Showing posts with label Roger Haight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roger Haight. Show all posts

Monday, July 21, 2014

Robert Blair Kaiser's Inside the Jesuits: How Pope Francis Is Changing the Church and the World — Jesuit DNA and the Papacy



Some weeks back, Rowman & Littlefield kindly sent me for review a copy of Robert Blair Kaiser's book Inside the Jesuits: How Pope Francis Is Changing the Church and the World (Lanham, MD: Rowan & Littlefield, 2014). The book has now, I believe, appeared in print, but the copy I received was an advance reading copy, a point I mention as I start this brief review because the page numbers I'm citing are from the page proofs, and both they and the text itself may have altered somewhat when the book was published.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Celebrating Religious Freedom, Remembering Those the Vatican Has Bullied and Silenced


Here's how Joseph O'Callaghan, an emeritus professor emeritus of medieval history at Fordham and former chair of the board of Voice of the Faithful in the diocese of Bridgeport, Connecticut, chose to celebrate the Catholic bishops' "Fortnight of Freedom":

Monday, March 22, 2010

Anthea Butler on Gutting of Catholic Theologians as Ground-Laying for Clerical Abuse Crisis



I highly recommend Anthea Butler's "Training God's Rottweiler: Catholic Church Sex Abuse Must End" at Religion Dispatches today.  Butler teaches religion at University of Pennsylvania.

She notes the incalculable damage inflicted on the Catholic church by the "gutting" of theologians at a point in history when it most needs astute theologians capable of placing the best of the tradition in dialogue with postmodern culture.  As she notes, the movement to silence theologians in the final decades of the 20th century emanated directly from Cardinal Ratzinger, the current pope.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Archbishop Burke on Twin Evils of Gay Marriage and Abortion: The Lamb Continues to Be Only A Lion

Archbishop Raymond Burke is back in the news—the American news. As I’ve noted before, the former archbishop of St. Louis was sent to Rome last summer to head the Vatican’s Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, the highest judicial office in the church beneath the pope himself. Many commentators have suggested that Burke was sent to Rome in accord with the ancient maxim, Promoveatur ut amoveatur: let him be promoted in order to remove him from the scene.

As it follows this maxim, the Catholic church has a history of handing out plum jobs to church officials who make a mess of their pastoral responsibilities. When court documents revealed the extent and longstanding duration of the sexual abuse crisis in American Catholicism in 2002, and when those documents showed the unsavory role that Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston had played in hiding and moving around priests abusing children, Law was nudged out of his pastoral responsibilities in Boston. Only to be promoted to the cushy post of Archpriest of the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome . . . .

The maxim about promoting folks in order to remove them doesn’t apply, unfortunately, to women removed from positions of ministry in the Catholic church. When Ruth Kolpack lost her job as a catechist in Beloit, Wisconsin, earlier this year as a result of her views regarding women’s ordination, church authorities offered her no golden parachute, despite her many years of ministry. Nor has Sister Louise Akers landed a plush job in the Vatican following her recent dismissal by Archbishop Daniel Pilarcyzk from all positions of ministry in the Cincinnati diocese. Akers’s crime? Supporting women’s ordination.

The church is not in the habit of handing out plum jobs to silenced theologians, either—Roger Haight was not given a comfortable sinecure in Rome, with palatial quarters and a handsome salary (both of which Law receives), when the Vatican silenced him at the beginning of 2009. Nor do priests who come out publicly as gay usually receive anything but scorn from the institutional church, in response to their honesty. As Fr. Geoff Farrow reports on his blog, in contravention of canon law, his bishop gave him neither financial support nor health insurance when he came out as gay in 2008 and the bishop booted him. As he notes, a priest accused of pedophilia would have received those benefits.

Unlike what happens to women, lay ministers, and gay priests who have the courage to admit they are gay when they’re unjustly dismissed by Catholic officials, the Burkes and Laws of the Catholic church do well for themselves. The church stands by its men, even (or especially), it seems, when they woefully foul their pastoral nests and damage numerous folks in the process.

