entanglement of the U.S. Catholic hierarchy with right-wing organizations that seek to weaken or overturn democratic institutions in the name of religious liberty. They want to remake the country into a nation of laissez-faire capitalism and conservative cultural ideals.” By Jessica Pegis, U.S. Catholic
Judge dismisses criminal abuse charges against former cardinal Theodore McCarrick
“The Massachusetts sex abuse case against former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick fell apart Wednesday (Aug. 30) as all criminal charges were dismissed due to the disgraced former cleric being deemed no longer mentally competent. Dedham District Court Judge Michael Pomarole ruled McCarrick is unable to stand trial after receiving a medical report from prosecutors which agreed with the earlier defense report that McCarrick, 93, is suffering from dementia.” By Damien Fisher, OASV News.com
- Former cardinal McCarrick found unfit for trial over sexual abuse, By Ruth Graham, The New York Times
- Former cardinal McCarrick found not competent to stand trial for sex abuse, By Jason DeRose, National Public Radio
Pope Francis tamps down hopes for Synod of Bishops livestream: ‘Not a television program’
“Pope Francis on Sept. 4 said that next month’s hotly anticipated Synod of Bishops will be open to the Holy Spirit — but not so much the press or the public. ‘This is not a television program where we can talk about everything,’ said the pope. Francis’ remarks came during an inflight press conference back to Rome after a four-day stay in Mongolia, and exactly four weeks before he is set to officially open the high-stakes, monthlong Vatican meeting where a number of controversial issues facing the Catholic Church in the modern world will be discussed by Catholic bishops and lay representatives.” By Christopher White, National Catholic Reporter
- Pope Francis: Synod proceedings will be secret to avoid ideology and gossip, By Gerard O’Connell, America: The Jesuit Review
TRANSPARENCY & ACCOUNTABILITY
With Catholic Church foot-dragging comes chance to evade justice
“After a judge declared him incompetent to stand trial on charges that he sexually assaulted a 16-year-old boy in Wellesley in the 1970s, the Zoom image of Theodore McCarrick showed an old man with a blank face, hunched over a table in a room at the assisted living facility in Missouri that is now his home. Yet when the remote session ended, one could still imagine the defrocked and disgraced cardinal smiling in triumph — just like any other aging gangster who beat the system. The charges against McCarrick, 93, were dismissed last week after two medical experts found he suffered from dementia. That makes him a living symbol of the cost of the decades-long coverup of clergy sexual abuse by the Roman Catholic Church.” By Joan Vennochi, The Boston Globe
FOR A SYNODAL CHURCH: COMMUNION, PARTICIPATION AND MISSION
The synod’s priorities are communion, participation, mission – not who can be priests
“According to the media, the most important issues facing the Synod on Synodality are the possibility of married priests, women deacons and the blessing of gay couples. The first session of the synod will take place in Rome this October, with a second session in October 2024. I personally hope the synod deals with these issues, but making these topics the principal focus of the synod would be a big mistake. They certainly are not central in the mind of Pope Francis, nor are they central to the ‘Instrumentum laboris,’ or working paper, that will guide the initial meetings of the synod.” By Thomas Reese, Religion News Service
With this synod, Pope Francis draws on decades of Catholic experimentation in Latin America
“As the first gathering of Pope Francis’ highly anticipated Synod of Bishops is set to begin on Oct. 4, Latin American and U.S. Latino theologians are recognizing influences from the pope’s Latin American roots in the theology and methodology behind this first-of-its-kind two-part synod process. With this synod gathering, Francis has introduced groundbreaking changes to the synod format, most notably adding laypeople, including women, as full voting members of the assembly for the first.” By Aleja Hertzler-McCain, National Catholic Reporter
Synod will have no place for ideology: Pope
“Pope Francis yesterday outlined his vision for the upcoming synodal assembly in October, which he said should be a prayerful exercise in dialogue free from ideology, not full of ‘political chatter’ like a television talk show. Pope Francis was peppered with multiple questions about the Synod on Synodality from journalists travelling with him on the 10-hour flight from Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, to Rome yesterday (Sept. 4). ‘In the Synod, there is no place for ideology,’ Pope Francis told journalists on the chartered ITA Airways plane.” By Catholic News Agency on CathNews.com
Archbishop urging collaboration between priests and faithful as he prepares for Synod in Rome
“As he prepares to travel to Rome for the Synod of Bishops in October, Archbishop J. Michael Miller has been speaking about the ‘co-responsibility’ pastors and laity have for the Church. At a Mass in July celebrating the 30th anniversary of St. James Parish in Abbotsford, the Archbishop said the synodal process emphasizes the importance of pastors working closely with their parishioners, ‘valuing them as co-responsible’ for the mission of the parish. ‘A renewed vitality throughout the whole Church is required, one that favors the rediscovery of the baptized as a disciple of Jesus Christ and a missionary of the Gospel,’ said the archbishop.” By The B.C. Catholic
CARDINALS
Bishop Accountability group: dismissal of charges against McCarrick ‘hugely disappointing’
“A group known as BishopAccountability.org, which tracks sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, condemned a Massachusetts district judge’s Wednesday (Aug. 30) decision to dismiss criminal charges against former cardinal Theodore McCarrick. The criminal charges involving the sexual assault and abuse of a minor were dismissed Wednesday after a judge ruled McCarrick, 93, was not mentally competent to stand trial. Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of the bishops accountability group, told CNA that ‘the dismissal of the case against McCarrick is hugely disappointing’ and that ‘our hearts go out to the courageous victim who brought this case and to all of McCarrick’s victims.’” By Peter Pinedo, Catholic News Agency, in National Catholic Register
WOMEN RELIGIOUS
Editorial: Bishop Olson’s actions against the Carmelite sisters are an abusive power play
“The scandal that has unfolded in recent months involving Bishop Michael Olson of Fort Worth, Texas, and the Discalced Carmelite nuns of the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity in Arlington, Texas, has much more behind it than only the purported transgressions by Mother Teresa Agnes Gerlach or the sisters in the 10-member community who remain loyal to her. Instead, the tawdry soap opera drama orchestrated by Olson has everything to do with his heavy-handedness and his cruel treatment of a congregation of women religious whose real transgression, it appears, is to oppose him and his supposed authority.” By National Catholic Reporter Editorial Staff
WOMEN’S VOICES
St. Phoebe and women’s voices
“It is hard to imagine how different Christianity would have been without all the contributions women gave to the faith, especially when their contributions were respected and encouraged by various apostles like St. Paul. Yes, Jesus’ disciples showed confusion and misunderstanding concerning his relationship with women during his earthly ministry, but they seemed to have learned from it, and promoted the role of women in the church after Pentecost. This was one of the things which made Christianity quite different, as it was willing to challenge social status, and to affirm many of those who had otherwise been marginalized, like women; this is what it seems to have lost over time. By Henry Karlson, Patheos.com
Learning from the women of St. Paul
“At the Synod in October, there will be 70 non-bishop members with the right to vote, half of whom will be women. In any other context, this tiny gesture would be seen as tokenism. However, within the Church, it is revolutionary and (probably) irreversible. It does raise the question of the role of women within the institutional Church, already firmly on the Synod agenda. Once, we were forbidden to talk about the ordination of women and now we are obliged! Working as a biblical scholar, perhaps the following observations may shed a little light.” By Kieran O’Mahony, The Synodal Times
I am a woman who serves like a deacon. Will I ever share St. Phoebe’s title?
