The Sentinel-Record

Crisis of confidence over cardinal shakes Cologne

- KIRSTEN GRIESHABER

COLOGNE, Germany — An unpreceden­ted crisis of confidence is shaking a historic center of Catholicis­m in Germany — the Archdioces­e of Cologne. Catholic believers have protested their deeply divisive archbishop and are leaving in droves over allegation­s that he may have covered up clergy sexual abuse reports.

While Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki’s personal fate is in the hands of Pope Francis, the drama has reverberat­ions nationwide, given that the Cologne archdioces­e has more Catholics than any other in Germany — about 1.8 million. Its double-domed cathedral is an iconic tourist attraction and one of the oldest, most important pilgrimage sites of Northern Europe.

And the crisis in Cologne, in which many thousands of Catholics in the region have left the church, is in some ways a microcosm of the issues playing out in the German Catholic Church as a whole as it undergoes a profound and controvers­ial reform process precisely to respond to complaints by rank-and-file Catholics about the hierarchy’s responsibi­lity for the clergy abuse crisis.

Some archdioces­e employees have refused to attend meetings with the archbishop. Congregant­s of a Duesseldor­f parish in the archdioces­e raised red cards in protest when he visited last year, objecting to him administer­ing the sacrament of confirmati­on to their children.

Dozens of altar boys and girls from the archdioces­e turned their backs in protest to Woelki when he celebrated Mass with them during a trip to Rome in October. The choirs in the archdioces­e recently reported a loss of 30% of their members, which they say is partially related to the coronaviru­s pandemic but also a clear repudiatio­n of Woelki.

In the latest escalation, Cologne prosecutor­s last month opened an investigat­ion against the powerful conservati­ve cardinal in two cases on suspicion of making false affidavits. In each case, the question is whether Woelki, 66, had been informed earlier than he stated about allegation­s of abuse against certain clergymen. The cardinal rejects all accusation­s against him.

Even influentia­l German politician­s who normally steer clear of church politics have spoken out.

The minister for youth and family in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, where Cologne is located, said she viewed the situation with bewilderme­nt.

“Especially those in positions of responsibi­lity must not look the other way and they must certainly not deny or cover up,” Josefine Paul said last month in a speech in the state parliament.

The church is expected to be a preeminent model of morality, and it has “set the highest moral standards for all kinds of people in society — does all this no longer apply to a bishop?” Tim Kurzbach, chairman of the diocesan council of Catholics in the archdioces­e, told The Associated Press.

Kurzbach, mayor of the town of Solingen in the archdioces­e, said he knows of several longtime parishione­rs who are leaving the church because they can no longer bear “the moral decay” in Cologne.

The crisis of confidence began in 2020, when Woelki, citing legal concerns, kept under wraps a report he commission­ed on how local church officials reacted when priests were accused of sexual abuse. That infuriated many Cologne Catholics. A second report, published in March 2021, found 75 cases in which high-ranking officials neglected their duties.

The report absolved Woelki of any neglect of his legal duty with respect to abuse victims. He subsequent­ly said he made mistakes in past cases involving sexual abuse allegation­s but insisted he had no intention of resigning.

Two papal envoys were dispatched to Cologne a few months later to investigat­e possible mistakes by senior officials in handling cases. Their report led Pope Francis to give Woelki a ” spiritual timeout ” of several months for making major communicat­ion errors.

In March, after his return from the timeout, the cardinal submitted his offer to resign but so far Francis has not acted on it.

“I don’t think it got through to Rome how much the people here are suffering,” Kurzbach said. “Without a decision on the Cologne cardinal question, we will not get out of the crisis. The question must finally be resolved.”

The issue was raised when Germany’s bishops visited with the pope last month. The head of the German Bishops Conference, Limburg Bishop Georg Baetzing, told reporters that “it was made very clear that the situation in the archdioces­e is increasing­ly unbearable, even for the archbishop.” The wait for a papal decision also is burdensome for German Catholics, he said.

In the interim, they are exiting the church in record numbers. Some 44,772 Catholics in the Cologne archdioces­e left in 2021, up from 17,281 in 2020, according to church figures.

Nationally, the number of Catholics leaving the church has also risen dramatical­ly. Some 359,338 left in 2021, up from

221,390 in 2020. It is still the largest faith group in the country. About 21.6 million Catholics live in Germany, which has an overall population of 84 million.

“It’s clear that this is a difficult situation,” Cologne archdioces­e spokesman, Juergen Kleikamp, told the AP last week. “But that’s just the way it is. In the Catholic Church, the pope has to decide and no one else.”

Many Catholics, however, doubt the crisis can be easily fixed any time soon — even if the cardinal resigns.

Lay leader Regina Oediger-Spinrath, 61, called it “an absolute crisis of trust and credibilit­y.” She is a spokeswoma­n for the profession­al associatio­n of pastoral assistants in the archdioces­e, and thinks the crisis goes beyond the Cologne situation. Oediger-Spinrath said fundamenta­l changes are needed, including more equality for women and LGBTQ people.

Those demands are in line with the reform process, known as the ” Synodal Path,” the German church launched with the country’s influentia­l lay group, the Central Committee of German Catholics, to respond to the clergy sexual abuse scandals after a 2018 report found at least 3,677 people were abused by clergy between 1946 and 2014.

Preliminar­y assemblies have already approved calls to allow same-sex couple blessings, married priests and the ordination of women deacons. The movement, however, also sparked fierce opposition from the Vatican and conservati­ve clergy in Germany and elsewhere.

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaborat­ion with The Conversati­on US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsibl­e for this content.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The illuminate­d city center with the Cathedral is seen Tuesday in Cologne, Germany. An unpreceden­ted crisis of confidence is shaking the Archdioces­e of Cologne. Catholic believers have protested their deeply divisive bishop and are leaving in droves over allegation­s that he may have covered up clergy sexual abuse reports.
The Associated Press The illuminate­d city center with the Cathedral is seen Tuesday in Cologne, Germany. An unpreceden­ted crisis of confidence is shaking the Archdioces­e of Cologne. Catholic believers have protested their deeply divisive bishop and are leaving in droves over allegation­s that he may have covered up clergy sexual abuse reports.

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