

April 2002
In Good
Hands:
Jesuit Superiors
& the Renewal of Jesuit Life
The fervour that characterized
our beginnings, manifested in Ignatius and in his friends in
the Lord, must also be apparent in our present day. Father Nadal,
speaking in the name of the first Jesuits, noted that the Society
is a light shining forth from Christ. It fills our beings, arouses
strong desires and urges us to work for the salvation of all
in a mission received from the Vicar of Christ on earth. [Introductory
Allocution of Father General Peter Hans Kolvenbach to
the Congregation of Procurators, Sept 17, 1999.]
- Bollard also told interviewers
on "60 Minutes" that during his seven years as a Jesuit,
at least 12 priests made unwelcome sexual advances and invited
him to cruise gay bars. At first, he refrained from reporting
the advances, he said, out of fear that he would jeopardize his
future with the order. When Bollard did take his complaints to
the Jesuit provincial in California, Father John Privett,
they were brushed off, he said. He said Privett gave him a coffee
cup that bore the words "no whining" and asked him
to sign a paper releasing the Jesuits from legal liability. [Pam
Schaeffer, in the National Catholic Reporter, December
17, 1999]
Today the Jesuit is a man whose
mission is to dedicate himself entirely to the service of faith
and the promotion of justice. [General Congregation 32, "Our
Mission Today," §41]
- I feel that
hopefully we now have an impetus going in the Congress which
will never allow [a pro-life amendment] to become the law of
the land. I have regularly received excellent information from
your organization and will continue to rely upon you and your
associates. [Letter of Father Robert Drinan, S.J., to
the president of the Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts,
August 5, 1974, cited by Mary Meehan, Our Sunday Visitor,
September 8, 1996, p. 9]
In like manner, we are to [call
to mind the] sin of one who went to hell because of one mortal
sin. Consider also countless others who have been lost for fewer
sins than I have committed.... Enter into conversation with Christ
our Lord. Recall to memory that of those who are in hell; some
came there because they did not believe in the coming of Christ;
others, though they believed, because they did not keep the commandments.
[St. Ignatius Loyola, Spiritual Exercises, §§52,
71.]
- On one point, however, I would like to correct the record. When asked what Jesuits have to contribute to Boston College, I replied that Ignatius and the early Jesuits often said that their purpose was "to help souls". Your reporter heard me say, "to help save souls" -- a small but important difference.... The Ignatian impulse is not to save people from their condition but to help them realize what it truly means. [Joseph
Appleyard, S.J., rector of the Boston College Jesuit community,
letter to the editor of the Boston College Observer, November,
1996.]
In the years after final vows,
the ordained Jesuit experiences all the pressures and complexities
of priestly ministry in the Society: he will probably be engaged
in a ministry which makes constant and exhausting demands on
him. [General Congregation 34, "Jesuit Identity and Ministerial
Priesthood," §189]
- Three Jesuit
priests were today due to appear in court charged with indecent
assaults on former pupils at one of the country's leading Roman
Catholic public schools. The offences are alleged to have been
carried out at Stonyhurst College and the associated St. Mary's
Hall prep school near Clitheroe in Lancashire in the 1970s and
1980s. Father Joseph Dooley, 79, of Green Park, central
London, Father Clifford Taunton, 82, of Winckley Square,
Preston, Lancashire, and Father George Earle, 73, former provincial superior of the English Jesuits, will appear before magistrates in Blackburn this morning. [Newswire
(U.K.) June 25, 1999.]
Such men should be appointed
superiors who enjoy a good reputation and authority among their
subjects. [Complementary Norms, 340]
- He loved the
Society of Jesus and the major mileposts of his life he said
were his entrance day, first vows, ordination and final vows....
In September 1990 he was diagnosed as HIV positive. He lived
with the news of that ticking bomb and even accepted being superior
and acting pastor at the Gesu parish in Miami for the final two
active years of his life. [obituary of Father George P. Casey,
S.J. in the Wisconsin Province News, September-October
1994.]
