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[Catholic Caucus] Former USCCB official sues Grindr for allowing his ‘outing’
Catholic Culture ^ | July 23, 2024 | Catholic World News

Posted on 07/23/2024 8:04:24 AM PDT by ebb tide

[Catholic Caucus] Former USCCB official sues Grindr for allowing his ‘outing’

» Continue to this story on Daily Journal

CWN Editor's Note: Msgr. Jeffrey Burrill, the former general secretary of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), has filed suit against the “hookup app” Grindr for allowing public disclosure of his identity.

Msgr. Burrill was forced to resign his USCCB post in 2021 after it became known that he had used Grindr to arrange homosexual encounters. He returned to parish ministry in the Diocese of LaCrosse, Wisconsin.

In a suit filed in Los Angeles County superior court, Msgr. Burrill argues that he was damaged because Grindr did not inform him that the app was selling information about its users, allowing outsiders to learn his identity. The above note supplements, highlights, or corrects details in the original source (link above). About CWN news coverage.


TOPICS: Catholic; Current Events; Moral Issues
KEYWORDS: frankenchurch; homopriests; jeffreyburrill; satanism; sexualpredator
He returned to parish ministry in the Diocese of LaCrosse, Wisconsin.

Active sodomite priests are acceptable in FrankenChurch; but if a priest dares to offer a TLM in a parish church: off with his head!

1 posted on 07/23/2024 8:04:24 AM PDT by ebb tide
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To: Al Hitan; Fedora; irishjuggler; Jaded; kalee; markomalley; miele man; Mrs. Don-o; ...

Ping


2 posted on 07/23/2024 8:05:00 AM PDT by ebb tide ("The Spirit of Vatican II" is nothing more than a wicked "idealogy" of the modernists.)
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To: ebb tide

From what Pope Francis says about faggotry it doesn’t seem like he like it but doesn’t really do anything about it.


3 posted on 07/23/2024 8:08:02 AM PDT by frogjerk (More people have died trusting the government than not trusting the government.)
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To: ebb tide

Satan found a home.


4 posted on 07/23/2024 8:08:37 AM PDT by cgbg ("Our democracy" = Their Kleptocracy)
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To: ebb tide

Dear Priest, you know the rules when you joined the RCC clergy.

You can’t have it both ways buddy, sorry.


5 posted on 07/23/2024 8:33:28 AM PDT by faithhopecharity ("Politicians aren't born, they're excreted." Marcus Tullius Cicero (106 to 43 BCE))
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To: ebb tide
Active sodomite priests are acceptable in FrankenChurch; but if a priest dares to offer a TLM in a parish church: off with his head!

Cardinal Burke was once the Bishop of LaCrosse. He was instrumental in the establishment of The Institute of Christ the King in the U.S.

LaCrosse has certainly declined as a diocese.
6 posted on 07/23/2024 8:35:03 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("Whatsoever he shall say to you, do ye." (John 2:5))
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To: frogjerk

By the use of that word he refers not to those burdened by SSA but instead to priests and prelates who adhere to the authentic faith, including wearing lace-trimmed albs.

“The issue of Lacegate is not the lace per se. The Holy Father himself points to the larger issue: the liturgical reforms that followed Vatican II, and in particular those who are regarded as out of step with it—the traditionally-minded clergy.”

__________

https://catholicherald.co.uk/grannys-lace-why-is-pope-francis-so-unsupportive-of-ordinary-clergy/

Granny’s lace – why is Pope Francis so unsupportive of ordinary clergy?
Hugh Somerville-Knapman OSB
June 13, 2022 at 9:34 am

If faith, as the nuns said, was the substance of things hoped for,
then lace was the outline—the suggestion—of things not seen.

—Iris Anthony, The Ruins of Lace (2012)

From time to time it seems as though Pope Francis can’t resist the urge to tell priests off in his speeches; he’s not afraid to employ mockery and sarcasm, either. That he has never been a simple parish priest frequently seems to come across in the content of his reproofs; so many of them tend to be anticlerical, as if this somehow profits the flock. It doesn’t necessarily make life easier for those of us at the coal face.

The Holy Father has commanded priests to “smell of the sheep,” as if the parish clergy of today are like the absentee-incumbents of centuries past who drew the revenues of parishes they never visited. He has also told us not to make the confessional, that source of healing grace, “a torture chamber”. Perhaps his experience in Argentina differed, but any torture on that front usually comes from the penitent’s own conscience.

The latest swipe was aimed at the clergy of Sicily, about whom he admits he knows little.

“I don’t know, because I don’t go to Mass in Sicily and I don’t know how the Sicilian priests preach, whether they preach as was suggested in Evangelii gaudium or whether they preach in such a way that people go out for a cigarette and then come back.”

Next came this pointed aside.

“Yes, sometimes bringing some of grandma’s lace is appropriate, sometimes. It’s to pay homage to grandma, right? It’s good to honour grandma, but it’s better to celebrate the mother, Holy Mother Church, and how Mother Church wants to be celebrated. So that insularity does not prevent the true liturgical reform that the Council sent out.”

