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Pope Francis Accepts Cardinal Wuerl’s Resignation, Calls His Actions Justified

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Pope Francis accepted Cardinal Donald Wuerl’s resignation Friday amid outcry over his failures to address sexual abuse, but called Wuerl a model bishop. Francis lauded Wuerl…
Pope Francis accepted Cardinal Donald Wuerl’s resignation Friday amid outcry over his failures to address sexual abuse, but called Wuerl a model bishop.
Francis lauded Wuerl for his “nobility,” despite his mention in Pennsylvania’s grand jury report on sex abuse about 200 times as a bishop who enabled predatory priests by allowing them to be assigned to other parishes instead of removing them from ministry. The pontiff said that the evidence concerning his tenure as bishop of Pittsburgh and as archbishop of Washington, D. C., was enough to “justify” his actions. (RELATED: Man Slams Cardinal Wuerl In The Middle Of Mass Over Sex Abuse Cover-Up, ‘Shame On You’)
FILE PHOTO: Pope Francis arrives to lead the Wednesday general audience in Saint Peter’s square at the Vatican, September 5,2018. REUTERS/Max Rossi/File Photo
“I am aware that this request rests on two pillars that have marked and continue to mark your ministry: To seek in all things the greater glory of God and to procure the good of the people entrusted to your care.
‘You have sufficient elements to ‘justify’ your actions and distinguish between what it means to cover up crimes or not to deal with problems, and to commit some mistakes. However, your nobility has led you not to choose this way of defense. Of this, I am proud and thank you,” Francis wrote, according to Crux Now.
Francis also announced, to the chagrin of sexual abuse survivors and their advocates who have ardently called for Wuerl’s resignation, that the cardinal will stay on as the apostolic administrator, or caretaker, of the archdiocese of Washington until his successor is appointed. Wuerl also clarified that he will retain his positions within the Vatican and will remain an adviser to Francis on the appointment of bishops.
WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 24: Pope Francis (R) arrives with Cardinal Donald Wuerl (L) to visit St. Patrick in the City Catholic church on September 24,2015 in Washington, DC. St. Patrick is the oldest Catholic church in Washington, founded in 1794. Pope Francis is on a five-day trip to the USA, which includes stops in Washington DC, New York and Philadelphia, after a three-day stay in Cuba. (Photo by Erik S. Lesser-Pool/Getty Images)
The pope praised Wuerl for not ardently defending himself, despite the fact that Wuerl preemptively issued a statement hours before the release of the Pennsylvania abuse report to try to defend his mishandling of abuse cases and persuade Catholic faithful to look upon him favorably. Wuerl’s defense did not have the intended effect, as prominent D. C. Catholics, abuse survivors, and survivor advocates began demanding his resignation.
“The grand jury report showed that Cardinal Wuerl oversaw and participated in the cover-up,” said Pennsylvania attorney general Josh Shapiro, according to The New York Times . “It is well documented.”
Pennsylvania’s report revealed that Wuerl not only allowed priests accused of sexually abusing children to be reassigned to different parishes, based on psychologists’ advice, but that he also authorized their settlement and retirement funds and at one point used diocesan money to reduce an accused priest’s sentence in a civil suit.
Wuerl’s critics also assert that his claim of being oblivious to the accusations against former cardinal Theodore McCarrick of sexual abuse is dubious, given the fact that McCarrick was sued by two accusers and the fact that some clergy have admitted that McCarrick’s habitual sexual misconduct with seminarians was widely known .
Wuerl’s tenure as archbishop of DC was marked by his efforts to work with different presidential administrations and his adherence to church protocol, until the release of Pennsylvania’s grand jury report and the McCarrick scandal.
Wuerl praised the pope’s letter, and clarified that Francis would choose a new archbishop for Washington who began serving in ministry after the church adopted guidelines in 2002 to better address and prevent sexual abuse.
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