We do not publish this decree
because we judge that infidelity in chastity is widespread within
the Society of Jesus. On the contrary, we are convinced that,
despite the challenges and testings of these years, fidelity
in chastity characterizes the life of the Society today as it
has characterized it in the past. [General Congregation 34, "Chastity
in the Society of Jesus," §228]
- Five women held
a news conference April 20 to say their uncle, Jesuit Father
William J. Walsh, sexually abused them hundreds of times
when they were children.... The women, all daughters of Walsh's
sister, now range in age from 44 to 54. Most said the abuse began
when they were 5 or 6 and continued until they were about 11,
12 or 13. The sisters said each had grown up thinking she alone
was abused. [unsigned National Catholic Reporter story,
May 1, 1998]
It would be unreasonable for
traveling Jesuits to expect local people to view their conduct
as it would be understood in their own native land. [General
Congregation 34, "Chastity in the Society of Jesus,"
§255]
- In this letter,
Father Walsh revealed his perverted thoughts about a 3-year
old, blind Chinese girl living in a Chinese orphanage. Father
Walsh spoke of his attraction to her and his sexual thoughts
as he watched her being bathed. [Walsh niece Susan Lansdale Peters,
quoted by CNN, April 28, 1998]
Respect for the dignity of the
human person created in the Image of God underlies the growing
international consciousness of the full range of human rights.
[General Congregation 34, "Our Mission and Justice,"
§55]
- Joan Lowney
put her arm around her husband, Bill, and squeezed his shoulder
as they listened to Father [Donald] Monan [S.J.] talk
about her daughter and her dreams. "It would be hard to
think of Shannon knowingly doing wrong to another person,"
said Father Monan. "This was a young woman whose talents
opened avenues in many directions but whose search for meaning
in her life always led in the same direction: It was almost as
though her own self-worth depended upon responding to what she
saw as the needs of those most deprived in society. The engaging
smile and spontaneous compassion and intense attention to those
in need are suddenly over." [Boston College Magazine,
Winter, 1995, on a Boston College alumna shot to death while
working in an abortion clinic.]
And touching our Society, be
it known that we have made a league -- all the Jesuits in the
world, whose succession and multitude most overreach all the
practices of England -- cheerfully to the carry the cross you
shall lay upon us, and never to despair your recovery, while
he have a man left to enjoy your Tyburn, or to be racked with
your torments, or consumed with your prisons. [Saint Edmund
Campion, S.J., final address to the Privy Council, 1581]
- Catholics on
the religious right/left/middle wish to be accepted by our church
hierarchy and affirmed for who we are -- no less Christ's beloved
than our heterosexual sisters and brothers who practice contraception
and family planning in spite of the official line.... We members
of Dignity have joyfully affirmed our Catholicism (Roman- and
Anglo-) for over 27 years. We know that silence can kill us.
To retreat silently behind our parish ghetto walls is deadly.
Our lovers are our catechumenate sponsors; our priests celebrate
the Eucharist and work to build a community that is not afraid
of being asked. [Letter to the editor of America, May
2, 1998, by Jim Maier, Maryland Province master of novices
1977-83.]
The Society expects from every
Jesuit not only fidelity to his vows but the normal public signs
of this fidelity. Jesuits should embody in their ministry and
in their lives an unequivocal "professional" conduct
(modestia) that manifests their commitments as priests
and as religious. Their manner of proceeding -- both as a community
and as individuals -- ought to preclude any ambiguity about their
lives, enabling those to whom they minister to rely instinctively
upon their disinterestedness and fidelity. [General Congregation
34, "Chastity in the Society of Jesus," 187]
- From auctioning
a suckling pig dinner while dressed as Miss Piggy to lighting
Easter fire from a trail of gunpowder, Father Peter Davis
lived and ministered with passion, humor and drama. On Dec. 28,
he died at a Portland, Ore., hospice of AIDS. He was 43. He loved
being a Jesuit and a priest. "I absolutely love it,"
he told a radio talk show host. "I do it easily. I do it
naturally." [obituary by Brad Reynolds, S.J., in
the National Jesuit News, April 1990]
As servants of the Gospel, we
are channels of the creative Spirit working in and through our
persons to build the body of Christ. [Introductory Allocution
of Father General to the Congregation of Procurators, Sept 17,
1999]
- The appellant
[Father Neal Destefano, S.J.] was tried by general court-martial
composed of a military judge. Pursuant to his pleas, he was convicted
of offenses that may be summarized as follows: fraternizing with
enlisted men; making a false official statement; two assaults
by serving alcoholic beverages mixed with grain alcohol without
the knowledge of the victims; three offenses of conduct unbecoming
an officer (by luring enlisted men to his hotel room for indecent
acts, taking a picture of an enlisted man in his underwear, and
masturbating in the presence of enlisted men); two assimilative
crime violations of Alaska law by serving alcohol to underage
enlisted men; and, one indecent assault (by hugging, kissing,
and fondling the genital area of an enlisted man). [decision
of Navy/Marine Court of Criminal Appeals (WL 935030) in re: United
States v. Neal J. Destefano, Lieutenant Commander, U.S. Navy;
December 15, 1995]
Obedience is to be offered by
all promptly, cheerfully, and in a supernatural spirit, as to
Christ.... Our holy Father Saint Ignatius desired that
we should all excel in the virtue of obedience. Accordingly,
with all our force and energy we should strive to obey, first,
the Sovereign Pontiff, and then the superiors of the Society,
not only in matters of obligation, but also in others, even at
the mere hint of the superior's will, apart from any express
command. [General Congregation 31, "The Life of Obedience,"
§277f.]
