On March 25, the New York Times published a now thoroughly discredited front-page story suggesting that Joseph Ratzinger, while prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, had willfully impeded sanctions against a clerical sexual abuser in Milwaukee who had preyed on the deaf children in his care.
Taking that date, and that calumny against Benedict XVI, as an arbitrary American ground zero in the latest round of assaults depicting the Catholic Church as a Rome-based global criminal conspiracy of perverts and their enablers, where do things stand, two and a half weeks into what at first seemed poised to become a scandal as devastating as the Catholic Church in America’s Long Lent of eight years ago?
It’s not 2002. During the Long Lent, the press played an important role in dragging into the light of day awful things the Church had failed to confront, or had confronted ineptly. The shame of that period still stings, as do the wounds suffered by victims. Yet 2010 is not 2002, and that is in large measure due to 2002.
Despite the ignorance and tendentiousness displayed by too many journalists and commentators in recent weeks (including Catholic commentators seeking another opportunity to revive the Revolution That Never Was—or, in the case of Patrick J. Buchanan, to revive the Golden Age That Never Was), the facts are slowly getting out, thanks in part to the unprecedented studies and audits authorized by the bishops of the United States in the wake of the Long Lent.
Reasonable people whose perceptions are not warped by the toxin of anti-Catholicism or who are not pursuing other (often financially-driven) agendas now recognize that the Church in the U.S. and Canada has bent enormous efforts towards cleaning up what Cardinal Ratzinger called in 2005 its “filth,” to the point where the Catholic Church today can be empirically shown to be the safest environment for young people and children in North America. The paralyzing drumbeat of one ghastly new story after another that went on all during 2002 has not been repeated. What we now have is, largely, the recycling of old material, usually provided to the press by contingent-fee attorneys whose strategic goal is to build a public “narrative” of conspiracy that will shape American courts’ decisions as to whether the Vatican and its resources can be brought within range of U.S. liability law.
The realization among serious Catholics that this is not 2002 and that things have changed dramatically since 2002, has led to a far more confident effort to fight back against misrepresentations such as those the Times perpetrated on March 25. There is a danger here: to recognize that this is not 2002 cannot blind us to the fact that there are wounds that remain to be healed, reforms of priestly formation that remain to be completed, bishops whose failures remain to be recognized and dealt with, new norms for the selection of bishops to be implemented, and accounts rendered as to why the Vatican, prior to Ratzinger’s taking control of the issue of clerical sexual abuse in the late 1990s, was sometimes sluggish in its response to scandalous behavior by priests and deficient leadership by bishops.
Assuming, however, that Benedict XVI has set in motion processes that will lead to all those lingering issues being forcefully addressed, a serious question can now be credibly posed: Are those most vigorously agitating these abuse/misgovernance issues today genuinely interested in the safety of young people and children, or are they using the failures of the past to cripple the moral credibility of the Catholic Church in the present and future? That question would have rightly struck many people as a dodge in 2002. It cannot be credibly regarded as a dodge today, because of what the Church has done since 2002 (and, indeed, since the 1990s, when the plague of abuse within the Church began to recede).
The Vatican response. During the first months of the Long Lent of 2002, John Paul II was not well-served by his Washington nunciature or by the Vatican Congregation for the Clergy. The nunciature was not providing the papal apartment with detailed, real-time information (in April 2002, when Cardinal Bernard Law first offered his resignation, the pope and his closest associates were at least three months behind the information-curve, and were just experiencing in April what Americans had lived through in January); the prefect of Clergy, Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, made matters worse by blowing off reporters’ questions about the scandals when presenting John Paul’s 2002 Holy Thursday letter to priests, explaining that the pope had more important things to worry about, like Middle East peace.
