Read Part 1 here.
Editor's note: Last November the pope told the USCCB not to take any substantive action on the sex abuse crisis because he had scheduled the summit in Rome. The summit, being hyped as a serious look at the problem, seems to be just one more stage production to create the impression that the Vatican is taking the problem seriously and actually doing something about it. Don't hold your breath. So far the press conferences indicate that the real problem (sodomite behavior which includes clergy homosexual abuse of minors, clergy homosexual abuse of young adults, especially seminary students, and consensual clergy homosexual sodomy between adults.) The only issue being addressed at the summit is the abuse of minors. And Blase Cupich, a master spinmeister, is continuing the cover up. When you read the papal schedule below, note how almost nothing is being said or done about what can only be described as the major Church crisis of our day. The pope has time to fly around the world, visit art galleries, attend interfaith meetings, and babble on and on about whatever; but dealing with the sex abuse crisis is hardly on his radar screen. The silence of the shepherd for his poor little slaughtered lambs in the womb and for the victims of clergy sex abuse (many of whom have committed suicide) is appalling!
Part 2: Has the Pope Abandoned
His Post? Has He Been Fiddling?
Editor's note: Last November the pope told the USCCB not to take any substantive action on the sex abuse crisis because he had scheduled the summit in Rome. The summit, being hyped as a serious look at the problem, seems to be just one more stage production to create the impression that the Vatican is taking the problem seriously and actually doing something about it. Don't hold your breath. So far the press conferences indicate that the real problem (sodomite behavior which includes clergy homosexual abuse of minors, clergy homosexual abuse of young adults, especially seminary students, and consensual clergy homosexual sodomy between adults.) The only issue being addressed at the summit is the abuse of minors. And Blase Cupich, a master spinmeister, is continuing the cover up. When you read the papal schedule below, note how almost nothing is being said or done about what can only be described as the major Church crisis of our day. The pope has time to fly around the world, visit art galleries, attend interfaith meetings, and babble on and on about whatever; but dealing with the sex abuse crisis is hardly on his radar screen. The silence of the shepherd for his poor little slaughtered lambs in the womb and for the victims of clergy sex abuse (many of whom have committed suicide) is appalling!
POPE FRANCIS FIDDLES
WHILE THE ROMAN CHURCH IS BURNING…BURNING MAD
by James M. Thunder
What
matters and events have kept Pope Francis so busy during August, September,
October, November, December, and January – 180 days – so busy that he could
neither address Archbishop Viganò’s testimonies nor engage with bishops on their conduct in abusing, or enabling
the abuse of, children and seminarians?
Consider the four business
management categories of tasks: important and urgent; important but not urgent;
unimportant but urgent; unimportant and not urgent. In what category would most
people place the issue of the bishops’ conduct in abusing children and
seminarians? Enabling such abuse? Covering up such abuse? Promoting abusers and
enablers?
How did Pope Francis keep busy? There
are the papal routines, presumably many of which could be worked into a more
pressing matter: daily morning Mass, weekly Wednesday afternoon audiences,
weekly Sunday praying of the Angelus. He also celebrates many special Masses,
such as one for the closing of the Youth Synod and one on November 3 for the
repose of the souls of Cardinals and bishops who have died in the preceding
year. I do not list below any of these routine papal activities.
What other things are on a papal
calendar? There are trips abroad. (He traveled to Palermo, Lithuania, Latvia,
and Estonia, Panama, and the United Arab Emirates.) There are the unscheduled
messages of condolences and prayers to victims of natural disasters, accidents,
war and civil strife, and persecution. There are appointments to Curial
offices. There is the receiving of new ambassadors. There are meetings with
Curial officials such as those that result in papal decrees of miracles and the
naming of bishops. (In his first three years, Pope Francis appointed 500
bishops. That’s a rate of over three weekly.) There are ad limina (or ad limina
apostolorum) visits which are week-long meetings that occur every five
years between bishops from a geographic territory and Curial officials,
including meetings with the pope. None of the activities I identified in this
paragraph appear on the formal online papal calendar. [The 2018 calendar is no longer online.]
I would not
expect you, the reader, to read each of the following entries. Scrolling would
be sufficient to make my point. Each day adds to the torment of the lay
faithful.
August 2018
August, the
entire month of August, is vacation time in Italy.
Aug. 2: Pope Francis announces a change on capital
punishment.
