Posts tagged as:

John Zuhlsdorf

First Things

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 6, 2010 · 9 comments

First Things, Avery Cardinal Dulles, John Zuhlsdorf, Models of the Church, Richard John Neuhaus, Scandal Time, Priests in Crisis, Sin and Risk Aversion, Raymond Arroyo, Kathleen Maxwell

. . . In “Scandal Time,” Fr. Neuhaus stared straight into the hearts of panicked American bishops who responded to the crisis with neither fidelity to the law of the Church nor with mercy. To the very end of his life, Father Neuhaus, like Cardinal Dulles before him, pleaded for the due process rights of priests accused, and for fidelity to the Magisterium and laws of the Church. In one of his last letters to me, Father Neuhaus wrote of his concern that priests have a fair and just hearing, and that bishops not be allowed to implement mob justice that resulted in the forced laicization of many in cases that were decades old and defied fair investigation. In a letter dated October 27, 2008, Father Neuhaus wrote: “It is indeed disturbing that [a bishop] may move on this without giving you a chance to offer a defense, and without your even knowing the case being presented against you … ln the modern history of the Church, it is more often than not the case that Rome is inclined toward checking possible abuses of power by bishops. So let’s pray that happens in this case. . . . .

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Clerical Claustrophobia Part 2

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on September 16, 2009 · 6 comments

Gordon MacRae, Falsely Accused Priest, Diocese of Manchester, Priestsincrisis.com, Charline Duline, Drinking from the Saucer, Avery Cardinal Dulles, John Zuhlsdorf, Clericalism

. . . At the time I was accused and faced trial in 1994, my attorney 
sought the help of my Diocese to defend the case. I was 
sitting in the attorney’s office on the day he called the 
Chancellor of my diocese asking for details of the protocol 
for reporting accusations of abuse to state officials.

The Chancellor, a monsignor, said that the diocese had never had 
to make such a report until accusations emerged against me. I 
was the only one, he said. Months later as I prepared for 
trial, the Chancellor and a diocesan lawyer issued a press 
release about me. Knowing that I refused “plea deals,” 
maintained my innocence, and struggled to mount a defense, the 
press release declared: “The Church has been a victim of the 
actions of Gordon MacRae just as these individuals.” My trial, 
from that point on, was but a farce. . . .

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