Things have changed for the better since those dark days. The Holy See Press Office, not previously known for prompt or effective crisis-management in this pontificate, has quickly brought serious, credible information and commentary to bear in recent weeks as different charges have been laid against Benedict XVI. The pope’s own March letter to the Church in Ireland—far too quickly consigned to media oblivion—demonstrated to those with the eyes to read such documents accurately that Benedict had wrestled the Curia into understanding that a pastoral outreach to victims, the public condemnation of abusive clergy and religious, sharp criticism of malfeasant bishops, and dramatic reform actions were necessary in this and similar situations.
There are still things that the Holy See doesn’t get quite right. During Holy Week, it was hoped that the pope would speak in his own voice, largely through the Church’s sacramental encounter with the central drama of salvation history. Yet the two most memorable moments of Holy Week 2010 were created by secondary figures. During the solemn Good Friday liturgy at St. Peter’s, the preacher to the papal household, Father Raniero Cantalamessa, inserted into his homily a commentary on the current situation in which he seemed to agree with a (Jewish) friend that what the recent assault on the Church was analogous to the horrors of historic anti-Semitism.
Two days later, at the beginning of the papal Easter Sunday Mass, the dean of the college of cardinals, Angelo Sodano, chose the unfortunate phrase “petty gossip” to describe what was in fact a determined attack on the Church’s credibility. Despite these missteps, however, the truth seems to have gotten out, if slowly and incompletely: the single most influential figure in reshaping the Roman Curia’s attitude toward these scandals and the Church’s legal practice in dealing with them, was Joseph Ratzinger, now Benedict XVI.
The plaintiff’s bar cannot concede this, for to do so would be to destroy the narrative it has been selling to the world media; Ratzinger’s enemies cannot concede this, for they have never been able to find good in him; and European secularists cannot concede this, for in their minds the Church is, in principle, irreformably corrupt—Voltaire’s L’infame. But those willing to look at facts and evidence have begun to understand just how crucial a role Ratzinger played in ensuring that 2010 did not automatically become 2002 redivivus.
Nailing down that counter-narrative would be considerably aided if, in the coming weeks, a comprehensive and documented narrative of the case of a predatory Munich priest which was mishandled during Ratzinger’s tenure as archbishop there—the revelation of which was the European ground zero for the latest set of explosions—would be published. It would also be helpful if the Holy See would provide a user-friendly explanation of how abusive priests are laicized, and how this process has been streamlined and accelerated, again under Ratzinger’s leadership. There is no harm in acknowledging that, like just about everyone else, Joseph Ratzinger was on a learning curve in dealing with abusive clergy and malfeasant bishops; the point to be stressed, however, is that he learned faster, and acted more decisively on what he had learned, than just about anyone else.
Mud Sticking. The 2010 edition of Scandal Time is by no means finished. Attorneys and others will continue to release documents implying that Ratzinger “stalled” laicizations decades ago (when in fact what he was doing was following the canonical norms of the time—norms he was later instrumental in changing).
The papal pilgrimage to Great Britain in September, which will include the beatification of John Henry Newman, is in trouble, with the clerical head of the Church of England, Dr. Rowan Williams, getting ecumenical payback by asserting that the Catholic Church has lost its credibility and the loopier elements of the British press and commentariat suggesting that the pope ought to be served with an arrest warrant on his arrival in the U.K.; the BBC has been particularly egregious in its skewed coverage and discussion of Munich, Milwaukee, and other cases. In the face of all this, the bishops of Britain must recognize that scandal-mongering has now metastasized into a full-scale assault on Catholicism itself, and ought to devote the next four months to the most vigorous defense of the truth of Catholic faith. It would also be helpful if Benedict XVI would meet with British and Irish abuse victims during his time in the U.K., as he did in the United States and Australia.
As for the future of the Church in Ireland, the gravity of the situation there would seem to provide an opportunity for Rome to take dramatic action. While the retirement of one Irish bishop, John Magee of Cloyne, was accepted in the wake of the papal letter of March 2010, it was not clear that this measure was in response to serious problems in handling abuse cases in Cloyne that had become public knowledge. Yet if 2010 is not to become 2002 redivivus, the Holy See must make unmistakably clear that it is serious about dealing with malfeasant bishops: that, in addition to swift action against abusive priests, the Church is prepared to take swift and decisive action against episcopal misgovernance.