Aug. 20: As mentioned in the first part, Pope Frances sends
a 2,000-word letter “to the People of God” on the sex abuse scandal
Aug. 25-26: Pope Francis attends the World Meeting of
Families in Dublin.
Aug. 31: Pope Francis addresses the General Chapter of the
Oblates of St. Joseph.
September
In September, it’s back to business for Italy. Here is a detailed calendar for the month:
Sept. 1: Pope Francis sends message on the World Day of
Prayer for the Care of Creation and addresses entrepreneurs attending the Day.
Sept. 3: Pope Francis meetings with the bishops of Sudan and
South Sudan.
Sept. 5: Pope Francis addresses the Italian Motorcycle
Federation.
Sept. 6: Pope Francis addresses the International Conference
for Consecrated Widows.
Sept. 7: Pope Francis addresses the Italian Parents
Association.
Sept. 8: Pope Francis addresses bishops from Mission Territories participating in the Seminar promoted by
the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples and, separately, the
Communio Internationalis Benedictinarum Symposium.
Sept. 11: Pope Francis meets with the bishops of Venezuela.
Sept. 12: Pope Francis addresses the
"Tensho Kenoh Shisetsu Kenshoukai" Association of Japan.
Sept. 13: Pope Francis addresses the bishops participating in the course promoted
by the Congregation for Bishops and, separately, participants at the conference
on the theme “The theology of tenderness of Pope Francis.”
Sept. 14: Pope Francis addresses the General Chapter of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin and,
separately, participants meeting on the crisis in Syria and neighboring
countries.
Sept. 15: Pope
Francis makes an apostolic visit to Palermo.
Sept. 17: Pope Francis addresses young people from the Diocese of Grenoble-Vienne (France).
Sept. 18: Pope Francis promulgates the apostolic
constitution Episopalis communio (“On the
Synod of Bishops”).
Sept. 20: Pope
Francis addresses the National Association of Mutilated and Invalid
Workers; the Sons of Mary Immaculate; and the World Conference on "Xenophobia, Racism and
Populist Nationalism in the Context of Global Migration."
Sept. 21: Pope Francis addresses priests of the Archdiocese
of Valencia, and sends a video message to participants in the “V National
Encuentro” of the Hispanic/Latino Catholic community meeting in Grapevine,
Texas, Sept. 20-23.
Sept. 22: Pope Francis reaches an agreement with the
People’s Republic of China.
Sept. 22: Pope Francis sends a video message to the
International Congress on “The Catechist, Witness to the Mystery,” organized by
the Pontifical Council for Promoting the New Evangelization.
Sept. 22-25: Pope Francis makes apostolic visits to Lithuania,
Latvia, and Estonia.
Sept. 26: Pope Francis sends messages to the Catholics of
China and to the Universal Truth and to the G20 Interfaith Forum held in Buenos
Aires, Sept. 26-28.
Sept. 27: Pope Francis meets with the bishops of Scotland.
Sept. 28: Pope Francis meets with bishops of England and
Wales.
Sept. 29: Pope Francis addresses the (Italian) National
State Police Association.
October
Oct. 1: Pope Francis addresses the priests of the Diocese of
Creteil (France), the IV Seminar on Ethics in Health Services Management, and
the General Chapter of the Institute of Charity (Rosminians).
Oct. 6: Pope Francis meets with Youth Synod Fathers and addresses,
separately, pilgrims from Slovakia on the occasion of the 200th
anniversary of the erection of the Eparchy of Presov.
Oct. 8: Pope Francis meets with the bishops of Taiwan. |
Oct. 10: Pope Francis addresses pilgrims from the Diocese of
Krakow.
Oct. 13: Pope Francis addresses seminarians from Lombardy.
Oct. 15: Pope Francis addresses pilgrims from El Salvador.
Oct. 16: Pope Francis sends a message on World Food Day.
Oct. 22: Pope Francis addresses the General Chapter of the
Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ (Passionists).
Oct. 23: Pope Francis addresses young people and elderly.
Oct. 25: Pope Francis participates in the Eucharistic
Celebration at the Altar of the Chair, with Synod Fathers who walked the Via
Francigena, from Monte Mario to St. Peter’s Square.
Oct. 27: Pope Francis sends a video message to the first
Synod of the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires, and addresses the closing session of
the Youth Synod.
Oct. 29: Pope Francis addresses young people from the
Diocese of Viviers (France) and, separately, the General Chapter of the
Congregation of the Missionaries of St. Charles (Scalabrinians). He sends a
message to the Director of SIR News Agency to mark 30 years of publication.
