Cardinal Adam Maida, who retired as archbishop of Detroit in 2009, first proposed the idea of the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center to the pope when he (Maida) was still bishop of Green Bay, Wis. (1984-90). It may or may not have influenced the pope to appoint Maida to Detroit. More than four years later he was named a cardinal.
The center was subsequently erected in Washington, D.C., at a cost of $75 million. It was expected to more than pay for itself as a tourist attraction and a think tank. That never happened, as some predicted at the time.
The center opened in March 2001 and has just been sold to the Knights of Columbus for $22.7 million. That's a lot of money, of course, but it represents a $34 million loss for the Detroit archdiocese.
... Unfortunately, Maida made the loans without consultation with the priests or laity of the archdiocese. ... no diocese, much less one in which there is so much poverty in its central city, should have been exposed to so much financial risk.
But the wish to honor Pope John Paul II was intense at the time, not least because of ethnic considerations. The pope was a native of Poland, and Maida is of Polish-American extraction.
* * * * *
The news story in the same issue of the NCR reminds us that too many U.S. bishops are still obsessed with sexual and marriage issues while not emphasizing enough issues of social justice, such as the recent assault on the rights of collective bargaining in some U.S. states, like Wisconsin and Ohio.
Archbishop Edwin O'Brien of Baltimore sent a private letter to Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley to protest the governor's support of legislation legalizing same-sex marriages in the state.
O'Brien referred to himself and his fellow bishops as "advocates for the truths we are compelled to uphold."
... Unlike his counterpart in Baltimore, Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York showed much pastoral wisdom in his dealings with Cuomo, and Cuomo, in turn, exercised much political prudence in his dealings with Dolan.
Both Cuomo and O'Malley ably defended justice and fairness in marriage and family life.
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Church in the World
German Church at odds over Communion for divorcees
Christa Pongratz-Lippitt
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The (London) Tablet
Three weeks before the Pope is due to visit Germany, the
president of the German bishops' conference, Archbishop
Robert Zollitsch of Freiburg, has come out in favour of
discussing the issue of Communion for remarried divorcees.
While both Cardinal Meisner of Cologne and the apostolic
nuncio in Germany, Archbishop Jean-Claude Périsset,
immediately distanced themselves from Archbishop Zollitsch,
several prominent German theologians applauded him. Cardinal
Meisner said that Archbishop Zollitsch had only been
speaking as the Archbishop of Freiburg and not as the
president of the bishops' conference, but it is clear from
the interview that this is not so. Archbishop Zollitsch uses
the pronoun "we" throughout and is obviously speaking on
behalf of the German bishops and indeed of the Church.
The interview is in the new and highly succesful "Faith and Doubt" ("Glauben und Zweifeln") section of the German weekly Die Zeit of 1 September. Archbishop Zollitsch was asked about the German President, Christian Wulff, who is a committed Catholic but who is barred from receiving Communion because he is divorced and remarried. The interviewer enquired whether this was a "problem for the Catholic hierarchy" especially as Pope Benedict was coming to Germany on a state visit at the President's invitation.
Archbishop Zollitsch admitted that this was "naturally" a
problem and said, "We are all faced with the problem of how
we can help people in whose lives certain things have gone
wrong and that includes a wrecked marriage. This is a
question of mercy and we will be discussing this problem
intensively in the near future." Asked if he thought
President Wulff was a good Catholic, Archbishop Zollitsch
replied, "For me he is a Catholic who lives his faith and
suffers greatly on account of the situation he is in. This
is a very serious problem but I really think that we will
move forward on the issue of remarried divorcees within my
lifetime."
The
Pope will also be meeting the mayor of Berlin, Klaus
Wowereit, who was openly gay and living in a gay partnership
but also a committed Catholic, the interviewer said. The
Church teaches that such partnerships are sinful. Is the
Church not "mutilating itself" by excluding so many people,
Archbishop Zollitsch was asked. Such situations worried him
deeply, he said, adding: "We must see how we can find
theologically based answers to questions of lifestyles."
The
issue of remarried divorcees not being able to receive
Communion and the Church's condemnation of active homosexual
partnerships are so-called "hot issues" which have hit the
headlines in the German-speaking media in recent weeks, as
they are among the reforms the Austrian Priests' Initiative
intends to put into practice.
When he founded the Austrian Priests' Initiative in 2006,
Mgr Helmut Schüller had several applications for membership
from priests in neighbouring Germany. He advised them to set
up their own initiative there, which they did, but it has
not become as active as the Austrian one. The German group
are still in close contact with the Austrian initiative.
German
theologians have drawn attention to the fact that remarried
divorcees are rarely refused Communion in Germany nowadays
and have recalled the Orthodox Church's practice of allowing
remarried divorcees to continue receiving Communion.