So okay, yeah, this post is a little behind ... but I'd started writing it before my imternet service went out of commission a little over two weeks ago.
So the good news is that Oakland Bp. Salvatore Cordileone, the incoming Bay City archbishop, is going to face no ecclesial penalties for Saturday night's [9/1/12] DUI charge. Of course, this is no comfort for the Catholic Church's detractors, who would just as soon impale a bishop's head on a stick for jaywalking as for treason, murder, grand larceny or opposing gay marriage.
So the good news is that Oakland Bp. Salvatore Cordileone, the incoming Bay City archbishop, is going to face no ecclesial penalties for Saturday night's [9/1/12] DUI charge. Of course, this is no comfort for the Catholic Church's detractors, who would just as soon impale a bishop's head on a stick for jaywalking as for treason, murder, grand larceny or opposing gay marriage.
READERS:
"Huh? Bishop who? That's old news! Let's get to what you have to say about that no-good, dirty, rotten *#&!$ Fr. Benedict Groeschel!"
Frankly, there's really nothing I can say. For one thing, the National Catholic Register took down the interview with Fr. Groeschel, so I can't read the quotes in context. According to Bill Donahue, Fr. Groeschel "hypothesized how a young person (14, 16 or 18, as he put it)
could conceivably take advantage of a priest who was having a nervous
breakdown." I don't know, though, because I can't read or judge it for myself.
Does it matter, anyway? The narrative has already been hammered into place; indeed, it was forged ten years ago, long before the Penn State scandal and the accident that injured the 78-year-old Franciscan's head. As far as the world's concerned, Fr. Benedict was defending predator priests. Period. Paragraph. End of revelation.