“As a young girl growing up in Haiti, I remember feeling like I lived in a paradise as I rested easy in my mother’s lap. She and our community made me feel safe, loved and seen. It was not hard for me to come to know God as a loving mother who cares for all his children. I sensed that God knew me and called me by name to go out and proclaim his word. By the age of 8, I was serving as a lector in our parish, and by the age of 18 was leading retreats for the Legion of Mary and speaking to groups of all ages. I felt welcomed to share who I was and bring forth my gifts.” By Marie Philomène Péan, National Catholic Reporter
LAITY & THE CHURCH
Developing the voice of the laity: moving the synodal concept from ideal to reality
“The synodal listening sessions opened the door to hearing the voice of the laity in a new way, as parishes across the world were asked to share their stories, hopes, and disappointments about living within the Catholic Church in order to guide where it goes next. Yet, according to the 2023 U.S. National Synthesis Report, dioceses entered the process with ‘a combination of excitement, confusion, and skepticism.’ In fact, ‘several dioceses noted some apprehension and even opposition as they began their synodal listening’—due, in part, to a feeling the process would be futile. This sense of futility reflects a Church that is communal in nature but not yet communal in participation.” By Kayla August, Commonweal
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
Lawmakers eye renewing Child Victims Act lookback window
“Lawmakers say they will explore reopening a lookback window for survivors of childhood sexual assault to file civil suits when they return to Albany next session. Friday’s funeral services for Albany Bishop Emeritus Howard Hubbard, who admitted to covering up sex abuse allegations within the diocese and faced multiple allegations himself, spurred strong emotions from survivors and conversation about future legislative action. Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal sponsored both the Child Victims and Adult Survivors acts that waived the statute of limitations to allow survivors of sexual assault to file lawsuits against their abusers.” By Kate Lisa, SpectrumLocalNews.com
CALIFORNIA
Sexual abuse survivor gfroup says Oakland Diocese filing for bankruptcy should sell real estate to pay victims
“Two weeks after the San Francisco Archdiocese of the Roman Catholic Church filed for bankruptcy amid hundreds of outstanding lawsuits from victims of sexual abuse, an organization representing survivors is demanding the Diocese of Oakland withdraw its Chapter 11 protections and pay victims with the proceeds. ‘According to our research, the Diocese of Oakland owns a real estate portfolio valued at about $3.3 billion,’ the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) wrote in an official statement shared with National Review on Tuesday (Sept. 5). ‘Of those properties, it appears to us that about $600 million are held in ‘non-core’ real estate. That is, those particular properties do not seem to be central to the Diocese’s mission.’ By Ari Blaff, National Review
San Francisco Catholic diocese bankruptcy filing leaves clergy abuse survivors in limbo
“Faced with more than 500 lawsuits stemming from clergy sexual abuse, the San Francisco Catholic diocese last week said it had no choice but to seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone wrote, ‘the bankruptcy process is the best way to provide a compassionate and equitable solution’ for abuse survivors. But victims say the bankruptcy is just a ploy to deprive them of justice and their day in court … Across the country, more than 30 dioceses have sought bankruptcy protection.” By Alexis Madrigal, KQED National Public Radio
COLORADO
Lawsuit against former Aspen priest dismissed
“A civil trial scheduled in December for a priest accused of molesting an altar boy at St. Mary Catholic Church in Aspen was canceled last month after parties agreed to dismiss the case, according to court records. Father Michael O’Brien was set to stand a five-day jury trial in Denver County District Court beginning Dec. 4. District Court Judge David Goldberg approved the dismissal of the lawsuit on July 14. O’Brien, who was ordained in 2000, was the pastor at St. Mary from 2002-11.” By Rick Carroll, Aspen Daily News