Though Cardinal Law has tended to stay in Rome following his promotion-removal, Archbishop Burke now spends his time hopping back and forth across the Atlantic, where he has an important, albeit unofficial, political position in the American Catholic church. He has become something of a darling of the Catholic right in the U.S., where he keeps his hand in by pontificating as frequently as possible about “the” Catholic position on American political matters.

Burke was in the U.S. back in March to attend the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast, an event sponsored by Republican political operatives that does all it can to suggest that the Republican party has the endorsement of the Catholic church. This was on the heels of an embarrassing interview Burke gave to American Catholic anti-abortion activist Randall Terry (and here), in which Burke appeared to give official sanction to Terry’s extremist antics, which include skits depicting President Obama ordering doctors to stab babies, and which continue unabated even as I post this piece.

Last November, Burke sought to influence Catholic voters to vote Republican by characterizing the Democratic party as “grievously anti-life” and unworthy of Catholic support. Burke has repeatedly sought to use the Eucharist as a political weapon to try to swing Catholic voters in a Republican direction, as he calls for communion bans on Catholic Democrats running for office. During the last election cycle, he pontificated from Rome about how the Democratic party is in the process of turning itself into the “party of death,” and continued his campaign to encourage bishops to deny communion to selected Democratic candidates like Joe Biden.

And now Burke is back in the U.S. again. Still pontificating. This time about truth and charity. Well, about truth, his version of the truth, the version of truth comfortable to the posh Republican businessfolks who hang onto his pronouncements.

Burke is in the U.S. now to be given an award, the “Service to the Church and Our Nation” award, by the Morley Institute’s InsideCatholic.com news site, headed by the former in-house guru for all things Catholic in the Bush administration, Deal W. Hudson. Predictably, the good archbishop, whom InsideCatholic banquet attendees describe variously as warm, kind, humble, gentle, simple, and quiet—a lion speaking with the voice and face of a lamb—used his platform at the D.C. awards banquet to make a wide range of political observations that play to his Catholic-right audience.

Deal Hudson’s summary of the banquet address (to which the next-to-last link points) says that Burke “returned again and again to the scandal of Catholic politicians who support abortion or same-sex marriage,” insisting that such politicians should be denied communion and Catholic burial—in what Hudson opines was “an obvious reference to the Kennedy funeral.” The lion with the voice and face of a lamb also used his InsideCatholic forum to take a swipe at Catholic supporters of health care reform, noting (Hudson’s summary) that endorsing universal health coverage because it achieves “some desirable outcomes” while it “includes abortion” is “false reasoning.”

The InsideCatholic banquet was not Archbishop Burke’s sole forum on this trip to the U.S. According to Michael Sean Winters at America magazine, he also gave an interview to FOX news, in which he stated that the health care reform bill prepared by Senator Baucus contains a “mandate” for abortion—a claim Winters flatly dismisses. Winters says that Burke told FOX that the Baucus bill “provides for the provision of abortion, so it’s simply not acceptable.”

As Winters notes, the only sense in which that statement might be parsed as true is that the health care reform bill does not outlaw abortion outright, something it cannot do with Roe v. Wade on the books. Winters goes on to discuss the “nettlesome policy issues” created by the interface of health care reform, abortion, and Catholic teaching. In a subsequent posting following up on Winters’s discussion of those issues, I want to discuss the abortion question and health care reform more closely.

For now, though, I want to return to Archbishop Burke’s claim that abortion and same-sex marriage are necessarily linked for Catholic voters, as a kind of diptych of non-negotiable truths on the basis of which “true” Catholics will cast their votes. When I hear the leonine archbishop with the voice and face of the lamb talking about abortion, I have to admit, I have a tendency to stop my ears—just as I do when I hear Mr. Hudson, with his history of sexually assaulting a co-ed student at Fordham University, talking about the sanctity of marriage.

