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A Response to Bishop Robert Barron’s ‘Letter to a Suffering Church’

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"Why stay Catholic with so much scandals?" asks Bp. Robert Barron in his book Letter to a Suffering Church. The main thesis of the small book is that Catholics, scandalized by the sex abuse scandal, should not abandon the Church which historically has gone through equally trying times.

Barron provides readers encouragement grounded in Scripture and Church history. He urges the laity to "fight" by "raising your voice in protest … writing a letter of complaint … insisting that protocols be followed … reporting offenders … pursuing the guilty … refusing to be mollified by pathetic excuses." While this all sounds very good, the problem is that these steps have already been taken with little to no effect.

As the founder of Word on Fire Catholic ministries and an auxiliary bishop for the archdiocese of Los Angeles, Barron tries to lead readers to believe that the worst is over.

He writes that "the reporting of new cases is down to a trickle." The fact is, however, that reporting doubled between July 1, 2017, and June 30, 2018. Even though he laments the abuse and cover-ups, he fails to address the fact that it is the Catholic Church — and not simply predator priests and corrupt bishops — that is responsible for the abuse problem. Why should one want to blame the problem on the "Catholic Church?"

Part of the problem dates back to when the Church established minor (high school) seminaries, like St. Anthony's Seminary in Santa Barbara, in which faculty members and upperclassmen preyed upon thousands of young boys during their period of psychosexual development.

Many of these innocent boys were turned into homosexual predators who later, as priests, sexually preyed upon altar boys and other young men who were as old as they were when they had their first sexual experience in the seminary.

Many of these innocent boys were turned into homosexual predators who later, as priests, sexually preyed upon altar boys and other young men who were as old as they were when they had their first sexual experience in the seminary.

Without revealing their identities, there were two priests who were ordained together. One attended a co-ed Catholic high school while the other one was enrolled in a minor seminary. While one was going to school dances and proms, the other one was being "befriended" by homosexual faculty members. 

After their ordination, one related to the boys and young men in his parish like a mentor and loving father, while the other one was later accused of sexually abusing teenage parishioners. Ever though the sexually abusive priest is at fault, is the "Catholic Church" not more at fault for allowing innocent boys to have been preyed upon and turned into sexual predators?

If the number of sex abuse cases is going down (despite the reporting of past cases going up), is it because of safeguards put into place by the Dallas Charter, or — more so — because most minor seminaries have been closed, thereby reducing the number of priests who prey upon young people as they themselves were preyed upon?

Minor seminaries were designed to attract high school boys to become priests before they discovered girls. Even if one argues that most were not ordained until they were around 25 or 26, it was expected they were not to date as seminarians. Many of those who retained their heterosexual orientation and were not turned into homosexual predators did in time discover women, which helps explain why studies show that at any given time no more than 50 percent of priests practice celibacy.

How many priests today were appraised of this statistic before they were asked to promise celibacy? How many heterosexual seminarians today — as few as there may be — are told that only half of all priests at any given time are practicing celibacy?

While research shows that 28% of men and 15% of women in the United States admit to having been unfaithful during their marriages, the late Richard Sipe, a leading expert in the field of priestly sexuality, maintained that only 2–10% of vowed clergy have never broken their vow of celibacy following their ordination


When Abp. Robert Carlson took up a second collection on Easter Sunday for retired priests, how many priests of the archdiocese of St. Louis are retired after reaching 70–75 years of age verses priests removed from ministry because of having been credibly accused or found guilty of having sexually abused minors, seminarians, or adults? 

If many diocesan priest retirement homes are filled to capacity, is it because bishops have no other place to put abusive priests? The fact that a number of predator priests were themselves victims of sex abuse undertaken by people employed by the Church only makes it right and just that the Church provide for them without misleading Catholics to believe their special "retirement" contributions are being used exclusively for priests who served faithfully until reaching retirement age.

Unfortunately, Bp. Barron does not address in depth the primary cause of the sex abuse crisis which Fr. Paul Sullins shared in his report entitled "Report: Clergy Sex Abuse" that was distributed to all the U.S. bishops at a meeting of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).

According to Fr. Sullins' research, as the percentage of homosexuals in the episcopacy, priesthood and seminaries increased beginning in the '60s, so too was there a direct proportionate increase in the number of sex abuse cases. This makes total sense when one considers that, unlike in U.S. society where 80% of sex abuse victims are teenage girls, some 80% of the victims of clerical sexual abuse in the Catholic Church are teenage boys.

Pope Francis, Cdl. Blase Cupich and others can try to blame the abuse crisis on "clericalism," but past and present lay members of the National Review Board would agree with Fr. Sullins' findings and say otherwise.

Interestingly, the Vatican and the USCCB are covering up the results of the Sullins report just as they did the 1985 sex abuse report "The Problem of Sexual Molestation by Roman Catholic Clergy: Meeting the Problem in a Comprehensive and Responsible Manner" co-authored by Dominican Fr. Thomas Doyle.

 If some 300 priests from six Pennsylvania dioceses abused over 1,000 minors, one can postulate that, with 150 predator chaplains, there were not two, but at least 500 abuse victims — or some 498 never reported by O'Brien.  

Had Church leaders not covered up the findings and the recommendations found in this report, how many abuse victims could have been saved over the past some 35 years? How many seminarians and young men will continue to be at risk of being abused as a result of the U.S. bishops failure to act upon the Sullins report that is supported by "Sex Abuse of Minors by Catholic Clergy" authored by Dr. Richard Fitzgibbons and Dale O'Leary? 

Not only are many U.S. bishops guilty of covering up and underreporting sex abuse, they themselves are guilty of "clericalism" by professing to be wiser than truly learned and experienced professionals in the field of clerical sex abuse like Paul Sullins, Thomas Doyle, Richard Fitzgibbons, the late Richard Sipe and others.

The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) reports that the average age of U.S. priests today is 67 and the number of priestly ordinations dropped in just one year by 27 percent from 590 in 2017 to 430 in 2018.

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Screenshot of Cdl. Joseph Tobin's tweet

It is interesting that those bishops who are playing or have played an important role in vocations to the priesthood are believed to have a homosexual orientation. The current chairman of the U.S. bishops' Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations, Cdl. Joseph W. Tobin, housed a gay Italian movie star and tweeted, "Nighty-night, baby. I love you," just like Abp. Charles Scicluna, the Vatican's point man on sex abuse, "liked" a photo of two men at a LGBTQ parade in New York City on Twitter. 

The official who was in charge of the most recent seminary investigation in the United States, "Two Faces" Cdl. Edwin O'Brien, was reported to have been recruiting candidates for the priesthood at Couragea conference for men and women struggling with homosexuality. This was the same O'Brien who grossly underreported sexual abuse in the archdiocese for the military services before being made a cardinal by reporting only two abuse cases

Bishop Accountability is currently in the process of updating its database to reveal that some 150 military and veterans affairs priests of the military archdiocese have been credibly accused or prosecuted for the sexual abuse of minors and young adults. 

If some 300 priests from six Pennsylvania dioceses abused over 1,000 minors, one can postulate that, with 150 predator chaplains, there were not two, but at least 500 abuse victims — or some 498 never reported by O'Brien.

Given the fact that no more than 2% of the U.S. population is made up of homosexual males and about half of U.S. bishops are believed to have a homosexual orientation, one should not be surprised that fewer heterosexually oriented seminarians are being ordained and the number of priests in the U.S. has dropped from around 60,000 in 1970 to 35,000 today.

If Fr. Sullins found a direct correlation between an increase in the number of homosexual bishops, priests and seminarians with an increase in the number of sex abuse cases which mainly involved young men, then further research may reveal a direct correlation between an increase in homosexually oriented bishops with a decrease in the number of heterosexual priests and seminarians.

How much can truly change when the 'metropolitan' solution cooked up by Pope Francis and Cdl. Cupich has bishops policing other bishops without mandated lay involvement?

Despite the fact that Pope Francis and most U.S. prelates, including Cdls. Donald Wuerl and Kevin Farrell, along with Bp. Robert McElroy, were aware of Theodore McCarrick's sexual predations, especially with seminarians and young priests, they did nothing to report, address or curb his sexual appetites. 

The even greater "elephant in the room" that neither the media nor the U.S. bishops — including Bp. Barron — want to expose is the amount of abuse that Pope Francis himself covered up in Buenos Aires prior to his papal election. How can the Pope discipline bishops for covering up or under-reporting sex abuse when most bishops know he himself covered-up innumerable abuse cases in his archdiocese with a population of 2.5 million Catholics?

Does one really believe the abuse victims who were interviewed in Buenos Aires were lying when they refuted the Pope's claim that "this never happened in my diocese"?

While the "good news" is that with the closure of minor seminaries there will be less homosexual predation of teenage boys, the "bad news" is that with the subsequent recruitment of large numbers of homosexuals in their 20s, 30s and early 40s who are using the priesthood to hide their homosexual orientation, one can now expect far more priests to prey either on heterosexual seminarians and vulnerable adults, or become sexually involved with other adult homosexuals — a problem that was intentionally not addressed at the February sex abuse summit in the Vatican. 

When bishops like Arthur Serratelli of PattersonRichard Malone of Buffalo and McElroy of San Diego allow priests and pastoral associates engaged in homosexual behavior with other priests or consenting adults to remain in ministry or be moved from one parish to another, can one conclude that bishops perceived to be gay cover up for their gay priests?

Just as heterosexual males are not inclined to go to gay bars, what devout heterosexual male would want to study for the priesthood in a diocese headed by a bishop perceived to be gay or associate with promiscuous gay clergy?

While one can applaud Bp. Barron for attempting to encourage Catholics not to lose faith in the institutional Church despite an inordinate number of bishops and priests who engage in, cover-up, or under-report sex abuse, how much can truly change when the "metropolitan" solution cooked up by Pope Francis and Cdl. Cupich has bishops policing other bishops without mandated lay involvement?

An excellent example of a major flaw in this system involves then-Abp. Edwin O'Brien who revoked Air Force chaplain Thomas Doyle's ecclesiastical endorsement after many bishops complained how his testimony at abuse trials was costing them millions of dollars.

When Fr. Doyle returned to the D.C. area from his Air Force base in Germany, it was the metropolitan, then-Cdl. Theodore McCarrick, who denied him faculties to celebrate Mass and the sacraments. 