LOUISIANA
Judge denies unsealing testimony of former priest who admitted to sexual abuse
“A federal judge on Monday (Aug. 28) denied a motion to unseal sworn testimony given by a retired Catholic priest who recently admitted on camera to WWL-TV that he sexually abused several teens in the 1960s and 1970s. U.S. District Judge Jane Triche Milazzo ruled that a deposition given in 2020 by Father Lawrence Hecker should remain under seal. She said attorneys did not follow the proper procedure to get the documents unsealed.” By David Hammer, WWL-TV4 News
- Judge denies unsealing testimony of former priest who admitted to sexual abuse, By David Hammer, WWL-TV4 News
MICHIGAN
Statement regarding conviction of Timothy Crowley
“The Diocese of Lansing today (Aug. 24) welcomed the conviction of former priest, Timothy Crowley, for sexual crimes against a minor. 74-year-old Crowley pleaded guilty to two counts of Second Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct at Washtenaw County Circuit Court, Wednesday, August 22. ‘Crowley’s crimes were a gross betrayal of the trust placed in him by the Catholic community within the Diocese of Lansing and, especially, of those families and young people entrusted to his pastoral care,’ said David Kerr, Director of Communications for the Diocese of Lansing, August 23.” By Diocese of Lansing
MINNESOTA
Clergy sex abuse lawsuit connected to deceased Rochester priest dismissed by federal judge
“A federal lawsuit accusing the Vatican of covering up clergy sex abuse was dismissed this week in U.S. District Court. The suit, filed in 2019, was filed on behalf of five men who claim they were victims of sexual abuse by priests within the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles between 1979 and 1984. One of the accusers alleged Thomas Adamson abused him in 1981 while Adamson was a priest in Apple Valley. In a 2014 deposition for a separate sex abuse lawsuit, Adamson admitted sexually abusing ten boys during his time in the priesthood between the 1960s and 1980s. He worked at churches and Catholic schools across Southeastern Minnesota and the Twin Cities including Rochester, Winona, Harmony, Caledonia, and Albert Lea.” By James Wilcon, KAAL-TV6 News
Lourdes High School, Rochester Catholic Schools settle lawsuit over sex abuse in the 1970s
“A partial settlement has been reached in a lawsuit claiming sex abuse at Lourdes High School in the 1970s. A plaintiff, identified only as Doe 222, claims Father Joseph Cashman had unpermitted sexual contact with him while Doe 222 attended Lourdes High School from 1972 to 1974. The sexual contact allegedly happened when the plaintiff was between 14 and 16 years old. Doe 222 filed a lawsuit against Lourdes High School, Rochester Catholic Schools, and the Diocese of Winona, claiming they should have known Cashman was a danger to children and did not provide a reasonable level of safety and care.” By Mike Bunge, KIMT-TV3 News
NEW JERSEY
Judge rejects Camden Diocese’s $87.5M settlement to abuse survivors
“A federal judge rejected the Camden Diocese’s $87.5 million settlement to sexual-abuse survivors Tuesday (Sept. 5), saying it would leave insurance companies on the hook for invalid claims and inflated attorneys’ fees. The Catholic Diocese of Camden, bankrupted by sexual-abuse lawsuits, agreed last year to compensate more than 360 survivors as it navigates Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The plan called for some insurers to pay $30 million into a trust covering claims and expenses.” By Josh Bakan, Patch.com
NEW MEXICO
Church and school officials ignored signs of sexual abuse by health aide
“A new lawsuit alleges local public school, private school and Catholic Church officials turned a blind eye for years to predatory behavior by former school health aide Robert Apodaca, who is accused in several child sex crimes cases and has pleaded guilty to three counts of molestation in one of them. The 70-page complaint filed Tuesday in state District Court seeks an unspecified amount of damages from multiple defendants, including Santa Fe Public Schools, the Archdiocese of Santa Fe and Santo Niño Regional Catholic School.” By Phaedra Haywood, Santa Fe New Mexican
NEW YORK.