- I think at some
point it will certainly be possible for women's ordination to
take place in the Catholic Church, but one thing is certain:
it won't be while this present Pope is alive. [Father Frank
Case, S.J., General Assistant of the Society of Jesus, quoted
by Victoria Streatfeild, The European, October 7-13, 1994.]
In the light of our tradition,
we can say that no ministry which prepares the way for the Kingdom
or which helps to arouse faith in the Gospel is outside the scope
of Jesuit priests. In recent years we have come to recognize
that it is for the priest, as sign and minister of the Lord's
active presence, to be present in or to collaborate with all
human efforts which help in establishing the Kingdom. [General
Congregation 34, "Jesuit Identity and the Ministerial Priesthood,"
§172]
- [Father Angel
Mariano, S.J.] was arrested about midnight Sept. 21, 1998,
in Campbell, Calif., near San Jose when a police officer caught
him in a sex act with a 17-year-old student in a parked car.
According to police reports, Mariano arranged to meet two teenagers
by posing as a 25-year-old woman on an Internet chat room. He
wore lipstick and rouge when he met the boys.... Mariano was
removed without any explanation. Asked why parishioners at Holy
Trinity were not made aware of the reasons for Mariano's departure,
[Provincial Father Tom] Smolich said: "Why
should they? This is an Internet cruising thing. This is anonymous
sex. This doesn't involve people at the parish. It wasn't a priest
thing. He wasn't dressed in a collar." [Glenn Bunting, "Lawsuit
Ends Silence on Abuse at Jesuit Retreat," Los Angeles
Times, March 24, 2002]
[The Jesuit] is a member of a
Society founded chiefly for this purpose: to strive especially
for the defense and propagation of the faith and for the progress
of souls in Christian life and doctrine. [from the bull Exposcit
debitum of Pope Julius III, July 21, 1550]
- Father Smith (not his real name)
is a Jesuit priest working in a Philadelphia parish in one of
the older parts of the city. He is a closeted gay priest and
does not want his name used.... "In my worst moments,"
he said, "I fear I will have been a collaborator in supporting
an institution that oppresses gay people...." He said he
became a Jesuit after falling in love with an older, 40-year
old Jesuit priest. Smith was 20 then and studying at St. Joseph's
College in Philadelphia. "As a Catholic priest, I know there
would be no church without gay people.... I assume priests are
gay until proven otherwise." [Bill Kenkelen, "For Philly's
Gay Priests, Life in the Shadows", National Catholic
Reporter Oct 5, 1990; 26:43 pp. 5-7]
Since Vatican Council II, at
the request of the Church itself, consecrated life has not ceased
being in motion. Still today, even under the pen of certain of
our confreres, publications are not lacking which describe our
deeds, and especially our misdeeds, in this time of permanent
upheaval, showing a certain nostalgia for the times of stability,
when the orientation of a religious institute seemed more sure
of itself. [Final Allocution of Father General to the Congregation
of Procurators, Sept 23, 1999.]
