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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Catholics' lack of interest in the Mass and not the least of these are "boring homilies.


Boring sermons blamed for dip in Philippine Church's popularity


Manila (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) - Some are turned off by boring homilies and "second collections." News of scandals involving priests also bothers them. But most are "distracted" by a lot of things.
Activist priest Fr. Robert Reyes and Msgr. Sabino Vengco offered these explanations to survey results showing "dwindling" numbers of Filipino Catholics hearing Mass over the past two decades.
A Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey in February found that only 37 per cent of Catholics were going to church, a huge decline from 64 per cent in 1991.
The survey also found that 9.2 per cent of Filipino Catholics were considering leaving the Church.
"We're haemorrhaging. It's not massive blood loss but there's blood loss. I see it; I experience it. The parishioners are losing faith, passion and interest in the Catholic Church. There's something lacking that they can't put their fingers on," Reyes said by phone.
To say that the number of church-going Catholics was "dwindling" is inaccurate because the decline has been happening for years, said Vengco, who estimated that the figure would be less than 30 per cent.
Both have explanations for some Catholics' lack of interest in the Mass and not the least of these are "boring homilies."
"Liturgies are rather bland and boring, and if the Liturgy is bland and boring, we have to wonder whether God is bland and boring. It has nothing to do with God; it has a lot to do with priests," Reyes said.
Second collections
Reyes said that a number of Catholics were also turned off by priests who preach too much about donating money to the Church or parishes that conduct "second collections" toward the end of the celebration. Some parishes do second collections in Sunday Masses year-round.
"This penchant for fundraising is taken negatively by the people. This should be looked into by the Church," said Reyes, parish priest of the parishes of Transfiguration in Murphy, Cubao from 1992 to 1996, Holy Sacrifice on the University of the Philippines campus in Diliman from 1996 to 2003 and Miraculous Medal in Project 4 from 2003 to 2006-all in Quezon City.
Reyes acknowledged that priests were sometimes so caught up with their "sacramental duties" that they fail to prepare well for the homily and ensure that everything-from the choir and the sound system to the lighting and seats-is A-OK.
Vengco, a lecturer and professor of Systematic and Sacramental Theology at Loyola School of Theology and Carlos Seminary, agreed that some priests were presiding over the Eucharist "perfunctorily."
"The way they preach is rather boring and not up to the demands of the listeners. So when it comes to preaching, that is one very negative factor. But we do have good preachers," Vengco said.
It's no surprise then that some turn to charismatic, Bible-based churches, where the service is vibrant, the pastors are more energetic, the homilies are more moving and the songs are livelier, Reyes said.
'Religious migration'
Vengco called this "religious migration," which he said occurred after Catholics had compared notes on the celebrations in the Catholic Church and services in evangelical groups.
"Catholics are now exposed to charismatic, born-again and evangelical groups, and they can make comparisons," Vengco said, even though he observed that this migration had "tapered off."
The SWS finding that the 37 per cent of the 1,200 respondents polled from Feb. 15 to 17 across the country confirmed going to church every week paled in comparison with the church-going members of Iglesia ni Cristo (70 per cent), Protestants (64 per cent) and other Christians (62 per cent). Seventy-five per cent of Muslims go to the mosque at least weekly.
The survey also found that 81 per cent of the more than 90 million Filipinos were Catholics, 6 per cent were Protestants, 3 per cent were INC members and 3 per cent were of other Christian denominations.
Compared with other groups, Catholics are the less devout, with only 29 per cent saying they consider themselves very religious.
Several bishops and the communications chief of the Archdiocese of Manila disputed the survey results, pointing out that churches were filled to capacity every Sunday and parishes were being created every now and then.
Sex abuses
Reading reports about sex abuses by priests, mostly in the United States and Europe in the papers or on the Internet, also affects the Catholics, Reyes said.
"A lot of Catholics are priest-centred. If the credibility and integrity of priests suffer because of the scandal, even if it happens elsewhere, lay people are affected. That is where the decline is coming from," he said.
Vengco, who writes the column "Alalaong Baga" for Business Mirror every Thursday, agreed that this was a factor but not in the same degree as in the United States or Europe.
But otherwise, most Catholics are distracted by a number of things from going to Mass, Reyes said.
"There are so many distractions. They'd rather go to the mall or sleep. Committing a mortal sin is no longer a threat. People feel it's not a sin. There's a relaxation of the moral discipline that makes people think they're sinning," he said.
Reyes, now a Franciscan novice undergoing a yearlong "canonical year" in Liliw, Laguna province, also observed that some men had become "lazy" and church-going has been relegated to the women and children.
While serving as a parish priest in Project 4, Reyes observed that only 5 to 8 per cent of the 140,000 residents were going to Sunday Masses.
"The church always looks full because of the sheer number of Catholics," he said.
Superficial religiosity
Vengco, however, pointed to some deeper reason behind all this: the Filipino's "superficial religiosity."
"We've been nominal Catholics sheer tradition since the Spanish period. It is never a case of conversion but rather political accommodation," he said. "There is not enough depth in it. The Filipinos are satisfied with what is superficial."
Reyes said the survey should prod Pope Francis to form a commission to "honestly assess what's going on" and challenge parish priests to craft a pastoral "formation" programme that would nourish the parishioners' faith and craving for knowledge of the Scriptures.
Reintroducing the "missionary orientation" of the priests in communities and strengthening the basic ecclesial communities, a venue for parishioners to pray and share experiences around Bible passages, would help a lot, he said.
"Rather than stay in our desks, we should immerse ourselves in communities. People are craving for more personal, pastoral approach, rather than a business-like approach to ministry," he said. "The only way we can start doing our work meaningfully is to create a lay partner to do the work and join him or her from time to time."
Vengco said: "There's a lack of spirituality among our priests. That's why their marriage doesn't come across to their listeners. We must be personal witnesses.
As St. Augustine said, 'Before anyone can touch others, you must yourself be touched by God.'"

