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  Catholic Order Says Founder Committed Misconduct

By Associated Press, carried in International Herald Tribune
February 4, 2009

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2009/02/04/europe/EU-Vatican-Legionaries-Scandal.php

VATICAN CITY: A staunchly conservative religious order favored by Pope John Paul II said Wednesday that there had been unspecified misconduct by its founder.

Legionaries of Christ's founder Marcial Maciel was a Mexican priest who was disciplined by the Vatican several years ago after allegations from former seminarians about sexual abuse.

In a report on its Web site, the National Catholic Reporter cited four unidentified former Legionaries or supporters of the order in the United States and Mexico as saying that the order had recently told current members and supporters privately that Maciel "apparently" fathered a child out of wedlock.

Chicago-based Legionaries spokesman Jim Fair declined to comment on specific allegations but said the order had learned "surprising" things about Maciel that were "not appropriate for a Catholic priest."

Maciel died last year in Texas at age 87.

"We've learned some things that are surprising and difficult to understand and in fact there are aspects of his life that obviously were not appropriate for a Catholic priest," Fair said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

"God does good sometimes through really flawed people," Fair said, insisting that the work of the order would continue.

Maciel founded the order in 1941 in Mexico City.

The Legionaries' conservative view, strict loyalty to Vatican teaching and its success in enrolling recruits won the admiration of John Paul. The order has been one of the fastest-growing religious orders in the Catholic church, which has been hit by a general drop in priestly vocations in many parts of the West.

But Maciel spent the last years of his life fending off the accusations by former seminarians that he had sexually abused them.

In 2006, a year after Benedict was elected pope, the Vatican said it had decided against a full-fledged church trial because of Maciel's age and poor health. Instead Maciel was asked to lead a "reserved life of prayer and penance," meaning the priest could not celebrate Mass in public.

 
 

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