This is not a matter of appeasing the media pack and its baying for blood; it is a matter of self-respect and the integrity of the Church’s institutional life. Over the past century and a half, the Holy See has gained the freedom to choose bishops freely throughout the world Church; that has been one of the signal accomplishments of Vatican diplomacy. To claim the right to choose bishops freely, however, carries with it the responsibility to address episcopal failure, even by the ultimate remedy of deposition in extreme cases. Procedures for accelerating the laicization of abusive clergy have been put in place in Rome; parallel procedures for determining when a bishop has lost the capacity to govern because of a thorough and irremediable collapse of his credibility as a leader and shepherd ought to be devised and implemented. It is widely expected that the upcoming apostolic visitation to certain Irish dioceses will result in sweeping change in Catholic leadership in Ireland. That change ought to be effected sooner rather than later, and explicitly linked to the reforms for which Benedict called in his letter to the Irish Church.
Cynicism and irony are powerful corrosives in ecclesiastical life. Yet they cannot withstand the power of radical conversion, joyful discipleship, and courageous evangelism. In North America, in Great Britain and Ireland, in Germany and Austria and the Netherlands, indeed all over the world Church, these are the most effective counters to the current wave of Church-bashing and Catholic-baiting.
And here, at least, there is one appropriate parallel to be drawn between 2010 and 2002: The only answer to what is at bottom a crisis of fidelity is deeper, more radical fidelity to the truth borne by the earthen vessel of the Church.
George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow of Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C. and author of The Courage To Be Catholic: Crisis, Reform, and the Future of the Church Distinguished Senior Fellow of Washington’s Ethics and Public Policy Center and author of (Basic Books).
Comments:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/12/opinion/12douthat.html?ref=opinion
How much has Pope Benedict XVI has acknowledged publicly that he, himself, was on a learning curve as an archbishop and as a cardinal? Which cases, in retrospect, does he think he could have handled differently? The more recent story of the delay in laicization of the Rev. Kiesle in the Oakland Diocese, with a letter written by the pope, is one which needs are more serious explanation by the Pope himself.
If Pope Benedict XVI, as successor to Peter, can acknowledge his own most grievous faults and throw himself on the mercy of our Lord and Savior, he can be a shining example to all that the best among us are terrible sinners, in what we have done and in what we have failed to do, and that our hope is in the name of the Lord, Who made heaven and earth, and that we are saved through the mercy of God by the merits of Jesus Christ.
Pope Benedict XVI must lay himself low, acknowledge his sins committed during his "learning curve", and proclaim that we, all of us sinners, can be saved by Jesus Christ and the mercy of God. Can you imagine the impact if he were to acknowledge how badly he, like many other bishops, failed in protecting the lowliest among us? How revolutionary - it will revitalize the church in a way not seen since the Pentecost.
That is not what happened.
This is a perfect example of the problem here. Stories appear by reporters who do not understand, or choose to misrepresent, Church procedures at the time; those stories then get passed into the general population as statements of fact.
The blame in the Kiesle situation is shared by the Oakland Diocese and law enforcement in Oakland, not Cardinal Ratzinger.
From the press we hear mostly about the Church — what it didn't do or hasn't done or allegedly covered up. I, for one, would like to hear more from the press and from the Church about the offending priests.
Michael+
Mr. Wiegel, you must get over your knee-jerk anti-Anglicanism. You know quite well that Dr. Williams wasn't taking a swipe at the world-wide RCC and was speaking in the context of a remark made to him by an Irishman. Moreover, both Benedict and your own organization have shown no hesitancy about interfering in or hurting the feelings of the Archbishop's flock. Perhaps a guilty conscience on your part?
