Austin American-Statesman

Can Francis reconcile Catholics to hierarchy?

- Mary Sanchez She writes for the Kansas City Star.

Millions of Catholics eagerly await Pope Francis’ arrival in the United States this fall. Like no other Christian leader in recent years, this humble, empathetic man has moved the world with simple words and deeds of virtue.

Yet whatever pleasant surprises and breakthrou­ghs may be in store during the trip — which includes a stop in Cuba, speeches before Congress and the U.N., and an outdoor Mass that will likely draw millions in Philadelph­ia — joy will be tainted by an unmistakab­le pall. The Catholic Church in America is still weighted by the sex abuse scandal, in the image it projects to those outside the faith, by the financial costs of the settlement­s, and in how it has divided those who remain in the pews.

I would have liked Francis to witness the conversati­on I did between two women last week in Kansas City. They spoke in hushed tones, alternatin­g between anguish and tenderness, before parting with an embrace. The women had never met before.

A news conference had brought them to- gether, and they discovered that they had an unholy bond. They believe that, decades ago, they were abused by the same priest, who is now dead. It was long ago, but the wounds were raw.

“He bragged to me about other girls that he had been hurting,” one woman told the other after the reporters had cleared the room. “That was you.” The news conference was part of the hubbub over the removal of Robert W. Finn, bishop of the Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese, a prelate remarkable only in his unfitness to shepherd his flock. Nearly three years ago, he became the most senior U.S. Roman Catholic prelate to be convicted of criminal charges related to the child sexual abuse scandal. Finn was found guilty of a misdemeano­r, having failed to report suspected child abuse in a case that eventually sent a priest (now defrocked) to jail for 50 years on charges of producing child pornograph­y.

Finn’s removal was actually a resignatio­n, accepted without comment by Francis in Rome, which rankled many.

Still, for both of the women, along with the other victims, the resignatio­n was a relief.

One of the women had been part of a 2008 nonmonetar­y settlement with the diocese that attempted to set in place significan­t changes in how allegation­s were to be handled going for- ward. The other was a part of a nearly $10 million settlement in 2014 to resolve civil cases against the diocese.

“This is just the beginning of what needs to happen,” one of the women said. “I hope this is a new era.”

Time will provide the reply to her hope.

Francis is the supreme pontiff who asked, “Who am I to judge?” He is the prince of the church who washes the feet of convicts. He has invoked faith to condemn the bombing of Syria. He has helped usher the reopening of relations between the U.S. and Cuba. He has met with Jewish leaders to condemn the growing anti-Semitism in Europe and decried Islamist attacks on Christians in Africa and in the Middle East.

Impressive, inspiring stuff. But to reconcile a disillusio­ned Catholic laity to an often uncaring, unresponsi­ve and morally reprobate hierarchy — now, that would be doing something.

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