Bishops’ Point Person for Abuse Says Credibility of Catholic Leaders “Shredded,” and Finn Goes to Trial

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

According to Bishop R. Daniel Conlon, chair of the U.S. Catholic Bishops Conference’s Committee for the Protection of Children and Young People, the credibility of the Catholic bishops vis-a-vis the abuse crisis has been “shredded.” And the Catholic church now finds itself at a moment akin to the Reformation moment, in which “the episcopacy, the regular clergy, even the papacy were discredited.”

And how can things be otherwise, I wonder, when it has been revealed that the president of the USCCB, His Eminence Timothy Cardinal Dolan, knew of and then lied about payoffs to pedophile priests in his former diocese of Milwaukee? And when, instead of coming clean and facing questions from the public after his lie was exposed, he chose the equally shameful path of shifting blame to the media and abuse survivors?

And when he then walked away from the media’s questions and hasn’t addressed them since? Though that hasn’t stopped him from attending the conventions of both major political parties in the capacity of a kingmaker, one mediating between the two sectors of power as if he’s a medieval prince of the church anointing monarchs.

Shtick ill-befitting a moral leader whose own moral credibility is in shreds–or so it seems to me as a very little person living in a faraway, powerless little place, and observing the doings of princes and kingmakers from afar. Because I’m one of those little people in faraway, powerless places who was taught–over and over again–by parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, teachers, and ministers that telling a lie brings shame to myself and my family and is immoral in the extreme, I have to admit that I just don’t get the posturing. The chutzpah. The failure to address one’s loss of moral credibility even as one asserts the right to make or break kings!

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