Exactly the wrong tack. The problem underlying the scandals is that the institutional Church had long been an administrative machine in which the human effects of its procedures, especially among the laity, hardly counted. No solution that does not include LESS power for the Vatican and more control of bishops by the laity they “rule” will work. When bishops really believe the laity count for something inside the Church, scandals like these will become almost impossible.
Since the number of incidents dropped dramatically after 1985, and reforms began in the 90s, you are wrong.
The media reporting in the 90s deserves far more credit than the lawyers who more recently have turned abuse cases into a cottage industry.
Cynicism and irony are powerful corrosives in ecclesiastical life. Yet they cannot withstand the power of radical conversion, joyful discipleship, and courageous evangelism. In North America, in Great Britain and Ireland, in Germany and Austria and the Netherlands, indeed all over the world Church, these are the most effective counters to the current wave of Church-bashing and Catholic-baiting.
And that is, in my humble opinion, the greatest problem, at least places like Austria and Ireland, where the Catholic Church has for so long been the dominant church, almost congruent with the nation: there is still a large percentage of the church membership, sprinkled as an infant, gone through First Communion and Confirmation because these are as much cultural as religious rituals, who are utterly unconverted, neither evangelized nor discipled. And some of these, for a number of reasons, have chosen the church as a career, and have advanced to positions of authority.
One senior bishop of my acquaintance speaks longingly and convincingly of times when the Church will be made up of committed and converted believers, but hates confrontation too much to take the radical steps needed to purge those not open to conversion and discipleship. Clergy here routinely speak as if all who are Catholics on paper (their baptismal certificate, or the church rolls) were actually believing Christians when it is patently obvious that this is not so.
So where is that evangelism, leading to conversion and discipleship supposed to come from?
Thank you for showing the face of anti-Catholic bigotry.
We all need reminders that it is still alive and well today.
Evangelism has to come from pastors. I had written a lengthy description on how this evangelization can take place and sent it to Avery Cardinal Dulles (a holy man with a deep understanding of the Church’s mission to evangelize), and he agreed with my description, but he also insisted that, as I had made clear in my description, it had to take place through pastors. But I haven't been able to find a pastor anywhere who is willing to begin, and I have searched and found no parish involved in lay formation, just a mistaken belief that they are. It’s always the same old story of a limited parish life of ministries with selected parishioners in a closed system that reflects the vision of the pastor. There is no plan for all parishioners to go out into the world to evangelize, just the mobilization of ministries (important in their own right, but NOT lay formation).
Pastors do understand lay ministry and are effective at maintaining those ministries, but again, lay formation is lost on them.
I have tried to convince many pastors to begin lay formation, but they are stuck in the old grind. None has responded to my concerns, except one who explained he had his own method of lay formation, which is building up ministries.
awr
Calumny is by definition a false accusation. The facts in the March 25 story are true. Indisputably so.
After learning that man who raped 200 children benefited from a cover-up implicating several archbishops and the current Pope himself, and never faced any accountability for his actions in this life, our first reaction is to call the unlucky reporter charged with the duty to write about it a "scandal-monger."
We have now reached a point of total moral insanity
The NYT article did not quote the notes or Fr. Brundage. There were merely included amongst all the other items. Nobody else to my knowledge has denied the authenticity of the remaining 83 pages of source documents.
Did you mean to type “I” instead of “We” in your closing line? Or could this insanity reach beyond the realm of morality?
Respectfully yours etc.,
Peter G
Goodstein did not read the documents correctly, she didn't do what good reporters are supposed to do and call experts to ask for their opinion (in this case canon lawyers) and she misrepresented the facts. It's clear that she was under the influence of the plaintiff attorney Jeff Anderson and she did not handle this with the objectivity that a reporter should have. This is not a matter of "public defiance" but of correcting the record.