To say that the Catholic church in the U.S. is developing an image problem for its anti-abortion politics—and this problem is growing because of the lamentably unwise, unjust, and uncharitable stance the church has chosen to take regarding gay people—would be an understatement. The church’s draconian anti-gay politics are undercutting its attempt to make a persuasive argument in the public square about the sanctity of life.

The image problem the Catholic church is creating for itself by its anti-gay money laundering in places like Maine and its use of gay people as political cannon fodder to distract attention from mishandling of clerical abuse cases in places like Connecticut, is becoming a substance problem. The homophobic image the church is building for itself in Maine and Connecticut and many other places in the U.S. evacuates its pro-life teachings of any compelling substance, for many Americans, both Catholic and non-Catholic.

And pushing the lion-like Republican archbishop with the voice and face of a lamb center-stage to babble to his rich constituents about the twin evils of gay marriage and abortion is not going to help matters. Not for many of us. I’m surprised, frankly, that my centrist Catholic brothers and sisters continue to listen. I long ago stopped doing so, when I realized that the lion was only a roaring lion seeking to devour. There never has been a lamb there.

Ask the good people of St. Louis who jubilated when the leonine lamb got sent packing to Rome after his pastoral shenanigans in their diocese.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

And Cue the Clowns. And the Cavemen

I could not make this stuff up if I tried. Not in a million years.

After I posted my reflections on the Haight case and Benedict and relativism earlier today, I scanned the blog at NCR responding to John Allen's reflections about relativism as Benedict's primary concern with Haight's christology. Only to read the following rantin' and ravin' screed, one among several in the same vein:

END HERESY in 2009

Stomping out heresy is a good way for the Church to begin the new year.

Hopefully more peculiar theories are put asunder in the days ahead, so that the Church can speak its creed with one voice to all the world, and that all the world may come to better know the Triune God.

Yep, as I noted in yesterday's posting about my Catholic brothers and sisters of the right and center, talk about heresy is alive and well--in 2009. And not just talk about heresy, but triumphant war cries to "stomp" it out, and bring "all the world" to know the Triune God.

I could not make this up. If anyone had told me after Vatican II that this is where we would be in 2009--that voices like this believe they represent the center of American Catholicism, and are given reason to believe that, by the center itself--I would have laughed uproariously.

I am grateful, though, that the poster who posted the preceding rant did spell out what I wanted to underscore as the heart of Benedict's animus against "relativism": this is not about relativism at all. It's about triumphalism. It's about muscle-flexing.

It's about putting and keeping the other in her despised place.

Count on Benedict's friends to spell out the real social agenda--the toxic, coercive one--that masquerades behind all the high-flown theological words.

It's a big agenda that goes well beyond relativism and world religions and the hope to coerce others to accept the Trinity: because the folks who tend to post such screeds are repeat posters at NCR and other centrist Catholic blog sites, I know the agenda very well. They don't hesitate to talk about it. Ad nauseaum. In all its gory detail. These same folks now jubilating in Rome's concemnation of the works of a Jesuit that they have never read and never will read authored vitriolic postings about Obama, Democrats, and liberals all through the election period.

They jump in anytime abortion comes up. They're there with their clubs to bash gays anytime anyone suggests the church might love and not bash. They are eager to keep women in their "natural" and "God-given" place of submission.

Benedict's friends. Benedict's faithful followers. Is he truly proud of what he has made of the church, I wonder, and continues to make of it?

And what does any of this have to do with Jesus?

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

The Haight Case and the State of American Catholicism

There has been ongoing discussion of the Roger Haight case at the Commonweal and National Catholic Reporter blog sites lately (www.commonwealmagazine.org/blog/?p=2648,
http://ncronline3.org/drupal/?q=node/3046). This is in addition to the discussion to which I linked several days ago, when I first noticed the new actions Rome had taken against Haight (http://bilgrimage.blogspot.com/2009/01/continuation-of-inquisition-new.html).

