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  First Things First

Catholic Culture
December 17, 2009

http://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/otr.cfm?id=5183

The Bishop of Limerick Donal Murray has resigned his post in the wake of Ireland's clerical abuse scandal. His sorrowfully lame resignation statement does not admit any failure on his part. He says rather that his continued presence in the job would create too many difficulties for too many people:

A bishop is meant to be a person who seeks to lead and inspire all the people of the diocese in living as a community united in the truth and love of Christ.

Well, no. The office of the bishop is to teach, to govern, and to sanctify (see the Catechism, 888-896). Leadership as such has nothing to do with it.

C.S. Lewis argued that the political shift from dominion by ruler to dominion by leader was one of the most important and far-reaching changes in the history of the West:

Of a ruler one asks justice, incorruption, diligence, perhaps clemency; of a leader, dash, initiative, and (I suppose) what people call ‘magnetism’ or ‘personality.’

If Murray had been less concerned to “lead and inspire” his flock, and instead had stuck to the more fundamental tasks of instructing, governing, and sanctifying them -- had he brought to his job a modicum of justice, incorruption, diligence, and clemency -- would the abusive clergy have preyed on multiple targets? Would he be apologising to the victims today?

 
 

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