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No. 2 at Vatican Wants New U.S. Saint
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone Visits Knights
BY MARIA CAULFIELD REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
August 19-25, 2007 Issue |
Posted 8/14/07 at 12:44 PM
NASHVILLE, Tenn. â Visiting the United States for the first
time since becoming Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone
addressed the biggest issues in the Church today.
He spoke at a press conference on controversial issues such
as the clerical sex scandals, Catholic politicians who support abortion, the
situation in Iraq and the Church in China.
The No. 2 man at the Vatican delivered a series of addresses
at the Knights of Columbusâ annual convention on the role of the laity and the
condition of the Church in the United States.
He held up as a model priest the founder of the Knights,
Father Michael McGivney, and said that he takes a personal interest in his
cause for canonization, which is being studied by the Vatican.
âI hope this recognition [of sanctity] will arrive soon, and
Iâll personally work on this, so that this day will come soon,â Cardinal
Bertone said during his homily, delivered in Italian, at the Aug. 7 opening
Mass of the Knights of Columbusâ 125th annual national convention at the
Gaylord Opryland Hotel in Nashville.
Cardinal Bertoneâs comments on the sainthood cause of Father
McGivney were met with applause from the Knights attending the Mass.
âI was thrilled,â Bishop William Lori of Bridgeport, Conn.,
the supreme chaplain of the Knights of Columbus, said of Cardinal Bertoneâs
comments.
âI think he appreciates what it would mean for parish
priests in the United States and around the world, to have one of their own
canonized a saint,â Bishop Lori said in an interview on Eternal Word Television
Network, which was broadcasting several events from the convention.
 The convention, held
Aug. 7-9, marked the 125th anniversary of the Knights of Columbus, which was
founded by Father McGivney and a handful of laymen in the basement of St.
Maryâs Church in New Haven, Conn.
On the first evening of the convention, Cardinal Bertone
received the Knightsâ highest honor, the Gaudium et Spes Award, which was first
given in 1992 to Mother Teresa of Calcutta. It comes with a $100,000 gift that
Cardinal Bertone said he will use for his favorite charities.
Cardinal Bertone held a wide-ranging press conference Aug. 8
for international media at the convention. Speaking in Italian with an English
translator, he strongly criticized the high-priced lawsuits against some U.S.
dioceses over clerical sexual misconduct, calling the legal actions âan
unbearable business.â
He said that as secretary of the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith under then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he had âaccompanied
the American Church through this difficult period.â The Church faced the
situation with âcourage and dignity,â reaching out to victims while not
consigning the offending priests âto perdition,â he added.
Cardinal Bertone called it a âfalse impressionâ that the
Catholic Church has been the only institution to be hit with sexual scandals,
saying, âI could only hope that all the other institutions and social agencies
would have the same courage to face the situation as the Catholic Church has.â
âNotwithstanding the seriousness of the crimes that have
been committed,â he said, âof the 44,000 priests here in the United States,
only a small percentage has been involved in this, and we need to keep this in
perspective.â
Regarding a suggestion that the Vatican issue guidelines for
the reception of Communion by Catholic politicians who support abortion,
Cardinal Bertone said that new norms are not needed since the Churchâs teaching
on the worthy reception of Communion is clear.
He said he finds a âdeep contradictionâ in the practice of
political parties that claim to support âfreedom of conscienceâ yet impose a
particular view upon all members of the party.
âI canât understand how a political party, either in this
country or Italy, can impose an ethical choice on an individual,â he said. âI
am speaking about views on abortion, homosexual âmarriage,â embryonic stem
cells and others.â
The theme of the Knights of Columbus Convention was â125
Years of Faith in Action: Witnessing to the âYesâ of Jesus Christ.â In keeping
with past events, the event was attended by an international assemblage of nine
cardinals, about 70 bishops and some 200 priests. Among them was Cardinal Jaime
Ortega y Alamino of Havana, Cuba, who spoke about the progress of the Church in
his country since the visit of Pope John Paul II in 1999.
During the event, delegates from all 50 U.S. states, Canada,
Mexico, the Philippines and Poland reaffirmed the organizationâs pro-life
commitment, and pledged opposition to homosexual âmarriageâ and support for
natural marriage, as well as for laws protecting the conscience rights of
health care professionals who opt out of immoral procedures.
In his annual report, Supreme Knight Carl Anderson, the
orderâs chief executive officer, voiced the same commitment, vowing that the
order will âpursue laws that protect the life and dignity of every person and
the integrity of marriage and family.â
He also reported that the Knights, a fraternal insurance
organization, has more than 1.7 million members and $62 billion of insurance
coverage for members and their families.
Celebrating the conventionâs opening Mass on Aug. 7,
Cardinal Bertone brought greetings from Pope Benedict XVI and preached on the
life and virtue of Father McGivney, who was an assistant priest in New Haven
when he founded the Knights. He died in 1890, and his cause for sainthood was
opened in 1997. Details of a reported miracle attributed to his intercession
are being studied by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints as a step in the
beatification process.
The cardinal called the organizationâs founding âa noble
goalâ that carried out Father McGivneyâs âapostolic visionâ of âhelping others
to recognize the call that Christ addressed to them, and to respond
generously.â
Father McGivney anticipated by many years the Second Vatican
Council, Cardinal Bertone said, because he âknew that it is not only priests
and religious who have a vocation but that every Christian is called by Christ
to carry out a particular mission in the Church.â
By their works of charity in parishes and communities, he
added, Knights of Columbus are like the Good Samaritan.
âYou bind the wounds of those you discover lying by the
wayside and help restore them to health and strength,â he told delegates.
The Knights claim seven saints for their organization, six
priests who were killed in the 20th-century persecution of the Church in
Mexico, and Bishop Rafael Guizar Valencia of Veracruz, Mexico, who died in 1938
and was canonized by Pope Benedict last year.
Cardinal Bertone, a member of the Salesians of Don Bosco,
won the praise and applause of convention attendees for his warm and engaging
manner, especially when he joined in the spirit of the annual âStates Dinnerâ
honoring all of the countries, states and provinces represented at the event.
When the Vatican anthem was played, he sang loudly the Latin
words, and stood often throughout the dinner to clap and wave the Vatican flag.
At a dinner in the cardinalâs honor, Anderson said that he
appreciated the cardinalâs enthusiasm for sports and presented him with a
Knights of Columbus soccer ball. Cardinal Bertone said that he will display the
ball near the entrance to his Vatican offices.
Maria Caulfield is based in
Wallingford, Connecticut.
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