This reminds one of the many seminarians, including Kamil Jarzembowski, whose vocations were destroyed after local Church and high-ranking Vatican officials did nothing when these heterosexually oriented seminarians complained about being hit on by gay classmates, faculty members, rectors and even bishops.

As long as there are so, so many corrupt prelates in the highest positions of the Catholic hierarchy, can Bp. Barron really expect matters to improve no matter how hard Catholics "fight"?

Gene Thomas Gomulka is a retired Navy (captain) chaplain in Coronado, California, who was a priest (monsignor) of the Altoona-Johnstown diocese and who served on active duty at Marine Corps and Navy commands for over 24 years until his retirement in 2004.

July 9, 2019—Viganò: Francis Burying Abuse

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Whistleblower warns of ongoing cover-up.

10,000 March for Life in Ireland

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DUBLIN (ChurchMilitant.com) - Ten thousand pro-lifers came out to a pro-life march on the Emerald Isle this weekend.

In Dublin on Saturday, July 6, thousands of participants in the All-Ireland Rally for Life marched against the legalization of abortion in the Republic of Ireland and called for the protection of pro-life laws still on the books in Northern Ireland.

Irish citizens voted overwhelmingly in May last year to overturn the Republic of Ireland's Eighth Amendment, which protected the right to life of unborn babies.

Niamh Uí Bhriain, a member of the rally's organizing committee, said in an address at the rally, "We may have lost the Eighth referendum, but we are not defeated."

She predicted that one day, pro-life advocates "will overturn what happened last May."

Video clips from the rally appear to show a large number of youth in attendance.

In addition to the Irish Republic's abortion referendum, rally attendees also spoke out against recent efforts to foist legalized abortion onto Northern Ireland.

For instance, there were some signs parodying the pro-abortion slogan "the North is next," saying instead, "the North protects." 

Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh, primate of Ireland, said in a speech at the rally, "The direct and intentional taking of the life of any innocent human being is always gravely wrong — we must avoid becoming desensitized to the value of every human life."

The archbishop told pro-lifers he was "deeply concerned by suggestions that amendments are being considered to the Northern Ireland (Executive Formation) Bill ... which will hijack this bill to remove existing legal protection for unborn babies and to 'fast track' the legalization of abortion on demand in Northern Ireland."

He continued, "How tragic it is for humanity that some legislators would 'fast track' the ending of the lives of the most defenseless in our society?"

A sign seen frequently at the rally depicted a pre-born baby, with the caption, "Abortion steals hope."

Also seen in photos was a large sign in Gaelic stating, "cosain an bheatha," which roughly translates to "defend life."

Weeks before the July 6 pro-life rally in Dublin, evidence surfaced that YouTube — which is owned by Google — manipulated search results related to the Irish May 2018 abortion referendum.

In a report on June 26, Project Veritas brought to light an internal document from YouTube that appears to be a search query blacklist.

This added legitimacy to a Breitbart report in January on internal discussions among YouTube employees about blacklisting certain searches.

Leading up to the Irish abortion referendum, Facebook announced it would not allow non-Irish organizations to buy advertising related to the referendum. Google went a step further, suspending any and all advertisements weighing in on the abortion vote — even advertisements paid for by Irish organizations.

The new report from Project Veritas indicates that the censorship went even deeper than previously known.

After decriminalizing abortion in the Republic of Ireland last year, pro-abortion activists are setting their sights northward, itching to take down Northern Ireland's pro-life laws.

The Northern Ireland Assembly has been suspended since January 2017 owing to political deadlock. Duties such as passing a budget for Northern Ireland have gone to the U.K. Parliament instead.

Earlier this month, several members of Parliament in the United Kingdom pushed for amendments to the Northern Ireland (Executive Formation) Bill that could overturn the country's pro-life laws.

Bishop Noel Treanor of the diocese of Down and Connor issued a statement read at Masses on Sunday that urged the faithful to contact lawmakers and voice their opposition to any measures decriminalizing abortion.

His statement said in part: 

It is therefore vital that citizens of Northern Ireland, and especially Christian citizens, take note that the Northern Ireland (Executive Formation) Bill, now before the Westminster Parliament, is being used to introduce amendments aiming to liberalise provision of abortion in Northern Ireland without the say-so of either the citizens of Northern Ireland or their elected representatives.

The bishop went on to state, "I would encourage everyone urgently to contact their MP this weekend or on Monday to register their objection to this undemocratic process."

Representatives of Northern Ireland pro-life group Precious Life demonstrated at Westminster on Tuesday, urging U.K. lawmakers not to force legalized abortion onto Northern Ireland.

--- Campaign 31877 ---

Fired Gay Priest More Evidence of Homosexual Infiltration of Church

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AMSTERDAM (ChurchMilitant.com) - A Dutch priest has been fired by the diocese of Haarlem-Amsterdam in the Netherlands after announcing his coming out at a Mass celebrating his 25th official jubilee. 

Parishioners heard the news about the dismissal on Sunday from the district board.

Pierre Valkering, pastor of Amsterdam Peace Church, punctuated his coming out by presenting a biography of his life as a homosexual priest called Ontkleed niet naakt staan: Hoe vindt een Roomse priester zijn weg? (Stand Undressed, Not Naked: How Does a Roman Priest Find His Way?) to his parishioners.

The gay pastor expresses strong criticism of the Catholic Church in his book, calling it "shrinking and sectarian."

The gay pastor expresses strong criticism of the Roman Catholic Church in his book, calling it 'shrinking and sectarian.'

The Dutch priest talks about visits to gay saunas and dark rooms and his addiction to porn.

The 57-year-old priest has been fighting for years for greater tolerance towards homosexuality within the Church. In 2016, he wanted to participate in the Amsterdam Gay Pride Parade by riding on one of the canal boats. The diocese, however, did not give its permission.

Bishop Jozef Marianus Punt of Haarlem-Amsterdam said through a spokesman the dismissal is due to the manner of Valkering's coming out, not his orientation.

Punt had asked Valkering to lay down his priestly duties "for the time being, and enter into a period of reflection" in April after the public coming out during Mass.

With the publication of the pastor's book, the diocese was attacked and publicly embarrassed, forcing it to issue a statement. 

According to reports, the diocese feels embarrassed because Valkering announced that he was homosexual in a Mass that celebrated his official jubilee "and did not abide by celibacy."

In a letter, the diocese informed the board that Valkering had been dismissed as pastor of the Peace Church effective June 24.


"The pastor could also have chosen to discuss his struggle with sexuality and celibacy openly and honestly with the bishop," the diocese said in the statement. "That honesty would certainly not have been punished. On the contrary, Father Valkering could have sought ways to reflect on this and receive help." 

In a statement to De Gaykrant, a Dutch newspaper for the gay community, Punt said that "while he appreciates Valkering's honesty and understands his struggle, he nevertheless asked him to lay down his priestly duties because the priest refuses to abide by his vow of celibacy," adding it is "incompatible with a worthy exercise of the priesthood."

The bishop ceded, "The Church understands human weakness and everyone's personal struggle to grow in holiness, but Father Valkering now declares that he doesn't even want to try and live an ordered celibate life."

The Code of Canon Law (CCC) states

An unmarried candidate for the permanent diaconate and a candidate for the presbyterate are not to be admitted to the order of diaconate unless they have assumed the obligation of celibacy in the prescribed rite publicly before God and the Church or have made perpetual vows in a religious institute. (CCC 1037)

According to the Dutch Review, Valkering said that "he is not happy with the decision of the diocese," but "this way of operating does not surprise me."

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Valkering's book

Valkering can still appeal against his dismissal. If he does that, then the appeal process in ecclesiastical law can take months.

The priest does not yet know if he will oppose the decision: "I will let it rest until after my vacation. My life has been turned upside down enough and it is nice to be able to take some distance."

De Gaykrant reported, "For a large number of parishioners from the Amsterdam Peace Church, it was an ink-black day" after they heard of their pastor's dismissal, adding "it was the bullet in the church."

Though multiple media reports say he was "fired," it's unclear what exact canonical penalties have been imposed beyond his dismissal from the parish. 

No one reliable survey has been done to determine how many homosexual priests have infiltrated the Church. But many surveys find between 15% and 50% of U.S. priests are gay, which is much greater than the 3.8 percent of people who identify as LGBTQ in the general population, according to one report.

Eighty percent of priests working at the Vatican are gay, although not necessarily sexually active, claims author Frédéric Martel in In the Closet of the Vatican published in February 2019.

Eighty percent of priests working at the Vatican are gay, although not necessarily sexually active, claims author Frédéric Martel.

Much literature underscores that the priesthood is becoming a gay profession, as Donald B. Cozzens, a former seminary rector, wrote in The Changing Face of the Priesthood, published in 2000.

And as far back as 1989, Rev. Andrew M. Greeley wrote: ''Blatantly active homosexual priests are appointed, transferred and promoted. ... National networks of active homosexual priests (many of them church administrators) are tolerated. Pedophiles are reassigned.''

The publisher's description of Valkering's book Ontkleed niet naakt staan: Hoe vindt een Roomse priester zijn weg? records that in 2016 the Dutch priest gave Pope Francis an Italian translation of his previous book chronicling farewell speeches of gay men written in collaboration with Jan van Kilsdonk.

Upon receiving the book, the Pope responded: "I carry those people with me in my heart. I want to say that to them."

Valkering maintained that the Pope's response "entrusted me with a mission!"

--- Campaign 31544 ---

Jesuits and The New York Times Continue to Attack Catholic Doctrine

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On Monday, The New York Times ran an article titled "How to Defy the Catholic Church." The article praises the decision of a Jesuit school to defy its archbishop and allow a teacher in a same-sex "marriage" to remain on staff and makes a plethora of foolish statements in an attempt to undermine fundamental Catholic doctrine.

Archbishop Charles Thompson of the archdiocese of Indianapolis recently informed two Catholic schools that if they failed to fire an employee who was in a same-sex "marriage," the schools would no longer be recognized by the archdiocese as Catholic schools. One school, Cathedral High School, reluctantly complied with the bishop's demands. The other school, Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory School, refused to do so.

Additionally, it turns out that the two men at these two Catholic schools were "married" to each other. 

