Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
06.29.2008 11:15 am

Sunday editorial: The true believer

  • Email this
  • Print this

ray_opt.jpgIn his four and a half years as head of the Archdiocese of St. Louis, Raymond Leo Burke became a hero to traditionalist Catholics in the United States. One conservative commentator went so far as to call him “the new John Fisher for our times,” the original one having been beheaded in 1535 for his opposition to King Henry VIII’s creation of the Church of England.

Archbishop Burke has been promoted to prefect of the Apostolic Signatura, a Vatican post roughly analogous to chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. The only higher legal authority in the church is the man who promoted Archbishop Burke: Pope Benedict XVI.

The prefect’s post generally guarantees elevation to cardinal, which means that Archbishop Burke, who turns 60 Monday, would be part of the conclaves that choose popes until he reaches the customary retirement age of 75.

Although he is regarded as among the American church’s most conservative bishops, it’s not out of the question that Archbishop Burke could be considered papabili — papal material — himself. Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, who became Pope Benedict XVI three years ago, also was regarded as among the church’s most conservative theological voices.

We congratulate
Archbishop Burke on his appointment. He clearly is more comfortable amid the scholarly and legalistic vaults of canon law than he is as a pastoral leader. In that, he is more like his predecessor and patron in St. Louis, Justin Cardinal Rigali, now archbishop of Philadelphia, than Cardinal Rigali was like his predecessor in St. Louis, Archbishop John L. May.

Indeed, Archbishop Burke and Cardinal Rigali are at the forefront of what could be called an “old school” movement among American bishops that places great emphasis on faithful allegiance to the church’s catechetical teachings. Archbishop May, who died in 1994, along with Atlanta Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory, the former bishop of Belleville, are more closely aligned with bishops who stress the church’s interaction with the problems of the world.

Non-Catholics and secular institutions, including this editorial page, do not get a vote on the church’s teachings. In fact, as Archbishop Burke surely would point out, Catholics themselves don’t get a vote on the church’s teachings, either; the church is not a democracy. So we take no stand on whether Archbishop Burke was right or wrong in most of his high-profile pronouncements here.

We’ll say only that there sure were a lot of them. In that sense, we admire the archbishop: He wasn’t one to hide his light under a bushel.

Among those issues: his efforts to claim control over the finances of St. Stanislaus Koska Church; his decision to excommunicate church board members; his discipline of those involved with an ordination-like ceremony for two women; his involvement in the dispute over stem cell research and his denunciation of singer Sheryl Crow’s involvement with a fundraiser for Cardinal Glennon Hospital. All these were internal church issues that just happened to become public.

Even his widely publicized statement that priests should deny communion to Catholic politicians — such as 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kerry — who support abortion rights was a faithful interpretation of traditional church doctrine.

But there is one area in which Archbishop’s Burke’s actions intersected with broader public issues and for which he should be held to account. The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, an advocacy group, said in a statement released Friday that under Archbishop Burke, “dozens of proven, admitted, and credibly accused predator priests have been welcomed here.” The statement continued, “In fact, we believe there’s not a bishop in America who has imported so many pedophile priests into his diocese as Burke has.”

That is not just a church matter. We hope Archbishop Burke’s successor will recognize that.

13 comments

Comments are closed.

Any coward, like John F. Kerry who supports abortion has the blood of babies on their hands
SAY THIS PRAYER: Dear Jesus, I am a sinner and am headed to eternal hell because of my sins. I believe you died on the cross to take away my sins and to take me to heaven. Jesus, I ask you now to come into my heart and take away my sins and give me eternal life.

— Rev Spitz
10:14 pm June 27th, 2008

Dear Jesus, I am a sinner who quit believing in eternal hell long ago, and have slept better ever since. I think God understands how weak we are and doesn’t carry a grudge. On the other hand, I’m not going to do cremation until somebody who has been there assures me that it doesn’t hurt.

God, please forgive me for what I think of SNAP. It can’t be expressed in polite company.

Finally, God, thanks for giving us all, regardless of our religion, Bishop Bob Hermann, who will temporarily lead the St. Louis Archdiocese. They don’t come any better.

— Senior citizen
11:29 pm June 27th, 2008

“Dear Lord,

Protect me from thine followers. Amen.”

Simian

— Simian
5:35 am June 28th, 2008

I have to say I am neutral on church leaders, but I am glad Burke is leaving so that the PD won’t have him around to spew their venum on any more.
Godspead to you Archbishop Burke. I wish I was going to Italy too.