- Leo Plowden
McLaughlin,
a one-time Jesuit priest who spent four heady years as an innovative
president of Fordham University in the 1960s, died on Thursday
at an infirmary on the Fordham campus in the Bronx.... "New
ideas," he once said. "That's all that counts in today's
world, new ideas -- and so few people have them." Dr. McLaughlin,
who had regularly made headlines during his tenure at Fordham,
made them again in September 1975 when, at the age of 61, he
announced that the previous June he had married Sari Gombos,
a 26-year old writer he had met at a Fordham dinner party several
years earlier. [New York Times obituary, April 11, 1997]
The mission of the Society derives
from our continuing experience of the Crucified and Risen Christ
who invites us to join him in preparing the world to become the
completed Kingdom of God. The focus of Christ's mission is the
prophetic proclamation of the Gospel that challenges people in
the name of the Kingdom of his Father; we are to preach that
Kingdom in poverty. [General Congregation 34, "Servants
of Christ's Mission," §31]
- In Chicago,
her usual escort is a Jesuit priest, whom she calls Father Costello.
"Particularly at a formal affair, you don't want to go alone,"
she says. He's much younger than I, and he's very, very handsome.
He's great fun. He's an excellent dancer." [Megan Rosenfeld
article on Eppie Lederer (Ann Landers) in the Washington
Post, Sept 22, 1996.]
Few are called to the life of
a Jesuit, but for the man who is called, chastity only makes
sense as a means to greater love, to a more authentic apostolic
charity. [General Congregation 34, "Chastity in the Society
of Jesus," 236]
- Bart [Lynch]
was four,
he remembers, when Father [Jerold Lindner, S.J.] assaulted
him in the course of a CFM camping trip. "Violence is the
key issue, even more important than the sexual abuse. I literally
feared for my life. Whispering in my ear, Father Jerry said,
'You want to live, don't you. Don't tell anyone, or I'll kill
you.'" This was after Father Jerry had sodomized the four-year
old. "I remember blood in my pants and Father Jerry burying
them in the woods".... But before the formal charges were
laid, the Jesuits were made aware of the accusations against
Father Jerry made by the two Lynch brothers. In May of 1997,
so Father Jerry has testified, he met with the Father Provincial,
John Privett and also with Father Sonny Manuel, another
senior Jesuit. According to testimony, Manuel said it was okay
for Father Jerry to continue teaching at Loyola High, but that
he couldn't lead youth groups to Europe because the agency running
the trips would have to be informed of the lawsuit. [Michael
Meadows, "The Case of Father Jerry," Counterpunch
1999: http://www.counterpunch.org/sexabuse.html]
Each Jesuit enriches the Society's
mission and contributes to what Saint Paul calls "the priestly
service of the Gospel of God." [General Congregation 34,
"Jesuit Identity and Ministerial Priesthood," §163]
- "As a Jesuit,
I cannot feel anything but pride and gratitude for a meteor that
burned itself out in the service of others," Kinerk said.
"On May 10, 1999, God took the gift back. Thom is with God.
As Jesuits, we rejoice. He has done what God sent him to do."
[Judy L. Thomas, "Vibrant leader kept AIDS secret",
Kansas City Star, January 31, 2000, quoting former Missouri
provincial Ed Kinerk, S.J., on Father Thom Savage,
S.J., the first U.S. university president to die of AIDS]
In Jesus Christ, we can accept
the magnitude of this challenge: to work at the integration of
faith and justice, to strive to understand how the Gospel is
to be inculturated, to embark with new zeal on the task of interreligious
dialogue, to continue to join our professional and pastoral skills
to the Ignatian way of proceeding. The Crucified Jesus reminds
us that in weakness and vulnerability God's love can shine forth
mightily. [General Congregation 34, "United with Christ
on Mission," §7]
- Two mentally
disabled men who live and work at a Jesuit retreat were sexually
abused by members of the clergy for at least five years, according
to court records and interviews.... Connor and Burke,
both 80, are among four Jesuits named as defendants in a lawsuit
charging that the mentally impaired men were subjected to repeated
acts of sodomy, molestation and false imprisonment at Sacred
Heart Jesuit Center.... In addition to Connor, three other Jesuits
who are registered sex offenders also lived at Sacred Heart in
Los Gatos. [Glenn Bunting, "Lawsuit Ends Silence on Abuse
at Jesuit Retreat", Los Angeles Times, March 24,
2002]
No community life is possible,
however, and no renewal can be truly fruitful unless each Jesuit
"keep before his eyes God, and the nature of this Institute
which he has embraced and which is, so to speak, a pathway to
God." His vocation summons each Jesuit to find privileged
time and space to pray with Christ, as friend to friend, learning
from this encounter how to be a servant of his mission. [General
Congregation 34, "United with Christ on Mission," §11]
- "I was
sitting in my room and was getting ready to go down to community
prayer," said Father Joe Costa, superior at Los Gatos.