I have become as fascinated with the blog discussions as with the case itself. In my view, they say a great deal about where the American Catholic church has ended up as a new millennium gets underway—about the very unhappy situation in which it finds itself after concerted attack from the center of the Catholic church on the project of Vatican II, and after several decades of close alliance of American Catholicism with neoconservative politics and thought.

The American church is in trouble. That trouble is on display for all the world to see on the fractious, headed-nowhere discussion the Haight case is evoking on various centrist blogs of American Catholicism. The movement of "restoration" spearheaded by Cardinal Ratzinger before he became Benedict XVI, with the blessing of John Paul II, has succeeded not only in dumbing us down, but also in shifting the discussion so far to the right that the position now occupied by the center is pretty much where the right was as Vatican II ended.

I had written several lengthy and perhaps turgid overviews of these discussions in postings I chose not to upload today and yesterday. Perhaps it was providential that I have had to spend both days tied to telephones as tech services seek to deal with bizarre problems that continue to afflict my computer.

The heart of what I’d like to say about the blog discussions I’ve been following re: Roger Haight and Rome’s silencing of him: as I read them, I feel a million miles away. I feel totally removed from the church my co-religionists represent, the co-religionists of both the right and the center.

It’s as if I am dropping in on a discussion taking place in 1950, as though Vatican II has not even happened—and no one has informed the movers and shakers of the American Catholic church that time has marched on and they are living in a little bubble in time, with rarefied air that is rapidly vanishing. The ghetto is a thing of the past. The defensive posture with all its plaintive cries of persecution by the cultural mainstream is no longer necessary. We are the mainstream—and we’re doing no better with the mainstream than other religious groups have done in the past.

I am beyond weary reading postings (not to mention papal statements) that act as if there has been no significant biblical scholarship in a century—scholarship which irrefutably demonstrates that the scriptures (including the gospels) are not eyewitness accounts to events the biblical writers were chronicling, but theological reflections on historic events and mythic stories. I’m flabbergasted that many American Catholics still seem to think that living a life of faith is primarily a matter of ingesting pills of catechetical “truth” and then spitting those pills out when the evil menace of modernity requires a sharp dollop of “the” Truth.

I’m baffled, in fact, that many of us are fighting modernity when modernity is over and done with and postmodernity is in full sway, that many of us (including our pope) continue to natter on about the dictatorship of relativism, when the primary danger churches face today is the dominance of irrelevance—of a self-imposed irrelevance.

And here’s what’s perhaps most shocking of all to me in these discussions: the stolidity, the stupidity—and yes, the mean venality—are on exhibit not only in the postings of the many self-designated saviors of orthodoxy who haunt those blog sites, to set aright posters who have forgotten to ingest their catechetical pill for the day. One expects those qualities in the postings of many of these self-appointed watchdogs. But the stolidity, stupidity, and mean venality are even more strongly in evidence in what many centrist American Catholic thinkers have to say about Haight and the church’s challenges today.

These are, after all, educated Catholics, these movers and shakers. They purport to have theological educations. They have gone, many of them, to the best ivy-league universities. They are journalists and lawyers and political consultants, some of them. They are even, God help us, theologians.

And they are talking on and on about heresy. As if that word has compelling import at the dawn of the 21st century. As if the biggest challenge the Catholic church faces is a threat to its ideas and to the clarity of its "truths," not the self-inflicted wound it insists on re-inflicting every time a church dignitary opens his mouth these days. The wound we inflict when we make bizarre statements about gay people as threats to human ecology. The wound we re-open when we pontificate about how the urine of women who take birth control pills is polluting the environment and causing males to be infertile.* The wound we deepen when we loudly proclaim our commitment to human rights but side with fundamentalist Islamic nations that make homosexuality a capital crime punishable by death, when the U.N. proposes to add sexual orientation to its human rights documents.

Above all, the deep, abiding, festering wound the church refuses to deal with, which it has inflicted on itself from the very center in its atrocious behavior towards those who report sexual abuse by clerics in their childhood. The wound the church keeps inflicting on itself when its dignitaries hide and move abusive clerics, and then refuse to admit any guilt when they are found out. The wound that stinks from the center of the church, through the refusal of bishops who have been exposed as protectors of abusive clergy to resign.