There is a profound difference between repenting for a past sin and living in a perpetual state of sin without repentance.

"To our knowledge, the Archdiocese of Indianapolis' direct insertion into an employment matter of a school governed by a religious order is unprecedented," Brebeuf said. "After long and prayerful consideration, we determined that following the Archdiocese's directive would not only violate our informed conscience on this particular matter, but also set a concerning precedent for future interference in the school's operations and other governance matters that Brebeuf Jesuit leadership has historically had the sole right and privilege to address and decide."

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Fr. James Martin

The Times applauded this Jesuit school for pushing back against the Catholic Church, and invoked Fr. James Martin to justify their position.

According to Fr. Martin and The Times, firing employees for participating in a same-sex marriage is unnecessarily discriminatory because it isolates people with one type of sin while letting people who struggle with every other sin off the hook. But there are some flaws with this perspective.

First, no sane Catholic believes homosexuality is the only sin that falls within the grounds of unallowable conduct for a Catholic school employee. Employees who dishonor Christ and his Church by committing adultery, cohabiting before marriage or getting divorced without an annulment should be fired as well. 

It may seem that the Church ignores these other teachings, but in reality, they are just harder to identify and therefore much harder to punish people for. The prevalence of Catholic schools firing teachers for same-sex "marriages" and not for these other unvirtuous acts has more to do with practicality than anything else. 

Additionally, there is a profound difference between repenting for a past sin and living in a perpetual state of sin without repentance. The latter, which includes same-sex "marriage," is worse.

If Catholic school students see a teacher living in a perpetual state of sin, they will obviously be led to believe the Church teaching on that issue is wrong, and that the teacher isn't actually engaging in a sin at all. And then the children will believe that any Church teaching may be subject to their own personal revision.  

Father Martin is very happy about Brebeuf's decision.

"Brebeuf's decision to retain their employee was probably the most Catholic thing the school could do," he told The Times. "It is standing with someone who is on the margins, and that's what being Catholic is all about."

Unfortunately, Fr. Martin is off the mark once again. Standing with people on the margins of society is good, but rather than simply standing there with them, we are supposed to walk with them to a different and better place. This concept applies to helping a poor person feed himself as well as helping a person in a state of sin come closer to God.

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We are not supposed to simply stand with people in their misery and sin and tell them they are OK as they are. Telling a person in sin they are OK as they are is no better than telling a person in poverty that they are OK as they are, and to lie about a moral truth that is fundamental to all of the Abrahamic religions (not just Catholicism) would not be helpful at all.

The Times also says, "It is time for Catholics to remember it again and stand up for their brothers and sisters in same-sex marriages, as Brebeuf Jesuit has done, even if it means defying the teaching of their own imperfect church."

This misguided statement fails to distinguish the imperfect Catholic Church from the infallible ideology that is Catholicism. The Church as an institution has plenty of issues, but the Church's teachings on faith and morals, including same-sex marriage, are absolutely true.

According to The Times, Cathedral High School complied with the archdiocese's request in this matter largely because they are a diocesan high school.

"Because Brebeuf is a specific ministry of the Jesuits, their canonical and nonprofit status is different than ours," Cathedral's letter said. "Therefore, the two schools cannot function the same way if Cathedral were to receive a similar decree as Brebeuf." 

This is interesting because it indicates that while diocesan schools do not have the financial independence to reject the orders of their bishops, the Jesuit schools do, and Brebeuf's decision may set a dangerous precedent for the future.

--- Campaign 31544 ---

Pope Francis’ History of Cover-Up

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Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò's recent testimony that Pope Francis is not acting on his knowledge of the Vatican's young seminarians being sexually abused is part of a larger pattern of cover-up that has emerged from the Pope's past as a bishop in Argentina.

Speaking to The Washington Post on June 10, Viganò stated that the Pope is aware of young seminarians being victimized at the Vatican's St. Pius X Pre-Seminary by another seminarian who went on to be ordained a priest.

"The pope and many prelates in the Curia are well aware of these allegations," said Viganò, "but in neither case was an open and thorough investigation permitted."

But as a bishop in Argentina, then Cdl. Jorge Bergoglio already had a history of covering up clerical sex abuse. One such case involves then-Cdl. Bergoglio as archbishop of Buenos Aires protecting the late Bp. Juan Carlos Maccarone, former bishop of Santiago del Estero, Argentina.

In 2005, a video surfaced of Maccarone's homosexual encounter with a 23-year-old male, Alfredo Serrano. Bergoglio immediately launched a PR campaign making Maccarone out to be the victim. According to Bergoglio, Maccarone was both a target of revenge and a victim of political enemies. Bergoglio avoided altogether any mention of the moral implications of Maccarone's homosexual activity that was evident in the video. Maccarone was said to have resigned that year owing to poor health.

But in 2010, Maccarone was found to be administering sacraments in a diocese next to Buenos Aires. He did so while residing in Buenos Aires, then under Cdl. Bergoglio's leadership, at a mission that was home to disabled children.

When Maccarone died in 2015, a report surfaced that he had been criminally implicated in abusing a minor. He was never prosecuted for this crime, owing to the lobbying of the Argentine Bishops' Conference of which Bergoglio was president from 2005 to 2011.

Many other cases exist involving the Pope Francis covering for predators like the former bishop of Oran, Argentina, Bp. Gustavo Zanchetta. Zanchetta is now under criminal prosecution in Argentina owing to credible allegations that he sexually abused seminarians.

The list expands from Argentina into the present day. This list includes Chilean Bp. Juan Barros and Honduran Abp. Juan Piñeda. It also includes Venezuelan Abp. Edgar Peña Parra, who was accused of sexually attacking minors.

In August 2018, Francis appointed Parra as substitute at the Secretariat of State, making him the Vatican's third most powerful prelate.

And the list goes on and on.

Watch the panel discuss the emerging pattern of papal cover-up in The Download—Viganò: Francis Burying Abuse.

Bishop Stika Supports Married Priests

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KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (ChurchMilitant.com) - Bishop Richard Stika of the diocese of Knoxville, Tennesee, has voiced support for married priests. 

In a tweet from July 5, Stika supported the notion of married priests in the Amazon as a solution to individuals who do not have ready access to the sacraments because they live in remote locations.

"Someone asked me today about the Church ordaining married men as priests in the Amazon," he said. "Since the Church already has married priests in the world, I see no reason not to."

"To deny the Eucharist because of Church discipline to a remote area is wrong," he added.

Since the Church already has married priests in the world, I see no reason not to.

Stika tweeted a rhetorical question on the topic later that same day.

"So which is more important, a celibate clergy that is not able to visit remote areas more then once a year or ordaining married elders of the tribe who could celebrate Mass?" he asked.

Father James Martin agreed with Stika, offering a similar rhetorical question.

"I agree with @BishopStika. Discussing the possibility of ordaining married men to the priesthood, especially in areas where the Eucharist is unavailable, is an urgent matter. A theologian once described the dilemma to me as: 'What is of more value: celibacy or the Eucharist?'"

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Many of the responses to Stika and Martin were negative.  

"Why is this being promoted by German Bishops. Once one hears of Cardinal Kasper's involvement one should be greatly concerned. This isn't for conversion of indigenous people but universal change in the Church, away from the True Faith," responded one person to Stika.

"Classic modernism. Use edge cases to bend and then break the rules," Noel Kelly responded to Martin.

Pope Francis told reporters in January that he believes celibacy is a gift for the Church and that optional celibacy is not the way forward, in his opinion. 

"Am I someone who is closed? Maybe, but I don't feel like I could stand before God with this decision," he said

However, the pontiff then talked about how there could be some possibility of ordaining married men to minister to those living in remote locations.

This possibility will be an official topic of discussion according to the Instrumentum Laboris (working document) for the upcoming Amazon synod. 

Affirming that celibacy is a gift for the Church, it is requested that, for the most remote areas of the region, the possibility of priestly ordination of elders, preferably indigenous, respected and accepted by their community, be studied, although they may already have an established and stable family, in order to ensure the sacraments that accompany and sustain the Christian life.

China and Amazonia are half a world apart but the Vatican seems to have both regions on the same path to apostasy.

On Saturday, Bp. Joseph Strickland of the diocese of Tyler expressed concern at the direction the Vatican has taken in different parts of the world, tweeting that "China and Amazonia are half a world apart but the Vatican seems to have both regions on the same path to apostasy."

That tweet has since been removed.

The Special Assembly for the Amazon of the Synod of Bishops will take place Oct. 6–27.

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Student Expelled From School for Saying There Are Two Genders

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ABERDEENSHIRE, Scotland (ChurchMilitant.com) - A student is being expelled after confronting his teacher over a comment made in class that there are more than two genders.

In June, a 17-year-old high school senior, only identified by the name "Murray," uploaded a video of an interaction he had with a teacher after being kicked out of class for saying there are only two genders.

The video shows the teacher telling Murray to keep his so-called opinion to himself, claiming it's national school policy to say there are more than two genders.

 

Murray responds, "It's not scientific whatsoever," and the teacher responds, "Not every policy is scientific."

He uploaded the video to the website Reddit, where it went viral, being seen well over 100,000 times, especially after it was retweeted by conservative commentator Paul Joseph Watson.

School authorities reacted quickly, claiming it was against school policy to record video and suspending him for a week. They also warned him he'd be expelled if he spoke to the press. The student noted, however, in a July 1 interview the video spoke for itself and there was no need to speak to the press.

He maintains that school authorities were hoping attention to the video would die down, but at the end of the first week of suspension, school authorities went to his home to inform him the suspension would be extended for a total of three weeks.

They maintained "higher-ups" in the education department made the decision.

Murray notes to his interviewer that he was working hard to complete his schoolwork during the three-week suspension and was looking forward to graduating and going to college.

But after three weeks, school authorities informed him he could not return to school and would not be allowed to graduate.

Murray maintains school authorities wanted to expel him from the beginning but they wanted to wait until attention died down so that he couldn't go to the press to declare he'd been expelled.

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NY Priest and LGBT Advocate Sacked for Sexual Misconduct

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NEW YORK (ChurchMilitant.com) - The priest who notoriously encouraged a young man to lie about his same-sex inclinations before entering the seminary, worked on behalf of entertainer Lady Gaga and her gay advocacy non-profit and established a gay fellowship in his church has been placed on indefinite leave by the New York archdiocese for serial sexual misconduct.

