A CHURCH official wasn’t expelled from a religious order in the midst
of a child abuse case more than two decades ago, but chose to return
home to Cebu, said Archbishop Emeritus Ricardo Cardinal Vidal.
Cardinal Vidal also told reporters that his office received
last Friday, when he was still in Manila, a copy of Arbishop Jose
Palma’s instructions to stop issuing statements to the media regarding
the issue.
The
81-year-old prelate said he is abiding by the directive but had to
first hold a press conference just to clarify some issues that were
already reported.
Msgr. Cristobal Garcia, former Archdiocesan Commission on Worship
chairman, was not expelled from his former congregation, Cardinal Vidal
said.
“He was given by the Holy See what is called an indult exclaustration
(where) a cleric is given the privilege to withdraw from the
congregation and look for a bishop who will accept him. He was given
three years (to do so),” said the former Cebu archbishop.
An indult exclaustration, which is applicable to religious
congregations, is a favor in response to a request made to the
congregation to be transferred. This favor is granted simultaneously
with the acceptance of a transferee, by a diocese.
The favor is not confined to those who have committed offenses but is applicable to all requests for transfer.
Cardinal Vidal said that Garcia, who hails from Cebu, preferred to work in the Archdiocese of Cebu.
“When he came here, I was called the benevolent bishop for accepting him,” he added.
Probation
The Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines’ (CBCP) ruling on
the transfer of priests, such as cases involving clergy leaving a
religious congregation to become a diocesan priest, was followed in his
case.
The ruling is applicable to all priests who file such requests.
Applicants for incardination, or the process of accepting priests in a
diocese, are given a probation time for observation of practices of
local tradition or culture and personal renewal.
“He (Garcia) was entrusted to (the late) Archbishop Manuel Salvador,
who was a canon lawyer. After three years, then he was incardinated to
the archdiocese,” said Vidal.
The prelate said he was surprised and puzzled that a case that was
more than two decades old is being reviewed by the Holy See or the
office of Pope Benedict XVI.
“We have already done everything,” he said, adding that he has all
the documents of Garcia’s incardination and that he will submit these to
Vatican City.
Msgr. Garcia is, in secular terms, on administrative leave as a
result of an investigation. He has been relieved of all his official
duties in the archdiocese.
Whose move?
Archbishop Palma, during a press conference last week, said Garcia’s
past case was elevated to the Holy See and that his office was directed
to submit documents.
Palma, who is also CBCP president, refrained from giving media statements on the issues involving Garcia after the conference.
He earlier told Sun.Star Cebu that this is to give due respect to ongoing state and church investigations.
Palma has said this case came before Garcia’s controversial alleged
statements on the ivory trade in the country that are included in an
article in National Geographic magazine’s October issue.
Vidal also clarified media reports that he had wanted to declare
writer Brian Christy persona non grata or personally unacceptable or
unwelcome.
“It should be the government. It is not proper for me to say that,”
the prelate told reporters yesterday at his residence in Cebu City.
His answer
“I was asked ‘Do you think he should be declared persona non grata?’ I
answered, ‘I am not the proper person to do that,’” he said.
The magazine article in question was the catalyst for an
investigation led by the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) and a
separate probe by the Catholic church.
Christy, in his blog (http://bryanchristy.com/blog/) comments on developments after his article was published online.
In a post titled, “My First ‘Persona non Grata’ (At least from a
Cardinal)”, dated Oct. 2, 2012 Christy said, “The Cardinal suggests I
lied about my interest in religious devotion. He is mistaken. I studied
this topic and interviewed many people to help me understand the
context for venerating holy images regardless of whether they were
ivory. This was an honest interest in Filipino culture and is reflected
in the story and here.”
Cardinal Vidal recalled that Garcia was the last priest ordained by
his predecessor, the late Julio Cardinal Rosales, in the United States
as a member of a Dominican congregation.
After undergoing a program for priests, Garcia became known for his
expertise in liturgical rituals and formulas, and also served as
business manager of the archdiocesan newsletter.
Congregation
He founded a religious congregation of men and women who assist in
various capacities, including administration and liturgical services, in
parishes within the archdiocese and the suffragan diocese of Dumaguete.
Cardinal Vidal said the work of the congregation, the Society of the
Angels of Peace (SAP), will continue under the supervision of Archbishop
Palma.
Palma led the fiesta mass at the Diocesan Shrine of Jesus the
Nazarene, the residence of SAP, in Barangay Cansojong in Talisay City
yesterday afternoon.
Sun.Star Cebu tried to enter the premises and observe the mass but
was barred by guards who said media practitioners were not allowed
inside.
Cardinal Vidal, in his press conference, also said he
does not know the details on the status of Garcia regarding the current
investigation.
The controversy as a result of the magazine article and the investigation of Garcia has saddened the 81-year-old retired bishop.
“It (ivory issue) has affected the Church. Some people are saying
this is an attack on the Church,” said Vidal. “Maybe the writer
(Christy) has no intention, but it’s the effect of the issue (that
should be observed).”