By The Prowler on 5.25.05 @ 12:08AM
The Rev. Thomas Reese was not the only recent target.
Vatican officials are wondering just how serious a problem they
have on their hands with the Society of Jesus in the United States
after it was revealed late last week that another official of the
Jesuit order was forced to resign for controversial writings.
Earlier this month, the Rev. Thomas Reese,
editor of America, the Jesuits' flagship magazine, was
reassigned after complaints were filed in Rome by U.S. Catholic
Church officials over the magazine's content, including articles
that called into question Church teachings on homosexuality, same
sex unions, and stem cell research.
But Reese was reassigned by his superiors only after those
complaints reached the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith and were then forwarded back to the Jesuits here in the
United States.
The order could have acted more proactively, however. According
to Church insiders, complaints about America magazine were
made to the Jesuit Conference in Washington more than a year ago,
yet the order did nothing.
Now comes word that the Jesuit Conference forced the resignation
of a lay employee, Erik Meder, the conference's
outreach coordinator for the Office of Social and International
Ministries. Meder was let go after an article he submitted to the
National Jesuit News, the order's newsletter, which is
sent to all members of the order, was published. The article,
entitled "Strangers No Longer: Who is the Other Among Us?"
advocated open church dialogue with homosexuals.
Meder resigned, according to the Jesuits, on April 27, just a
week after the election of Pope Benedict XVI, and ten days before
the reassignment of Reese. Meder told the National Catholic
Reporter, "Because the article was already printed, it had
caused, it was explained to me, 'irreparable harm to the Society of
Jesus in the United States.' The reason [for being asked to resign]
officially was that in choosing to submit the article I displayed
'a lack of prudence,' 'a lack of discretion' and I couldn't
therefore be trusted in the future to represent the national office
as liaison."
According to Church insiders in Rome, by late April senior
Jesuit officials in the United States would have been aware of the
pressure to remove Reese from his post, "and they would have known
that the jig was up," says a Church official in Rome. "For them
[the Jesuits] the issue with America magazine would have
been simmering and would have sent the clear message that they were
being closely observed here. An article -- which is very similar in
tone and content to other articles the order has allowed to be
published -- that openly questioned Church teachings was not
convenient to the order."
According to the Rome source, questions remain unanswered. Meder
was not the editor of the newsletter, nor did he have a say in what
appeared in the publication. In fact, the article was not only
published in the official Jesuit organ, it was posted on the Jesuit
Conference website.
Who assigned and edited the article? Who approved it for
publication, and who allowed the article to be posted on the
Conference's website? Officials of the Jesuit Conference have
publicly blamed lay officials for the mistakes, claiming they were
unaware of what was being published and posted in their own
newsletter and website.
"Some of the answers have not been satisfactory, at least those
published in the press," says the official in Rome. "To the public
eye, this may seem an isolated incident, but it is not, and it will
not be treated as such."
topics:
NATO, Unions