Father John Duffell was subjected to a canonical penal process over an allegation of misconduct with an adult. Cardinal Timothy Dolan related the circumstances to Duffell's former parishioners at Manhattan's Blessed Sacrament in a July 1 letter.

"I write to share some unpleasant and somber news concerning Fr. John Duffell, your just retired parish administrator," Dolan wrote and continued:

Father Duffell has been directed not to publicly exercise his priestly ministry due to an allegation from the past that he abused his position of authority in a violation of his promise of celibacy.

The allegation was made first to the [Manhattan] District Attorney, and then brought to our attention. This allegation involves an adult; it does not involve a minor. It is important that the archdiocese take such allegations seriously.

According to the New York Daily News, Duffell officially retired on July 7. The newspaper published portions written by Duffell to his friends and family in which he declared he had intended to remain as pastor of Blessed Sacrament for an undisclosed time, but a summons to the chancery altered his plans.

Duffell, pastor at Church of the Blessed Sacrament in New York, oversaw a benefit for two pro-gay groups, the Ali Forney Center and Lady Gaga's Born This Way Foundation.

The Daily News quoted Duffell's letter, which included the following information: "Many years ago there was an allegation of sexual impropriety with an adult which I categorically denied because it was not true" and "those files were subpoenaed from the Archdiocese by the Manhattan District Attorney."

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Duffell's gay advocacy has been covered extensively.

Church Militant reported in 2017:

The trend among Catholic laity corresponds to swelling dissent within the ranks of the American clergy. Increasingly, priests and bishops publicly flout Church teaching on homosexuality. This spring alone, Cdl. Joseph Tobin of Newark, New Jersey gave his blessing to an LGBT pilgrimage and Mass at his cathedral; Fr. James Martin, S.J. released a gay-friendly book that was subsequently welcomed by high-ranking prelates, including in the Vatican; and Fr. John Duffell, pastor at Church of the Blessed Sacrament in New York, oversaw a benefit for two pro-gay groups, the Ali Forney Center and Lady Gaga's Born This Way Foundation.

In a separate article also published in 2017, Church Militant noted:

Pastor of Blessed Sacrament, Fr. John Duffell, was present at the event Saturday night. A friend of Cynthia Germanotta, Fr. Duffell, spoke at a so-called diversity conference in 2011 where he instructed a gay, would-be seminarian to lie about being gay so as to not be barred from entering the priesthood.

At the venue, a young man in the audience said he felt "broken" after being told by a seminary that he couldn't be admitted to the priesthood, owing to his homosexual inclinations and asked what he should do. Father Duffell, a priest of the archdiocese of New York, responded, "You're not broken, the system is broken, and therefore you deal with it as a broken system; you lie."

Regarding his recent sidelining by the archdiocese, the Daily News quotes a 70-year-old parishioner, Anita Pearl. She told the paper she didn't "respond spiritually" to the priest.

"He was very autocratic and self-centered," she said. "Everything had to revolve around him. Instead of saying, 'Please be seated,' he said, 'I invite you to sit down' as if it was his personal invitation."

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Gravest Crisis in 2,000 Years of Church History

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With the Vatican document for the Synod on the Amazon, the Bergoglian pontificate now has its official manifesto of the extreme left, based on “surreal socialism.” 

In addition to Trump and Salvini, Brazilian President Bolsonaro is now among its enemies, all three of them emblems of the hated Western civilization of peoples of the Judeo-Christian tradition which does not deny its roots and identity. 

This Vatican Instrumentum Laboriswrites José Antonio Ureta, "represents the total opening of the doors of the Magisterium to 'Indian theology' and to 'eco-theology,' two Latin American derivatives of liberation theology, whose cheerleaders, after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the failure of 'real socialism,' now attribute the historic role of revolutionary force to the indigenous peoples and to nature, in a Marxist key.”"

It's the total opening of the doors of the Magisterium to 'Indian theology' and to 'eco-theology.'

Among Catholics there is confusion. It seems that the "Church that goes out" that Bergoglio wanted is truly going out — going out of Catholicism. Cardinal Walter Brandmüller — a personal friend of Benedict XVI — is a distinguished historian of the Church, and yet he has not hesitated to use the strongest terms to speak out against this Instrumentum Laboris: "heretical" and "apostate."

Brandmüller speaks of the Synod as "an aggressive intrusion into the purely secular affairs of State and society in Brazil." He then condemns the theological absurdities of the document (in contrast to the texts of the Second Vatican Council) and the "anti-rational rejection of 'Western' culture which emphasizes the importance of reason." Such a Vatican Instrumentum, the cardinal thunders, "makes the synod of bishops and ultimately the Pope responsible for a grave violation of the depositum fidei, which has the consequence of the self-destruction of the Church or the changing of the Corpus Christi mysticum into a secular NGO with an ecological-social-psychological purpose."

The prelate concludes "forcefully" that the Vatican document "contradicts the binding teaching of the Church on decisive points and thus it must be qualified as heretical. Given that here even the fact of divine revelation is called into question, or misunderstood, one must also speak, in addition, of apostasy." This "constitutes an attack on the foundations of faith ... and therefore must be rejected with the utmost firmness."

The position of the cardinal, who is a close friend of Benedict XVI, is the position of Catholics. And one may also assume that this position is shared above all by Papa Ratzinger, who for years defended the Faith of the Church from the liberation theology and from all of its derivatives which today fill the Vatican document. 

Despite a thousand pressures placed on him to do so, the Bergoglian court never obtained from Benedict XVI a refutation of the four cardinals of the Dubia (one of which was Brandmüller himself). Nor did it ever obtain a refutation of Abp. Carlo Maria Viganò, author of a historic testimony concerning the Vatican scandals.  

Rather, in April Papa Ratzinger published his own testimony — specifically addressing the scandals — which offers reflections in line with the viewpoint of the aforementioned dubia cardinals and also offers Benedict's own contribution. 

And we can also say that Ratzinger's document already anticipated the Vatican document on the Amazon. In fact, it condemns every attempt to replace the Church of Christ by creating "another Church, invented by us," because it is a church that — instead of concerning itself with the salvation of man – concerns itself with politics, the economy,and ecology (according to worldly ideologies), is “an experiment that has already been tried and failed.” 

This text of Benedict has now been published in a volume by Cantagalli together with other texts of Bergoglio on the problem of the scandals, and the clerical choir is now singing the praises of this editorial work as a sign of the harmony that supposedly exists between the two popes. 

But what harmony? Certain sections of the Bergoglian camp reacted violently last April when Benedict XVI announced the publication of his “notes.” There were those who suggested that they were not his own. Furthermore, Bergoglio was very careful not to spread the document, which had already been given to him by Benedict XVI, at the [February] Vatican summit on the scandals for which it was written. 

Now instead, Francis contributes to this book with his writings in order to make people forget his failures in this area (highlighted by Archbishop Viganò). Bergoglio is taking shelter behind the authority of Benedict XVI. But it is enough to read the two texts to understand the two opposing positions. 

Papa Ratzinger in these years has a dramatic task. On the one hand he must ward off all of the Bergoglian pulls which would carry the Church outside the bounds of Catholic doctrine (and his very presence is a deterrent which “admonishes” the Argentine). On the other hand, he must encourage those Catholics who are bewildered by the present disaster (including bishops and cardinals) and he must invite them to defend the faith of the Church while avoiding the production of irreparable ruptures 

The signals he gives are always discreet, but clear and comforting. Not only by means of powerful interventions like the document he issued last April, but also by recalling that he – that is, the pope – is there and Catholics should not feel that they are orphans. The latest (truly beautiful) book which Ratzinger has published, “Per Amore,” does not carry on its cover the title “Pope Emeritus” but the firm signature “Benedetto PP XVI.” These initials “PP” stand for “Pastor Pastorum” (or Pater Patrum), which is the title and prerogative of the reigning pontiff. 

This is the umpteenth little sign of the dramatic situation of the Apostolic See, which cannot (yet) be clarified, but which confirms what Benedict XVI said in his final audience on February 27, 2013: “The “always” is also a “for ever” – there can no longer be a return to the private sphere. My decision to resign the active exercise of the ministry does not revoke this.”  

In several of his recent letters – like his November 23, 2017, letter to Cardinal Brandmuller, in which he shows that he is very concerned about the situation of the present Church – Benedict XVI concludes by writing: “With my Apostolic blessing.” But only the reigning pontiff can give the Apostolic blessing (directly or by delegating others). If Benedict was no longer pope, doing so would be committing an abuse.

Moreover, many other signs should make one stop and reflect. Not only his dress, his name, his title, his coat of arms. Bergoglio himself calls him “Holiness” (because he is officially called “His Holiness Benedict XVI.”) 

For the last six years — in Bergoglian circles — they have wanted to obtain from Benedict XVI a declaration in which he says that he no longer has anything to do with the papacy, and that he is only a bishop. But Benedict does not say these words.  

A journalist from Corriere della Sera has now written that anonymous people (in unspecified circumstances) are said to have heard Benedict say, "The Pope is one, Francis." But this same journalist recently had the chance to meet Ratzinger and ask him questions, and Benedict XVI did not ever say this phrase to him. 

Benedict is central in the Church today.

The thought of Benedict XVI is best expressed above all by the words of his right-hand man, Archbishop Georg Gaenswein, who said at an historic conference at the Gregorian University 

Before and after his resignation, Benedict understood and understands his task as participation in such a "Petrine ministry." He has left the papal throne and yet, with the step made on February 11, 2013, he has not at all abandoned this ministry. Instead, he has complemented the personal office with a collegial and synodal dimension, as a quasi-shared ministry. ... This is why Benedict XVI has not given up either his name, or the white cassock. This is why the correct name by which to address him even today is “Your Holiness"; ... He has not abandoned the office of Peter — something which would be entirely impossible for him to do following his irrevocable acceptance of the office in April 2005.

Gaenswein spoke of a "pontificate of exception." 

There are those who believe that by a mysterious design of Divine Providence, the Church is being subjected to a very harsh trial, its own Good Friday, but that the presence of Benedict guarantees that She will not be shipwrecked. Certainly Benedict is central in the Church today. And one day everything will become clearer. 

First published in Libero on July 1, 2019.

