Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Whistleblower Priest Reprimanded by His Bishop

The last Bishop Fr. Scahill engaged, resigned not too long afterward, with good reason, he was a liberal who defended a pederastic homosexual. Fr. Scahill is also a liberal and as one of his sheep remarked, "a heretic". We're inclined to believe such heartfelt declamations from the nave since they address a man who refuses to admit the true provenance of this media generated brouhaha in the first place. It's liberalism. The same kind of liberalism that would encourage this would-be Emile Zola to accuse his boss, the Pope, in the tribunal of the mob in the first place. Never mind that Father doesn't seem to be aware of or concerned about the details of 1985.

Notice, Father Scahill nowhere puts the blame where it belongs. It's the liberalism that allows monsters like this to go without punishment in the first place and it's liberalism which put them in the positions they enjoyed and it's liberalism, again, which is using them to destroy the Catholic Church.

Liberalism is the mistaken idea that one religion is as good as the next and that the truths religions generally propose for people's belief are a matter of indifference. A liberal doesn't believe Catholicism is true, but he may find "truth" in it and enjoy some of its ceremonies and culture, but he will scoff at miracles and indeed, it's moral admonitions.

George Orwell marked well the dishonesty of his clerical liberal friends who pretended to be Catholic and played a double game for their public, and this was in the 30s. We expect with great confidence that showboats like Pfleger and Scahill are in that sect.



EAST LONGMEADOW, Mass. (RNS) Less than 24 hours after calling for Pope Benedict XVI to step down, a Massachusetts priest has been rebuked by his local bishop.

A longtime critic of how the church has handled the sexual abuse crisis, the Rev. James J. Scahill delivered four sermons over the weekend suggesting that the 82-year old pope should take greater responsibility for solving the church's clergy abuse problems or resign.

The sermons, delivered from the pulpit at St. Michael's Catholic Church, made Scahill one of the first priests in the nation to call for the pope's departure.

Short article Continues...

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