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Clerical Losers (After Benedict XVI, liberal American church leaders are learning about penance)
The American Prowler ^ | 5/11/2005 | The Prowler

Posted on 05/10/2005 10:36:20 PM PDT by nickcarraway

If there were any "losers" in the election of Pope Benedict XVI, they certainly will not be found among the faithful, or the Latin American or African Catholic churches. No, the biggest losers are here in the United States, where influential, liberal Catholic priests who have actively and publicly defied the Vatican, along with several Cardinals selected late in the reign of Pope John Paul II, find themselves in a bit of a political pickle.

"Pope Benedict knows better than any one else who the trouble makers are in the United States, and he knows who has worked against the Church's teachings there," says an ordained source at the Vatican. "You will be seeing changes soon."

Sooner than expected. Late last week it was announced that the Rev. Thomas Reese, the editor of the Jesuit weekly America, was leaving his position at the magazine to be reassigned to new duties.

Reese was one of a number of American commentators in Rome during the recent pontifical election, and while he was often restrained in his remarks about then-Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, he made it clear he was not a supporter of his candidacy.

America magazine, the public organ of the Jesuit order in U.S., is one of the most liberal Catholic periodicals, second only to the National Catholic Reporter, an independent publication.

That America was essentially viewed by the mass media and a number of American Catholics as an official church publication only confused matters. Under Reese it published articles with views that opposed the Roman Catholic Church's teachings on homosexual priests, stem-cell research, whether Catholic politicians can be denied communion if they support abortion rights, and homosexual unions.

"Most of the major media sees this publication and thinks, 'Well, if the Jesuits are writing this stuff, then American Catholics must be thinking this, or living this way,'" says the Rome insider. "It created confusion and allowed the media to portray a divided, confused American Church. It may well be, but from Rome's perspective, there is only one truth, and America isn't publishing it."

In certain Catholic circles it has been known for some time that a number of American Jesuits actively opposed Pope John Paul II, particularly his attempt to bring American Catholic universities into line with Roman Catholic theological teaching. At one time it appeared that as many as 30 Jesuit theology professors at such schools as Georgetown, Creighton, San Francisco, and Santa Clara would be barred from teaching theology or philosophy due to their refusal to adhere their teachings to established Roman Catholic doctrine.

"The Vatican has been having problems with the Jesuit order in a number of areas, including doctrine and celibacy," says an American theologian. "It isn't just the Jesuits, but because of their higher visibility, they have garnered more attention. It is safe to say that the Jesuits have been out of favor with the Vatican for some time. This resignation may be just the beginning of a greater effort to bring the order in line."

Reese resigned, according the Jesuit insiders in New York, after the order received word from Rome that the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has received complaints from several American Catholic bishops about the magazine and its content.

America in the past had made a point of attacking the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, openly questioning its positions on a number of issues where American Catholics differ with Rome.

IT ISN'T JUST JESUIT journalists who are getting put in their place. In the coming weeks and months it is anticipated that a wave of retirements and re-assignments will occur elsewhere in the American Catholic Church.

Already, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, of Washington, D.C., has announced that he will submit retirement papers when he turns 75 later this year. Such retirement papers are pro forma for all cardinals; they serve at the pleasure of the Holy Father, and oftentimes are allowed to remain in office after they turn 75.

But McCarrick's situation may be different. He is known to have not been a supporter of Pope Benedict before his election. "Cardinal McCarrick has to be wondering where he stands right now," says another American priest from Rome with insight into the machinations of the Vatican. "This is a man who went out of his way to cross then-Cardinal Ratzinger and the Doctrine of the Faith."

McCarrick is believed by many in conservative Catholic circles to have been the individual who in June 2004 leaked to the Washington Post and other newspapers a memo written by Cardinal Ratzinger instructing American bishops to detail to their congregations the Catholic Church's longstanding doctrine on life issues and on the responsibility of Catholic politicians to live both their private and political lives in union with the Church. As Ratzinger's letter stated, those politicians out of step with the Church should be turned away from the communion rail.

The letter, a version of which is almost always sent out to the bishops around election time in the United States (across the country, many Catholic priests take the time in homilies before election day to remind parishioners of the Church's policies in such matters), took on greater meaning in 2004 because Sen. John Kerry made such a production of attending Catholic services and receiving communion during his campaign.

It didn't help McCarrick that he allowed the Kerry campaign to make public meetings he had with Kerry and his advisers. When, on one occasion, McCarrick went out of his way to hide the meeting, Kerry's aides leaked word of it anyway.

