
Part II
Return To Part I
Thus, the Signatura of
1998 said Father Gruner had permission to reside in Canada between June 5,
1978, and November 15, 1989, and again between April 8, 1990, and July 18,
1990, but the Signatura of 1999 said there was no such permission. The
Signatura had blatantly contradicted its own official version of the facts.
A close student of the
case would notice something very suspicious in this contradiction: if the
Signatura had simply continued to maintain that Father Gruners permission
to reside in Canada was "revoked" in July 1990, then its 1999 decree would have
been consistent with its 1998 decree. Why had it gone further in the later
decree, claiming there was never any permission in the first place? What did
the Signatura have to gain from a self-contradiction that was not even
necessary to reach the result it desired? The answer to the question would
only be apparent to someone familiar with recent developments in a certain
litigation in Canada.
Back in June of 1990 the
Vice Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Toronto, Msgr. A. McCormack, published a
"clarification" in the archdiocesan bulletin which stated (among other things)
that Father Gruners "status is irregular"a phrase remarkably
similar to the one now being used by the Signaturaand that no Catholic
should make donations to the apostolate. Yet only two months before, the Bishop
of Avellino had sent Father Gruner, in Canada, a certificate attesting to his
good standing as a priest. McCormacks accusation of "irregular status"
was therefore demonstrably false. "Irregular" priests do not receive
certificates of good standing from their bishops. McCormacks
"clarification" had been circulated in the secular press throughout North
America, shaking donor confidence and causing severe damage to the apostolate.
When McCormack refused to make a retraction of his patently false statements,
the apostolates directors authorized the filing of a libel suit to
protect the apostolates good namean action fully in keeping with
Catholic moral theology in the case of a calumniator who refuses to retract.
In August of 1999 Father
Gruner testified under oath at a deposition in the suit. By this time McCormack
had been rewarded with a promotion to the Vatican. Father Gruner testified that
as of June 1990 (the date of McCormacks "clarification") his status could
not possibly have been "irregular" because he had Bishop Venezias
permission to reside in Canada and the bishops successor had given him a
certificate of priestly good standing as recently as April 1990. After Father
Gruners deposition it was clear that McCormack was at serious risk of a
judgment against him for libel.
From these facts,
certain conclusions seemed highly probable: McCormack (or someone else in the
Vatican) had read the transcript of Father Gruners deposition and
realized that Father Gruner was likely to prevail in the libel litigation.
Therefore, in order to protect McCormack, who was now a Vatican functionary,
Father Gruners status in 1990 would somehow have to be declared
"irregular" by the Signatura. This could be accomplished by holding that Father
Gruner never really had permission to live in Canada, so that his presence
there had been "irregular" from the start. Then McCormack could claimnine
years after the factthat his libelous accusation of an "irregular status"
in 1990 was "true" after all, because the Churchs highest court had just
said so.
This would explain the
appearance of the novel and canonically meaningless concept of "irregular
condition" in the Signaturas latest decree; the language mimicked
McCormacks phrase, "irregular status." It would also explain why the
decree was dated in July even though it was not issued until September: If the
decree had been given a September date, it would have been all too apparent
that it had been written with a view to helping McCormack overcome Father
Gruners deposition testimony in August. So the decree was backdated to
July, before the deposition took place.
None of this is to
suggest that all five of the prelates who signed the decree knowingly engaged
in such a deception. It was entirely possible that they signed a decree
prepared for them by someone else (perhaps Grochelewski) without reading it
very carefully, following the Signaturas newly-enunciated principle that
the accuracy of the facts does not matter so long as the result is "just and
legitimate."
Now that the Signatura
had revised the facts to dispense with Father Gruners 1978 permission to
reside in Canada, what would it say about his involvement in the apostolate?
While not denying that
Canon 278 guaranteed the natural right of secular priests like Father Gruner to
associate with others in private apostolates, the Signatura cited Canon 278,
§3, which states that "Clerics are to refrain from establishing or joining
associations whose purpose or activity cannot be reconciled with the
obligations proper to the clerical state." How could an apostolate devoted to
Our Lady of Fatima possibly be irreconcilable with the obligations of the
priesthood? The Signatura offered no explanation. On the contrary, for the
first time in the entire proceedings, the Signatura had actually conceded that
the apostolate itself was legitimate:
"For reasons of
clarity it is to be noted that here we are not dealing with the legitimacy
of the private association but only regarding the condition of Reverend
Gruner himself."
If the legitimacy of the
apostolate was conceded, if it was conceded that the Church did not require
permission for it, then how could Father Gruners involvement in the
apostolate be inconsistent with the priestly state? More to the point: How
could a priests legitimate apostolic work constitute an "irregular
condition"?
Here the Signatura
offered a further non-answer: "The Second Vatican Council teaches that priests
. . . are collaborators of the bishop in the service of Christ . . .
