We learn that the new Archbishop of San Francisco celebrated his
ecclesial elevation making jokes in the pulpit about his DUI arrest
(last time I looked driving while drunk was a very serious danger to
others--check out the Bishop of Phoenix who killed a man in a hit and
run while drunk a few years ago, apparently the new archbishop learned
nothing from that episode).
Meanwhile, in the basement of the Catholic cathedral the Episcopal
Bishop of San Francisco was excluded from the event going on upstairs
because he dared to question Catholic "theology" that tells us
homosexuality is "intrinsically evil" and rebukes all science that
teaches the exact opposite.
So much for interfaith ecumenical spirit.
But most ominous of all on this "Installation Day" is the report that
outside the Cathedral was a group of hundreds of "Neocatechists"
celebrating the installation of this new archbishop who is a member (as
is the new archbishop of Los Angeles) of Opus Dei.
Here is where the real scary story looms.
What is the Neocatechist movement?
It is, like Opus Dei, I discuss the Neocatechist sect in my recent book, The Pope's War: Why Ratzinger's Secret Crusade Has Imperiled the Church and How It Can Be Saved (where I also lay bare the truths behind the hyper-secretive--and influential--Opus Dei sect).
The Neocatechist movement is highly secretive but boasts 1.5 million
followers in 106 countries, supports 70 seminaries, and is called 'the
most powerful neoconservative movement in the church.'
The founder, Kiko Arguello, is 'the nearest thing to a televangelist
that we have in Spain' and is 'one of the most powerful men in the
Catholic Church.'
After his conversion from agnosticism, like a good
convert, he became more papist than the pope. Key to his catechesis is
sexuality.
He claims that homosexuality 'is a sickness that can be
cured.'
He rejects condoms and teaches that '25% fail'.
He encourages
having as many children as possible--members average five children per
family.
Pope John Paul II was an ardent admirer of Kiko, and the pope's
personal secretary, Stanislaw Dziwisz (now a cardinal in Poland and a
fierce opponent of separation of church and state, who is deeply
resented there and is the same person who charged $50,000 for private
Masses with the pope), is their champion.
Kiko's followers include 3,000 priests and 1,500 seminarians. They
organize many 'religious demonstrations' that are in fact political
ones, and, like Dziwisz, they rally against the separation of church and
state.
Cardileone's ardent support and fundraising for Proposition 8 is only
the tip of the iceberg.
The Pope's deliberate appointment of this
homophobic Opus Dei bishop is not just an insult to San Francisco and
its citizens and its values: It is an ultimate act in cynicism.
Since he is still in his fifties, San Francisco and environs is stuck
with him probably for twenty years.
In Oakland where he was previously
bishop, most clergy and Catholics are dancing in the streets that they
are rid of him.
In San Francisco, Good Luck.
It is a time of religious
darkness.
Watch the man carefully and all his Opus Dei and neo- catechumenist
minions just as you keep an eye on the Opus Dei members of the Supreme
Court and media.