"That's when everything started falling. It was kind of
grim. We had to skip community prayer. Everyone had to have a
good strong Scotch. That's what they needed most at that time."
[Ed DeBerri, S.J., "Big shake leaves veterans talking,
rookies nervous", National Jesuit News, December
1989, p. 1]
The task for the Jesuit priest,
in the midst of these multiple demands, is to continue a life
of faith and a generous and humble service of Christ. Even if
he is not primarily involved in direct pastoral service of others,
it will help him to keep his priestly identity alive if he is
able to minister regularly to a sacramental community; lay people,
especially the poor, build the personal faith of those who serve
them. [General Congregation 34, "Jesuit Identity and Ministerial
Priesthood", §190]
- The appeal by
maths teacher Chaning-Pearce, 57, was funded by The Society
of Jesus, which runs the £12,000-a-year school. Last September
at Preston Crown Court, the priest admitted indecently assaulting
three boys, aged 15, 13 and 12, but denied four counts of molesting
the 16-year-old. The incidents occurred in his study or in a
tree-house in the school grounds where boys were allowed to sleep.
[Newswire Press Association (U.K.) June 4, 1998]
From experience, the Society
has learned that pivotal to its fidelity in chastity has been
the strong though humble and simple devotion to the Blessed Virgin
that has flourished among us since the time of St. Ignatius.
[General Congregation 34, "Chastity in the Society of Jesus,"
§247]
- Dung. Female
genitalia. The Virgin Mary. Each of these images, all by itself,
can evoke powerful movements in the spirits of American Catholics.
We may not be used to graphic presentations of labia; some may
be disturbed by them, but that does not make them obscene....
A woman's genital organs play an important role in the transmission
of that same incredible gift. Why not ponder the mystery of life
and vitality and procreation represented in the rich mystery
of Mary, the mystery of our ground in the fertility of this lovely
earth, instead of construing the work as "disgusting"?
[Father George Wilson, S.J., on Chris Ofili's "Virgin
Mary," National Catholic Reporter, December 10, 1999]
In these years, throughout the
Society, we have been purified in the faith by which we live,
and have grown in our understanding of our central mission. Our
service, especially among the poor, has deepened our life of
faith, both individually and as a body: our faith has become
more paschal, more compassionate, more tender, more evangelical
in its simplicity. [General Congregation 34, "Servants of
Christ's Mission", §15]
- "There
had been previous times when [Father Stephen Dawber, S.J.]
