The Peterborough Examiner

Funeral held for disgraced cardinal

- NICOLE WINFIELD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis prayed Thursday for a merciful final judgment for Cardinal Bernard Law, symbol of the Catholic Church’s failure to protect children from pedophile priests and its arrogance in safeguardi­ng its own reputation at all costs.

In a final blessing at Law’s funeral mass, Francis blessed his coffin with incense and holy water at the foot of the back altar of St. Peter’s Basilica and recited the ritual prayer commending him to God.

“May he be given a merciful judgment so that redeemed from death, freed from punishment, reconciled to the Father, carried in the arms of the Good Shepherd, he may deserve to enter fully into everlastin­g happiness in the company of the eternal king together with all the saints.”

The dean of the college of cardinals, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, celebrated the funeral mass, along with some 30 other cardinals, and eulogized Law without making any mention of the scandal. Following the typical protocol, Francis arrived at the end of the service to deliver the final prayer.

U.S. Ambassador-designate Callista Gingrich and her husband, Newt, as well as some other members of the diplomatic corps were on hand in the pews, along with the Vatican foreign minister, Archbishop Paul Gallagher.

Turnout was otherwise limited, with the basilica ushers stacking extra rows of empty seats before the mass began.

One of the opening prayers reads: “O God, who chose your servant Cardinal Bernard Law from among your priests and endowed him with pontifical dignity in the apostolic priesthood, grant, we pray, that he may also be admitted to their company forever.”

Law, who died Wednesday at age 86, resigned in disgrace as archbishop of Boston in 2002 after revelation­s that he covered up for dozens of priests who sexually molested children, moving the priests to different parishes without telling parents or police.

The scandal, exposed by The Boston Globe, then spread throughout the world, with thousands of people from all continents coming forward in ensuing years with claims their priests sexually abused them when they were children.

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