McCarrick is also known to have prevented the founding of at least one orthodox Catholic studies program that was seeking his support to open a small two-year college in Washington, D.C. Known as Campion College, it have served as a feeder school to Catholic University, Christendom College in Virginia, and the soon-to-open Ave Maria University in Florida, and offered philosophy and theology courses to young professionals in the Washington area interested in expanding their Catholic faith. The program had the support of a number of high-ranking conservatives in the Vatican.

In Rome, after the election of Pope Benedict, rumors swirled that McCarrick, along with several other prominent American Cardinals, had initially thrown their support behind Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, a political moderate, but one in line with the Church's important teachings.

ANOTHER CARDINAL PERHAPS looking over his soldier is Los Angeles's Roger Mahony, who more than any other American Catholic leaders except Cardinal Bernard Law, is stained by the covering up for pedophiles in the Catholic Church.

But Mahony has other issues that have caught the eye of Rome in the past few years, not the least of which were his attempts to block Los Angeles parishioners from taking part in traditional Latin masses in his diocese. At one point, Mahony claimed that only Catholics who attended such masses back in 1965 would be allowed to participate in the Tridentine Mass.

"That hasn't gotten a lot of attention, but Mahony's maneuvers in that case have been remembered here," says the Vatican source. "Some of these gentlemen may have thought they would outlive the strict enforcement of doctrine. The confirmation and ascension of Pope Benedict is evidence that they will not."

Why would the Tridentine Mass controversy stand out? Perhaps, in part, because Pope Benedict XVI has often spoken and written about the beauty and spirituality of the Latin Mass, and its focus on Christ and His sacrifice. As recently as two years ago, then Cardinal Ratzinger reaffirmed his belief that there was a place for portions of the Latin Mass in today's liturgies.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; Philosophy; Politics/Elections; US: California; US: District of Columbia; US: Massachusetts
KEYWORDS: abortion; cary; catholic; conservative; jesuit; liberal; media; politics; prolife; religion; tradtionalmass
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To: sinkspur

The TM is lessimportant than the attitude that the bishops, not the Pope, are the ultimate authority in the Church. The new bishop of Belleville is another asshat who needs a vocation change- he is a Bernardinite.


21 posted on 05/11/2005 5:51:02 AM PDT by steve8714
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To: Salvation

>>ANOTHER CARDINAL PERHAPS looking over his soldier is Los Angeles's Roger Mahony, who more than any other American Catholic leaders except Cardinal Bernard Law, is stained by the covering up for pedophiles in the Catholic Church.<<

Could I nominate Pilla next?


22 posted on 05/11/2005 6:11:07 AM PDT by netmilsmom (Pope B16-Smacking down Heresy since 1981!-Benedict Gott Geschickt)
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To: maryz
Bernie Ward is a leftist "Catholic" priest who does the 10-1 evening talk radio slot from KGO in San Francisco. He occasionally does talking head stuff on Fox when they need an obnoxious, in your face, fast talking, hard leftist.

Truly a despicable human being.

23 posted on 05/11/2005 6:15:53 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (The environment is too complex and too important to be managed by central planning.)
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To: John Locke
LOL! Are you from the land of Taj Mahoney too? Good to have someone else to commiserate with!
24 posted on 05/11/2005 6:27:07 AM PDT by GipperGal
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To: C2ShiningC

Hallelujah Ping!!!


25 posted on 05/11/2005 6:28:54 AM PDT by GipperGal
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To: Carry_Okie

Thanks. If you catch Ward on B-16, do let us know how he's taking it. Otherwise, we'll be concerned. ;-)


26 posted on 05/11/2005 6:36:58 AM PDT by maryz
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To: nickcarraway
No, the biggest losers are here in the United States, where influential, liberal Catholic priests who have actively and publicly defied the Vatican

I have been fighting this urge since I read this piece earlier . . . but -- at the risk of sounding like my niece at 14 or so: LOOOOOOOooo-sers! LOL!

27 posted on 05/11/2005 6:39:06 AM PDT by maryz
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity

Pavone is doing great work where he is. Putting him in an archbishop's hat would just slow him down.


28 posted on 05/11/2005 6:44:19 AM PDT by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: NYer

Schaudenfreud is a sin. The Pope, being of German origin, probably knows this better than others. I doubt that he and his closest followers are tap dancing on tables over other's misery. It's not like charity to snub "losers".

My beef is with the Evil One. He's the real loser. But the most we can do against such a supernatural is reject the father of lies.

We must jealously pursue all other mortals (with the Divine jealousy that God has for our souls Exodus 20:4-5).

http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/exodus/exodus20.htm
4
You shall not carve idols for yourselves in the shape of anything in the sky above or on the earth below or in the waters beneath the earth;
5
(2) you shall not bow down before them or worship them. For I, the LORD, your God, am a jealous God, inflicting punishment for their fathers' wickedness on the children of those who hate me, down to the third and fourth generation;

FOOTNOTE:
http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/exodus/exodus20.htm#foot2

2 [5] Jealous: demanding exclusive allegiance, such as a wife must have for her husband.


