Wednesday, September 2, 2009

CHANGES ALLEGEDLY MADE BY LEGION IN RESPONSE TO SCANDALS AND ERRORS





Letter to members of Regnum Christi from Territorial Directors

See First Part containing Introduction

2nd Part describing changes

1. This brings us to a key point in relation to you, our friends. It is clear that all these facts lead us to think about the past, the present and the future. Many of you have rightly asked if the Legion has made or will make changes in its life. Yes…we have, we are and we will. Some examples:

a. One of the questions that come to mind refers to the “safe environment and child
protection” measures in our communities and apostolates. Our Constitutions, other norms and many elements of our discipline have always helped us to be particularly careful in the dealing with minors. More recently we are in the process of accreditation by Praesidium, a risk management organization now helping a great number of religious institutions in North America. Praesidium is conducting a full review of our internal rules and policies, as well as our training of all those who deal with minors. They will shortly be conducting on-site visitation of several of our institutions to verify that what is on paper is being applied. There are twenty-five accreditation standards to meet, covering the areas of prevention, response and supervision. Here in the U.S. we have also set up an external review board so that in the event of allegations of sexual abuse, we have the advantage of “outside eyes” to weigh the evidence, issues and provide us with recommendations. Praesidium accreditation is being promoted by the Conference of Major Superiors of Men, which links all the male religious orders in this country. We also fully comply with all diocesan standards, which vary from place to place.

b. On the financial side, for a long time now we have had yearly audits done by outside accounting firms. We could not have acquired the loans we needed to purchase our seminaries and found the many works of apostolate undertaken during these years
without systems in place of strict accountability and responsible financial management. In recent years, due to the growth of our operations, we have put in place a still more professional system of business management through the services of Integer Group. Staffed by lay professionals, Integer has further improved our operating and management processes to ensure the integrity of all our operations.

c. A further area of adjustment which has begun and continues in process is the way we refer to Father Maciel in the Legion and Regnum Christi. While we cannot deny that
Father Maciel was our founder and did much good, neither can we deny the reality of
what has recently come to light and his grave human failings. We have taken progressive steps to make sure that there is no inappropriate reference to Father Maciel (we have, for example, removed pictures of him from our center; we have extensively edited our websites; we are in the process of reviewing new editions of other writings, brochures, etc.). All this has led us to what is most essential: to center our life, even more, in Jesus Christ. This is an ongoing and difficult process given the need to discern his person from the solid Catholic doctrine that he transmitted and the legitimate institutional aspects of the Legion of Christ and Regnum Christ. This discernment is not something that can be done lightly or overnight. Father Alvaro has and will seek the advice and guidance of learned and prudent men of the Church to enlighten this difficult question seeking not to lose God’s gifts to the Legion and Regnum Christi. We are also receiving enormous help from the Church, especially from the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, to whom we are truly grateful.

2.

a. You know that he has mandated an Apostolic Visitation of the Legion. Archbishop
Charles Joseph Chaput of Denver has been appointed as Visitor for the Legion in the
United States and Canada. Archbishop Chaput will visit our seminaries and religious
houses, see our life up close and interview whomever he wants. His mandate will be to
question, probe and assess with depth and objectivity. Legionaries are free to speak and write to him with all their comments and questions. He sets his own timetable and the points he wishes to probe, and he will present his findings and recommendations directly to the Holy See. For the moment, the Legion cannot make any specific statements regarding the content or development of the Visitation, since this would interfere with the work of the Visitors.

b. Questions and comments have also been raised regarding the “private vow of charity” that was professed in the Legion. The rationale of this vow was to ensure that the grievances one could have with his superior were brought to those who could resolve them and thus avoid irresponsible criticism or internal factions that degrade unity. This vow had been in place since 1957 and was approved by the Church. Pope Benedict XVI, who has the power to bind and loose, asked the Legion to remove it, which we did two years ago.

c. In the past two years, also following the indications we received from the Holy Father, we changed our general practice of superiors being the spiritual directors of their
subjects. This practice was based on one of the century-old monastic traditions that view the superior as Spiritual Father and Mentor of his community. We are seeing positive fruits from this change of practice.

d. There also have been changes in the Legion regarding sacramental confession. In the past, members were free to go to the Ordinary or Extraordinary confessors (assigned by the General Director for each community). They were also free to go to any other Catholic priest with faculties for confession. Members often asked to go to confession with their own superiors. Following the instructions of the Holy See, today superiors are no longer habitual confessors for those under their authority.

e. We would finally like to mention that our general director is in frequent contact with our superiors in the Holy See and also with the Apostolic Visitors to speak about these and other complex issues. These are some of the significant steps the Legion of Christ has taken. And as we said, we expect more will come in time, with judgment and prudence.