So the pope does not like priests wearing cottas or albs ornamented with lace. Fine, but personal taste has never been within the remit of papal infallibility, nor even a lower level of the magisterium. With a captive audience of Sicilian bishops—not the priests themselves, but their superiors—the Holy Father seemed to want to bolster a type of episcopal camaraderie by having a dig at their clergy.

In any case, in Mediterranean countries and other hot climes the purpose of lace is not necessarily to advance decoration, but to reduce perspiration; it is practical, not ideological. Lace was a sensible development of the body-length alb in lands where hot days are the norm, at least in summer. Of course Sicilian priests wear lace, and of course many a pious Catholic lady—even a nonna or a mamma—delights in making such vestments in service of the Church she loves.

By caricaturing Sicilian priests as mummy’s boys Pope Francis risks alienating these ladies, the most loyal part of the flock, but maybe the Sicilian clergy were stand-ins for another target: the lace-wearing clergy of the North and the West. The issue of Lacegate is not the lace per se. The Holy Father himself points to the larger issue: the liturgical reforms that followed Vatican II, and in particular those who are regarded as out of step with it—the traditionally-minded clergy.

Providence may be at work in this, of course. The Petrine office was never more exalted than after Vatican I, which decreed the infallibility of the pope but was prevented from teaching more broadly on the roles of the episcopacy, clergy, and laity. Nevertheless, the arguable incompleteness of Vatican I allowed the Church a strong central voice and a united identity in the face of the turbulence of the last century, and not least the blight of communism.

Given Pope Francis’s failure to condemn unequivocally the naked aggression of President Putin, or to offer concrete succour to the people of Ukraine, then it may be time to revisit this approach. Many people, even his supporters, seem to think that the pope is now animated by an awareness that his time is running out. Simultaneously, the majority of young people who still persevere in the Church are voting with their feet and embracing more traditional liturgy in steadily increasing numbers. Time is on their side.

It is sad that the Holy Father so often seems to express a dislike of the ordinary clergy; he so rarely encourages us that sometimes it’s as though he thinks we are part of the problem, and not the solution. We’re not perfect, of course, but the deficiencies—real and imagined—of the modern presbyterate are not the cause of the Church’s woes. Rather, they are symptoms of a deeper malaise: a decades-long turn to the world, rather than to God, which has decimated the numbers of practising Catholics in the West.

The focus for any cure to this lies beyond both the parish clergy and liturgical tastes. Never mind lace; if we wish to heal the Church’s ailments then surely the first question needs to be this: “If the sheep have gone astray, then what have their shepherds been doing?”

Dom Hugh Somerville-Knapman is a monk of Douai Abbey, and parish priest of Scarisbrick in Lancashire


7 posted on 07/23/2024 8:43:38 AM PDT by one guy in new jersey
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To: ebb tide

BWAHAHAHAHAhahahahahahahahahaha!!!!

He’s POed because “grindr” outed him ...

The real problem is that he was on “grindr” in the first place.


8 posted on 07/23/2024 8:45:01 AM PDT by NorthMountain (... the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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To: ebb tide
Like a true narcissist, he plays the victim.

A spiritual man might see the hand of God in his public "exposure" (no pun intended) but his spiritual horizon extends no further than the human dimension.

9 posted on 07/23/2024 10:25:12 AM PDT by marshmallow
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To: ebb tide
Hmm, is this the same "Monsignor Jeffrey D. Burrill" who is "Parochial Administrator" of St. Teresa of Kolkata in Wes Salem, Wisconsin? The parish website seems to deliberately hide its about page, as there's no menu or obvious link to it and the name "Burrill" is noticeably absent from the website. (It's on the parish newsletter, which you have to chase down and won't show up in a search.)

Former Bishop Callahan of the Diocese of LaCrosse restored him as "Administrative Pastor" in 2022 (as far as I can tell, that's basically a temporary pastor with all the liturgical duties of a regular pastor). This was a year after Callahan removed a priest for saying that, due to the party's stance on abortion, you can't be "a Democrat and a Catholic" see CNA article here and around the time he banned Latin Masses.

Must be some Donald Weurl things going on up there in Wisconsin. Before becoming Bishop in NY, Timothy Dolan was in Milwaukee and paid "sexually abusive" priests $20K to leave. Just. Wow.

Anyway, seems to me that our Grindr priest needs a new confessor; in that he's suing Grindr means he has no contrition, and so should be refused the Sacraments, much less offering them.
10 posted on 07/23/2024 11:32:08 AM PDT by nicollo (Remember when we had to close tags?)
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To: nicollo
Yes, they are one and the same:

Opinion: Jeffrey Burrill’s rehabilitation compounds the original scandal of his sin

11 posted on 07/23/2024 3:45:36 PM PDT by ebb tide ("The Spirit of Vatican II" is nothing more than a wicked "idealogy" of the modernists.)
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To: ebb tide

Good article. I maintain, though, that this guy had/has enablers, and therein are far worse sins.


12 posted on 07/23/2024 5:01:32 PM PDT by nicollo (Remember when we had to close tags?)
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