How much tragedy and crime would have been prevented if only the bishops would have listened to what Fr. Gerald Fitzgerald had to say about pedophiles.
From R.J. Stove:
To summarize: in the 1950s, Fr. Fitzgerald constituted a rare
voice—often, it would seem, a lone voice—on the subject of sexual
immorality, and above all pederasty, in the priesthood. This was at a
time when such Molochs as Freudianism and the Kinsey Report still
exercised such tyrannical rule over the American public culture, that
their despotism was conceded (and applauded) by old-fashioned
buttoned-up liberals like Lionel Trilling, quite as much as
new-fashioned monsters like Allen Ginsberg. Against this despotism, even
such classic admonitions as Fulton Sheen’s Peace of Soul proved almost useless....
This is, in part, what Fr. Fitzgerald said. The letter came into the public domain only four years ago:
These men, Your Excellency, are devils and the wrath
of God is upon them and if I were a bishop I would tremble when I failed
to report them to Rome for involuntary laicization [in his haste he spelled it “laycization”] …
It is for this class of rattlesnake I have always wished the island
retreat—but even an island is too good for these vipers of whom the
Gentle Master said—it were better they had not been born—this is an
indirect way of saying damned, is it not? When I see the Holy Father I
am going to speak of this class to His Holiness.
Well, this cri de coeur proved to be—as A.J.P. Taylor would
have put it—a turning-point of history at which history failed to turn. A
year afterward, Pope Pius XII, in whom Fr. Fitzgerald invested such
high hopes, had died. A decade afterward, the very words “damned” and
“wrath” had largely disappeared from Catholic consciousness, as being
excessively “negative.” (Read more.)
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1 comment:
What happened to the RC Church in the 60's is the same as would happen in the home if parents let the kids take over and make the 'rules'.
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