29 posted on 05/11/2005 6:51:12 AM PDT by SaltyJoe (The suspense is terrible...I hope it will last.)
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To: nickcarraway

""Some of these gentlemen may have thought they would outlive the strict enforcement of doctrine. The confirmation and ascension of Pope Benedict is evidence that they will not.""

All praise be to God!


30 posted on 05/11/2005 6:56:22 AM PDT by SolomoninSouthDakota (Daschle is gone.)
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To: sinkspur

Whatever, McCarrick was dublicitous in his handing of the Ratzinger letter. He and Mahoney are not facing the "Young Turks" in the Church. IAC. Read Peter Boyle's article in the May 16th New Yorker. It may be that the secularists are beginning to realize that liberal Catholics have been feeding them a line, that they can no longer count on the Conference to support the program of the Democratic Party, But as far as the Tridentine mass is concerned, the pope WILL not subject the people to any monkeying around with the liturgy. As you know this stuff has been going on since the Middle Ages, and all it does to confuse us all. Maritain once wrote that he never expected more from liturgical reform than that the liturgy would be translated into English. Instead we went all the way from a modified form of the dialogue mass to the
1972 reforms. The pope has criticized the turning around of the Altar because it was never mandated and turned the priest into a performer. But as a conservative he knows it is too late to spin it around again.


31 posted on 05/11/2005 7:03:15 AM PDT by RobbyS (JMJ)
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To: patton

Translation for #11?


32 posted on 05/11/2005 7:24:22 AM PDT by Romish_Papist (The times are out of step with the Catholic Church. God Bless Pope Benedict XVI!!!!)
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To: RobbyS
It's never too late.

There are Episcopal churches that still celebrate ad orientem.

B-16 can just start with the "historical" churches and work his way back from there. Might have to pull up and re-set a few floor tiles (and a relic or two if they are under the altar), but they moved 'em out, they can move 'em back.

33 posted on 05/11/2005 7:39:46 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: sinkspur

Aw, Sinky, don't be mad that you weren't important enough to make the article. Where is it that you are a deacon again?


34 posted on 05/11/2005 7:39:51 AM PDT by JohnnyZ (“When you’re hungry, you eat; when you’re a frog, you leap; if you’re scared, get a dog.”)
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To: nickcarraway
High time.

I know a few AmChurch folks that are nervous. I figured a housecleaning would be coming (and so did they), but this just confirms it.

35 posted on 05/11/2005 7:42:11 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: leprechaun9
With Latin as the official language of the Roman Catholic Church, why are Latin Masses prohibited in the United States? They can only be said by dispensation?

A priest can say the New Mass (as of 1969/1970) in Latin without any formal permission from his bishop. However, this occurs even more rarely than the traditional Latin Mass.

A priest must receive permission from his bishop to say the traditional Latin Mass (pre-1969/1970). There is actually an ongoing debate as to whether this is necessary. But, the practical reality for now is that it is necessary to receive permission from the ordinary.

Catholics who love the old Mass, and the beautiful sacred music that usually accompanied it, have much to be optimistic about with Benedict XVI.

36 posted on 05/11/2005 7:44:47 AM PDT by ELS (Vivat Benedictus XVI!)
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To: SaltyJoe
Schaudenfreud is a sin. The Pope, being of German origin, probably knows this better than others. I doubt that he and his closest followers are tap dancing on tables over other's misery. It's not like charity to snub "losers".

Oh please

What Benedict XVI is doing, beginning to clean out the church, is not schadenfreude it is leading the church in the teachings of Christ.

For you to suggest that it is, is a bit disingenuous of you.

37 posted on 05/11/2005 7:47:18 AM PDT by It's me
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To: JohnnyZ
Where is it you are a deacon again?

Deacon Fred, exposing SpongeBob for the perv that he is.

38 posted on 05/11/2005 7:49:17 AM PDT by sinkspur (If you want unconditional love with skin, and hair and a warm nose, get a shelter dog.)
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To: RobbyS
The pope has criticized the turning around of the Altar because it was never mandated and turned the priest into a performer. But as a conservative he knows it is too late to spin it around again.

Why is it too late? I don't think it is too late.

Just put the priest on the other side.

39 posted on 05/11/2005 7:49:25 AM PDT by It's me
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To: AnAmericanMother

amen!


40 posted on 05/11/2005 7:49:45 AM PDT by cyborg (Serving fresh, hot Anti-opus since 18 April 2005)
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