Only 37% of Pinoy Catholics attend mass


Only 37% of Pinoy Catholics attend mass

MANILA, Philippines - Filipino Catholics going to church every Sunday have gone down from 64 percent to 37 percent, based on a survey by the Social Weather Stations (SWS).
Nearly one in 10 or 9.2 percent of Catholics who are registered voters “sometimes think of leaving the Church,” according to the same SWS survey taken Feb. 15 to 17.
More than 80 percent of the 94 million Filipinos consider themselves Catholics.
In comparison, there are nearly twice as many in other Christian denominations and sects who are weekly churchgoers: 64 percent among
Protestants, 70 percent among Iglesia ni Cristo members and 62 percent among other Christians groups. Seventy-five percent of Muslims attend masjid at least weekly, the SWS said.

“In the entirety of 70 SWS surveys of church attendance during 1991-2013, weekly attendance was always lower among Catholics than among Filipinos in general,” it said.
The highest recorded weekly church attendance among Filipinos was 66 percent in July 1991, the first time SWS asked the question. The highest recorded weekly church attendance among Catholics was 64 percent, also in July 1991.
The latest 37 percent weekly church attendance of Catholics in February 2013 matched the all-time low 37 percent weekly church attendance of Catholics in March 2008.
Meanwhile, the same survey showed that compared with other religious groups, Catholics are the least religious.“The decline in Catholics’ weekly church attendance from 1991 to 2013 is highly significant, statistically speaking,” the SWS said.
Only 29 percent of Catholics consider themselves “very religious,” compared to 50 percent among Protestants, 43 percent among INC members and 41 percent among those from other Christian denominations. Among Muslims, 38 percent consider themselves very religious.
The survey also found one in every 11 Catholics “sometimes think of leaving the Church.”
“Having thoughts of leaving the Catholic Church is more common among Catholics who do not consider themselves as very religious, who attend church monthly at most, and whose church attendance is less now than five years ago,” the SWS said.
The survey used face-to-face interviews with 1,200 registered voters divided into random samples of 300 each in Metro Manila, the rest of Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Sex abuse: the scandal the Catholic Church cannot shake


Sex abuse: the scandal the Catholic Church cannot shake

(Reuters) - Colm O'Gorman was 14 years old when Father Sean Fortune arrived unannounced at his parents' house in a small town in southern Ireland. The priest was given tea and a seat by the fire, and asked the teenager to help set up a youth group.


