...It now appears Brundage's account may be significantly flawed.
Brundage had taken issue with an Aug. 19, 1998, letter from Weakland to the deputy at the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith - then headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI - in which Weakland said he had instructed Brundage to end the trial and would instead move to suspend Murphy's priestly duties.
"This sort of thing would have stuck in my memory, because I would have been furious that Weakland would want me to stop the case," Brundage said in an interview with the Journal Sentinel on Thursday.
He speculated that Weakland might have written the Aug. 19 letter to the deputy, then Archbishop Tarcisio Bertone, but never told Brundage to end the trial because Murphy died two days later.
But on Friday, the Journal Sentinel learned that a letter seemingly written by Brundage to Weakland on Aug. 15, 1998, shows Brundage actually drafted Weakland's letter to Bertone.
It addresses Weakland, saying: "As you have requested I put together what might be a response to Archbishop Bertone's document regarding Fr. Murphy that he recently sent us. Here is a suggested response:"
The central part of the letter is virtually identical to Weakland's later letter to BertoneYadayadayada.
In the Catholic Church, a priest takes a vow of obedience to his Bishop. With the usual exceptions, a priest WILL do what his Bishop asks him to do.
So Brundage--who was NOT independent of this vow, nor of Weakland--simply did what he was told. The fact that Brundage disagreed with the proposed course of action is irrelevant; he could file his objection later if Rome agreed with Weakland's position. In fact, Fr. Brundage specifically SAID that he would object to a decision to cease the trial.
But to the mind of Pete Isely--and the much less-sophisticated reporterette at the JS, this is surely a sign of Brundage's duplicity. In fact, it's a sure sign that Brundage took his vow of obedience very seriously.
At some point in time, Fr. Brundage may tell the whole story on this and other Weakland actions, and a bit about Fr. Brundage's personal history.
Of particular interest: what inspired Fr. Brundage to leave Milwaukee and journey to Alaska?
Hmmmmm????
Could "disgust" be an answer???
You're rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. This controversy is about what happened in 1998. Remember that the pedo priest in question started molesting the deaf boys in 1950 and this pattern of unconscionable behavior lasted until the mid-1970's. Where were all the leaders of the church between 1950 and 1975? That's the real question. How many "enabler" priests permitted this abuse to continue? That's the real scandal.
ReplyDeleteNo kidding.
ReplyDeleteReally??
This is not 'deck chairs.' Someone wants to diminish what good actually WAS done, and that should be set straight.
"The central part of the letter is virtually identical to Weakland's later letter to Bertone."
ReplyDeleteI note "central part" and "virtually identical" in that quote. The implication being given is that Fr. Brundage himself suggested terminating the judicial investigation - which is the opposite of what Fr. Brundage has said. It was a draft of a 'potential' response. Weakland ultimately wrote the final version.
As Fr. Brundage has noted, being the judicial vicar, there are some things he cannot talk about or clarify at this point due to confidentiality in the process.
I believe him when he states that he would never have agreed to terminate the investigation. Ab. Weakland's credibility, on the other hand...
And yes Dad, I too wondered about Fr. Brundage being in that Alaskan diocese. Some reports said that he was "on loan" - but intriguing, nevertheless.