Antonio Socci is the author of The Secret of Benedict XVI (Angelico Press, 2019). For more information click here. 

Translated by Giuseppe Pellegrino 

‘The Process’

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TRANSCRIPT

As you know, Church Militant often reports on various aspects of the scandal of clerical sex abuse, as well as the conditions approved by various bishops which allow this scandal to continue.

This past weekend, the archdiocese of Detroit, under the leadership of Abp. Allen Vigneron, made a major gaffe in making public the name of a priest who was accused of a single act which allegedly occurred more than 40 years ago.

And full disclosure here: The accused priest, Fr. Eduard Perrone of Assumption Grotto in Detroit, is the pastor of a number of people here at the apostolate who are parishioners at Grotto.

We are not reporting on this because Fr. Perrone is the pastor of some of us, but rather, since we are based in this archdiocese, we actually know firsthand many of the personalities involved in this case, we have personal knowledge of this case, much more so than we do of other cases we report on.

In this regard, it would be remiss of us not to report and comment on this because we know many inside points regarding the matter. 

At each Mass at Grotto this past weekend, representatives appointed by Abp. Vigneron went to the podium and announced Fr. Perrone had been temporarily restricted from any public ministry.

They invited parishioners to go to the back of the Church after Mass and ask them any questions they may have, and they handed out this paper by the hundreds to parishioners saying the cause of Father's removal was due to a credible allegation of sexual abuse of a minor.

Since some Church Militant staff were in attendance for the noon Mass, we went back to ask questions, as we had been invited to.

What we ran into was a wall of silence and refusal to even entertain certain questions. I specifically asked Msgr. Michael Bugarin two questions. 

One, why in the statement did the archdiocese not print that Fr. Perrone was denying the allegations and declaring his innocence?

That line is not in Vigneron's statement, or the statement he approved of. Bugarin gave the ridiculous answer that "that's not part of the process," a line he repeated at least a dozen times regardless of the question or the questioner.

But here's the interesting point: Bugarin knew that Fr. Perrone had already denied the allegations both to him and to the Associated Press (AP) a month earlier.

AP had been tipped off about the story by some apparently vindictive individuals and had been calling around on the story for weeks, as the reporter freely admits in the final published version.

Bugarin had been interviewed for the same story and knew that Fr. Perrone had been as well, and here is the critical point: Perrone denied the allegations to the reporter and insisted on his innocence.

That was going to be printed, and Bugarin knew it. Yet, in the archbishop's approved-of statement, Bugarin refused to let Perrone's denial of the charges be part of the statement  — again, blaming the process.

The second and even more damning issue for Abp. Vigneron and his hand-picked episcopal vicar and delegate for matters of clergy misconduct, Msgr. Bugarin, is they actually went against guidelines published by the Pope for what bishops should do in these types of cases.

During the sex summit in Rome last February, various officials gave the Pope their thoughts on some measures that should be followed in these matters.

Pope Francis then published those points — 21 in all — and published them as guidelines that bishops should strongly consider when dealing with these cases.

When I showed Msgr. Bugarin these points, again published by the Holy See for the Pope, personally issued by him, Bugarin said he had no knowledge of them.

That's alarming for the point man for Abp. Vigneron, whose title, again, is "delegate for matters of clergy misconduct."

Frankly, it's his job to know this sort of thing. But he didn't, or at least says he didn't. It makes the archbishop look complicit in this error.

What I showed him on my cell phone as not only the list of 21 points, but this one in particular — point 14 — which reads, directly:

14. The right to defence: the principle of natural and canon law of presumption of innocence must also be safeguarded until the guilt of the accused is proven. Therefore, it is necessary to prevent the lists of the accused being published, even by the dioceses, before the preliminary investigation and the definitive condemnation. 

Bugarin and Abp. Vigneron completely disregarded that express desired guidelines of the Pope and not only announced Fr. Perrone's name from the pulpit, causing great upset at each of the Masses, but they also handed out these fliers with explicit detail of it being a report of alleged abuse of a minor and posted Fr. Perrone's name on the archdiocesan webpage of accused clergy — as the document itself makes clear in the first paragraph.

Again, Bugarin told me directly he had no knowledge of that document from the Pope, published on the Vatican's page for the world to see.

And here is why point 14 is so massively important and what Vigneron did so incredibly wrong.

In 2004, the Canon Law Society of America issued a text providing professional guidance to bishops and their lawyers on how to approach these cases.

In undertaking the preliminary investigation, a diocese would also violate the principle of confidentiality if it made a public announcement naming a priest and saying that he has been accused of sexual misconduct or if it issued a public statement about the findings issued by the diocesan Review Board … which are of their nature preliminary and canonically inconclusive. 

Such violations of confidentiality by a diocese irreparably damage the reputation of the accused and create a virtually insurmountable obstacle to the appropriate exercise of his ministry. 

[It] is difficult to see how his name could be restored adequately after the damage to his reputation was done. It is also possible that a priest might have a civil cause of action against a diocese for making libelous comments about him.

Detroit screwed up big time in the handling of this matter, not to mention granting an interview the AP right in the middle of their own internal investigation.

This is reprehensible treatment of a priest supported up and down the archdiocese, whose only crime may have been that he is a traditionalist and offers the Latin Mass and decades ago blew the whistle on the rampant homosexuality at the seminary and got it shut down by Pope John Paul.

The Deardon gay priests have hated his guts ever since.

Now interestingly, within a few hours, of our encounter with Bugarin, Perrone's name was suddenly taken down from the archdiocesan page of accused clergy, and then about 24 hours later, the archdiocese rolled out a whole new page, with never before seen categories of priests and their status.

Here it is, and as you can see, entirely new categories have been created, with Fr. Perrone being shifted from the former page category of "accused of sexual abuse of a minor" into the "under canonical review" category.

Seriously? Does the archbishop really think this mitigates or makes up for the severe damage done to his reputation — for Msgr. Bugarin standing stone-faced in the back of the parish refusing to say why Fr. Perrone wasn't allowed to at least claim his innocence?

Heck, even the secular media on the AP report extended him that courtesy.

That AP report has gone international; hundreds of millions of readers and viewers in Italy, London and every major daily in the U.S. have seen that story. It even ran across a ticker on Fox News.

All over the world, Fr. Perrone's name and reputation have been demolished by the actions of this archdiocese and their at least carelessness in not following common sense practices presented by the Canon Law Society of America and even promoted by Pope Francis himself.

And no, changing around a website on a holiday weekend hoping no one would notice doesn't cover it.

These actions by this archdiocese are despicable, especially given the highly dubious nature of them.

Why hasn't the archbishop allowed Fr. Perrone to publicly declare his innocence, especially in light of hundreds of millions of people who now think of him as a predator priest?

What in the Hades are archdiocesan officials doing on the phone with AP talking about a case they still don't have all the facts on?

Why did they distribute the damning statement to the media when the exalted "process" hadn't even gotten off the ground?

Is the process to really throw a priest who maintains his innocence to the wolves of the secular media?

Did the archdiocesan legal firm of Bodman actually write that statement and then the archbishop, in consult with Bugarin, just sign it and send it out?

If so, then who is actually running the diocese — the archbishop or the lawyers? Just who is calling the shots here?

How is it that the man in charge of all these cases doesn't know about the Canon Law Society guidelines or that the Pope — the Pope — had issued guidelines against this very sort of thing.

And to think, all of this coincides nicely with Abp. Vigneron's recently launched push to choke almost $200 million from the faithful in his "Unleash the Gospel" initiative.

How about unleashing the truth here? Why has Fr. Perrone been treated so disgustingly?

For the record, a Facebook effort is now gaining steam by former altar boys of Fr. Perrone — and there are many over the years — rushing to his defense, saying they have never seen or heard any such misdeeds by Fr. Perrone in any capacity at any time.

Dozens have signed, and the list is growing. In fact, the AP even went looking for other alleged victims and couldn't find any — even admitting that three they spoke with defended Fr. Perrone.

This evil which has engulfed the Church, the evil of homopredation, has created this climate whereby bishops will betray even faithful clergy on the advice of lawyers and incompetent chancery personnel.

Archbishop Vigneron, the buck stops with you. You said a couple of years ago that you were introducing a "new DNA" — your words — into the archdiocese and things were going to be different.

That there would be transparency and accountability. Well, if you ever had a chance to make good on those promises, now's your chance. To Hades with the "process" that your point man is so in love with.

Let Fr. Perrone go on camera, in his collar, and announce his claim to innocence, especially since it was your press release that has blackened his name all over the world.

What McCarrick Investigation?

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It has been a year since public and credible allegations were first made against the former Cdl. McCarrick, known now as just Theodore McCarrick.  

Last year it was the archdiocese of New York that first made public the allegations against McCarrick, and since then, what has happened? 

Who is (or was) leading the internal investigation against McCarrick within the archdiocese? What is the current status of the investigation? Has the investigation against McCarrick been closed? And if so, why? Why have primary (and still living) victims and witnesses of McCarrick'abuse not been interviewed by so-called "Church investigators"? 

Why have primary (and still living) victims and witnesses of McCarrick'abuse not been interviewed by so-called 'Church investigators'? 

Those senior clerics in the United States who have had continuous and direct contact with McCarrick — have they been interviewed? One person who should be interviewed is the former Cardinal-Archbishop of Washington, Donald Wuerl. Wuerl was the person who helped McCarrick find alternate accommodations in the Washington, D.C. area following sanctions placed on McCarrick by Pope Benedict. Furthermore, it was Wuerl who also arranged accommodations for McCarrick at a monastery in rural Kansas, where McCarrick now lives after being removed from the clerical state.  

Therefore, the question remains, why hasn't Cdl. Wuerl been interviewed? 

However, if we turn back and focus on McCarrick for the moment, there are a host of questions that remain unanswered. For example, has McCarrick's computer, cell phone and tablet, along with all of his emails, been examined? And if not, why not?

 
 
Who is gathering McCarrick's written correspondence? The Church, even in the modern world, has an extensive paper trail on file that is properly recorded within diocesan officesincluding the Office for the Papal Nuncio to the United States, the Congregation for Bishops and the Secretary of State in Rome. Again, who is in charge of gathering this information for review and analysis? 