What I find deeply demoralizing is the inability of the Vatican itself to take any serious responsibility in this matter. To convey any true Christian humility. The Pope and the Vatican are quick to apologize for the behavior of others, but they themselves accept little or no responsibility. Essentially, it is always the fault of someone else -- the press, the bishops, the secularization of society. Yes, Benedict has instituted reforms, but he had little choice, and he has done so slowly. The fact is, without the blunt and sometimes misguided efforts of the press, priests would today be abusing children.
In the Oakland case, Benedict can hide behind procedure and bureaucratic practice and pettifoggery. But the fact is, he should have recognized that this was an urgent matter. He should have seen that, with a priest tying up and raping children , the Vatican should not have allowed so much time to go by in the laicizing process. I doubt that Benedict would have been so dilatory if the priest held doctrinally incorrect views.
The reason the press continues to bay is because of the Vatican's moral pride. The Pope and his cardinals and bishops continually lecture the world, from the moral mountaintop, about sex, family and abortion while tending very little, it seems, to its own moral condition. It would make an enormous difference if the Vatican admitted that it's learning curve has been too slow. It would make a world of difference, too, if the Vatican acknowledged that the Vatican (and not just local authorities) often placed the reputation of the Church and its priests before its duty to the least among us. Which is shamefully un-Christian.
It would also help if the Church and its defenders (of whom I am one) stopped exhibiting so much whinging self-pity. Yes, the world is unfair. Toughen up. You're a Christian.
Re the Oakland case it has been repeatedly pointed out and people just continue to ignore this: the priest in this case had already been removed from ministry and was no longer tying up and raping children; the laicizing request was not a matter of proposed disciplinary action for his misdeeds, it was his own request. Cardinal Ratzinger's office at the time was not responsible for abuse cases; that was handled elsewhere. And as far as I know theologians with doctrinally incorrect views were not usually laicized, they simply had their teaching authority (missio) removed.
But overall I agree that less whining and more humility in admitting flaws in Vatican procedure would probably go over better.
You are certainly correct that Benedict did nothing wrong according to the letter of the law. The problem is that the Vatican's slow moving and bureaucratic emphasis on the letter of the law is infuriating in the case of confessed child molesters. In the Latin letter Benedict wrote to the bishop in Oakland (some say it was a form letter) outrage, urgency -- and concern for the victims -- are missing. Alas. It was not the moment for a form letter.
I must add, however, that the Church today is indeed displaying a welcome urgency, even if the Vatican itself remains too uncritical of its own practice.
Rene:
I very much doubt the spirit of Vatican II is to blame for this problem. I wish it were, because then we could have a simple explanation. Perhaps my view of human nature is too dark, but I am certain pedophilia occurred often before Vatican II, but that reporting it was all but impossible. Even recognizing it as a problem could be difficult. In those days, the issue, if it was noted, was usually brushed off as minor, just "boys will be boys." (That monster in Milwaukee apparently never suffered any remorse and did not consider what he did pedophilia, but rather sexual education for backward boys and, if a sin, a minor one. )For all the problems created by secularization and gross materialism, one benefit may be that sexual horrors such as pedophilia and rape have finally been brought into the light.
Pedophilia, by the way, is hardly unique to homosexuals. Heterosexuals also prey on children and teenagers. The fact that pedophilia in the Church is mostly by homosexuals is probably explained by the significant numbers of homosexuals who enter the priesthood, hoping to find in celibacy and the company of celibate men a way to control difficult urges and to live respectably in a largely heterosexual world.
To call the story "throroughly discredited" takes an incredible amount of nerve. And it is just one story.
If I understand Weigel's position correctly, Goodstein is a "scandal-monger" who is "baying for blood." This is the attitude that made frank discussion of abuse cases impossible for many years. It was simply not acceptable to state the truth. Questions were not asked. When the truth was told, judgment was swift from the clergy, community, and families.
These kids had to suffer alone.
