Wednesday, September 14, 2011

ARCHBISHOP CHAPUT ALREADY DRAWING FLAK

Cathleague

 

ARCHBISHOP CHAPUT ALREADY DRAWING FLAK
Chaput

 
Below is a statement by Catholic League president Bill Donohue:
 
The new Archbishop of Philadelphia, Charles Chaput, hasn't been in office one week and already he is drawing flak from dissidents. 
 
On September 8, the day of Archbishop Chaput's installation, Robert Hoatson was protesting the event outside the Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul. The Philadelphia Inquirer ran a picture of him on its website, and identified him in the newspaper as a priest. What they did not say is that he is a suspended priest from New Jersey who filed a lawsuit against the Catholic Church asking to be removed from the clergy. Predictably, Chaput's homily that day was attacked by victims' groups and dissidents for not being sufficiently contrite about the fate of alleged victims in the archdiocese.
 
As soon as Chaput's appointment was announced in July, the phony victims' group, SNAP, held a press conference condemning him. Maureen Turlish, a nun who leads the Church-bashing group, Voice of the Faithful, lectured him on how to proceed. Still another group of malcontents, Catholics4Change, demanded that they "become part of Church leadership." But wouldn’t that make them part of the dreaded "institutional Church" they so deplore?
 
These people also lie. Turlish, for instance, is fond of saying that the two Philadelphia grand jury reports on the archdiocese document "facts." Similarly, an editorial this week in the dissident weekly, the National Catholic Reporter, condemned the last three Philly archbishops for being "complicit in hiding crimes and criminals." Specifically, it said the archdiocese "is a place where children, mostly boys, have been raped and molested, in some cases repeatedly." It did not use the word "allegedly," accepting as "fact" accusations that have never been challenged in court!
 
What's really driving the early animus against Chaput is his persona: he is bright, courageous and orthodox. That's why Catholic professors like Nicholas Cafardi and David J. O'Brien are busy telling him not to address wider moral issues, especially in the upcoming presidential season. Fat chance. Guess they don't know his steeliness. 
 
Contact our director of communications about Donohue’s remarks:
Jeff Field