Within the United States alone, there should be at the very least active and ongoing McCarrick investigations taking place within the archdiocese of New York, the archdiocese of Washington, the archdiocese of Newark, as well as the whole of the ecclesiastical province of Newark. 

But there is not — and why not?  

Turning to various U.S. Catholic seminaries, especially those within the dioceses mentioned above, we know from public accounts that McCarrick would regularly visit these seminaries and invite young boys and young men to his beach house on the Jersey Shore and would sleep with them in the same bedWho is looking into McCarrick's activities within these seminaries on the U.S. East Coast? Have any these seminaries started or conducted any kind of internal investigation into previous allegations made by former seminarians or conducted any kind of review in relation to McCarrick's contact with them? 

If an investigation has been done, what are the results of the investigation or review? Was there any criminal activity by McCarrick discovered during the investigation, and what was done about it? Where are the reports? And who has access to them? 

Like many other predatory priests in the past, such men had access to large sums of money, and McCarrick is no different. So who is conducting the financial audit and analysis of McCarrick's holdings? Who is conducting the all-important financial investigation into his activities? Who is examining the people who gave McCarrick large amounts of money and why? As well, who has McCarrick given money to and why? Does McCarrick still control or have access to these large sums of money ... and, if so, what is he doing with it?   

During his time as a senior cleric within the Church, McCarrick was instrumental in promoting many bishops. All these records of those bishops appointed over the last 20-plus years need to be reviewed and those bishops themselves need to be placed under a higher level of scrutiny pertaining to their relationship with McCarrick. 

Finally, there is McCarrick himself. Who has interviewed him? How many times has he been interviewed, and by whom? Does he still have access to communications? Is he currently in contact with people, and who are they? 

The key witnesses, victims and whistleblowers associated with the McCarrick affair have not been interviewed. 

As time waits for no one, the longer there is no action in pursuing a truly comprehensive investigation against McCarrick, it will become more challenging. Documents pertaining to McCarrick have already begun to disappear, be misplaced, lost or "accidentally destroyed," thus making a paper-based investigation more difficult. The key witnesses, victims and whistleblowers associated with the McCarrick affair have not been interviewed. Over time their recall and evidence will become more difficult in building a profile of McCarrick's deedsHowever, their individual pain and trauma suffered at the hands of McCarrick will remain with them for the rest of their lives. 

To date, McCarrick continues to proclaim his innocence. Officials in Rome have declared that they are looking into McCarrick's history. Then again, the amount of information and raw data that remains yet undiscovered within various diocesan offices as well as other locations is truly outstanding. The volumes of information not recovered and the long list of people who have not been interviewed in relation to the McCarrick affair remains the question everyone is asking: Why has the investigation into McCarrick not happened? 

Father John Lavers led the 2012 investigation into various unethical and immoral activities by seminarians at a U.S. seminary and various diocese.

RCF Investigation Leads to Lansing Priest’s Withdrawal of Faculties

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LANSING, Mich. (ChurchMilitant.com) - Lansing's Bp. Earl Boyea announced yesterday that he is finally taking action against Fr. William Auth, O.S.F.S., following publication of an exhaustive, damning investigative report by Roman Catholic Faithful (RCF) on June 30 warning that the priest is possibly involved in a multi-million-dollar financial scam and is a threat to minor children.

"Based on the concerns raised, Bishop Boyea has prohibited Reverend Auth from fundraising within the Diocese on behalf of Maya Indian Missions and has withdrawn Reverend Auth's faculties to serve as a priest within the diocese," the diocese announced on its website yesterday afternoon. "Additionally, the diocese has forwarded the concerns regarding Maya Indian Missions and Reverend Auth to the Michigan Department of Attorney General for further investigation."

Father Auth is a member of the Oblates of St. Francis DeSales based in Toledo. He was ordained 50 years ago — the diocese of Lansing celebrated his anniversary in the June issue of FAITH Magazine — and apparently lives during summer months at a cottage he purchased with his brother in 1975 in Cement City, a small town 20 miles south of Jackson, Michigan, in the diocese of Lansing.

The reportage about 'the Angels,' as they came to be known, verified suspicions that there was indeed a strong network of priests and bishops who were recruiting active homosexual men to the priesthood.

Father Auth rose from obscurity into a virtually instant international poster-priest for bad behavior in 2000, shortly after RCF Founder and President Stephen Brady discovered the St. Sebastian's Angels internet chat room, in which more than 50 homosexual priests and at least one bishop spoke of their sexual exploits and preferences, along with pornographic images of themselves.

The reportage about "the Angels," as they came to be known, verified suspicions that there was indeed a strong network of priests and bishops who were recruiting active homosexual men to the priesthood. RCF's website contains archives of its original and extensive reportage about the group.

Auth, who was 57 at the time, posted a photograph in the chat room of himself with a 12-year-old boy on a trip in Mexico, where he has been director since 1991 of the school for local youth, Maya Indian Mission, Inc.

The photo shows Fr. Auth kneeling with his arm around the child's shoulder on a hill overlooking a massive Mexican historical site above a caption which read: "The little guy with me is not my current lover, but he was a guide äsuncion12 years old and a great little kid."

Brady told Church Militant he was pleased that Bp. Boyea has seen fit to remove Fr. Auth from ministry within the diocese of Lansing, but he remains discouraged that there has been so little interest among virtually all U. S. bishops and Catholic media in removing the worst kinds of priests, like Fr. Auth, unless they are forced by harsh media publicity.

The lack of interest in the sexual corruption of the Church is especially evident in the "mainstream Catholic media, as I indicted in an investigative report for Catholic World Report in 2000.

"The financial corruption is everywhere in the Church," Brady said, "and it's hard to get people to pay attention."


Since 1991, Auth has been stationed full-time at the non-profit organization Maya Indian Mission, Inc., located in the village Komchen in the Yucatan Peninsula, about seven miles south of the Gulf of Mexico.

While Fr. Auth he made his sexual perversions well-known through his persistent posting in the St. Sebastian's Angels' chat room, until last week virtually nobody has been aware of the finances of his school complex in Mexico.

RCF's seven-page report highlights apparent financial irregularities for a non-profit school of its type. The records show the mission owns no land or buildings, has no employees besides Fr. Auth and provides no scholarship or other assistance to students. Most money, it appears, either goes to Fr. Auth by way of salary and expenses or goes into savings and investments. The report states: "Form 990 for year 2016 shows a total balance of cash, savings and investments of $2,574,225," continuing: 

Public financial records filed by Maya Indian Missions Inc. for the years 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016, reveal that funds donated to the nonprofit were either placed in an investment stock portfolio and other securities that were most recently valued at $2,371,396, paid to Fr. William Auth in the form of W2 income of $27,000, reimbursed expenses by as much as $61,565, or are transferred in amounts as much as $180,000 to Mexico.

The report compares financial records of Auth's mission to that of two similar organizations in the same region and concludes the bizarre accounting used provides Fr. Auth to set himself up for spectacular financial benefits. 

The report adds: "This lack of financial reporting and oversight provides Fr. Auth with an opportunity to use Maya Indian Missions Inc.'s reported charitable expenses to hide an average of $198,444 of personal income from the IRS per year, or 94% of reported expenses by Maya Indian Missions Inc."

Brady said the published numbers, on which the RCF report relies on for its analysis from Auth do not add up today, and they never did.

"In 1999 and 2000 when I first got tax records from the Mayan Mission I could see he was stashing away millions of dollars. I contacted the Diocese of Santa Rosa and nobody seemed interested," Brady said.   


"When I looked at his tax records in 2000, he claimed his travel expenses were about $1,000, but in his newsletter, he said he was spending a lot of time in Brazil and traveling all over the country," Brady added. "There was no way in the world his reported expenses could pay for all of that. I thought he was stashing a lot of money away. I have no doubt he had $5 million hidden, because he was going to so many parishes in many states raising money."

Brady thinks it impossible for the Church to somehow clean up its pattern of financial chicanery, which allows apparent fraud to be rampant up and down any organizational chart within the Church. IRS and FBI need to get involved. There needs to be a criminal investigation.

Defenders of St. Sebastian's Angels have mostly cited the general consensual nature of their relationship and the strong support individual bishops give to the broad "gay subculture" the Angels represent.

This may be a reason Lansing former bishop, Carl Mengeling, was so strident about preventing any publication of any details about Fr. Auth 19 years ago, as well as why Bp. Boyea declined to restrict in any way the activities of Auth in 2012 when he was informed in excruciating detail about Fr. Auth's misdeeds:

Bishop Earl Boyea has been notified about the activities of Fr. Auth, at least six times since 2012 by certified mail. One whistleblower says she even hand delivered concerns to the Diocese of Lansing that detailed concerns about Fr. Auth’s history and business operations that have been conducted within the Diocese of Lansing with Bishop Boyea's permission.

Deacon Michael Murray, former Chancellor of the Diocese of Lansing, replied in 2012 to the letters by stating that Fr. Auth's provincial says that Fr. Auth's lifestyle is now in full accord with the Catholic Church. In a later letter, Dcn. Murray says the Diocese of Lansing does not hold canonical or civil authority over Fr. Auth.

Dcn. Murray did admit that Fr. Auth has faculties with the permission of the Diocese of Lansing.

Rape in Cement City

Perhaps the most controversial part of RCF's report is the proximity of Fr. Auth and his home to reported cases of serial rape of minors.

But RCF's reports indicates Auth's cottage in Cement City is located about 15 feet from a house owned by his close friend and now ex-priest, Dennis Gray, who was a serial child rapist before being leaving the priesthood in 1987.

Perhaps the most controversial part of RCF's report is the proximity of Fr. Auth and his home to reported cases of serial rape of minors.

A 2005 documentary, Twist of Faith, is about Fr. Gray, according to the RCF report. It "describes 42 alleged victims of Dennis Gray, as well as the cover-up by the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales, a congregation of Roman Catholic Priests. Court records show that 19 lawsuits were filed naming Dennis Gray."

Additionally according to the RCF report:

According to lawsuits, three victims reported that they were transported to Crystal Lake by multiple priests. The victims were served cocktails, raped, and sexually molested at former priest Dennis Gray's cottage. An investigator of Roman Catholic Faithful interviewed an alleged victim of Gray who stated that several of Gray's victims were raped in Fr. Auth's garage.