Failing to disclose this information to the authorities about these cases was a crime in itself. It has not been dealt with yet, the plaintiff's bar, press, and secular society are right to demand accountability. Weigel is wrong and that he feels the need to make pathetic excuses and attack the motives of Goodstein instead of confronting her factual allegations about Murphy and the hierarchy shows he is conscious of how wrong he is.
The statute of limitations for sexual assault crimes does not run out in Wisconsin. Murphy could have been arrested and sent to prison any time, even in the months preceding his death. The Church intentionally shielded the full extent of the case against Murphy for decades with the explicitly stated intention of avoiding the community pressure that would bring a prosecution. And there can be absolutely no doubt that if the press had put this kind of heat on while Murphy was still alive, he would have died in prison.
Failing to disclose the whole truth was a crime in itself. Benedict and the archbishops are a party to the crime.
No doubt what you say about Oakland is correct as far as it goes, but it seems to me to leave the central question unanswered. When then Cardinal Ratzinger wrote (re. the delayed laicization of Fr. Kiesle): "This court, although it regards the arguments presented in favor of removal in this case to be of grave significance, nevertheless deems it necessary to consider the good of the Universal Church together with that of the petitioner, and it is also unable to make light of the detriment that granting the dispensation can provoke with the community of Christ's faithful, particularly regarding the young age of the petitioner," what was he thinking?
Surely he didn’t believe that with time and more maturity Fr. Kiesle could be rehabilitated, or did he? Or was he perhaps hoping that time would eventually heal and that these wounds would somehow be forgotten? Or, was it that he feared laicization would only fix the scandal in the minds the faithful and thereby inflict a permanent scar on the face of the Universal Church, and so was stalling for time?
Admittedly, none of these are very flattering interpretations but what are we to make of it? At best it seems to indicate an inability on the part of the Cardinal to act decisively in a crisis. And yet, while there may not have been any good options, surely there was a right option.
Can you can help me here?
This wasn't an urgent matter. The man had been removed from all ministry a few years earlier. He was no longer allowed to present himself as a priest or perform any priestly actions.
He had pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and was given probation - perhaps the DA should have thrown the book at him - bishops don't have any prisons.
Kiesle was petitioning to have his vows dispensed so he could get married.
This was a stock letter sent out to ANY priest who was petitioning to be released from his vows. They all presented reasons in their petitions they thought were serious.
He was still young and there was a policy of not letting priests out of their vows to get married until they were 40 years. When he reached 40 they granted the priest's petition.
Nobody was wanting him to go back into ministry of any kind. He had already had all authority to act or appear as a priest removed. Waiting until he was 40 put nobody in danger.
The "detriment" to the church community mentioned was having invested 7 to 8 years in training this priest and for him then to quit. A lot of priests were doing it at that time and it was causing a priest shortage. It was a stock letter.
What's so hard to understand?
I don’t necessarily disagree with what you say.
I'm willing to assume for the sake of our discussion that the letter of November 1985 was merely a form-letter, even coming as it did 4 years after the initial petition and after numerous urgent follow-up inquiries, both in person and by letter.
However, I’m not sure what you mean when you state that Fr Kiesle had already, at the time of his petition in 1981, “all authority to act or appear as a priest removed.” Perhaps you would clarify?
Lastly, in the spirit of Prof. Weigel’s call for the development of a counter-narrative I have been attempting to connect the dots of the case in a manner that is charitable to all concerned. My sense of it is as follows:
1) That after returning from 3 years leave of absence (which coincided with his probation period following his molestation conviction in 1978 and during which time and after he underwent counseling/ therapy of some kind), the diocese was suddenly faced with having to decide on how ultimately to deal with him.
2) That his return to active ministry was never an option.
3) That staying in the diocese indefinitely was not an option given his notoriety.
4) That for the first time in 3 years was he now able to travel and/or relocate.
5) That it appears to have been in everyone’s interest for him to appeal directly for laicization thereby expediting his removal from the priesthood (and hopefully thereby the diocese as well) by avoiding a lengthy, costly and uncertain ecclesiastical/judicial process with all the publicity it might entail.
