Monday 26 August 2024

THEOLOGIAN SAYS NZ CATHOLIC BISHOPS MUST RESIGN


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Saint Bridget of Sweden Witnesses a Priest Being Condemned at Christ's Judgment Seat


 


New Zealand's Catholic Bishops - or at least, the most senior among them - are compromised, demoralised men. So much so that one of their own employees, Dr Christopher Longhurst who lectures in theology at TeKupenga Theological College, says the NZ Royal Commission's finding that the bishops failed to address abuse and neglect, despite past promises of transparency, means they must resign. 


The recently appointed +Michael Gielen (Christchurch) and +John Adams (Palmerston North) would seem not to be implicated, as the NZCBC's dismal record on abuse goes back at least 22 years. 


The bishops (including a clutch of 'Emeriti')  devised the devilish document Aroha and Diversity in Catholic Schools. They are complicit in Catholic schools teaching "sexuality education" on gender diversity and inclusivity which is designed to destroy the natural family. And they fiddle while Rome burns, with such effeminate idiocies as printing prayer cards with 'The Lord's Prayer' (sic) in Te Reo Maori.


This is another instance of the Novus Ordo effect. These prelates are products of the Second Vatican Council, of the conciliar Church which has morphed into the Synodal Church of Antipope Francis whose purpose, broadly speaking, is to make the sin of sodomy acceptable to the Mystical Body of Christ. To make it legit. Faithful Novus Ordo Massgoers would do well to reflect on the cover their presence in the pews provides for the Antipope and his heterodox Francis church while it gets on with the biz of dismantling the Catholic Church. 



Dr Longhurst (originally from Napier) is a Doctor of Sacred Theology, specialising in Theological Aesthetics. 





The New Zealand Royal Commission's final report condemns Catholic Church leaders for failing to address abuse and neglect, despite past promises of transparency. Their lack of accountability and evasion of responsibility suggests that the current bishops should reconsider their positions.

 

Based on the New Zealand Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care’s final report, Catholic Church leaders have brought great shame on the New Zealand Catholic Church. Their lack of accountability and transparency in responding to pervasive abuse merits serious condemnation.

 

The Commission found that “Catholic Church leaders have not been accountable or transparent to their congregations and the broader community about the nature and extent of abuse and neglect by their members.” (199) Given such a finding, perhaps it would be best for the local Church and New Zealand society if those church leaders—the bishops, tendered their resignations to the pope.

The Commission’s use of the words “have not been” is telling. The scope of investigation into abuse in the care of the Catholic Church included experiences up until today. Therefore, testimony on the current church leaders’ response has informed the Inquiry.

However, over 22 years ago, the New Zealand Catholic bishops published their Pastoral Letter on abuse, stating, “We give you an assurance of our commitment to confront this problem with openness and transparency.” However, the Inquiry found that this commitment was not honored.

 

Episcopal accountability

Then, in the wake of the final report’s publication, the same church leaders made another commitment, this time “to ensure that the findings and recommendations of this significant Inquiry are not lost or confined to words in a report.” (24 July 2024) But given their former commitments on issues so vital as keeping children and vulnerable people safe and healing the abused were not met, why should we continue to believe them?

 

Supporting the Commission’s findings is the fact that earlier this year, the New Zealand bishops and congregational leaders commissioned an independent assessment of how they have complied with national safeguarding policy and responded to abuse complaints. The assessment was carried out by the international firm GCPS Consulting. 

 

Key interest groups, such as survivor support networks, were advised that an executive summary of the findings would be published on the church’s Te Rōpū Tautoko website. However, that website issued its last statement recently without publishing the report. Inquiries into the whereabouts of the report have resulted in no response. Therefore, even in this instance today, it seems that church leaders have not been able to be accountable or transparent.

 

Regarding episcopal accountability in the Catholic Church, only a pope can hold a bishop to account. Catholic survivors in New Zealand recently appealed to Pope Francis three times, in September 2022, again in March 2023, and again in June 2023, asking him to hold New Zealand bishops to account and respect his own calls for openness and transparency in dealing with survivor complaints. They also asked Pope Francis to help dismantle the local church’s system of coverup and denial that is harming so many people. Regrettably, those letters did not receive a reply.

