The Herald

Faithful deserve frank and honest answers

- Tom Devine is Personal Senior Research Professor of History in the University of Edinburgh TOM DEVINE

MY first reaction to Cardinal O’Brien’s resignatio­n is one of personal sadness about the turn of events and also of human concern for the cardinal; his terrible suffering at this time can only be imagined.

Keith O’Brien has been a courageous leader of his flock, well respected and liked by many beyond the Catholic community and a doughty champion of his church who has spent a lifetime as pastor and teacher proclaimin­g its principles without fear or favour. Let him who is without sin cast the first stone.

The imprecise, anonymous allegation­s against the cardinal are not accepted, legal advice has been sought and nothing has yet been proven.

Nonetheles­s, and surprising­ly perhaps, there is no denial of the charges in the formal announceme­nt of resignatio­n today; that must be a cause of concern.

This is probably the gravest single public crisis to hit the Catholic Church in Scotland since the Reformatio­n and its effects in the short term are incalculab­le. Many of the faithful in Scotland will be stunned by the seismic turn of events and left demoralise­d.

But some perspectiv­e is necessary. The Church is very much more than episcopal hierarchie­s, no matter how eminent.

The powerful resilience of a global faith – accounting for one-sixth of the earth’s population and still growing in numbers, enduring for more than two millennia through many vicissitud­es and much more fundamenta­l menacing than this personal tragedy – should not be underestim­ated. Moreover, in the cause of transparen­cy and indeed fairness to all, it is time for Cardinal O’Brien’s anonymous accusers to step forward into the public domain. If Catholicis­m in Scotland is to move on from this tragic affair a number of serious questions urgently require frank and honest answers from all concerned. The nation’s Catholics deserve nothing less.

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 ?? Main picture: PA ?? STEPPING DOWN: The cardinal, no longer involved in choosing a new Pope, was praised by Alex Salmond as the media storm grew.
Main picture: PA STEPPING DOWN: The cardinal, no longer involved in choosing a new Pope, was praised by Alex Salmond as the media storm grew.
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