— A CENTRIST
9:39 am June 28th, 2008

Simians and Centrists, regardless of their faith or lack of it (and I love you both), should really like and respect the new temporary archdiocesan leader. A shame that he’s 73, which will keep him from moving up in the hierarchy, but he has improved the lives of many people as their friend and spiritual leader.

— Senior citizen
2:38 pm June 28th, 2008

Well, first of all I must say that I am a former Catholic, a former seminarian, a grandfather, a victim of sexual and physical abuse at the hands of nuns primarily and priest and lay teachers secondarily as a child and teenager and that I have no real differences with traditionalists Catholics. They can believe whatever they want. But that does not mean that they are right. It only means that they almost always wind up controlling things. They are after all, the self appointed ‘keepers of the flame’ within the church and are usually slightly multiple personalitied! Frankly, they are usually smart, connected, monied and completely clueless as to the pain that people suffer as a result of their unbending version of Catholicism. I doubt that Christ would recognize them.

That includes Burke.

— Thomas Michael Barnes
5:41 pm June 28th, 2008

That bizarre accusation is totally beyond belief.

— Disbeliever
7:41 pm June 29th, 2008

Your last quote is totally unfounded and should not have been included since the speaker has no evidence for such a broad, over-the-top accusation: not a bishop in America who has imported so many pedophile priests? This archdiocese hasn’t had to bankrupt itself to pay for sex abuse claims.
Other than that last remark, I found your article fair. Thank you.

— ordinary catholic
11:02 am June 30th, 2008

As every Catholic knows, “faithfull allegiance to Church teachings” and the “Church’s interaction with the problems in the world” are not mutually exclusive, rather one in the same. A true bishop like Burke recognizes that one flows naturally from the other. Consider: if the Church interacts with the world (as She should) what is the basis of the interaction? Answer: “faithful allegiance to Church teaching.”

Second, shame on you editors–you take SNAP at face value? Did you conduct any investigation to even verify de minimis whether such an accusation is true? That’s an utterly poor example of journalism. Just utterly poor. Your readers deserve better–in the very least, an explanation or qualification.

— Veritas
11:51 am June 30th, 2008

No, our archdioceses hasn’t gone bankrupt from payouts to victims of clergy abuse.

What we have done is full-out fight any and all clergy abuse accusations both procedurally and factually. Procedurally, we have won many cases where the relevant statute of limitations has barred recovery. Factually, the church has denied any serious problem, and failed and refused and continues to fail and refuse to apologize, accomodate or attempt reconciliation with the innocent victims of some all too frail church servants. When you consider Archbishop Burke’s background, his approach makes a kind of twisted sense.

I believe this to be the true legacy of Archbisop Burke, an unrepentant defender of anything the church does.

Instead, we were fed a steady diet of smoke screens about St. Stan’s and John Kerry, and a steady drum beat of support for Republican candidates despite their inaction on abortion when in the majority here in Missouri and in Washington, DC and their continued betrayals of the culture of life in supporting unjust wars, the executions of children and the mentally retarded, cruelly cutting healthcare to the unborn which has resulted in an increase in abortions, and cruelly cutting healthcare to infants, the poor, the elderly and disabled which has resulted in deaths or severely curtailed the quality of life for many of our most vulnerable citizens.

Good bye, Archbshop Burke!

— Tim Hogan
12:36 pm June 30th, 2008

Dear Simian:

You said: “Dear Lord, Protect me from thine followers. Amen.”

As a follower, I’d like to let you know that the correct form would be: “Dear Lord, Protect me from THY followers. Amen.”

If you want to be a Mr. Smarty-pants, at least get your grammar correct.

— Jim
1:42 pm June 30th, 2008

You journalists seem to think that you are all-knowing and can truly see the issues of the Catholic Church in St. Louis in a way that the archbishop of St. Louis cannot.

Sounds to me like your about as arrogant as you think he was.

And, by the way…
If he’s made a Cardinal, he’ll be able to vote for the pope until he is 80 (not 75)!!! Maybe you guys are not that smart after all. What a shame!

— Jim
1:45 pm June 30th, 2008

Shame on the Post-Dispatch editorial board for allowing anti-Catholic bigotry to run rampant on this website. This isn’t news, it’s blind hatred and obvious lies. You wouldn’t dare to allow similar comments to be made about any other religious group on the planet.

— Senior citizen
5:13 pm June 30th, 2008