by
Deal Hudson
November 19, 2007
LifeNews.com
Note: Deal W. Hudson is the director of the Morley Institute for Church
& Culture, and is the former publisher and editor of CRISIS Magazine,
a Catholic monthly. He is the author of six books and his articles
and comments have been published in many newspapers and magazines.
Perhaps
it should come as no surprise that Archbishop Raymond Burke (St. Louis)
lost an election at the annual meeting of the U.S. bishops last week.
Over the past three years, Burke has assumed the mantle of the late
Cardinal John O'Connor in pro-life matters, challenging fellow bishops
to take stronger stances in the defense of innocent life.
Nominated as chairman for the Committee on Canonical Affairs and Church Governance, 60 percent of his fellow bishops preferred his opponent. As bishops' conference expert Rev. Thomas Reese noted in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, an auxiliary bishop defeating an archbishop for a conference chairmanship is "very unusual."
Archbishop Burke's credentials as a canonist are widely recognized.
In fact, he missed the bishops' meeting because he was in Rome as
a member of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature, the Vatican's
highest judicial authority.
Burke has been a controversial figure since early 2004 when, as bishop
of La Crosse, WI, he began to challenge pro-abortion Catholic politicians
publicly on their reception of the Eucharist.
Shortly after moving to St. Louis as archbishop, Burke said he would
deny Communion to Sen. John Kerry if he presented himself. Although
his position has been backed up by 13 other bishops, Archbishop Burke
was clearly straining the boundaries of "collegiality."
Father Reese, former editor of America magazine, says the bishops
were sending a message: "Most of the bishops don't want communion
and Catholic politicians to be a high-profile issue, and he [Burke]
is seen as a man who's pushing that issue. . . . Had he been elected,
it could have been interpreted as endorsing his position."
Archbishop Elden Curtiss (Omaha), Archbishop Sean O'Malley (Boston),
and Cardinal Francis George (Chicago) went on the record denying that
there was any message being sent by the bishops to Burke. And supporters
of Archbishop Burke have no reason to regret the selection of Bishop
Thomas Paprocki, the Chicago auxiliary, whose reputation and credentials
are similar to that of Burke's.
The question still in the air after the bishops' meeting, however,
is whether Burke is being punished for not backing down after the
controversy surrounding him during the 2004 election.
In response to the Kerry and Communion controversy, the bishops formed
a task force, headed by Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, to study the
issue and present a report. That report, "Catholics in Political
Life," differed sharply with Burke, finding that each bishop
could decide for himself in such cases.
Archbishop Burke did not back down. Early this year, he published
an article on Canon 915 in Italian law journal Periodica
de Re Canonica arguing that the McCarrick report was
incorrect.
Burke said that a bishop's interpretation of what to do in the face of a pro-abortion Catholic politician "would hardly seem to change from place to place." For Burke, enforcing discipline must go hand-in-hand with teaching:


