Posted on 11/04/2008 1:01:50 PM PST by NYer

Termed a "locking of horns," the interim head of the St Louis church is moving to consolidate fund-raising oversight for the 550,000-member archdiocese's Catholic Charities... and the fallout hasn't been pretty.
Bishop Robert Hermann has given the board members an ultimatum: Agree with his plan, or get out.Its annual budget topping $80 million, the work of the Gateway City church's diaconal arm was recently highlighted in a video-series featuring "90 Second Stories of Hope."
The archdiocese says that it has talked with Catholic Charities about its "day-to-day operations" and that it wants to better coordinate fundraising with the agency. But, at least one board member claims the dispute is really about the archdiocese trying to seize control of the nonprofit and how it is run.
In a memo to board members dated Oct. 30 and obtained by the Post-Dispatch, Hermann wrote that Catholic Charities "was allowed ... to drift in a direction that began to work contrary to the desires of Archbishop Rigali and Archbishop Burke" and that the relationship between the Archdiocese and Catholic Charities is "at an impasse."
Cardinal Justin Rigali, now archbishop of Philadelphia, preceded Archbishop Raymond Burke as St. Louis' Catholic leader. Hermann has been interim bishop since Burke was named to a Vatican post in June.
Hermann wrote in the memo that he wants to combine the two organizations' development offices because the archdiocese has been "getting complaints of donor fatigue in going to the same people at the same time for donations."
He added that while "I treasure and respect each and every one of you," he understood that they may be "uncomfortable" with his approach. He told them he wanted to know by the end of this week whether they wanted to remain on the board.
"While I prefer that you stay, I would not want you to stay if this were a constant thorn in your side," he wrote.
Former board member James Gunn said talks about combining fundraising operations began soon after Hermann was named acting bishop.
Gunn, a lawyer and partner at Thompson Coburn, said he and board chair Kelly O'Malley, a partner at O'Malley Hansen Communications, were removed for objecting to Hermann's directives. O'Malley did not respond to a request for comment.
Several other board members did not respond to phone calls, or declined to speak on the record, citing an agreement with the archdiocese that they not speak to reporters.
Archdiocesan officials "want to be able to solicit people for their own purposes," Gunn said. "The social ministry of the church is not nearly as important to them as their far-right conservative Catholic agenda."
Catholic Charities President Thomas Mulhearn did not respond to an interview request Monday. Hermann denied an interview request, but released a statement saying that he and Burke had been discussing Catholic Charities' day-to-day operations with Mulhearn over the last year.
"Per those conversations, I continued to move forward to implement the Archbishop's desire that Catholic Charities' fundraising activities and those of the Archdiocese of St. Louis be more closely synchronized," according to the statement. "In an effort to further improve stewardship within the entire Archdiocese, we are attempting to continue to improve coordination of operations."
Ping!
I think this is the key sentence. Catholic Charities in most places have strayed far from church teaching with their "social ministry," which actually should be called "socialist ministry." It is about time the church hierarchy stepped in and gave these charities new direction. There was a case here in Virginia earlier this year where a Catholic Charities social worker actually took a child to get an abortion.
There was a story on FR today about one of the Catholic social charities handing money to ACORN. The bishop was not amused, as I recall.
Read the code:
“The social ministry of the church” is code for Marxism.
“their far-right conservative Catholic agenda” is code for the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Yes, there is that uncomfortable little set of facts. And there is apparently some rule that says the women involved in “social ministry” have to be homely and badly groomed.
Well, Mr. Gunn, as we all check our preferences and "principles" at the door as we Make the Sign of the Cross with the Holy Water, you can go back to your posh office at Thompson Coburn in the US Bank tower downtown and stew in your cafeteria-ness.
My guess is that the donor pool is drying up either because the donors that actually will give are CINOs and very few or they are part of a very small social circle in a limited number of parishes. That invites fatigue. They've got to widen the circle for Catholic Charities if it's going to survive. Either that or use an approach other than major gifts.
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