Understandably, in the midst of the present circumstances there have been a few of our members who have felt that they can serve God better by separating themselves from the Legion and Regnum Christi; others have opted temporarily to step aside to see and evaluate, waiting also to see the outcome of the Visitation. The vast majority has opted to continue doing as much good as they can from where they are, knowing that our time here on earth is limited, and trusting that with the guidance of the Church whatever needs to be corrected in time, and whatever is good will be confirmed. Each one has made his or her choice before God, moved by their love for him and their desire to serve him to the best of their ability, and for no other consideration. Let us have great Christian understanding and respect for all. Each of us must presume the best and purest intention in the other, pray for each other, and recognize that each one of us suffers and recovers in different ways and at different times.

As Father Álvaro told us in his homily, in Cheshire, St. John Chrysostom teaches us fives ways to reach reconciliation: asking for pardon, forgiving others, prayer, almsgiving and humility (cf. ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, Homilies, PG 49, 263-264). Let us ask the Lord to grant us the grace to walk this path, inasmuch as each one of us needs it, for his greater glory.

Loving, serving, and building together –that has been our life in the Legion and Regnum Christi. As tragic as the failings of our founder are, they should not cause us to diminish our efforts to bring souls to Christ, and to serve him and the Church selflessly in all our brothers and sisters. You have worked so hard to create apostolates, build schools, run youth clubs, form people in the Catholic faith – and those efforts are good and real. Let nothing distract you from loving and serving God in your neighbor. We enter now into a new chapter of our history which must be focused on the pursuit of holiness and love for souls.

May we take inspiration from our Blessed Mother who “meditated all these things in her heart” (cf. Lk 2:51). She will lead us along the path of God’s will and help us to respond as she did: “May it be done to me according to your word” (Lk 1:38).
May Saint Paul’s letter to the Corinthians inspire us during these challenging times:
“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. For as we share abundantly in Christ's sufferings, so through Christ we share abundantly in comfort too.” (2 Corinthians 1:3-5)

You remain in our prayers, and we depend on yours.
Yours in Christ our Lord,

Fr Scott Reilly, LC
Territorial director
Atlanta Territory

Fr Julio Martí, LC
Territorial director
New York Territory

3 comments:

  1. If the Constitutions on the basis of which the Legion is supposed to operate and according to which the memebers make their vows were those approved by the Holy See, if they express the supposedly God given charism for the good of hte Church, why did the Legion hire top class lawyers to sue Paul Lennon for publishing them on Internet? Should the Legion not have published them way back since one of its principal tasks would be to make the God given charism known. Given the fact that it did sue Paul Lennon, and did all in its power to prevent the constitutions from being known, one must assume that there is some skull duggery in this matter. My thesis is that the Constitutions approved by the Holy See which are the basis for the legitimacy and the juridical basis of the Legion were not the ones given to members, so that there is a big fraud in this whole matter. If members vowed to live in accordance with Constitutions which they didn't even know, then they were incapable of fulfulling such vows. The whole Legion is a fraud. I tried to get the Vatican Dicastery in charge of Religious to resolve this matter, but they didn't. I understand that there is a German legionary named Clemens Guttelberth who works in the said Dicastery. That is to say that he is a Legion mole there and in charge of damage control there for the Legion. I am hoping that the present investigation will resolve this. If this is proven to be true, then there would be no need to suppress the Legion because what was actually approved doesn't even exist and the vows of all the members would be invalid, as well as the whole juridical structure of the Legion. This may sound preposterous, but would I put this beyond Maciel? Certainly not.

    As for the members having freedom to go to confession to any priest, this is mere rhetoric. Would anyone dare to go out to some priest without being placed on a black llist? Didn't superiors keep a list of the members who went to confession to them, as well as failing to keep the seal of confession. Confessional information was bandied about in meetings of superiors and also written in reports to higher ups.

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  2. Dear Friend,
    I see your two critiques are:
    The ambiguity of the Constitutions, and
    Members confession being controlled.

    I must say that these objections regarding the Legion system have surfaced time and time again in serious discussions about the Legion and the Regnum and have not yet been answered in a satisfactory way. I agree that the Investigation must look into these issues.

    This leads to even broader critique:

    Many legionaries know from experience that Maciel and the Superiors were/are wont to take documents out of their sleeve at any moment, and are masters in the art of pre-dating or post-dating "official" documents according to expediency.

    This is related to Maciel and his "team" doctoring documents at will, inventing documents that don't exist, altering document contents and signatures, "doctoring" documents to suit the receiver (Pope, Cardinal, Vatican, benefactor...)

    People, expecially the well meaning Catholic public, have no idea what Legion leaders are capaple of. They lack imagination...and experience in the Legion

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  3. A concerned Catholic woman observer comments:

    "[....]
    To think that a supposed man of the Church could have been so cruel as to devise the LC system...Concentration camp inmates, apart from the beatings they endured, suffered hardly more than you did. When I think of the poor guys who are Maciel's victims even now, I lose my cool and curse "Our Father".

    Do you really think the visitation will improve the situation? I have nightmares that the present crop of jailers will succeed in pulling the wool over the eyes of Archbishop Chaput et al. Possible? I shudder."

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