would say, 'Why don't we just take our clothes off and sit. I
won't touch you,'" the man said. "I had managed to
sort of say no, but I didn't have the sense to cut the relationship
off on those previous occasions. He was someone I admired and
trusted and who really took great time and care to talk with
me about every aspect of my life." [Sacha Pfeiffer, "BC
High suspends priest accused of student molestation", Boston
Globe, March 6, 2002]
When [Ignatius] wondered in Barcelona
whether he should study and how much, it was a question of whether
after his studies he should enter a religious order or go through
the world as he was. And when he thought of entering a religious
order, then he thought and desired to enter one that was corrupt
and unreformed ... to be able to suffer more, and also perhaps
thinking that God would help them. [Autobiography of
Saint Ignatius Loyola, §71]
- Best Place
To Meet A Mate, Gay:
The Jesuit Urban Center, South End. True, many happy couples
found their love in the Ralph Lauren paint department of Homo
Depot -- er, Home Depot. But Sunday morning Mass at the Jesuit
Urban Center spawns more blessed pairings. The Urban Center's
liturgy is both classic and contemporary; its mixed congregation
is mostly gay; its AIDS and HIV support programs are some of
the best in town; and its coffee hour is a great place to get
phone numbers. 775 Harrison Avenue, Boston, 617-536-8440 ["The
Best of Boston 1999", in Boston Magazine, August,
1999]
We never go into politics, never;
politics as such. It is true we try, for instance today, in the
whole question of international justice, to help the underdeveloped
countries and so forth. We are for truth, for justice. If you
call politics this high idea of justice, fine. But if you speak
of politics in the sense of parties, or working for governments,
we are completely out of this. [Father General Pedro Arrupe,
S.J., in a BBC interview by Malcolm Muggeridge, January 25,
1970]
- The first day
of Father Robert Drinan's study group turned out to be
a marvelous success, with a full room eagerly anticipating the
good Padre's words of wisdom.... Citing a long tradition of separation
of Church and State, as well as the original Constitutional prohibition
on religious tests for public office, Father Drinan expressed
great concern primarily for the fate of non-believers in a society
governed by leaders "imposing" their religious beliefs
on all. Laws against contraception and prayer in public schools,
the attempt to re-criminalize abortion, and laws concerning the
rights of homosexuals are examples, some historic and others
contemporary, of such imposition.... Father Drinan argued that
a philosophy of human rights should replace that public religiosity
as our new "non-theological theology." [God and Politics
Study Group Synopsis, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government,
October 12, 2000]
"I think [former Jesuits]
are Jesuits. You don't leave. I really believe that. Ignatius
recognized that laymen are the core of the Society. Although
it's not necessarily true canonically, I would say they are Jesuits."
[Father General Peter-Hans Kolvenbach, S.J., quoted in
Company Magazine, Fall 2000, p. 22.
- Father Rusty
Smith ('80) was recently appointed Abbot of the Companions of Saint Brigid and Director of the Anglican Spirituality Center of New Mexico. Father Rusty remains involved in social justice, theological respect for diversity and human liberation. He states: "My partner Jody and I just celebrated our 12 year anniversary and we are marking the occasion by building a new house. This the true test of our relationship. We have lots of room for visitors and welcome past and current Jesuits when they are in the Albuquerque area. Life is good!" [OLIM: A Newsletter for Former Jesuits of the New Orleans Province, March 2001, Number 35, pp.6f.]
Nor can it be said that the pope
was speaking of matters that do not involve our faith, since
the essence of his teaching directly concerns the human and divine
dignity of man and of love. In the enormous crisis of growth
which envelops the whole world, the pope himself has been what
the entire Church must be, and Vatican II affirmed, "both
a sign and a safeguard of the transcendence of the human person"
(Gaudium et Spes, §76). For this reason the service
we as Jesuits owe to the Holy Father and to the Church is at
the same time a service we owe to humanity itself. [Letter of
Father General Pedro Arrupe, S.J. to the whole Society,
on the encyclical Humanae vitae,
in Acta Romana Societatis Iesu. Vol. XV, Fasc. II, 1968]
- "The pope
says the doctrine has to be clear. Well, the doctrine is too
damned clear! That's not the problem." [Vincent T. O'Keefe,
S.J., Father General Pedro Arrupe, S.J.'s Vicar, quoted by
Carl Bernstein in His Holiness, p. 408, anent divorce,
abortion and contraception.]
Although serving God our Lord
much out of pure love is to be esteemed above all, we ought to
praise much the fear of His Divine Majesty, because not only
filial fear is a thing pious and most holy, but even servile
fear -- when the man reaches nothing else better or more useful
-- helps much to get out of mortal sin. And when he is out, he
easily comes to filial fear, which is all acceptable and grateful
to God our Lord: as being at one with the Divine Love. [Saint
Ignatius Loyola, Spiritual Exercises, 18]
- "Yet the
overall portrait is one of men content in their vocations, who
have drawn closer to the person of Jesus while leaving an earlier
Almighty God figure behind." [Father Raymond Schroth,
S.J., review of Passionate Uncertainty: Inside the American
Jesuits, Star-Ledger (Newark) March 3, 2002, p. 5]
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