Does the Pope want the truth? Thursday’s meeting will tell.
By Phil Lawler ( bio - articles - email ) | Sep 12, 2018
As Pope Francis meets on Thursday with leaders of the US bishops’ conference, one question looms more important than all others:
Will the Pope authorize an apostolic visitation of the American hierarchy?
An apostolic visitation—a full investigation, under papal authority—could, if it was conducted rigorously and honestly (and that’s a crucial “if”):
- unearth the documents that will prove conclusively whether or not Archbishop Vigano’s testimony is accurate, whether or not his criticism of the Pontiff is justified;
- identify the bishops, in this country and in Rome, who helped advance the ecclesiastical career of ex-cardinal McCarrick—and those whose careers McCarrick has advanced;
- expose the influence of the “lavender mafia” and the corruption of the Roman Curia; and
- give American Catholics at least some reason to believe that the Vatican is finally taking action, and the cover-up is ending.
Cardinal DiNardo, in his role as president of the US bishops’ conference, has urgently requested an apostolic visitation, and indicated that he will go to Rome to pursuit of that request. That is a remarkable development: the head of the USCCB is, in effect, calling for an investigation of the USCCB! This is a bold move; one might even call it a desperate move. It’s almost the clerical equivalent of an infantry officer calling down artillery strikes on his own unit’s position. Casualties would be inevitable.
Yet the USCCB wants this investigation. Many American bishops have recognized that the situation is dire, and called for drastic action. Even knowing that a thorough investigation would be painful, a majority of American bishops want to know the truth.
Does the Pope?
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