6) That it was deemed most expedient to pursue a “quick and honourable” as opposed to a “lengthy and dishonourable” discharge.
7) That this was a win-win solution: allowing the bishop to reassure his flock that he had managed the crisis swiftly and effectively and allowing Mr Kiesle to begin a new life, together with his new bride, in a place where he was not so notorious and without the stigma of having been forcibly removed from his clerical state.
8) That instead the normally routine laicization process dragged on for 5 years.
9) That my initial question remains: What was Cardinal Ratzinger thinking when in 1985 he delayed yet further a decision which had already been pending for 4 years? Could he possibly have thought that the benefit to the Universal Church of hanging on to one unfit priest until his 40th birthday outweighed the scandal caused among the faithful of Oakland at having him remain as a priest (however inhibited) in their midst year after year for what must have seemed, at least to some, an eternity? Could the importance of honouring the revised laicization protocols of John Paul II possibly have outweighed the damage done to the confidence the concerned faithful of Oakland in their priests and bishops? Admittedly these are judgment calls but that does not explain the apparent paralysis in this case? Was Cardinal Ratzinger unable or unwilling to act decisively in this crisis? Was he really content to just wait out the clock, or is there perhaps another more charitable option that I have not considered?
James P.: “all authority to act or appear as a priest removed.” means exactly that, remaoval of authority to act as a priest had already been acconplished by the Bishop by fiat. Laicization being considered by the Vatican at the time of the inffamous letter, was not necessary nor had the Bishop not acted would it have that effect. Why the priest was even seeking it (and it was the priest himself who was seekiing it) I don't now. Lacization officially moves a riest from the clerical to lay state with in canon law; allowing him to marry. It does not by the way constitute a "removal from the priesthood", which in Catholic belief, like divorce is impossible.
Joe S. says: "After learning that man who raped 200 children benefited from a cover-up implicating several archbishops and the current Pope himself, and never faced any accountability for his actions in this life." The matter was known to the police, reported by the victims. Known to the press complete with protest in front of the Cathedral, and generally known to the locals who cared, all long before it was made known to the Vatican. If cover-up there was, it was rather pointlessly after the fact; the cat, as they say, was long out of the bag.
Still Julia, you said it better.
The question of what to do with the Kiesles of this world was and remains a difficult one. As Julia so succinctly put it, “bishops don’t have jails”.
The diocese had repeatedly attempted to find a situation for Kiesle where he could grow and mature but he was feckless. The bishop expressed concern that he was wasting away the best years of his life. Thus, when he eventually found a job Kiesle was encouraged by the bishop to “assume responsibility for the managing of his own life.”
Kiesle, it seems, responded well to this new-found independence which in turn may have influenced his decision to petition for laicization and relief from his vow of celibacy. All of which could only have come as a great relief to all concerned. The parties could now move on with their lives, each no longer encumbered by the other.
Understandably, then, it was a source of frustration and disappointment for the diocese when the CDF did not respond quickly and decisively as it had hoped, but rather allowed the case to linger on for years. This much is clear from the evidence.
We can say with certainty that, notwithstanding the sense of urgency expressed above, the CDF saw insufficient reason to expedite the case. What we will never know is just why it took 5 years for a formal reply to arrive which in effect counselled patience as deliberations continued. Full stop.
We did a little internet research and found cases going back to the early 60's that are still unresolved. This did not surprise me as any instititution is smothered in red tape and afraid of bad press.
What bothered me was that those abused never received councelling or any help, and there still is no policy to help the abused or the abuser.
As a Christian I am ashamed of how another wing of my faith has behaved. Not that non-Catholics are better, there has been deacons violating young girls, pastors having affairs, and even member committing adultery all while attending church on a regular basis.
Our society just does not take faith into it's heart. Why is that?