Church Militant emailed Bp. Boyea questions regarding Fr. Auth, including whether he was going to insist that his brother bishops in the state of Michigan likewise restrict Auth from ministry. Boyea's spokesman, Patrick O'Brien, replied that Bp. Boyea is on vacation and said, "I will do the best I can to get you a response in a timely manner."

Father Ken McKenna, O.S.F.S., provincial of the Toledo-Detroit province of the Oblates of St. Francis DeSales, did not respond to a request for information from Church Militant as of press time.

Phone numbers listed for Fr. Auth on an internet-based phone directory were out of service on Tuesday.

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Federal Court: Let Atheists Lead Gov’t Prayers

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MIAMI (ChurchMilitant.com) - A federal court ruled Monday that people of all faiths, as well as atheists, must be allowed to give an opening blessing at government meetings.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on Monday that Brevard County in Florida violated the First Amendment by essentially barring atheists, Wiccans and others from delivering opening invocations for the Brevard County Board of Commissioners.

The county's board of commissioners, like many legislative bodies in the United States, often has a religious invocation that precedes its public proceedings.

Representing a three-judge panel, Circuit Judge Stanley Marcus wrote in the ruling, "In this case, Brevard County has selected invocation speakers in a way that favors certain monotheistic religions and categorically excludes from consideration other religions solely based on their belief systems. Brevard County's process of selecting invocation speakers thus runs afoul of the Establishment Clause."

Reuters reports that the court heard the case in Miami, Florida.


Among the plaintiffs in the case are the Humanist Community of the Space Coast, the Central Florida Freethought Community (CFFC) and the Space Coast Free Thought Association.

The CFFC consists largely of atheists and agnostics. It fights for "secular local government which neither promotes nor denigrates any religion."

A press release from CFFC on Monday's court ruling noted, "Since a 2014 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Town of Greece v. Galloway, the CFFC has offered nearly 80 non-theistic invocations at city, town, and county government meetings across Central Florida. Brevard County was the only government body that rejected CFFC's requests for inclusion in the process."

David Williamson, another plaintiff, celebrated the federal court's decision, saying, "We are pleased a second court has agreed that religious discrimination by the Brevard County Commission is unconstitutional and must stop. Our hope is that a third court is not needed to reaffirm our rights."

Arguing the plaintiffs' case were attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the ACLU of Florida, the Freedom From Religion Foundation and Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

The court's Monday ruling stated that several current and former county commissioners "testified unambiguously that they would not allow deists, Wiccans, Rastafarians, or, for that matter, polytheists to deliver prayers, and that they would have to think long and hard before inviting a Hindu, a Sikh, or a follower of a Native American religion."

The ruling stated elsewhere, "Brevard County's haphazard selection process categorically excludes certain faiths — some monotheistic and apparently all polytheistic ones — based on their belief systems."

In explaining the decision, Marcus pointed to legal precedents, including U.S. Supreme Court rulings, related to the interpretation of the First Amendment's Establishment Clause: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

The way this has been interpreted in the courts, Marcus wrote in the decision, is that the government must not prefer one religious sect or creed over others. Monday's decision affirmed that the Establishment Clause cannot be interpreted as prohibiting religious displays from government functions, saying that "the Supreme Court's interpretation of the Establishment Clause has expressly permitted the longstanding practice of opening a legislative session with a prayer."

The district court upheld a lower court's 2017 decision siding with the plaintiffs, but also overturned some aspects of the ruling.

In the 2017 decision, U.S. District Judge John Antoon ordered Brevard County to offer each of the eight plaintiffs an opportunity to give an invocation. But in the opinion of the panel of federal judges, "The trial court's injunction goes too far and says too much."

"Again, all that we hold today is that the Board's current invocation speaker selection procedures are unlawful," Monday's decision went on to state. "The Commissioners have favored some religions over others, and barred those they did not approve of from being considered. This plainly violates the principle of denominational neutrality found at the heart of the Establishment Clause."

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Chicago Archdiocese’s Immigration Program Funded by Leftists

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CHICAGO (ChurchMilitant.com) - The archdiocese of Chicago has partnered with Democrats to push leftist immigration reform.

Starting on July 10 and running for four days, the archdiocese of Chicago, led by Cdl. Blase Cupich, will be training representatives from 13 dioceses at the Catholic Theological Union on how to start parish-based immigration ministries. The goal of the event is "forming a nation-wide network."

The annual training event, Instituto Pastoral Migratoriais conducted by Cupich's own immigration ministry called Pastoral Migratoria. Started in 2008, it's overseen by the archdiocese's Office of Human Dignity and Solidarity — the same office that runs the Catholic Campaign for Human Development and Catholic Relief Services programs, both scandal-ridden agencies caught helping outfits that distribute contraception or promote LGBT advocacy.

A press release announcing the annual training event notes that the Instituto "was created as a result of the failure of comprehensive immigration reform."

Church Militant spoke with Kathleen Sullivan, a long-time pro-life advocate who formerly worked with the archdiocese of Chicago during the 1970s and 1980s. Sullivan and Mary Kraychy co-founded Catholics for Responsible Action to be a voice for the unborn in the face of the silence of the bishop.

She attempted to work with Cdl. Joseph Bernardin, former head of the archdiocese of Chicago, during his tenure to develop an archdiocesan-wide pro-life ministry, but he rejected her proposal partly on the grounds that "it was not set in the context of the broad range of life issues" — his seamless garment theory.


Sullivan and the group were critical of the bishops' inaction, and that criticism led to Cdl. Bernardin refusing to allow Catholics for Responsible Action access to parishes to develop a cohesive network or for fundraising.

She learned the pro-life budget for the whole archdiocese went from $41,000 to $92,000 in the 11 years after Roe v. Wade, the equivalent of around $200,000 today.

Cardinal Cupich projected the archdiocese's immigration ministry would top more than $500,000 in expenses in 2018. 

"It is what they did not do," Sullivan explained. "Sixty-one million abortions later and the Catholic Church doesn't run a real pro-life operation." 

Sullivan's work in pro-life ministry encompassed the development of an abstinence education program, and all of her work has been done without the support of a national collection from the bishops. Cardinal Bernardin, as chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' (USCCB) Pro-Life Committee, refused to bring up at the November meeting of all the bishops.

"The agenda for that meeting is already set," Cdl. Bernardin wrote. "There is a process which must be followed in developing agenda items for consideration." 

Democrat Money 

According to annual review reports, the archdiocese of Chicago provides almost 20% of the operating budget for the Immigration Ministry, and the rest comes from donations. 

About 29% of the funds for the program are donated by liberal religious orders that push social justice and leftist causes. Sullivan said she suspects these religious orders are "just pass-throughs" for some of the half-billion in taxpayer dollars the USCCB receives each year. 

In 2016, the USCCB, under the umbrellas of Catholic Relief Services and Catholic Charities, received more than $600 million in federal funding — well over half the total budget. The majority of this money is used for immigration programs.

In 2018, the 25th Ward Regular Democratic Organization was listed as a donor to Cdl. Cupich's program. According to the Illinois State Board of Elections, this committee is a political party with the stated purpose to "[a]dvance the agenda of the regular democratic party of the 25th Ward." 

Another long-time donor to the archdiocese of Chicago is the Blue Foundation, also with ties to the Democratic Party. Established as a program by Ancora Associates, the main purpose of the Blue Foundation is to provide education grants to high school students.

Ancora Associates was founded by Clare Muñana in 1987 as a management consulting firm and has assets over $3 million. Muñana is also a trustee for the Aspen Institute and a board member for the Middle East Investment Initiative (MEII), a non-profit that offers "finance and technical assistance programs" in the Middle East and North Africa.

Democratic Party Machine

The overarching goals of Pastoral Migratoria are, in their words, education, advocacy, accompaniment and empowerment.

At the parish level, it is marketed as an "immigrant to immigrant" ministry. Lay leaders and pastors in the immigrant community are trained to start programs to help educate "native-born congregations" and pass out "calls of actions" for immigration advocacy each month.

Volunteers also lobby their representatives for immigration reform and Medicaid expansions.

These action alerts are printed and distributed by the parishes to support immigration reform initiatives such as the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), the DREAM Act, Temporary Protected Status and other "immigration justice issues" such as ending the policy of separating children and families.

Some of these lay volunteers also lobby their representatives for immigration reform and Medicaid expansions for immigrants.

The archdiocese of Chicago's immigration ministry brochure notes that they helped 1,850 voters register last year and "5 congressional visits were organized where [Pastoral Migratoria] leaders visited their state and federal representatives in support of DACA and immigration reform."

"This is evidence of the Church being part and parcel of a political party," Sullivan said, adding, "they really operate as an arm of the Democratic machine."

Immigration Hot Spots

After nearly a decade in operation, Cdl. Cupich's immigration ministry program went national. Their 2015 Annual Review notes that they "[c]ompleted a detailed business plan that provides a road map for a multi-year rollout of a Pastoral Migratoria national expansion pilot to new cities, dioceses and parish sites." 

Cardinal Cupich's immigration program expansion mirrors the Democratic Party's immigration hot spots.

The diocese of Stockton, California, and Kansas City-St. Joseph, Missouri, were two of the first to start programs and will be attending the Institutio this year. 

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Interactive Map showing Unauthorized Immigrant Populations

Other dioceses in immigration hot spots attending this year are Fresno and Los Angeles, California; Atlanta, Georgia; Baltimore, Maryland; New York; Richmond, Virginia; Salt Lake City, Utah; St. Cloud, Minnesota; St. Petersburg, Florida; and Washington, D.C.

The USCCB is also sending representation. 

Church Militant spoke with an archdiocesan representative who didn't want to be named, who said the main purpose of the program is to meet the spiritual and corporal needs of the immigrant community to "bring them into the community of the parish."

According to the representative, 150 out of 340 Chicago parishes have Mass in Spanish. Another 30–35 parishes have Mass in Polish. Chicago has the largest population of immigrants from Poland in the United States.

Along with the English-speaking immigration programs, these three groups receive the majority of their support from Pastoral Migratoria. 

This illustrates the fall-off of the faith in the United States. While the Catholic population is still hovering around 20%, immigration from Hispanic countries, the majority of them Catholic, is propping up the numbers in the pews. The numbers of white Catholics of European descent has fallen to 13%.