"I was 14, and very eager and hungry to be out in the world, involved in things, doing things, making a difference. And that's what he exploited," said O'Gorman, now 46 and the executive director of Amnesty International in Ireland.

The abuse that followed, culminating in Fortune's repeated rape of the boy, was part of one of the greatest scandals ever to hit the Catholic Church, damaging the curtailed papacy of Pope Benedict and posing a huge challenge to whoever succeeds him.

O'Gorman's story is just one in a worldwide scandal that destroyed lives, bankrupted dioceses, and in many cases cost the Church its most precious asset: faith.


No questions were asked when Fortune took O'Gorman to his isolated house for the weekend. Such was the Church's power in Ireland at that time, no one would question a priest.

That was the first time Fortune sexually assaulted O'Gorman. Driving him back to his parents the next day, the priest stopped the car around the corner from the teenager's home.

"There were no words that I had that could explain what had happened, and I was terrified," O'Gorman recalls. "He said to me: ‘I'm worried about you, you have a problem. Either I can tell your parents, or you can come back down to me again.'"

"He kept coming and taking me away, for nearly three years."

Fortune's attacks became increasingly violent and escalated to rape. O'Gorman, depressed and suicidal, finally fled his hometown. He became homeless on the streets of Dublin.

It took a decade for O'Gorman to re-establish contact with his family and explain what had happened. With their support, he made a report to the Irish police in 1995.

"Within weeks, I heard back from the detective who had started the case that they had found another five victims," O'Gorman said.

RECURRING PATTERN

The investigation revealed a bully priest who manipulated and abused people wherever he went, and a Church hierarchy that, after receiving complaints about him, moved him on to places where he found new victims: a pattern that recurred in its handling of abuse cases worldwide.

Fortune killed himself in 1999 while on trial for 66 accounts of assault and rape of boys.

Though there was little legal precedent, O'Gorman took a civil suit against the Diocese of Ferns and Pope John Paul in 1998, in which he cited evidence that Fortune's crimes were well known but that the Church did nothing to limit his access to children.

The diocese apologized in 2003 and paid O'Gorman 300,000 euros ($389,500) in compensation.

In a dramatic illustration of the loss of faith in the Church across the developed world, Ireland - where Catholicism was written into the constitution and had enormous influence throughout the 20th century - closed its embassy to the Holy See in 2011 as relations hit an all-time low.

The sexual abuse crisis and its continuing repercussions on the Church was likely one of the difficulties Benedict referred to when he became the first pontiff in centuries to abdicate, saying he no longer had the strength to continue.

For 20 years before becoming pope, the then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was the man in charge of coordinating the Church's response to abuse cases, as prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. A meticulous scholar, he spent years reading the details of case after case of abuse.

"There was no one in the Church hierarchy who was better positioned to make a real difference than Pope Benedict," David Clohessy, director of the U.S.-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said last week. "He had both the power and the knowledge."

FILTH IN THE CHURCH

Shortly before his election in 2005, Ratzinger gave a now-famous address in which he lamented "filth" in the Church, seen as an indicator he would take a tougher line if made pope.

After his election, as the scandal was gaining more publicity, Benedict met abuse victims in Germany, the United States, Australia, Malta and Britain, and barred two high-profile former Vatican favorites suspected of abuse from office.

The barring from public ministry of charismatic Italian priest Gino Burresi and Marcial Maciel, the Mexican founder of the Legionaries of Christ religious order, marked a watershed, showing the Church was finally acting against abuse.

Victims groups say that the Vatican had a policy of not reporting abusive priests to secular authorities, citing evidence such as a letter sent by its head of clergy to a French bishop in 2001, commending him for not denouncing a pedophile priest who had been given 18 years jail for abusing young boys.

