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Author Topic: SSPX Addresses PA Grand Jury Report, Calls Clerical Abuse ‘a Shame’  (Read 1465 times)

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Offline Mr G

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https://remnantnewspaper.com/web/index.php/headline-news-around-the-world/item/4094-sspx-addresses-pa-grand-jury-report-calls-clerical-abuse-a-shame

As you see below, Katie is an SSPX parishioner, but only now is she and others starting to see that the SSPX is silent when it comes to criticizing the Pope and Hierarchy. If you know anyone similar to Katie, then now would be a good time to explain to them why the SSPX is silent.


Written by  Katie Reiser


On September 15, an article quietly appeared on the Society of St. Pius X website which acknowledged, for the first time, what some are calling the Scandal of the Century—new and devastating revelations of the full extent of the clerical sex crisis which has been rocking the Church for decades.

Though this article commented in depth on the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report, oddly enough it makes no mention of Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò’s bombshell 11-page testimony which in many ways stole the thunder of the Pennsylvania report, and I can’t figure out why they omitted this.

On the Vatican’s reaction to the revelations in Pennsylvania, the Society report quotes Greg Burke’s defense of Francis, claiming that, “Victims should know that the Pope is on their side.” 

Pope and his PR man, Opus Dei's Greg Burke

To my knowledge, the author of this Society brief is among only a handful who still take the affidavits and assurances of the Vatican’s damage control agent, Greg Burke, at all seriously.  

The Society report is useful since it collates the reactions of others to this biggest crisis since the promulgation of the New Mass. For example, it mentions that “in the US, over 140 theologians, educators and lay directors called for all the American bishops to resign” in an open letter of provocation. But then it also highlights Pope Francis’ (the “Sovereign Pontiff”) words in his Letter to the People of God:

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“In his letter, the successor of Peter considered that one of the sources of these ‘ecclesial wounds’ is a ‘peculiar way of understanding the Church’s authority.’ ‘Clericalism’, he accused, ‘supports and helps to perpetuate many of the evils that we are condemning today,’ such as ‘the thirst for power and possessions’ and spiritual corruption.’” (Whether or not the SSPX concurs with this papal diversionary tactic is not obvious to the reader.)

The report moves on into the general reaction to the Pope’s letter, citing the issues raised by journalist Aldo Maria Valli, LifeSiteNews, unavox.it, and Carlos Esteban, a Spanish journalist. But the report does not here add any of its own critique, which I find frustrating since the Society should be in a position to hold a hard line on this. Confusion and ambiguity are tools of the Vatican. Let’s not do that.

In the final section, entitled: The Hypocrisy of the World and the Statistical Reality, the Society report states: “The fact that men invested with the priestly dignity could have committed such acts is indeed a shame.” And then moves on to suggest that much of this is the work of anti-Catholic media:

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“The media attacks the Church furiously while pretending to forget that these cases, as scandalous as they may be, are only a tiny minority compared to the abuse committed by adults on children in schools, sports activities, or stepfamilies, not to mention the shady circles of fashion, the show business and the media.”

The report then lists stats which appear to show a higher number of abuse cases in families and among peers than those which originate from priests and religious. No doubt, this may be the case. But what is the Society report getting at?

To my thinking, for even just one Catholic priest to abuse a child or engage in ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖ acts is infinitely worse than for a hundred pagans who don’t know better to do something similar. And the fact that so many dioceses have lost lawsuits and had to pay out millions of dollars is itself proof that this problem cannot be dismissed as mostly the concoction of Catholic-bashing media.

The report continues: “As serious as it may be, it remains a marginal reality, much more marginal, in any case, than the media, always ready to pounce on an opportunity to dishonor the Church, would have it.” And…? The fact that it’s happening at all is the ugly story here.

Closing line: “The Church intercedes for her wounded children, not for this hypocritical and corrupt world for which Christ refused to pray (see Jn. 17:9).”

