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Rigali to be replaced in Philadelphia

This article first appeared in the St. Louis Beacon, July 19, 2011 - Former St. Louis archbishop (1994-2003) Cardinal Justin F. Rigali will no longer head the Philadelphia archdiocese. 

Pope Benedict XVI has named Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput as the Philadelphia archbishop, effective immediately. Chaput has been in Philadelphia quietly for several days in meetings. Rigali may serve as administrator until Sept. 8 when his replacement is installed with prayers and pomp.

Like Boston Archbishop Sean O'Malley, who was called upon to clean up the tragically flawed Boston administration of Cardinal Bernard Law, Chaput is a Franciscan Capuchin friar. His order of vowed men has as its sacred work, the goal of "rebuilding" the church just as their founder St. Francis did.

Chaput, a Concordia, Kan., native, is part Potawatomi and the first Native American U.S. archbishop. After Rigali turns 80 and loses his right to vote for a pope in a conclave, Chaput is expected to be named a cardinal. While he would become the first Native American cardinal in North America, several Latin American cardinals have had roots in the indigenous community.

Chaput was named Denver's shepherd in 1997 after having been bishop of Rapid City, S.D., for nine years. Before that, he headed of his Capuchin Province of Mid-America as its CEO and minister. He went to a seminary in Pennsylvania, so, the son of the Great Plains is not unfamiliar with Pennsylvania Catholics. Chaput has a tie with one of St. Louis best known historic women, but more on that later.

Trouble in Philadelphia

Rigali's retirement had been anticipated since February when a Philadelphia grand jury named him, along with his two predecessors Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua and Cardinal John Krol, as grievously mishandling the cases of as many as 37 priests who had against them at least one credible charge of sexual abuse of minors and allowing them to remain in ministry.

A few of the priests were no longer in Philadelphia and some were no longer priests when Rigali arrived. At first Rigali reacted by saying no Philadelphia priests in ministry had "an admitted or established allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against them." Under the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' "Dallas" Charter to Protect Children and Youth, approved in June 2002, bishops need not get admissions from the priests but are to turn them over to the civil authorities for investigation.

Rigali hired an outside investigator, a former prosecutor, to look into the charges against the priests.

With the report of investigator Gina Maisto Smith in hand on March 8, Rigali suspended 21 priests accused of sexual abuse. With the action coming on Shrove Tuesday or Mardi Gras, churches had to scramble to find priests to say Ash Wednesday Mass. Not even in Boston had so many priests been suspended in one day. Later, his archdiocese's lay board accused Rigali and his clerical administrative team of keeping many accusations from them. Each diocese must have a sexual accusations review lay board of experts. Rigali's lack of oversight, at best, not only upset Philadelphia Catholics but Catholics across the nation. Many bishops who uphold the charter were said to be livid.

Reassurance in St. Louis

Over the past few months many St. Louis Catholics have been concerned that Rigali may have not followed the charter here diligently. After the 2002 Boston scandal broke, Rigali delegated all those responsibilities to two of his vicar generals: first to Bishop Timothy Dolan, now New York archbishop, then, to Msgr. Richard Stika, now Knoxville, Tenn., bishop.

Several St. Louis priests have recently said that they were assured that Dolan and Stika were fearless in ridding the archdiocese of those who would harm children. In interviews with this reporter, both bishops have talked with passion about the need to protect children and mentioned their closeness to their own nephews and nieces. St. Louis archdiocesan officials also took a second look.

"Since the Philadelphia grand jury report, we have reviewed our files and have not found any priest who is in active ministry to have a credible accusation of sexual abuse of a minor, " said the Rev. Mr. Phil Hengen, the ordained deacon who leads the St. Louis Archdiocesan Office for Protection of Children.

'Sense of Hope'

"It's been like Good Friday here for four months," said Rocco Palmo who writes the worldwide Catholic blog "Whispers from the Loggia" from his native Philadelphia. "Ever since the grand jury report we have been waiting for the next shoe to drop, wondering what is next.

"Now, I think that Chaput will give people a sense of hope. He's a visionary bishop and is wonderful with people."

"For first time in 100 years, Philadelphia will have a bishop who has been a parish priest," Palmo said. "You know where you stand with him. As one of his friends said to me, 'He's in your face'."

If not for the abuse reports, Rigali might have stayed in Philadelphia for three or four more years. Under canon law, all bishops send the pope a letter of resignation when they turn 75. For Rigali that was in April 2010. But that letter is rarely accepted from cardinals in good health. Cardinals often remain in office until they turn 80 and lose their vote in the conclave.

Rigali, a member of a Vatican commission working on refining the English translations of church rites including the Mass, is expected to fly to Rome to attend that group's meeting late this week. After a vacation, he likely will return to Philadelphia for late August farewells.

Chaput's Love for a St. Louis Woman

In July 1988 when Rose Philippine Duchesne was canonized, Chaput led a group of Potawatomi to Rome. In the most colorful minutes of the Canonization Mass, under the great dome of St. Peter's, the small group in traditional Potawatomi dress were in the Offertory Procession bearing traditional works of art including beautiful, handmade moccasins.

Mother Rose Philippine Duchesne, a Religious of the Sacred Heart, left her native France at 49 to live out her girlhood dream of teaching the Indians. In the St. Louis region, she taught several part-Indian girls including the daughter of fur trader Manuel Lisa in schools she founded. But not until she was 71 and helped open a school in the Potawatomi village of Sugar Creek, Kan., did she live her dream of living among the Indian people.

Attending Catholic parish schools in Kansas, Chaput grew up hearing about the woman whom his Potawatomi ancestors called "The Woman Who Prays Always." When the canonization was announced, the friar determined to bring a group of Duchesne's beloved Potawatomi to Rome. Before leaving for Rome, he visited this region and prayed before the saint's sarcophagus at her shrine in old town St. Charles. He visited the site of the old City House at Convent and Broadway near today's Busch Stadium in St. Louis and at the Old St. Ferdinand Church in Florissant.

The late Sister Mary O'Callaghan, a historian, who led Chaput on the Duchesne tour in 1988 told this reporter how impressed she was with the friar's devotion to the American pioneer educator. In an interview in Denver last September, Chaput told this reporter that the canonization had been a time of great joy for him and that he regularly prayed to her to intercede with God for him.

He may put her to work now as he takes a broom to the mess in Philadelphia.

Patricia Rice, a freelance writer, has long covered religion.

Patricia Rice is a freelance writer based in St. Louis who has covered religion for many years. She also writes about cultural issues, including opera.