They are demanding a comprehensive Church policy for protecting the millions of children still in its care in schools, hospitals and youth groups worldwide, and the demotion of clergy who hid abuse in the past.

The Benedict papacy's response, O'Gorman said, "falls at the first and most important hurdle. That is to simply acknowledge the truth of what happened, and the truth of its role in the cover up of crimes by priests across the world."

With the victims still far from satisfied, the abuse crisis still hangs over the Vatican as the its cardinals - the "princes of the Church" - gather to elect Benedict's successor.

SIN OF A PRIEST

Cardinal Roger Mahony, who as archbishop of Los Angeles worked to shield pedophile priests from prosecution, according to files unsealed by court order in January, has expressed incomprehension about accusations leveled against the clergy over their handling of cases in the past.

"People say: ‘Well, why didn't you call the police?' In those days no one reported these things to the police, usually at the request of families," he told the Catholic News Service on arrival in Rome.

The Vatican's chief prosecutor of sex abuse under Benedict, Monsignor Charles Scicluna, said in an Italian television interview last week: "This disease affects all places and all society, but unfortunately our sin makes the news. Why does the sin of a priest create more fuss?"

The Vatican emphasized last week that it was the duty of cardinals to attend the conclave unless there was a serious impediment such as health. Britain's most senior cardinal Keith O'Brien excluded himself from the conclave after allegations he had behaved inappropriately with other priests.

He admitted his sexual conduct was not that expected of a priest. No allegations suggest this involved children.

Some cardinals have been suggested as "clean hands" candidates for the papacy, notably U.S. Cardinal Sean O'Malley, who published a list of clergy accused of abuse on the Boston Archdiocese website and established a system for mandatory reporting of allegations to civil authorities.

Whoever the next pontiff is, he will have to face a scandal that caused two million Catholics to leave the Church in the United States alone, according to one University of Notre Dame study.

"It doesn't just damage the body, but the soul, and the faith of believers," said Scicluna.

"This is a battle that we cannot afford to lose."

Catholic Church scandal: Cardinal Keith O'Brien faces Vatican inquiry over allegations of sexual misconduct


Catholic Church scandal: Cardinal Keith O'Brien faces Vatican inquiry over allegations of sexual misconduct as he asks forgiveness of those he 'offended'


Britain’s most senior Catholic clergymen looks set to face a Vatican inquiry over allegations of sexual misconduct with the body that was once headed by Pope Benedict set to lead the investigation.


The Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, the Vatican council charged with confronting major transgressions by clergy, will likely launch an investigation into Cardinal Keith O’Brien once the new Pope is chosen.

The Catholic Church in Scotland has been plunged into crisis after the Cardinal admitted in a brief statement on Sunday evening that allegations against him from three current priests and one former clergyman that he sexually molested them had some substance.

After initially threatening the journalist who broke the story with legal action, O’Brien admitted in his weekend statement that his sexual conduct “had fallen below the standards expected of me”.

Vatican spokesmen yesterday refused to confirm whether an investigation would be launched but the Scottish Catholic Media Office said they expected an enquiry would take place once Benedict XVI’s successor is chosen.

It is usually officials from the CDF who lead such investigations. Before he became Pope Benedict, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger headed up the CDF and earned the nickname “God’s Rottweiler” for his pursuit of clergy who strayed from orthodox Catholic teachings. However the pontifical council was also attacked by critics for the way it has handled inquiries into historical sex abuse scandals.

All but 25 of the Cardinals that are set to choose the new Pope have now arrived in Rome. Yesterday [MON] they took the vow of secrecy that starts the Papal Conclave and began to meet in “general congregations” to sketch out a profile of what they need from a new Pontiff.

According to a report by Reuters’ Vatican Correspondent Philip Pullella, the cardinals have asked to be briefed on a secret report that was commissioned by Benedict to look into the so-called “Vatileaks” scandal – a series of allegations of mismanagement, corruption and political bickering at the heart of the Vatican.

As the Papal Conclave gets underway it looks set to be overshadowed the twin scandals surrounding the Vatileaks report and the moral authority of senior clerics. As well as the furore surrounding Cardinal O’Brien there is a growing campaign to stop the American Cardinal Roger Mahony from voting for the new Pope.