The sex abuse scandal and the lack of substantive theology have driven Catholics from the Faith, dropping the number of native U.S. Catholics from one in four to fewer than one in eight. 

Dubious Partners

Some speculate that the motive for bringing immigrants into the Church has less to do with the Faith and more to do with the financials. 

Church Militant learned that Pastoral Migratoria does not provide financial support to the parishes for local ministry. Instead, they are funded by parishioner's donations and grants from other "partner" organizations of the archdiocese, like Catholic Relief Services, Catholic Charities, Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights and Catholic Legal Immigration Network.

The support programs at the parish level are at the discretion of the pastor and lay leaders and can include workshops, legal help, food, clothing or housing. 

Pointing to the partner organizations, the archdiocesan representative explained those groups run the various workshops, e.g., Alzheimer's workshop, workers' rights workshops with the help of local labor unions and voter registration workshops, adding, "Non-partisan, obviously."

The list of collaborators, partner organizations and donor organizations that work with Pastoral Migratoria include myriad social justice religious organizations and groups. One advertised support for "LGBT justice" and another claimed to be a "progressive Catholic social justice organization that works to dismantle exploitative systems of power."

In the 1980s, Sullivan said she developed conferences designed to define the role of women in the Church "in order to counter the running away from religious life from the liberal nuns." She added, "Those nuns working for bad bishops are part of the exodus plan from the true Church."

Pastoral Migratoria also works with the Center for Migration Studies of New York. That organization is headed by the bishop of Brooklyn, Bp. Nicholas DiMarzio. In 2016, Democrat Assemblywoman Margaret Markey accused Bp. DiMarzio of attempting to bribe her

Markey claimed Bp. DiMarzio offered her $5,000 in hush money in exchange for withdrawing her support for proposed reforms to state law concerning the statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases. Markey was a vocal proponent of those reforms for nearly a decade.

The Instituto Pastoral Migratoria will be held from July 10–14 at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. 

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Thousands Protest Infiltration of Gender Ideology Into Dominican Republic

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SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (ChurchMilitant.com) - Thousands of people protested the Department of Education's plan to indoctrinate children with gender ideology.

On July 4, thousands of people gathered in Santo Domingo and Santiago in the Dominican Republic to protest the Department of Education's plan to teach gender ideology to children.

The protest, called Con Mis Hijos No Te Metas, or "Don't Mess with My Children," also advocated for the rights as parents as the first educators of their children.

The goal of the protest was to demand the repeal of the Department of Education order 33-2019 that established as a priority the design and implementation of gender policy in all activities of pre-university education.

Protesters claim this order, under the guise of equality and tolerance, has "the clear intention of initiating pre-university students in gender ideology indoctrination."

A press release issued by the organizers of the protest notes the new standard is the first to define gender "as a social construct different than sex, which is the philosophical premise of gender ideology."

Organizers of the rally also claim this is a "systematic and organized penetration of gender ideology in the Dominican Republic" that "has permeated many of the government's institutions, where they hold talks with titles of tolerance, equality and inclusion that look very attractive, but deep down are loaded with gender ideology."

Julian Musa, one of the speakers at the rally, explained they have noticed the systematic infiltration of gender ideology in parts of the country, saying, "We have documented information about organized dissemination of this current ideology in many ministries and administrative directions of the government."

Musa explained that this is a result of agreements between the Dominican Republic government and the United Nations and organizations from the United States and the European Union.

He went on to say that certain agencies, such as those that work with women and children, have already opened gender clinics and numerous bills are "saturated with the fundamentals of the gender ideology." 

He said the objective of order 33-2019 "was veiled indoctrination of our children."

Those who submit to stop the natural biological process of its puberty pay a high price.

During the rally, Dr. Patricia Acra, a pediatrician, warned that gender ideology should not be implemented before knowing its scientific implications.

She explained, "Human sexuality is an objective biological feature ... our cells, each one of them has a genetic marker or chromosome, that we define as a man or woman."

She added that there are 6,400 genes that differentiate us, adding, "Scientifically, there is no gene for homosexuality ... you do not inherit what makes it a reversible condition."

"Gender confusion in boys and girls is transient, not definitive," Dr. Acra said. "Those who submit to stop the natural biological process of its puberty pay a high price." 

She went on to explain some the known risks of the transitioning process, such as infertility, mood changes, increased risk for metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes and possibly cardiovascular disease and endometrial carcinoma [cancer] in women and joined Dr. Michelle Cretella, president of the American Academy of Pediatricians, in calling the transitioning process child abuse

A number of religious leaders attended the rally. Bishop Víctor Masalles, the bishop of Baní diocese, tweeted: "My full support for the civic manifestation of concerned parents so that their children will not be indoctrinated with a background of gender ideology. A valid concern that we must support."

In May, following the passage of 33-2019, the Dominican Bishops' Conference issued a statement condemning the new policy.

"We consider it noxious that the gender policy is included in the design of the curriculum," they wrote. 

Videos of the rally can be found here.

--- Campaign 31544 ---

July 10, 2019

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RCF Investigation Leads to Lansing Priest's Withdrawl of Faculties
Lansing Bp. Boyea responds to damning litany of abusesFULL STORY

Bp. Malone Slammed for Not Investigating Sex Abuse Allegation
No interviews have been made despite allegations surfacing over 14 months ago. FULL STORY

UK Lawmakers Force Abortion and Same-Sex Marriage on Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland Assembly has been suspended since 2017. FULL STORY

Facebook CEO Admits Pulling US Pro-Life Ads Prior to Abortion Vote
Mark Zuckerberg: "We ended up not allowing the ads." FULL STORY

British Activist Seeks US Asylum 
Tommy Robinson fears he will be killed for exposing Muslim rape gangs. FULL STORY

Watch today's Download here

July 10, 2019—Inciting Schism?

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Fr. Vaughn Treco excommunicated over fiery homily.

Two-Facedbook: Social Media Platform’s Double Standard on Policing Hate

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MENLO PARK, Calif. (ChurchMilitant.com) - Although the social media platform Facebook boasts approximately 1.56 billion daily users and 2.7 billion users per month, not all its users are granted equal consideration under the recently posted "Community Standards."

Commentators with alternative viewpoints have expressed concerns the standards leave them open to threats of violence while protecting the individuals making the threats. For example, commentator Paul Joseph Watson frequently receives intimidating threats — physical violence, including death — on social media platforms.

Self-described as a member of the "New Right" conspiracy theorists associated with Alex Jones and InfoWars, Watson frequently raises the ire of his opponents to the extent he sometimes fears for his life.

However, because Facebook and Instagram have labeled him a "dangerous individual," Watson wrote, "They are painting a target on my back."


Watson quotes directly from the standards, which prohibit "[t]hreats that could lead to death (and other forms of high-severity violence) of any target(s)."

One exception is expressly stipulated: "[U]nless the target is an organization or individual covered in the Dangerous Individuals and Organizations policy."

Watson continues:

Back in May, Facebook and Instagram banned me under the justification that I was a "dangerous individual." They provided no evidence whatsoever that I had behaved in a "dangerous" manner or violated any of their policies.

Facebook has designated me a "dangerous individual" and now says it's acceptable for its users to issue death threats against me.

The social media giant increasingly has prompted concern from its right-of-center users suspicious their views are being censored by Silicon Valley progressives.

Commentators with alternative viewpoints have expressed concerns the standards leave them open to threats of violence while protecting the individuals making the threats.

Founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has even admitted Facebook the company censored pro-life ads prior to Ireland's national referendum on legalized abortion.

In May, it was reported Facebook refused to run Irish pro-life ads, determining that photos of a baby in utero were "too graphic." 

Breitbart reported in May that Facebook pulled 23 pages promoting a politically populist message with an estimated 2.3 million followers in Italy. 

In addition, Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg has made two separate donations of $1 million each to Planned Parenthood thus far in 2019.

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Questioning Pope’s Prudential Judgments Isn’t Schismatic

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If questioning a pope's prudential judgments was schismatic, as it supposedly was for Fr. Vaughn Treco, then St. Paul would have been excommunicated.

Saint Peter, or Cephas as he was called, was given a vision as recorded in chapter 10 of the Acts of the Apostles that the keeping of the Mosaic law was no longer required by God. This he taught infallibly at the Council of Jerusalem as recorded in chapter 15 of Acts.

But when he went to Antioch, he ate with the so-called Judaizers who taught that Christians must keep the Mosaic law and receive circumcision. This is when St. Paul criticized the prudential judgment of a reigning pope as he saw that St. Peter's act would scandalize other Christians into thinking they too must keep the Mosaic law. The incident is recounted by St. Paul in Galatians 2:11–14 as follows:

But when Cephas was come to Antioch, I withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed. For before that some came from James, he did eat with the Gentiles: but when they were come, he withdrew and separated himself, fearing them who were of the circumcision. And to his dissimulation the rest of the Jews consented, so that Barnabas also was led by them into that dissimulation. But when I saw that they walked not uprightly unto the truth of the gospel, I said to Cephas before them all: If thou, being a Jew, livest after the manner of the Gentiles, and not as the Jews do, how dost thou compel the Gentiles to live as do the Jews?

A pope's prudential judgments, such as allowing Communion in the hand or not disciplining heretical clerics, are certainly not infallible and can be questioned by the faithful.

Father Treco questioned certain prudential judgments of recent popes and was excommunicated for doing so. He was most critical of papal inactivity, however, such as Pope St. Paul VI's decision to not correct known heretics and the decision by Pope Francis to not stop Holy Communion from being received sacrilegiously by Catholics living in sin.

The Catholic Church teaches Her popes are not impeccable, meaning they can commit sins of commission and of omission. Popes sin and go to confession. The Church also teaches that popes are infallible, meaning unable to error in teaching, only when they teach Catholic faith and morals in a definitive way to the universal Church.

Catholics may even disagree with popes on certain prudential judgments that touch the application of doctrine such as when to apply the death penalty in various societies. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in 2004 as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith makes this very point:

If a Catholic were to be at odds with the Holy Father on the application of capital punishment or on the decision to wage war, he would not for that reason be considered unworthy to present himself to receive Holy Communion. ... There may be a legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war and applying the death penalty.

Watch the panel discuss the excommunication of Fr. Treco in The Download—Inciting Schism.

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