While many of those of a more secular persuasion were
looking elsewhere, at matters party political and economic, the Roman Catholic
Church has had its own little local difficulty. Cardinal Keith O’Brien, the
church’s most senior representative in the UK and its head in Scotland, was
accused of “inappropriate behaviour”
towards a number of other priests.
St Peter's Basilica, Vatican City
But, unlike some party politicians, there was no messing about: Cardinal O’Brien tendered his resignation, to take effect next month when he turns 75. And even this was not good enough for the Holy See, as Pope Benedict XVI decided that the Cardinal would retire immediately. So O’Brien will not be off to Rome presently to join the Conclave of Cardinals electing Benedict’s successor.
This news has been received badly by the Maily Telegraph’s religious guru Damian
Thompson, who has declared that “This
is a shocking crisis for the Church”, which is bullpucky of the highest
order. The allegations concerning O’Brien’s behaviour would have provoked a
real and shocking crisis only if the Church had somehow evaded the issue, but
it has not.
What does Thompson think might be a superior strategy in the
circumstances? The kind of stuff that has been known to happen in a branch of
Christianity with an all-male priesthood has apparently happened. It cannot be
un-happened. There is a need for swift and decisive action. It has been taken,
very publicly, by the leader of the Church. What crisis?
True, there is certain to be fallout as the inevitable questions
are asked as to why O’Brien was kept in place for so long. But from where we
are now, there is no strategy that
enables these to be headed off. Roman Catholicism has learned, as a body, and
from a number of instances of rather more significantly “inappropriate behaviour”, that prevarication is not an option.
The Church of Rome could not have come out of this affair in
any better shape. I am not a fan of organised religion, and find much about the
Catholic Church to be downright strange, but here it has learned crisis
management rather better than many party politicians.
Let us hope that the
same Church continues to take a similarly firm line with any and every instance
of “inappropriate behaviour”
unearthed in the future.
Let's hope so. Unfortunately, there isn't a conclave every day.
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