The 'Boston 58'

Bole, William

William Bole THE 'BOSTON 58' A lesson in being 'not nasty' On the second Wednesday of Lent at Saint Augustine Church in Andover, Massachusetts, Father Alfred Ellis offered up a special intention...

...The logic is underwhelming, and I am afraid the discourse will get even nastier...
...Weigel's theory about the pernicious nature of theological "dissent" should not surprise anyone familiar with the neoconservative theory of the "New Class," which holds that an adversarial class of "symbol specialists," composed of academics, journalists, and liberal clerics, is subverting American values...
...I don't doubt that Weigel and Neuhaus had the goods on some of the signers, though I could scarcely name one who should be subject to such vitriol...
...He lives in Maryland and is senior fellow at the Washington-based Ethics and Public Policy center...
...For the sake of further disclosure, I should say that, as a reporter who writes about religion and society, I have known both Neuhaus and Weigel most of my adult life...
...Writing in the February issue of his journal, First Things, editor-in-chief Neuhaus said of the fifty-eight, "they represent the subculture of infidelity that is the source of priestly miscreance in doctrine and life...
...One fellow who is active in the Knights of Columbus, not known as a doctrinally subversive organization, told me, "Father Al is painfully shy...
...Here we are supposed to infer that "these fifty-eight" reject the church's teaching on abortion...
...Let us pray for those who have strayed from the faith, that they may be reconciled with the church and with God," he asked...
...William Bole THE 'BOSTON 58' A lesson in being 'not nasty' On the second Wednesday of Lent at Saint Augustine Church in Andover, Massachusetts, Father Alfred Ellis offered up a special intention at the early morning Mass...
...I could say the same about the other Augustinian friars in our town, north of Boston, and many others who wear the collar...
...How rigorous could his inquiries into the views and souls of the others have been from such a distance...
...In those early days of Lent, Ellis gently reminded us of the ways of worshiping reverently, for example, the proper positioning of hands when receiving the Eucharist and the importance of offering the sign of peace only to people nearby...
...Both have found John Paul's teachings on consumerism, economic rights, and world peace hard to digest, although that hasn't stopped them from trying to give the pope's teaching their own distinctive twist...
...Last December, in what we parishioners know to have been a spiritual struggle for him, Ellis, along with fifty-seven other priests in the Boston archdiocese, signed a letter calling on Cardinal Bernard Law to resign...
...Having heard dozens of homilies at Saint Augustine's, including one by a guest preacher from the organization Priests for Life, I cannot imagine this to be true...
...Father Richard John Neuhaus and columnist and papal biographer George Weigel have been leveling brutal accusations against the so-called Boston fifty-eight who helped bring down the cardinal following his dreadful handling of the clergy sexual-abuse crisis...
...That argument has been rehearsed before, most forcefully in Weigel's latest book, The Courage to Be Catholic, which asserts that insufficient orthodoxy is the source of the sexual-abuse crisis...
...I am fairly new to the parish, but longtime members with whom I've spoken could not recognize Ellis or his associate, Father Harry Erdlen, or any of the other friars, in Weigel's and Neuhaus's accusations...
...More to the point, how would Weigel know...
...And, this idea that he's some kind of rebel is just ridiculous on the face of it...
...Concern about people's faith is, of course, what you'd expect from a priest...
...At a time when Catholics of many theological stripes are striving for healing and unity, the last thing the Archdiocese of Boston needs is the long-distance carping of people like Weigel and Neuhaus...
...I have written things about them that are favorable and things that are unfavorable...
...Rome, they argue, paid no attention to the signers because it knew where all of these miscreants "were coming from...
...Yes, there are people here in Massachusetts who agree with Neuhaus and Weigel...
...I do not know what he considers extensive, but he seems not to know the Augustinians of Andover...
...Parsing the priests' letter, Weigel observed that the Boston 58 praised Law for his support of causes including interre-ligious dialogue and abolition of the death penalty, but neglected to mention Law's pro-life witness...
...I'd be stunned to learn that Weigel or Neuhaus agonized before cranking out their columns, as Ellis agonized before signing that letter...
...According to some, signing that letter means that Ellis is unfaithful and morally corrupt...
...they are a motley bunch...
...This latest rush of rancor verges on calumny...
...Meanwhile, in his syndicated column that ran in the Pilot, the archdiocesan newspaper, Weigel stressed that "men who had repeatedly and publicly denied the church's teaching on the moral truth of things were among the signatories...
...At any rate, they smeared them all...
...I do not defend the Boston 58 as heroes...
...For him to speak out the way he did, he had to think and pray long and hard about it...
...I cannot vouch for all or even most of the fifty-eight priests, but it happens that five of them live within biking distance of my house, four at the parish rectory in town and one at the Augustinian friary up the road...
...The only comic relief in this latest episode came when Neuhaus commented to the Globe that his criticism was "not nasty...
...With no hedging, McKinley told me that the priests who signed the letter have "well-documented histories" of doctrinal dissent...
...By what authority can they besmirch the reputations of people about whom they know next to nothing...
...Weigel and Neuhaus, who edits First Things from New York City, might think their remote research gives them room for deniability, in case their blanket condemnation of the fifty-eight is found to be spurious (or libelous...
...She makes a sincere and passionate case, but reasons within a tight circle...
...Weigel told the Globe that he wrote his column after "extensive consultation" with knowledgeable people in the archdiocese...
...Shy and soft-spoken, he preaches about love and forgiveness, respect for life, and the merits of a life lived in pursuit of holiness...
...That's because the Boston 58 is reportedly regrouping to try to influence the selection of the next archbishop...
...Carol McKinley, for instance, speaks for Faithful Voice, a conservative lay group organized in opposition to the much-publicized Voice of the Faithful...
...What everyone who read the recent Globe article should understand is that these sorts of accusations are polemical business as usual for these two (who, when they are not hurling accusations of bad faith, actually have worthwhile things to say about many moral and cultural issues...
...Yet this is no ordinary time for Catholicism in America...
...I relate this not to show how extraordinary Ellis is, although he is, but to show how ordinary he is, as pastor and preacher...
...When pressed for evidence, she fell back on the fact that they signed the letter to the cardinal: "By simply the fact that they did what they did-that's a rejection of the teachings and the faith," said McKinley (who, on the matter of my pastor, also sees him as suspect because he allowed a Voice of the Faithful chapter in his parish...
...I suspect that these latest salvos have more to do with an obsessive devotion to favorite theories and theses (which have some merit), than with "extensive" knowledge of the Boston 58...
...One thing is clear...
...No handshaking in the aisles or waiving to friends in back pews allowed...
...These insinuations were made by two exceedingly influential Catholic intellectuals and subsequently reported on the front page of the Boston Globe (Michael Paulson's "Priests Who Asked Law to Quit Attacked," March 8...
...That is to say, these priests are not only infidels but quite possibly moral degenerates as well...
...Weigel and Neuhaus, neoconservatives practiced in the art of controversy, have reputations for saying uncharitable things about people with whom they disagree...
...The slight verbal hedging-"among" is fairly vague-didn't do much to lessen the impression that practically all of the signers were notorious truth-deniers and faith-rejecters...
...They have no deniability...
...Weigel and Neuhaus are eager to refute any suggestion that pressure from clergy and laity influenced Rome's decision to accept Law's resignation...
...This particular non-barking dog clearly demonstrated where these fifty-eight priests were coming from, so to speak-and where they wanted the Archdiocese of Boston to go," he wrote...

Vol. 130 • March 2003 • No. 6


 
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