As archbishop of Los Angeles from 1985, Mahony worked to send priests known to be abusers out of the state to shield them from law enforcement scrutiny, according to church files unsealed under a U.S. court order last month.

Cardinal O’Brien previously announced his retirement when the allegations against him first emerged a fortnight ago and he confirmed over the weekend that he would no longer play any public role in Catholic Church. He added that he apologised to “the Catholic Church and the people of Scotland”. But gay rights groups have called on the Cardinal to offer a specific apology to the LGBT community because he was such a prolific opponent of homosexuality and gay marriage.

“O'Brien's statement falls well short of what we would expect from a spiritual leader,” said the veteran gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell. “He has failed to apologize for the hatred and harm he caused the LGBT community. I urge the Cardinal to show true remorse for his homophobia and hypocrisy by saying sorry to the LGBT community for the hatred and harm he has caused - and by publicly repenting his homophobia.”

Catholic Church controversies since Benedict XVI's resignation


Catholic Church controversies since Benedict XVI's resignation


The resignation of British Cardinal Keith O'Brien on Feb. 24 over allegations of inappropriate behaviour is the latest scandal facing the Catholic Church in the run-up to the election of the next pope in March.
Here's a look at controversies that have emerged since Pope Benedict announced his resignation on Feb. 11.

O'Brien's resignation

On Feb. 24, the Vatican accepted the resignation of Cardinal Keith O’Brien, who heads the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland. The 74-year-old O'Brien faces misconduct allegations after three priests and one former priest within the Diocese of St. Andrews and Edinburgh filed complaints that he approached them in an inappropriate way, the Observer newspaper reported on Feb. 23.
The physical advances allegedly took place as far back as 30 years ago.
Although O’Brien is contesting the allegations, by stepping down he will no longer be a part of the conclave that will choose a new pope in March.
"I do not wish media attention in Rome to be focused on me, but rather on Pope Benedict XVI and on his successor," O'Brien said following his resignation.

Vatileaks

On Feb. 21, the Italian newspaper La Repubblica reported that Benedict's decision to step down could have been the result of wanting to distance himself from allegations that a network of closeted gay priests in the Vatican was being subjected to blackmail.
According to the paper, the Pope's decision to step down came on the same day last December that he received a dossier related to the so-called "Vatileaks" controversy — the 2012 scandal in which the Pope's butler, Paolo Gabriele, was arrested for allegedly stealing secret documents.
La Repubblica reported that the dossier concluded that because of their alleged homosexuality, some members of the Holy See were susceptible to "external influence," in other words, blackmail.
The Vatican replied on Feb. 23 by condemning the "false and damaging reports" and suggesting that the media were trying to influence the election of the next pontiff.

U.S. allegations of coverup

Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, former head of the largest Catholic archdiocese in the U.S., is being urged not to take part in the conclave after being accused of protecting more than 120 sexually abusive priests during his time as the archbishop of Los Angeles from 1985 to 2011.
According to the L.A. Times, a Catholic organization called Catholic United has gathered thousands of signatures and took a petition to Mahoney on Feb. 23, asking that for the well-being of the Catholic Church, Mahony refrain from participating in the conclave.
The protest is in response to the Jan. 31 release of 12,000 pages of personal documents dealing with the accusations and Mahony and other officials’ handling of them, which were published by court order. The files showed that Mahony helped keep accused priests of out trouble.
In one instance, the files showed that an accused priest by the name of Aguilar Rivera fled to Mexico when Thomas Curry, Mahony’s aide, advised him that parents of the allegedly abused children might go to the police. Rivera is still a fugitive in Mexico, the Times reported.
Mahony retired in 2011, and the day the documents were released, Mahony’s successor — Jose Gomez — stripped him of his remaining public duties.
In 2007, Mahony and his diocese apologized for the abuse of hundreds of victims and reached a collective settlement worth $660 million with more than 500 families of children who claimed to have been abused.