Diocese of Buffalo announces substantiated claim of abuse
“As a result of an investigation conducted through the Independent Review Board, Bishop Michael W. Fisher has accepted the board’s recommendation and has determined that a claim made against retired priest Father Joseph Vatter that he had abused a minor female has been substantiated. Bishop Fisher had placed Father Vatter on administrative leave in February 2023. As a result of the substantiated claim, Father Vatter will continue to be removed from ministry and be listed on Priests with Substantiated Claims of Abuse on the diocesan website. Prior to being placed on leave, Father Vatter had occasionally celebrated Masses at various churches within the Diocese of Buffalo.” By WhyCatholic.org
Cortland priest arrested for child sex abuse
“A priest ordained by the Catholic Diocese of Syracuse has been arrested for sexual abuse allegations. On August 31, the Cortland County Sheriff’s Office announced the arrest of Reverend Nathan Brooks, 36, of Lafayette. Brooks allegedly subjected one individual to inappropriate sexual contact on multiple occasions from 2019 to 2021 in the Town of Homer and in the City of Cortland. Brooks was charged with endangering the welfare of a child, forcible touching, and sexual abuse in the third degree. According to a news release from the Diocese, Brooks has been suspended from all priestly ministry at this time. The investigation is ongoing.” By Samantha Rich, BinghamtonHomepage.com
- Syracuse Catholic Diocese priest charged with forcibly touching minor over several years, By Fernando Alba, Syracuse.com
OHIO
Activists: Ohio needs to do more to stop child sexual abuse
“An abuse survivor and victim advocate spoke about her mission to help those who were sexually abused by officials of the Roman Catholic Church. Claudia Vercellotti, an activist with Toledo’s chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, appeared on ‘Between The Lines’ on Friday (Sept. 1). The nearly 45-minute interview is available on the Sandusky Register’s YouTube channel. She spoke about the group’s attempts to have Ohio hold child predators within the Church accountable for their abuses, and to break the cycle of abuse.” By Sandusky Register
OKLAHOMA
Judge dismisses sex abuse lawsuit against Mount St. Mary Catholic High School
“A federal judge has dismissed an explosive lawsuit filed by several young women who accused a prominent private high school in Oklahoma City of fostering a culture of sexual abuse and harassment. In Oklahoma City federal court, U.S. District Judge David L. Russell threw out the case against Mount St. Mary High School, which was brought by more than a dozen Jane Does who claimed breach of contract, negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress, public nuisance and violations of Title IX.” By Josh Dulaney, the Oklahoman, on YahooNews.com
AUSTRALIA
Bishops’ conference and CRA publish royal commission update
“The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference and Catholic Religious Australia have published a report updating the Church’s progress in implementing the relevant recommendations of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. On the five-year anniversary of the initial response, the report is part of the Church’s ongoing efforts to be publicly accountable for how it is working to create, maintain and enhance safe environments for children and all people who are at risk.” By CathNews.com
Catholic Church loses bid to have abuse lawsuit thrown out in Australia
“The Catholic Church on Friday suffered a loss in an Australian appeals court after a panel of judges said an abuse case brought by the father of an alleged victim of Cardinal George Pell could proceed. The cardinal allegedly abused the boy in the 1990s; his father brought suit against the Catholic Church and Pell in 2022, shortly before Pell’s death in January of this year. The alleged victim himself died of a heroin overdose in 2014.” By Daniel Payne, Catholic News Agency
- Church loses bid to restrict family’s lawsuit, By CathNews.com
CANADA
Decades after reporting Rivoire, whistleblower learns she wasn’t the only one
“One of the first people to inform the Roman Catholic Church of allegations of sexual abuse by Rev. Johannes Rivoire has spoken to a safeguarding commission looking into the church’s handling of those complaints. Karen Bergman spoke to retired Quebec Superior Court judge André Denis in Winnipeg on Aug. 24. Denis was appointed by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate to lead the commission. Rivoire worked as a parish priest in Rankin Inlet, Igloolik and Arviat as a member of the Oblates, a religious order in the Roman Catholic Church. He remains a member today.” By Jorge Antunes, Nunatsiaq News
IRELAND & NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish priest’s horrific abuse of more than 60 students detailed in new report
