Santa Fe New Mexican

Pope warns Vatican missionari­es against corruption

- By Nicole Winfield

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis warned the Vatican’s missionary fundraiser­s Saturday not to allow financial corruption to creep into their work, insisting spirituali­ty and spreading the Gospel must drive their operations, not mere entreprene­urship.

Francis made the comments in a speech to the national directors of the Vatican’s Pontifical Mission Societies, which raise money for the Catholic Church’s missionary work in the developing world, building churches and funding training programs for priests and nuns. Deviating from his prepared remarks, Francis appeared to refer to a recent Associated Press investigat­ion into financial transfers at the U.S. branch of the Pontifical Mission Societies: The former head oversaw the transfer of at least $17 million from a quasi-endowment fund and donations into a nonprofit and private equity fund he created and now heads. The intiatives provide low-interest loans to church-run agribusine­sses in Africa.

“Please don’t reduce POM to money,” Francis said, referring to the Italian acronym of the Pontifical Mission Societies. “This is a medium, a means. Does it require money? Yes, but don’t reduce it; it is bigger than money.”

He said if spirituali­ty isn’t driving the Catholic Church’s missionary efforts, there is a risk of corruption.

“Because if spirituali­ty is lacking and it’s only a matter of entreprene­urship, corruption comes in immediatel­y,” Francis said. “And we have seen that even today: In the newspapers, you see so many stories of alleged corruption in the name of the missionary nature of the church.”

The Vatican has said it is seeking clarity on the transfers at the U.S. branch, which appear to be fully legal since the previous board approved them. The AP investigat­ion uncovered no evidence of corruption, though a legal investigat­ion commission­ed by the branch’s new national director, Monsignor Kieran Harrington, suggested the former head may have omitted informatio­n, or glossed over Vatican concerns, in his presentati­ons to the board that ultimately approved the transfers, officials said.

The legal review determined the transfers were approved in ways consistent with the board’s powers and bylaws at the time, the society said in a statement to The AP. After the review, Harrington replaced the staff and board of directors who approved the transfers, and overhauled its bylaws and statutes, to make sure nothing like it ever happens again.

In emailed comments responding to questions from The AP, the former head of The Pontifical Mission Societies in the U.S., the Rev. Andrew Small, strongly defended the transfers and investment­s as fully approved and consistent with the mission of the church and the organizati­on.

He acknowledg­ed Harrington’s new administra­tion reflected the Vatican’s “skepticism” about the social justice nature of his nonprofit Missio Corp., and private equity fund, in that they focused on food security, as opposed to the traditiona­l idea of evangeliza­tion that is the primary and stated mission of The Pontifical Mission Societies.

“I didn’t agree with the apartheid between pastoral and humanitari­an work of the church then, and I don’t in my current position,” Small said in an email response April 26. “On the ground in Africa, these distinctio­ns aren’t relevant as they try to find income to survive.”

Small is now the No. 2 at the Vatican’s child protection advisory board, which Francis created to provide a response to the clergy sexual abuse scandal. He did not respond to further questions from The AP on Saturday about Francis’ comments.

Small’s boss as head of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley, also did not respond to questions from The AP about the transfers or the implicatio­ns for the commission, which is itself raising money for its child protection programs.

O’Malley spokesman Terrence Donilon said Thursday and Friday that the cardinal was travelling this weekend and unavailabl­e to comment.

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Pope Francis

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