And the wound to the faith of all of us that these actions cause. And the horrible unlanced wound borne by countless numbers of Catholics who were abused by clerics and religious as minors.

I am deeply frustrated—no, even more, I am completely alienated—by centrist Catholics who should know better, who seem to think that the church attracts people more by the clarity of its ideas than by the life it leads. And whose discussion of theological issues totally prescinds from the real lives of real people in real places at real times. I can find nothing in common with my centrist brothers and sisters of faith who talk about doctrine in isolation from people, and how people—real people in real places and real times—embody doctrine. I can find no common ground with my centrist co-religionists who seem to think we can continue doing systematic theology apart from sociological, political, and cultural analysis.

For me, one of the can-never-go-back contributions of Vatican II is its rediscovery of the biblical and patristic notion of the church as a sacramental sign of God’s love and salvation in the world. Once one begins to reappropriate that very traditional theological notion and to talk about the church as the sign of God’s salvation in the world, one has no choice except to look at what the church does, how the church lives, what the church effects in the world, as one talks about what the church holds, teaches, and proclaims.

There is no separating the two, in a sacramental universe. It is impossible to talk about the church’s teachings, about its “truths,” without talking about how the church lives, with how those teachings affect people’s lives. In much centrist discourse in American Catholicism today, there is a hidden presupposition that this kind of analysis—analysis that talks about real people in real places at real times; analysis that adverts at all to people’s lived experiences—is vulgar, analysis that somehow runs beneath the high-order analysis of abstract thought and of philosophy.

There is the assumption that grounding what we say about theology and doctrine in references to real people’s real lives and real experiences is not “objective,” that such analysis opens the door to prejudice—and to lapses of charity.

As a result, a tiny handful of centrist Catholics who inhabit a very particular world, one that they read as the whole world, talk on and on about objectivity and truth and the church’s obligation to safeguard its deposit of faith, as if their viewpoints represent the viewpoints of the entire American Catholic church. A handful of almost exclusively white, middle-class, heterosexual, married Catholics living in major American cities (mostly on the coasts, at that) speak as if their experience reflects the experience of all American Catholics—as if it should be read as experience tout court.

The off-the-wall comments of Catholics on the far right at these centrist blog sites are not really intrusions at all—not, that is, intrusions into the centrist conversation. They are the alternative voice of the same group of people. They are the center speaking out of the other side of its mouth. They are the right-wing flip side of the centrist perspective.

And both voices are as irrelevant to the majority of American Catholics as they possibly could be. Most American Catholics have made the move from modernity to postmodernity with more or less equable grace. Most American Catholics have long since made that move where we live and have our beings. Most American Catholics intuitively get the need to connect analysis of real-life experience with theological analysis.

And more and more of us are alienated not by what the church says, not by lapses from abstruse christological points, but by how the church lives, by what it does, by its lived witness to the gospel. Most of us no longer mull over fine points of what the church teaches, because the disconnect between the teaching and the lived witness has become so unbearably wide. Who can care, really, about relativism and christology when clerics abusing minors are shifted about in our parishes, and when the men doing that shifting not only escape punishment but are even elevated to positions of honor in Rome?

Most American Catholics would immediately experience revulsion at the details of how the Vatican investigates and censures a theologian, if those details were known to them. They would be repulsed by the lack of respect for human rights and human dignity—by the fact that Rome does not even disclose to a theologian charged with error the error or errors that have been reported about that theologian, that a theologian under scrutiny is not permitted to know the identity of her detractors or to answer the possibly false charges of those detractors, and so on. Most American Catholics would question the qualifications of the church to stand for human rights while it egregiously violates human rights, if they knew how Rome deals with theologians.