 




Inadequate attempts

This means that, in effect, there is no accountability for abuse in New Zealand’s Catholic Church. As Gloriavale leaver Rosanna Overcomer stated, “When people in positions of power have no accountability, they create a path of hurt and destruction. Systems left unchecked don’t improve; they deteriorate.” (217)

 

The problem raised by the Commission regarding the bishops’ failure to provide a proper system to prevent further harm (199) can no longer be deflected by statements such as “we’ve changed and will continue to change.”

 

In a public interview with Radio New Zealand (RNZ) on July 26, Archbishop Paul Martin, leader of New Zealand’s Catholic Church, attributed the abuse to “the culture of the time.” However, the Commission found that “the church leadership has made minimal and inadequate attempts to understand the fundamental and broader systemic factors that have influenced abuse.

 

This has meant the church’s prevention of further harm has been limited at best.” (200) Therefore, it would seem misleading to continue to use “the culture of the time” as an excuse today.

 

 

self-explanatory

 

Furthermore, it seems disingenuous of Archbishop Martin to make such a comment after the fact that the Inquiry was “unaware of any consideration by the church of the systemic causes” of the pervasive abuse (198).

 

More surprising may have been Martin’s reply to the RNZ interviewer’s question regarding the Commission’s recommendation that global religious leaders of institutions where the abuse occurred apologize. “Will you write to the Pope and ask for a formal apology to be issued to the victims and survivors?” RNZ asked. Martin replied, “We need to talk about that.”

Required changes

Surely, Church leaders who display such a lack of courage and empathy have no place in leadership roles. Not only do they stain the good character of Catholic laity and innocent clergy, but they also bring the institution into further disrepute.

 

 



 

In light of such morally impoverished leadership, surely it would be better if the New Zealand Catholic Bishops reconsidered their positions. Evidently, they are not capable of making the required changes.

 

Not only have they proven unwilling to be held to account, but they have shown themselves to be entrenched in their own power and privilege, as demonstrated by their immediate response of setting up another committee comprised of themselves to respond to the Commission’s findings.

By such repetitive misbehavior, they are keeping us all at risk, endangering more children and vulnerable people in the care of New Zealand’s Catholic Church. Therefore, they themselves must be changed. They must resign.

Dr Christopher Longhurst, a Catholic theologian, serves on the executive of the Association of Practical Theology in Oceania, and is lecturer in theology at TeKupenga Theological College of Aotearoa New Zealand. 'Catholic bishops in New Zealand need to reconsider their positions' - Catholic news – La Croix International (la-croix.com)



 

St Augustine (Philippe de Champaigne)



St Augustine, Bishop and Doctor of the Church, pray for us

5 comments:

  1. Resign 🤬off should be in prison or I would volunteer to work the guillotine

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  2. https://amg-news.com/pepe-orsini-the-grey-pope-and-the.../

    ReplyDelete
  3. Im sorry. I see you are a very intelligent person, and can say things, so eloquently. People, like me, just go 😒
    Can you please translate into simple language? I think i understand your message, but, I'm not sure 🤔 😕 😅 😐

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    Replies
    1. No, I should apologise to you! Late at night when v tired I think I make things sound more complicated than I should.
      NZ's Bishops have been told by Dr Christopher Longhurst, whom they employ to lecture at their own theological college, that they must resign. He believes they have failed repeatedly, over 22 years+, to deal with the problem of sex abuse in the Church.
      I believe the bishops are a result of the Novus Ordo Mass, which fails to teach the Gospel and the Sacred Tradition of the Catholic Church. I am concerned that people who still attend the Novus Ordo Mass (and support the bishops by putting money in the plate) are enabling the bishops and Antipope Francis to continue their work of destroying the Catholic Church.

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  4. It seems strange that so many churches and government institutions have all been involved in similar ways in this abuse over past decades. It seems to point to a cultural thread that was running through our whole society that enabled the serious things to happen. So, if our whole society was to blame, who has to apologize and who has to provide the no doubt considerable compensation that will be sought?

    Just pondering the issues. I don't wish to diminish the suffering of those affected, or diminished the responsibility of those who allowed, or made it happen.

    ReplyDelete