“The newly published report ‘A Restorative Response to the Abuse of Children Perpetrated by Joseph Marmion SJ’ interviewed 62 past pupils of the Irish priest who was a teacher in three schools in Ireland throughout the 1960s and 1970s … In March 2021, Jesuits in Ireland named Marmion as someone who had abused boys sexually, emotionally, and physically during his time at Dublin’s Belvedere College.” By IrishCentral.com
‘Priests were angry at me for speaking out over abuse’ – Archbishop Diarmuid Martin
“The former Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has revealed how he invoked the ire of other priests after speaking out over child sex abuse in the Catholic Church. Speaking to Joe Duffy for RTÉ’s ‘The Meaning of Life’ program on Sunday night (Sept. 3), the 78-year-old retired cleric recalled the reaction to his public condemnations following the publication of the Ryan and Murphy reports in 2009.” By The Irish News
‘Others looked the other way but my dad did something about it’
“The son of an Irish teacher who blew the whistle on pedophile Jesuit priest Joseph Marmion said his father should be recognized for his role in helping to end the reign of the predator who sexually abused at least 60 boys. Riocard Mór Ó Tiarnaigh reported Marmion to the then principal of Belvedere College in September 1977, prompted by his son’s disclosures about a school trip to Vienna. His son, also Riocard, said the teacher’s actions helped ‘light the fuse’ that led the Jesuits to remove Marmion from teaching duties at the end of that school year.” By Maeve Sheehan, Irish Independent
Victims’ group slams decision to invite US cardinal to Armagh Cathedral
“A group representing victims of clerical abuse has criticized the decision to invite a prominent US cardinal to Northern Ireland. Timothy Dolan, the Archbishop of New York, is visiting Armagh on Sunday (Sept. 3). He will celebrate Mass at St Patrick’s Cathedral to mark 150 years since its dedication in August 1873. However, abuse victims have expressed dismay at the invite.” By Belfast Telegraph
- Head of Catholic Church in Ireland facing resignation call from abuse survivor over invite to top U.S. cardinal, By Niall Deeney, Belfast Live
NEW ZEALAND
Catholic Church ‘two-faced’ for refusing to help abuse survivor’s bid share experiences in Rome
“A Christchurch man who suffered sexual abuse as a child at the hands of the Brothers of St John of God has criticized the Catholic Church for publicly offering help to survivors and then turning down his request for financial aid. Darryl Smith was one of dozens of boys who suffered ‘extreme abuse and neglect’ at Marylands School in Halswell between 1955 and the late 1980s. On his first night at the school, in 1971, he was woken from his sleep, taken to an office and raped. He was 6 years old.” By Shannon Redstall, The Press
- The misery of Marylands, By Shanti Mathias, The Spinoff
With Catholic Church foot-dragging comes the chance to evade justice / The Boston Globe
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Clergy Sexual Abuse, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on September 7, 2023
What was first revealed by the Boston Globe Spotlight team in 2002 was followed up by two more decades of institutional foot-dragging when it comes to accountability for prominent predators like him. And with that foot-dragging comes the chance to evade justice.
By Joan Vennochi, The Boston Globe
“After a judge declared him incompetent to stand trial on charges that he sexually assaulted a 16-year-old boy in Wellesley in the 1970s, the Zoom image of Theodore McCarrick showed an old man with a blank face, hunched over a table in a room at the assisted living facility in Missouri that is now his home. Yet when the remote session ended, one could still imagine the defrocked and disgraced cardinal smiling in triumph — just like any other aging gangster who beat the system.
“The charges against McCarrick, 93, were dismissed last week after two medical experts found he suffered from dementia. That makes him a living symbol of the cost of the decades-long coverup of clergy sexual abuse by the Roman Catholic Church. What was first revealed by the Boston Globe Spotlight team in 2002 was followed up by two more decades of institutional foot-dragging when it comes to accountability for prominent predators like him. And with that foot-dragging comes the chance to evade justice.
“Last month, for example, Howard J. Hubbard, the longtime bishop of the Albany, N.Y., diocese, who acknowledged covering up sexual abuse, died of a stroke at age 84. Hubbard was also personally accused of sexual abuse, which he denied. In reporting on his death, The New York Times noted that lawyers for plaintiffs in sexual abuse cases involving the Albany diocese have accused church lawyers of using delay tactics ‘in hopes that aging victims and witnesses will die before the cases are resolved.'”
By Joan Vennochi, The Boston Globe — Read more …