Catholic Church: Sanctuary for criminals
Imagine a corporation and imagine that the boss of the corporation learns that his employees are raping the children of the company’s customers. Continue to imagine that the boss does not take disciplinary action against the employees. Instead of terminating the employees and cooperating with the police investigating the matter, the boss instead conceals the actions of the employees and moves them from company location to company location.
The sheltered employees continue to rape the children of the company’s customers and the boss continues to avoid accountability for the employee’s actions. The boss then decides to launch a public relations campaign to convince customers that there is no wrong doing within the company. Loyal customers attack less then loyal customers for questioning the integrity of the company.
Now imagine that the founder of the corporation, who is without the faults of the boss and has worked tirelessly to construct a reputable company, has died. The corporation decides not to take disciplinary action against the boss or the employees; it decides instead to support the management decisions of the boss to avoid accountability and thus loses its integrity as a corporation of good works.
The founder was a man of integrity as agreed by everyone who knew him. But the corporation decides to promote the boss and give him a role of spokesman for the corporation. Replacing a man of integrity with a man without integrity does in no way benefit the corporation that had something but lost it, integrity. A man that loses his integrity can not gain the integrity of the man who had it by simply associating himself with the other man. The corporation does not help itself also by following this illusion.
Cardinal Law's Role in
By Greg Frost
BOSTON (Reuters) - The Vatican's decision to let Cardinal Bernard Law lead a funeral Mass for Pope John Paul in Rome has prompted outrage back home, where the ousted Boston archbishop is seen as a symbol of a pedophile priest scandal.
Victims of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergymen were particularly harsh in their reaction, saying the decision to give Law a prominent role in the pomp and circumstance surrounding the pope's death came as a slap in the face.
"I find it personally very insulting and one more instance of how the Roman Catholic hierarchy protects and promotes even the most egregious among them," said Ann Hagan Webb, a regional coordinator of the group Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests.
"He (Law) protected priests at the expense of children over and over and over again, and this symbolically says: 'We don't care about these children; we'd rather honor him,"' Hagan Webb, a clergy abuse victim herself, told Reuters.
Law resigned as archbishop of
The scandal spread to other dioceses across the
The Archdiocese of Boston has since agreed to pay more than $86 million to settle legal claims filed by hundreds of people who said they were abused by priests.
IN PUBLIC EYE AGAIN
For a time after he left
Law resurfaced in American media this week following the pope's death, granting a lengthy interview to ABC News and being photographed at numerous public events.
"From the moment Law appeared on ABC, we have received an overwhelming number of e-mails and phone calls, for the most part from people very much upset by Law's visibility," said Suzanne Morse of the Catholic laity group Voice of the Faithful, which grew out of the scandal.
The Rev. Walter Cuenin, a
"All the priests (who were accused of abuse) are off the job, so some Catholics feel that Law should be retired and not serving on active duty in
However, Cuenin also said given Law's position at the basilica in
"On that particular decision I don't think it's intended to make a statement but it's more that it would be logical to have one of those Masses there.
The
Law was chosen because his church is one of the four major basilicas in
The nine-day cycle began with the Pope's funeral in St. Peter's Basilica.
As a cardinal under 80, the former
<< Home