Showing posts with label Dissent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dissent. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Congratulations! You Have Just Been Excommincated

Excommunicated Woman Deacon

Michelle Chava-Redonnet, author and hospital Chaplin won the 2006 Women's Ordination Conference Bishop Murphy Scholarship. This past weekend she was ordained a woman priest in the Woman Priests she was promptly reminded of her excommunication by Cardinal Justin Rigali.

More links (here) , (here) , (here) and (here)

Some Background

According to the Spring 2008 newsletter of the Rochester, NY, Catholic Worker House, a woman named Chava Redonnet is preparing to exercise her ministry at the Rochester Catholic Worker as a “priest” once she is “ordained”. Many of the leaders of this Rochester house who are good people, have unfortunately been led away from the Catholic Church by Fr. James Callan’s breakaway (here) Spiritus Christi Church (here) here in Rochester. It looks like a trend, unfortunately.

Link (here)

Friday, February 13, 2009

"Temple Police"

He said the diocese was challenged by the ageing of its priests, most of whom would be eligible for retirement by 2014, leaving only six priests out of the full complement of 40.

The 65-year-old said the investigation had been going for two years, but a decision had not yet been made.

"The ultimate outcome is I'd be sacked and have to stand down,"
he said.

"Or they would ask me to resign or operate in another diocese ... at this stage, I don't know."

Bishop Morris, who has held the Toowoomba post for 16 years, said the church couldn't stifle debate and that's what the letter was promoting. "I will continue to fight for what I believe is the truth," he said.

"And I will continue to fight to be able to ask questions."

Bishop Morris said there was a group of very conservative Catholics dubbed the "temple police" who traveled around parishes dobbing in priests who didn't toe the line. "There are plenty of temple police around at the moment," he said.


"They're not a large majority - they believe in their conservative views and if they don't agree with something, they'll write to Rome."

Link (here) to the full story

Friday, July 4, 2008

Deceit, Dissent And Dogma: All For One And One For All

Rod Dreher: Why McKinney priest's ouster matters
May 16, 2008
Rod Dreher of Dallas is an editorial columnist.
His e-mail address is rdreher@dallas news.com.
The abrupt resignation of the Rev. Art Mallinson from St. Michael's Roman Catholic parish in McKinney after only two weeks on the job was right and proper. By involving himself in a lewd online discussion group for homosexual priests, Father Mallinson severely damaged his ability to serve as pastor of that or any parish.
One media report described the now-defunct St. Sebastian's Angels Web site as a "support group" for gay priests. That innocuous description is entirely misleading. The site, which boasted more than 50 priests as members, featured pornographic imagery and photographs of naked men. It contained extensive, profanity-laced discussions of sexual fantasies and adventures. A South African bishop ( Bishop Reginald Cawcutt ) once posted a message that said he looked forward to the death of Pope John Paul II and shared his desire to poison Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who would later become Pope Benedict XVI.
The group's members complained often about celibacy, and featured members bragged about how they had no intention of keeping their priestly pants buttoned. Roman Catholic Faithful, a conservative activist group, began monitoring the site in 1999 and made its findings public in 2000, after getting nowhere in quietly asking bishops to deal with the problem. Two Dallas priests were exposed as members. One, Father Cliff Garner, eventually left the priesthood. Father Mallinson, the other, remained at his post in Lancaster, until his recent reassignment to McKinney. According to the Dallas diocese, Father Mallinson told church officials he quit St. Sebastian's Angels in 2001, after porn began to be posted on the site. The diocese, which is investigating the matter, has been misinformed, to put it charitably. The information RCF made public in 2000 was taken from the site in 1999. The priest also told diocesan officials that the site intended to help gay priests live celibate lives. That's demonstrably false. Stephen Brady of RCF gave me an e-mail Father Mallinson sent to his online comrades, talking about how, under an assumed name, he arranged to meet a gay man in a coffee shop following an online chat. No one knows what happened next, but it is difficult to believe Father's intentions were innocent. Mr. Brady can provide Bishop Kevin Farrell all the information he needs to evaluate the St. Sebastian Angels' true nature, if the new Dallas bishop cares to investigate. Father Mallinson posted his photograph on the site, which ran it under the caption: "But! But! He looks so harmless!" Well, wasn't he? After all, there have been no allegations that he ever abused minors or even violated his vow of celibacy. And the Web site has been defunct for years. But it's not harmless.
A priest is more than a dispenser of sacraments and manager of a parish. He is a spiritual leader to his flock. Nobody can expect priests or pastors, rabbis or imams to be perfect. But with ordination comes spiritual and moral authority. People look to a priest for leadership.
Father Mallinson obviously never intended his participation in that nest of vipers to become public. But it did, and that bell cannot be unrung. His parishioners have a right to know why he got involved with the group and stuck with it despite the relentless sleaze. They have a right to hear from him whether he's truly repented and what his real beliefs are about Catholic teaching on celibacy and sexuality. People might be willing to forgive a regrettable lapse of judgment if that's all this was. But they need to hear from the priest, who can't begin to restore his moral authority until he clears this up. We will no doubt hear that Father Mallinson has been the victim of gay-bashing. Nonsense. If a heterosexual Catholic priest had joined a clandestine online group of straight clerics who trafficked in lewd sexual stories, denounced celibacy, cursed the Pope and posted pornographic images of women, Catholics would be just as alarmed. There are certainly gay priests who abide by their vows. But this is about McKinney Catholics' right to a priest with integrity. "That catty, vicious site was, alas, not a place where priests took off their collars to hang out," a priest wrote me this week. "It was a place into which they dragged their collars and soiled them in the filth."
Father Mallinson should come clean.
Link (here)