As a member of the Society faithful, I’m grateful that the SSPX has now addressed the clerical sex abuse crisis in the Church. As a woman living in the world, I appreciate priestly guidance on this issue so that I can be prepared to answer the many questions that are put to me at work about this scandal and how to separate it from the spotless Bride of Christ.

That said, I sincerely hope to hear more from the Society in the future, since to my view they neglected to mention the game-changer in all this, i.e., Archbishop Viganò, and further developments since the month-old PA Grand Jury incident. What does the Society think of the bombshell everyone else is talking about: Archbishop Viganò’s Testimony and the implication of members of the hierarchy, up to and including Pope Francis, in a massive coverup scandal?



Especially since it appears to many that Archbishop Viganò, in choosing to stand alone for morality, is a heroic figure not unlike Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre was.  The ‘deep state Church’ on which Archbishop Viganò shines his torch could be said to represent the ultimate vindication of Archbishop Lefebvre.

The parallel at least is interesting: Viganò stands alone for Catholic moral theology just as, thirty years ago, Archbishop Lefebvre had stood alone for Doctrine and Liturgy.  I would think the Society—more than anyone else—would want to point to this parallel precisely because Archbishop Viganò’s testimony fulfills Archbishop Lefebvre’s prophesy of dire moral consequences if the Church leadership did not stand for traditional doctrine and liturgy after Vatican II.

The great Archbishop Lefebvre knew that when the Church began stripping away the sacrificial nature of the Mass, the priesthood would quickly cease to have a purpose and would degenerate into the evil thing we have today—a twisted and perverse caricature of its former self. This abandonment of doctrinal and liturgical tradition is the state of emergency to which Lefebvre was alluding, is it not?  And therefore, he kept his Society aloof from a mainstream Church fraught with spiritual and moral corruption.

Why then, does the Society report close with what appears to be an attempt to minimize the clerical abuse crisis in the Novus Ordo? Is the Society investigating the hundreds of charges against Novus priests to assess credibility, or is there some other method of determining that rampant immorality in the priesthood does not, in fact, follow doctrinal and liturgical laxity? Why does the Society feel the need to champion the Novus Ordo all of a sudden? And is the Society in a good position to even know what’s really going on in the Novus Ordo?   

The Society have been removed from the seminaries and dioceses for decades, thank God; but perhaps this make us less apt to know the full extent of the rot than would, say, the priests and bishops who have boots-on-the-ground experience at the diocesan level—conservative and tradition-friendly Novus Ordo priests who are not, by the way, questioning the fact that ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖity and child abuse are rampant in the new Church. Rather, the response of 20 to 30 honest bishops has been to nod, cringe, and side with Archbishop Viganò, even if some priests may in fact have been falsely accused. The reality is or at least seems to be that sɛҳuąƖ abuse has reached crisis proportions in the Novus Ordo.  And yet, curiously, the Society seems to be suggesting otherwise, even in the face of diocesan priestly testimony:


Offline brianhope

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Re: SSPX Addresses PA Grand Jury Report, Calls Clerical Abuse ‘a Shame’
« Reply #1 on: September 22, 2018, 08:20:31 PM »
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  • Even though we've all know that Menzingen went milquetoast a long time ago, this seems like a new low. Imagine Archbishop Levebvre passing over the Vigano Testimony in silence! The real kicker in this SSPX response to the Pennsylvania grand jury investigation is where the report quotes Greg Burke’s defense of Francis, claiming that, “Victims should know that the Pope is on their side.”, when it is certain from the Vigano testimony that he is not on their side. 


    Offline PAT317

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    Offline PAT317

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    Remnant publishes complaint by SSPX faithful about SSPX's wimpy response
    « Reply #3 on: September 25, 2018, 02:39:04 PM »
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  • This thread could also have been called, "Remnant publishes complaint by SSPX faithful about the SSPX's lightweight response to current scandals." 

    Related: 

    "THE REMNANT" PUBLISH ARTICLE OF SSPX'ER SCANDALIZED WITH SSPX