Hope for a troubled Catholic Church?

UNITED STATES
San Francisco Chroncile

By Brian Cahill

Updated 6:13 pm, Monday, March 11, 2013

Amid the fanfare, panoply, rumors and leaks of the upcoming papal election, a New York Times/CBS poll tells us that 7 out of 10 American Catholics believe their bishops are out of touch. While the poll gives high marks to parish priests, it’s clear that the bishops’ failure of accountability in the child sexual abuse scandal and the weakness of their arguments regarding celibacy, the ordination of women, birth control and same-sex marriage have resulted in a significant loss of moral authority.

Just a few examples support the poll findings:

Cardinal Roger Mahony, in Rome to vote for a new pope, is trying to tweet his way through the unfolding evidence of his role in the child abuse scandal, telling us that only special training would have equipped him to know what to do when he was told that children were being molested by some of his priests.

Cardinal William Levada, in defending Mahony’s right to vote in the conclave, declared that “there are some victims groups for whom enough is never enough.”

Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone, who told us after California voters approved Proposition 8, which restricted the definition of marriage to opposite-sex couples, that we should respect the will of the voters, has changed his tune. A week after the 2012 election, in which voters in four states affirmed same-sex marriage, he complained, “People don’t understand what marriage is.” Recently, Cordileone told a London newspaper that “legislating for the right for people of the same sex to marry is like legalizing male breast feeding.”

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