To their discredit, most of the centrist commentators on the Haight case I’ve been reading recently are so intent on parsing abstract theological concepts that they appear totally unmoved by the question of the violation of theologians’ human rights and human dignity. As are their confreres on the right, who are, for the most part, gleeful to see another theologian go up in flames—who seem eager to renew the actual flames of the Inquisition of the past.

God help us if these folks are the best we have to offer, if the future of the church is in their hands: if our lives are in their hands.

And as the nattering continues, the faith of many of us has been going up in flames long since. As these brothers and sisters of the center and of the right carry on. As they carry on their theological discussions about Love and Truth, as if no questions about actual love and actual truth merit attention. Questions about actual love and actual truth right among us, in the real world in which most of us live, far removed from the grand discussions of airy ideas and the parsings of theological fine points.

*On this story, see the excellent recent summary at Enlightened Catholicism (http://enlightenedcatholicism-colkoch.blogspot.com/2009/01/human-ecology-backed-by-pseudo-science.html).

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Continuation of the Inquisition: New Penalties for Theologian Roger Haight

I began this day reading a posting by David Gibson on the Commonweal blog which says that the Vatican has added new penalties to those already in place for American theologian Roger Haight (www.commonwealmagazine.org/blog/?p=2644. Previously, he had been forbidden to write in the area of christology or to teach in Catholic institutions. He is now forbidden by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the contemporary embodiment of the Inquisition, to write about theology at all or to teach anywhere, including in non-Catholic institutions.

Roger directed my dissertation. Because of that connection, and the gratitude I owe him for the hard work he put into that arduous process (arduous for both of us), I feel what is being done to this good Jesuit at a deep level. I am, frankly, appalled and angry, and I'm not sure that writing out of the space of anger and disgust is wise. Most of all, I would not want anything I write to bring further harm to a man in his 70s whose vocational life has been well-nigh destroyed by church fiat.

Because I went to a Jesuit university, I know a bit about Ignatian spirituality. I have long admired the Jesuit emphasis on living for others, and on placing oneself each day in God's hands, in the hope that God will use one's heart, mind, and soul to serve good ends and combat bad ones. I pray the Suscipe prayer of Ignatius of Loyola at the start of each day, before I begin my work.

At the same time, as I say this, I have to say honestly that few Jesuits I have ever met impress me. Many of those who taught or tried to guide me at Loyola were, frankly, too enmeshed in the top-level social circles of New Orleans to make much impression on me. I was simply not in their scope of vision, a scope limited to those with money, power, and significant family ties. I remember sitting through an entire semester of a math class at Loyola taught by such a Jesuit, who never learned my name, but persisted on addressing me by the name Danny--the name of another young man in the class who fit the ideal this priest, whose unique vocation was to take well-heeled Garden District matrons to the Holy Land each summer, pursued.

A few Jesuits I've met have, however, significantly impressed me, and have made a dent on my hard-hearted hell-bound heart. One of these was my undergraduate professor C.J. McNaspy, who embodied the Jesuit ideal of wide learning and catholic sympathy for everybody and, in particular, those on the margins. C. J. was a Jesuit, a person for others, par excellence.

As is Roger Haight. Roger worked his rear off to teach graduate students. Not a single other professor I had in grad school prepared for class as assiduously as Roger did. No other drew from students the response Roger did--a response out of the depth. In his classes, what one thought was not so important as how one thought, as the basis on which one made theological judgments. Knowing the theological literature, being able to cite it fluently, being persistent about pursuing its arguments and capable of defending one's own arguments: these were what counted in Roger's class.

As a result, even when I took classes in 19th-century theology from him in the fairly moderate 1980s, in a fairly moderate graduate school in theology, there were strong reactions against Roger. Because he pushed students to think and not to parrot.

One of these, I recall, came from a California nun with whom I took a class, and who was the first right-wing Republican nun I had ever had the misfortune to meet. This sister was not to the right in terms of lifestyle. Indeed, she dressed in expensive, tailored clothes and had immacuately coiffed hair. She moved among and expected to continue to move among highly placed Republicans in her home county, Orange Co., California.