Oct. 31: Pope Francis addresses the American Bible Society.
November
Nov. 1: Pope Francis sends a video message to the Scholas
Occurrentes of Buenos Aires.
Nov. 5: Pope Frances addresses the World Congress of
Mountain Jews.
Nov. 8: Pope Francis sends a written message to a conference
in Rome on drinking water.
Nov. 9: Pope Francis receives the new ambassador from
Ireland. He addresses students from the School of Journalism in Germany and the
International Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists.
Nov. 10: Pope Francis address the Alunni del Cielo
(“Students of Heaven”) Association and, separately, the Plenary Assembly of the
Pontifical Committee for International Eucharistic Congresses. He sends a
message to the Archbishop of Poznan for the 100th anniversary of
Polish independence.
Nov. 12: Pope Francis sends letters, one to mark the 50th
anniversary of the founding of the monastic community of Bose, and another for
the inauguration of the academic year of the Pontifical Lateran University.
Nov. 13: Pope Francis sends a message to the XXV General
Assembly of the Spanish Conference of Religious Men and Women meeting in
Madrid, Nov. 13-15.
Nov. 15: Pope Francis meets Israel's President Rivlin. He
also addresses the Pius Pontifical Latin America College in Rome.
Nov. 16: Pope Francis receives the new ambassador from
Bosnia and Herzegovina. He meets with representatives of the Equestrian Order
of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem.
Nov. 17: Pope Francis addresses the Joseph
Ratzinger-Benedict XVI Foundation and, separately, the Apostolic Movement of
the Blind.
Nov. 18: Pope Frances releases a message on the second
annual World Day of the Poor and lunches with the poor.
Nov. 19: Pope Francis receives the new ambassador from
Austria, receives Indian Nobel Peace Prize recipient Kailash Sathyarthi, and
addresses pilgrims from Albania.
Nov. 22: Pope Francis sends a video message to 8th
Festival of the Social Doctrine of the Church meeting in Verona, Nov. 22-25.
Nov. 23: Pope Francis meets with the bishops of Iran. He
addresses the Giorgio La Pira Foundation.
Nov. 24: Pope Francis receives participants in the Third
International Meeting of Choirs and he addresses seminarians from the Diocese
of Agrigento. He sends letters for the Centenary of the Death of Bl. Giuseppe
Toniolo and the 50th anniversary of the elevation to “Pontifical
Basilica” of the Basilica of Saint Nicholas of Bari.
Nov. 27: Pope Francis tours a Russian art exhibit.
Nov. 28: Pope Francis sends an address to the International
Christian Union of Business Executives.
Nov. 29: Pope Francis receives bishops of the Episcopal
Conference of the Indian Ocean. He sends a message to a conference on
decommissioning places of worship and he addresses the International Convention
of the Rectors and Pastoral Workers of Shrines.
Nov. 30: Pope Francis receives children from Poland
suffering from cancer.
December
Dec. 1: Pope Francis receives people from the Dioceses of
Ugento and Molfetto. He addresses the International Conference on Drugs and
Addictions. He sends a letter on the 60th anniversary of the
reconstruction and consecration of the Cathedral of Manila.
Dec. 3: Pope Francis addresses the Rondine “Cittadella della
Pace” Association and, separately, the International College of the Gesù of
Rome.
Dec. 4: Pope Francis sends a message on the occasion of the
23rd Public Session of the Pontifical Academies.
Dec. 5: Pope Francis sends a letter to his envoy for the
Dec. 8 beatification of Algerian martyrs.
Dec. 6: Pope Francis receives members of the Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mercy
(Mercedarians), on the eighth centenary of its foundation.
Dec. 7: Pope Francis receives the new ambassador from Spain.
Dec. 8 (Feast of the Immaculate Conception): Pope Francis
visits the Rome daily newspaper Il
Messaggero. He venerates the Immaculate Conception at the Spanish Steps.
Dec. 10: Pope Francis sends a message to the International
Conference on Human Rights, meeting in Rome, Dec. 10-11.
Dec. 12: Pope Francis announces his schedule for his trip to
the UAE, Feb. 3-5.
Dec. 13: Pope Francis sends a message to participants in the
Study Day on Water organized by the FAO meeting in Madrid. He addresses
Telepace and, separately, non-resident ambassadors.
