National News

From the Pulpit, Priests Address the Scandal

By Carol Zimmermann

WASHINGTON (CNS) – For his homilies on the weekend of July 21-22, Father Edward Looney, administrator of two rural Wisconsin parishes, planned to preach about ways to include God on summer vacation.

His rough outline was scribbled on Post-it notes.

But during the Saturday evening Mass when he heard the opening lines of the first reading from Jeremiah, the priest switched gears, deciding he had to say something about sexual abuse allegations against now former Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, retired archbishop of Washington.

“Woe to the shepherds who destroy and scatter the flock of my pasture,” the passage from Jeremiah 23 begins.

It goes on to deliver harsh words for shepherds who have not cared for their sheep and says they will be punished for their evil deeds.

The message was not lost on Father Looney, who was ordained in 2015 and is frequently a guest on EWTN Radio’s “Morning Glory” program.

“I thought about it and when I got to the ambo I knew it was a game-time decision” for a new homily, he told Catholic News Service.

So, for the 4 p.m. Mass July 21 at St. Peter and St. Hubert parish in Rosiere, Wisc., and subsequent Masses there and at St. Francis and St. Mary Catholic Church about 10 minutes away in Brussels, the priest linked the Old Testament passage with the current situation in the church.

Lost Faith in Priests

Father Looney put his homily on social media, as he often does, and one person who responded thanked him, saying he had been an abuse victim and hadn’t lost faith in the church, which he still prayed for, but had lost faith in priests.

About 700 miles away, the same reading that inspired Father Looney also moved Father Alek Schrenk’s homily in Butler, Pa. Father Schrenk, parochial vicar of three small parishes – St. Michael, St. Paul and St. Peter –  said that in light of the first reading he didn’t see how he couldn’t address the abuse allegations, noting that he was still struggling to deal with it “just as much as anyone.”

The priest, who was ordained just last year and will get a new assignment in the fall with the reorganization of parishes in the Pittsburgh Diocese, said he felt the need to speak out about “abuse of power in the church,” especially since it is on many people’s minds locally with the upcoming release of the grand jury report on an investigation of clergy sexual abuse claims, many decades old, in the Pittsburgh Diocese and five other Pennsylvania dioceses.

He also said he thought parishioners needed to hear a priest speak about this situation honestly and “give them a lens to look at it through faith.”

After Mass, the feedback was uniformly positive, he said, and a lot of people told him it took a lot of courage.

It was a homily he had prepared, writing it out to be sure he had the phrasing correct because he didn’t want to turn his parishioners against church leaders, he said. But when he read it at the first Mass, he felt emotional, with what he described as righteous anger.

“I felt betrayed as a priest,” he told Catholic News Service.

One parishioner told him he was glad he hadn’t pushed the issue under the rug.

Another person, visiting from the Diocese of Erie, Pa., said he came from a parish where his pastor had been removed because of abuse and asked for a copy of the homily to so he could send it to his family.

Father Schrenk said the situation is discouraging but he said it also can make people realize “we can do something to repair the damage. We can take what’s so good about the church and salvage that and highlight that.”

The priest, who was in seventh grade when the church abuse crisis was headline news, said it “has become more obvious that the road to healing is longer than we thought” and requires “a systemic overhaul.”