Her reactionary views were political and theological. With Roger, she was persistently at daggers drawn for reasons murky to me. It was clear she was on a crusade--to purify the church and make it safe for her sort. She relegated the rest of us, her fellow students, to the sidelines in class, where we were expected to enjoy the privilege of listening to her rail at Roger for his christological heresies. Yes, that was the term she used--in the 1980s, in a theology class: heresies.

She would not be challenged to think or defend. She preferred to parrot, to repeat the creed and to point out that, in her humble opinion, Roger's christology from below did not conform to the words she was reciting from the creed. She preferred to hobnob with the rich and powerful in both church and society. A christology from below made her uncomfortable, because it said something about those with whom she stood in solidarity socially and politically.

It was also clear to me that Roger was not supported by some of his fellow Jesuits in Canada, though I could perhaps cause trouble for him by telling all that I saw in that respect. Some of these Jesuits were staunch anti-communists from Eastern Europe, with a penchant for "reporting" to the authorities anyone they suspected of being less than orthodox.

One of the first articles I sought to publish in graduate school got panned by a Jesuit in that network, who happened to be at Fordham at the time, and who had whited out his scathing critique of my work on connections between peacemaking and economic justice so badly that his name was still legible on the letter encouraging the Jesuit journal to which I had submitted my essay not to publish it. Fortunately, a more progressive Catholic journal took the article gladly when I sent it to them.

There was also among Roger's confreres in the Jesuit community in Toronto a priest who has been made bishop, and who is, in my view, hardly distinguishing himself by some of the pig-headed and theologically dubious actions he has taken to earn a name for himself as defender of an orthodoxy willing to butt heads with the Canadian government. He is a John Paul II appointee, the kind of priest being made bishop under the current regime.

I interacted with this priest a number of times as I went through graduate school. I wanted to wash my hands each time I shook his--and mentally, want to wash them even today, as I think about him. I am fairly certain that he has played a big role in bashing his Jesuit brother, who to my mind, far more faithfully embodies Jesuit ideals than he, the big bishop, does. This bishop is also a big old gay basher, to boot--a quality that helps rather than hurts, if one wants to be appointed to office in the church of John Paul II and Benedict XVI.

Reading some of the comments on the Commonweal blog defending what the CDF is doing to Roger Haight infuriates me even more than I am already angered by the cruel, unjust action of the Vatican towards Haight. One respondent suggests that the CDF never undertakes actions like this without "due diligence" and abundant evidence. Just trust the big papa at the top . . . .

Really, I want to say sarcastically to him? Really? The way the Inquisition undertook actions against witches in the past, with due diligence and abundant evidence? Witches were never burned at the stake until their inquisitors proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that they were witches: by neighbors who had seen them cavorting nude on mountaintops with the devil, or riding across the sky, or casting spells that caused harm to others. Neighbors and relatives who often benefited economically by accusing the witch of witchcraft. Witches were not ever condemned until the Inquisition had gathered as much evidence as possible to prove the heinous crime of the witch--evidence gathered under torture, if needed.

Really? Trust the authorities? Give ourselves and our minds over to a doctrinal-purity commission that carries on the Inquistion, that does its work in secret, that will not allow the accused to know who has accused him or her, or of what he or she has been accused, so that he/she may defend himself/herself? Everything the Catholic church and other churches have done is worthy of trust?

Nothing I can say will ever change the minds of such folks. And, sadly, those who "think" like this are now at the very center of the Catholic church--again. There may have been a brief moment in the 1960s and 1970s, when Steve and I foolishly headed off to study theology, in which it appeared that a window had opened.

John Paul II and his henchman Ratzinger, the current pope, decisively slammed that window. And for many of us, what the church is doing to people like Roger Haight does not elicit trust. It provokes deep anger and alienation. A church whose leaders behave with such conspicuous lack of justice and charity has an uphill battle in trying to convince many folks that it stands for justice and charity.