Wednesday, January 02, 2019

Double Lives

Cardinal Wright with Wuerl

Corruption

I came across an article by that title on Commonweal.  It's probably the best written regarding the scandal.  It's rather balanced and sober, as well as enlightening.  I can't believe how naive I've been.

During the nearly four decades I spent writing about religion for Newsweek, I heard numerous tales of “lavender lobbies” in certain seminaries and chanceries, told mostly by straight men who had abandoned their priestly vocations after encountering them. At one time or another, the whispering centered on networks in Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Chicago, or Pittsburgh, among other dioceses. One of the few priests to complain in public was the late Andrew Greeley, who spoke of gay circles operating in the administration of Chicago’s Joseph Bernardin, a cherished friend of his. As far back as 1968, I heard similar rumors about priests serving in the Roman Curia, mostly from Italians, who are generally more relaxed about homosexuality than Americans and unsurprised when those leading double lives are outed. What concerns me, though, is not simply personal hypocrisy, but whether there are gay networks that protect members who are sexually active.

Here it is worth revisiting the career of Cardinal John J. Wright (1909–1979) who, like McCarrick, was the subject of numerous stories about his own sexuality. Again, these came mostly from former seminarians and priests of the Pittsburgh diocese, which had a reputation during Wright’s decade there as a haven for actively gay clerics. That was especially true of the Pittsburgh Oratory, which Wright founded in 1961 as a religious center ministering to Catholic students attending the city’s secular universities.

Wright was an intellectually gifted churchman whose reputation as a liberal in the Spellman era rested chiefly on his interest in literature and the arts and his voluminous essays on those subjects and others published in liberal Catholic magazines, including this one. In 1969, at the age of sixty, Pope Paul VI chose Wright to head the Congregation for Priests in Rome and elevated him to cardinal. It was there, in the frenzied initial years of the post-council era, that I first heard stories of his leading a double life rather openly with a younger lover. What interests me now is not the private details of this double life, but whether it influenced how he ran the congregation overseeing the selection, training, and formation of the clergy. Donald Wuerl, who recently resigned as archbishop of Washington D.C., would surely know the truth about Wright. Wuerl’s first assignment after ordination at the age of thirty-one was as secretary to then Bishop Wright of Pittsburgh in 1966. The younger priest was said to be closer to the cardinal than the hair on his head. He became Wright’s omnipresent full-time personal assistant when the latter moved to Rome, even sitting in for him during the papal conclave that elected John Paul II.  - Double Lives - The Peril of Clerical Hypocrisy, By Kenneth L. Woodward

What I don't know is a lot.

9 comments:

  1. I know of one priest at the Oratory in the early 1070's who was gay. He propositioned a friend of mine. Of the other members at the time I have no knowledge.

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    1. I returned to the sacraments in the early '70's and in my fervor I couldn't even imagine such a thing. For me being gay was all about going out night clubbing and so I never believed a religious person would have anything to do with that. Most of my life I rejected any such insinuations that actively gay homosexuals were in the priesthood or religious life - with some exceptions of course, but I never believed most of it until recent years. The rumors about McCarrick I always dismissed. What an idiot.

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  2. Terry you are just like the rest of us. Believing these men took vows in good faith and mostly upheld them. I think we maybe still surprised about how common and widespread this was in every locality. I am sad that good men felt they had to leave the priesthood to survive. So many mortal sins all interconnected to this one.

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  3. So, what comes up in my Twitter feed? This article which only made me feel more distressed. I wonder if this corruption can ever be weeded out?

    https://www.americamagazine.org/politics-society/2019/01/02/report-nuns-india-have-faced-abuse-decades

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  4. http://origin.bishop-accountability.org/

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  5. So, it seems I cannot escape this. A nightmare from which I cannot wake up. Another paper another scandalous article. All the horrid things anti-Catholic preachers and bigots said about the Church I love seem to have had a basis in truth. All I can say is I never saw any of it. What now?

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    1. We've started saying the St. Michaels prayer every day, especially because of these very scandals. Also fasting.

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    2. It is a wise response. I feel totally overwhelmed with them.

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  6. Here is the article:

    https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/ny-news-catholic-church-nun-sexual-abuse-20190102-story.html

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