Homosexuality and Africa

Cardinal Peter Turkson of Ghana is viewed as a likely contender to become the next pope.
In a February interview, CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour asked the 64-year-old cardinal whether the sex abuse scandals in the Catholic Church could reach Africa, a part of the world where the church is growing.
Turkson felt this was unlikely to happen, because he said homosexuality is tolerated less in many parts of Africa.
"African traditional systems kind of protect or have protected its population against this tendency," he said. "Because in several communities, in several cultures in Africa, homosexuality, or for that matter any affair between two sexes of the same kind, are not countenanced in our society. So, that cultural 'taboo,' that tradition has been there. It's helped to keep this out."
Kieran Conry, British bishop of Arundel and Brighton, was one of many people to criticize Turkson's comment, in which he appeared to equate homosexuality with pedophilia.
"Homosexuality is irrelevant to the child-abuse problem," Conry was quoted as saying in a report in the newspaper, The Australian.

DreamWorks, Participant Movie Focuses On Catholic Church Sex Scandal Uncovered By Boston Globe


DreamWorks, Participant Movie Focuses On Catholic Church Sex Scandal Uncovered By Boston Globe


BREAKINGDreamWorks Studios and Participant Media have acquired feature film rights to the story of the Catholic Church’s decades-long cover-up of its pedophile priests in Massachusetts. The scandal was uncovered by a year-long investigation by the Boston Globe. Tom McCarthy has signed on to direct and co-write the script with Josh Singer. Anonymous Content’s Michael Sugar and Steve Golin and Rocklin/Faust’s Nicole Rocklin and Blye Faust will produce. David Mizner, who originally brought the project to the producers, will serve as a consultant and associate producer. King and Jeff Skoll will serve as executive producers.
Life rights have been acquired to the Boston Globe’s “Spotlight Team” of reporters and editors, including then-Globe editor Marty Baron, special projects editor Ben Bradlee Jr., Spotlight Team editor Walter “Robby” Robinson and reporters Michael Rezendes, Sacha Pfeiffer, and Matt Carroll. The team spent a year interviewing victims and reviewing thousands of pages of documents and discovered years of cover-up by Catholic Church leadership. Their reporting eventually led to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard Law who had hidden years of serial abuse by other priests and opened the floodgates to other revelations of molestation and cover-upsaround the world which still reverberate today. For their efforts, the Globe team won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2003.
This will be the sixth collaboration between DreamWorks and Participant, most recently teaming for Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln. In addition to The Visitor,McCarthy wrote and directed The Station Agent, Win Win and Up. He also scripted The Million Dollar Arm for Disney, which will star Jon Hamm. He is repped by the Gersh Agency and attorney Andrew Hurwitz.
Josh Singer wrote the Wikileaks drama The Fifth Estate for DreamWorks, which was directed by Bill Condon and will be released later this year. A veteran TV writer, he has worked on such shows as The West Wing, Law & Order: SVU, Lie To Me, and Fringe. Singer is repped by WME and Anonymous Content.

CATHOLIC CHURCH HIT BY ANOTHER SCANDAL

CATHOLIC CHURCH HIT BY ANOTHER SCANDAL

       Dozens of Americans have declared that they were abused by a Catholic  priest, in yet another scandal for the Vatican.

About 50 people have reported that the abuses took place in Catholic schools in the states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Ohio during the period of 1982 to 2007 by Franciscan friar Brother Stephen Baker, who apologized in a note prior to stabbing himself to death on January 26. 

Baker’s death came after the disclosure of financial settlements for 11 men, who accused him of sexually abusing them, while he was a teacher and a coach at Catholic John F. Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio, from 1986 to 1990. 


The Roman Catholic Church has been hit by numerous scandals in the United States and in Europe over the past few years, involving allegations of covering up sexual abuse of children by priests to protect pedophiles and the Church’s own reputation.

The surprise resignation of Pope Benedict XVI was an unprecedented move in the modern history of the Catholic Church. The Pope recently said he would resign from his position on February 28. Reports say the decision came after the Pope learned about the extent of sex and graft scandals inside the Vatican.