Dec. 16: Pope Francis addresses parents, volunteers, and the
children of the Santa Marta Pediatric Dispensary.
Dec. 17: Pope Francis addresses the International Commission
Against the Death Penalty.
Dec. 18: Pope Francis issues a message for the 52nd
World Day of Peace, Jan. 1.
Dec. 20: Pope Francis receives members of Italian Catholic
Action Youth.
Dec. 21: Pope Francis gives Christmas greetings to the
employees (with their families) of the Holy See and the Vatican City.
Dec. 21: As mentioned in the first part, Pope Francis
delivers a 4,000-word address to the Curia on the upcoming February summit on
the abuse of children, and on the ordained who stab brothers in the back.
Dec. 22: Pope Francis addresses the (Italian) National Civil
Protective Service.
Dec. 25 (Christmas Day): Pope Francis delivers his “Urbi et
Orbi” Blessing.
January
Jan. 3: As mentioned earlier, Pope Francis sends a 3600-word
letter to the U.S. bishops on retreat in Mundelein Illinois.
Jan. 7: Pope Francis addresses the Diplomatic Corps.
Jan. 8: Pope Francis sends a message for World Day of the
Sick.
Jan. 11: Pope Francis makes a surprise visit to a Poor Clares
monastery 100 miles from Rome.
Jan. 12: Pope Francis addresses the Italian Association of
Church History Professors.
Jan. 13: Pope Francis baptizes 27 infants in the Sistine
Chapel on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord.
Jan. 15: Pope Francis sends letter to Pontifical Academy of
Life on the 25th anniversary of its establishment, and a message to
a meeting of the Presidents of the Doctrinal Commissions of the Episcopal
Conferences in Asia.
Jan. 17: Pope Francis addresses the management and staff of
the Vatican office responsible for public security. He sends a video message to
the World Indigenous Youth Gathering. He issues a moto proprio absorbing the work of the Ecclesia Dei Pontifical Commission
(charged with dialogue with the Lefebvrists of the Saint Pius X Fraternity)
into the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Jan. 19: Pope Francis addresses the Finnish Ecumenical
Delegation on the Feast of Saint Henrik.
Jan. 23-28: Pope Francis makes an apostolic journey to
Panama for World Youth Day.
Jan. 29: Pope Francis inaugurates the judicial year of the
Roman Rota and addresses the Fourth International Conference for World Balance.
February
Feb. 1: Pope Francis addresses the Joint International
Commission for Theological Dialogue Between the Catholic Church and the
Oriental Orthodox Churches and the General Chapter of the Hospitaller Order of
St. John of God.
Feb. 2: Pope Francis addresses the National Council of the
Principality of Monaco and the Board of Directors of the Italian Pro-Life
Movement.
Feb. 3-5: Pope Francis makes an apostolic journey to UAE.
Feb. 7: Pope Francis addresses personnel of the Regina Coeli
House of Rome.
Feb. 8: Pope Francis addresses the Missionaries of Africa
(White Fathers), the Missionary Sister of Our Lady of Africa (White Sisters),
and member of the Galileo Foundation.
Feb. 9: Pope Francis addresses the Alphonsian Academy Higher
Institute of Theology and the National Association of Magistrates.
Feb. 14: Pope Francis address the Plenary Assembly of the
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, and the
42nd Session of the Governing Council of the UN Agency,
International Fund for Agricultural Development.
Feb. 16: Pope Francis addresses the Augustinianum
Patristic Institute.
Just prior to the
February summit: Pope Francis will meet with the Council of Cardinals.
Feb. 21-24:
Summit of heads of episcopal conferences.
Conclusion
So, Part 2
has recounted the Pope’s activities for over 180 days. While Pope Francis
famously asked, “Who am I to judge?”, there is no reason that we should not avail
ourselves of this information in judging Pope Francis. When I read these
activities, my cheeks flush. I am enraged. I burn. The laity put their
sons under the care of priests and bishops. The laity provided the funds for
the education, housing, food, clothes, cars and retirements of priests and
bishops. Yet, some of them, too many of them, abuse our sons, wreck their
lives, their faith, their vocations to married life or the priesthood. And then
our bishops take our money, not their personal funds, and pay compensation to
victims. Some dioceses have filed for bankruptcy. So, our dioceses lose these
funds for the purposes for which they were donated: to evangelize, to pay for
charities, to pay for the maintenance of our churches. Where is the response,
in deed not just in word, of Pope Francis?
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