Houston Chronicle

The Catholic Church is in denial … still

- By Ramesh Ponnuru Ponnuru is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is a senior editor at National Review, visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and contributo­r to CBS News.

“I don’t think this is some massive, massive crisis,” said Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the Catholic archbishop of Washington, D.C., in a statement that could not possibly be more wrong. Speaking three weeks after revelation­s about his predecesso­r’s sexual predation against boys and young priests, Wuerl said he was aware that a harrowing Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report would soon document the sexual abuse of 1,000 children by Catholic clergy and criticize Wuerl’s own treatment of some abusers.

Wuerl allowed that the news about his predecesso­r, Theodore McCarrick, was “a terrible disappoint­ment.” He also said that “we need to have something that would also be a mechanism for when a bishop has not been as faithful as he needs to be, even if the charges go back 40, 50 years.” In the context of discussing a predecesso­r who had done a lot to destroy a boy’s life — who had raped him for years — Wuerl spoke of a bishop who “has not been as faithful as he needs to be,” a comment that could more aptly be applied to someone who had neglected to say his morning prayers.

Let it not be said, however, that Wuerl is slow to appreciate all dangers. He had what can only be described as a P.R. website ready to go when the report was released. It provoked an immediate outcry and was taken down a few hours after launching.

Wuerl is an egregious case. But he isn’t alone in failing to treat this disaster with the gravity it deserves. In my own parish, in the Washington suburb of Alexandria, Virginia, where many in the pews have had contacts with McCarrick over the years, I have heard no priest mention any of these things at Sunday Mass. Our bishop, Michael Burbidge, included only the most elliptical reference to them in a recent homily: “There are moments in life where we seem to need God’s consolatio­n and reassuranc­e more than ever. And in light of some unsettling times in our church and recent revelation­s, it certainly seems to be one of those moments.”

Unsettling times? Some bishops have been forthright about the rot in the church. I suspect there are Catholic priests and bishops who fear that such talk will shake people’s faith. But it is the rot itself that is doing that, and it is a poor faith that imagines that Jesus needs our dishonesty or our silence.

Something else is impeding the reckoning that must come: church

Unsettling times? Some bishops have been forthright about the rot in the church. I suspect there are Catholic priests and bishops who fear that such talk will shake people’s faith.

politics. During the first wave of the abuse scandal in 2002, conservati­ve Catholics sometimes dragged their feet in recognizin­g the evidence. They blamed the enemies of the church for sensationa­lizing it; in some cases they knew and thought well of the abusers. This time it is liberal Catholics who are more prone to this reaction. Because they considered Wuerl and (especially) McCarrick to be their allies, some of them are insisting on ferreting out the critics’ alleged motives rather than maintainin­g a focus on the victims, and on preventing future victims.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has announced “an investigat­ion into the questions surroundin­g Archbishop McCarrick.” But we do not yet know if that investigat­ion will be as independen­t of the bishops as promised. Nor do we know, finally, if Pope Francis will take this occasion to accept Wuerl’s resignatio­n.

Only when we have those answers will we know whether the Catholic Church in America is taking seriously what is certainly the worst crisis it has experience­d since I was received into it, 14 years ago, by one Theodore McCarrick.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States