August
21, 2018
Worthy Chaplains and Dear Brother Knights,
The issues that have come to light concerning sexual abuse
by Archbishop Theodore McCarrick and in the Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report
are cause for grave concern among Catholics and Brother Knights. Many feel
deeply betrayed by those whom they long held in high regard. Such concerns
are shared not just in the United States, but in Europe, Latin America and
elsewhere.
These sins of commission and omission have sent the Church we love, the
Church we serve and the Church that Jesus Christ established into
convulsions. Sadly, the disgrace not only is borne by the perpetrators, it
hurts us all, as does the silence of shepherds who have ignored the cries
of their flocks.
There are many wonderful and faithful laborers in the vineyard of the Lord
among our priests and bishops. However, it is clear that in addition to devastating
criminal acts, we have seen many other moral failings by clergy that
represent a crisis of commitment to the Gospel.
Too often the needs of victims have been subordinated to
a distorted sense of mercy toward the perpetrators or an instinct for clerical
self-preservation. The sexual acts — both criminal and non-criminal —
highlight the need to recover a respect for and a renewed commitment to the
priestly promises of celibacy.
The Knights of Columbus has supported the pastoral and charitable work of
our bishops and priests since our founding by the Venerable Father Michael
McGivney. We understand that the priest should lead the parish and the
bishop should be the center of unity in a diocese. But we — like all
Catholics — are painfully aware of the wreckage that ensues when elements
of this leadership are abdicated by evil actions whether directly
perpetrated or covered up.
Now, the Knights of Columbus — laymen, priests and chaplains together —
will have an important role to play in rebuilding the Church. We must
commit the Knights of Columbus to work for repentance, reform and
rebuilding of the Church.
Repentance should include a full accounting of the misdeeds by those who
have committed them. Archbishop McCarrick and others at fault owe us a full
account of their actions, motivations and cover-ups. After years of having
us confess to them, it is now time for them to come clean about what they
have done and what they have failed to do.
This will also help increase the recognition that clerical sexual abuse is
a global problem that must be addressed at the highest levels of the
Catholic Church. Moreover, priests and bishops who refuse to live according
to their promises of celibacy should be removed from public ministry, not
out of retribution, but for the protection of the faithful and to prevent
future variations of the scandal we now suffer.
Reform must include many good ideas that have been proposed, such as a full
and complete investigation of sexual abuse led by an independent commission
that includes laity; complete transparency by the Catholic hierarchy into
all matters of criminal sexual misconduct past or future; an expansion of
the zero tolerance policy to include sexual activity or misconduct by
clerics including bishops, and by seminarians; and a call for faithfulness
by all members of the clergy, including bishops. There must also be an
independent ethics hotline for reporting of criminal and other conduct at
odds with Catholic teaching on the clerical state of life; and there must be
protections against retaliation.
Such reforms will be difficult for a Church largely
unused to them, and we must support our bishops and our priests in
embracing these reforms in order to rebuild.
We can help to rebuild our Church in several ways. Above all else, Knights
— and our chaplains — must embrace love of God and love of neighbor. This
is Christ’s great commandment and the founding mission of our Order. It is
also exactly the opposite of the rejection of God and exploitation of
neighbor that our Church has witnessed in these scandals.
Shortly before becoming Pope Benedict XVI, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
decried the “filth” in the Church “even among those, who in the priesthood,
ought to belong totally” to Christ. He also provided the antidote, stating
at other times that what the Church needs now more than anything else is
“saints.” Pope Francis reiterated Pope Benedict’s sentiments in his letter
on Aug. 20.
In the days ahead, the Knights of Columbus will help renew our Church on a
national level through a Novena of Masses in reparation for these sins that
have so grievously wounded the Body of Christ. I take this opportunity to
ask that you offer this Novena of Masses for our Church at your earliest
opportunity.
Beginning in November, the Knights of Columbus will sponsor, in cooperation
with the Shrine of St. Jean Vianney in Ars, France, a national tour of the
relic of the heart of this great patron saint of priests. In the coming
weeks, I will share more details with you about this initiative.
We will also continue to strengthen and rebuild our Church at the level of
our families and parishes through our Building the Domestic Church program.
Its twin elements of imbuing families with faith and strengthening parish
life are critical to providing a Catholic Church that rebuilds based on the
Gospel principles of love of God and love of neighbor. Together with our
recently announced “Faith In Action” initiative, we will strive to make our
parishes truly become, in the words of Pope Francis, “a family of
families.”
Now is the time for all brother Knights to stand steadfast in faith, as
Catholics and as gentlemen. We will assist priests, bishops and our fellow
Catholics in helping the Church chart a course for the future that puts
Christ at the center, so that truly we may say, “Thy will be done on earth
as it is in heaven.”
This is the moment in which Knights — including in a
special way our priest members — can be part of a great renewal for good in
our Church. And as we strive to follow the Lord more closely in the days
ahead, may he deliver us from every evil and in his mercy graciously grant
his Church peace and unity.
In closing, know that your faithful witness and
sacrifice can bring inspiration and hope to millions of your fellow
Catholics. It will be needed in the days ahead more than ever before.
And to every priest and bishop whose commitment and dedication to our Order
and to our Church has been faithful and exemplary, please accept my gratitude
in both a personal way and on behalf of the Knights of Columbus.
Let each one of us prayerfully invoke the intercession of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, so that in the words of St. Maximilian Kolbe, our hearts would
be cleansed and themselves become immaculate, similar and like unto her own
heart.
Fraternally,
Carl A. Anderson
Supreme Knight
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