Incardination since the Second Vatican Council is especially understood as
incorporation into a particular church (diocese) and its presbytery
(priesthood) with the service of the same church under the leadership of its
pastor . . ." Yes, and so what? All of this was equally true before the
Council, but it was also true that priests have the natural right to engage in
apostolates without episcopal permission, and that the Signatura did not
even question the legitimacy of Father Gruners apostolate.
The Signatura had
avoided these obvious objections, resting on its mere ipse dixit that an
admittedly legitimate apostolate was somehow inconsistent with incardination
"since the Second Vatican Council." Yet it was the Pope, not the Signatura, who
had the authority to interpret and implement Vatican IIs purported
teaching on incardination. The Pope had exercised this authority by
promulgating Canon 278, which guarantees the right of secular priests to
establish and join private associations of the faithfulall the more so,
associations conceded to be legitimate!
As if this were not
enough to sustain Father Gruners position, three different bishops had
offered to incardinate Father Gruner with permission to continue his work in
Canada, precisely because they deemed it a service to their own particular
churches. In fact, Father Gruner was already serving the "particular church" of
Hyderabad by building an orphanage and supporting the orphans with the
apostolates resources, and by conducting Marian pilgrimages which had
attracted tens of thousands of potential Hindu converts, drawn by devotion to
the Virgin Mary as fostered by the apostolates papally blessed Pilgrim
Virgin statue. These were among the reasons which led Archbishop Arulappa to
issue Father Gruner a decree of incardination for the continuation of what the
Archbishop himself had called "Gods work." The same Archbishop had been
the first signatory on the Open Letter to the Holy Father, protesting Father
Gruners mistreatment. Clearly Archbishop Arulappa recognized in Father
Gruner precisely the sort of "collaborator" his diocese needed, in keeping with
"the teaching of Vatican II" on incardination.
If no fewer than three
bishops viewed the apostolate as consistent with Father Gruners priestly
obligations, on what basis could the Signatura say otherwise? Yet another
non-answer: "Leaving aside the question by which the bishop in India or Brazil
could permit a priest incardinated in his diocese to reside in Canada and be
active in a private
apostolate"leaving aside, that is,
the very crux of the matter!"it is clear that, hypothetically, in no
manner would this have rectified Reverend Gruners condition." And why was
that? If the Signatura did not question the apostolates legitimacy; if
the apostolate was already performing major corporal and spiritual works in the
Archdiocese of Hyderabad; if the Archbishop of Hyderabad considered it
"Gods work"if all this was true, then why would incardination in
Hyderabad not rectify Father Gruners alleged "irregular condition"?
These facts had not
impressed the Signatura. Evidently, the members of the tribunal had
concludedhaving only God before their eyesthat building orphanages
and feeding orphans in a poverty-stricken Third World diocese did not
constitute a service to the local church. No, it was all very "irregular." As
the Signatura would have it, Father Gruner had much more important works to
perform in the Diocese of Avellino: the work of keeping quiet about the Message
of Fatima; and, of course, the work of curing his "irregular condition" by
remaining in Avellino for the rest of his life, doing nothing. The orphans
would have to find another benefactor.
Throughout its
discussion of Father Gruners status, the Signatura had completely ignored
a basic norm of canonical interpretation, most recently expressed in Canon 17
of the 1983 Code: favorabilia amplianda, odios restrigendarights
and privileges are broadly interpreted, while restrictions on rights and
privileges are narrowly interpreted. In other words, the presumption in canon
law is in favor of proper liberty and against the undue restriction of liberty.
In Father Gruners case, however, the Signatura had given the narrowest
possible interpretation of Father Gruners liberty to engage in an
apostolate under Canon 278 §1, and the broadest possible interpretation of
the restrictive phrase "cannot be reconciled with the obligations of the
clerical state" in Canon 278 §2. That is, the Signatura had turned the law
on its head, taking a narrow view of rights and a broad view of restrictions in
the Code.
The Signatura maintained
the same upside-down approach to the law in addressing the related question of
the Congregations unprecedented directive that the Bishop of Avellino
deny excardination to Father Gruner, so that his incardination in the
Archdiocese of Hyderabad could be blocked.
Canon 270 states
that:
Excardination can be
lawfully granted only for a just reason, such as the advantage of the Church or
the good of the cleric. It may not, however, be refused unless grave reasons
exist . . .
This canon reflects the
truth that when a priest is incardinated in a particular diocese he does not
become an indentured servant for life to his original bishop, but rather has
the right to transfer to another diocese where his talents and particular
priestly charisms would be better usednot only for the good of the Church
but for his own personal good. In short, priests are not chattel slaves, but
human beings like everyone else. This is why Canon 270 provides that a priest
may not be refused excardination to another diocese without "grave
reasons."
What exactly were the
"grave reasons" for denying Father Gruner excardination from Avellino, where he
could not speak the dialect and had never been given a canonical mission in the
first place? The only reason now given by the Signatura was Father
Gruners "irregular condition." But the "irregular condition" consisted of
nothing more than engaging in the very apostolate which the Archbishop of
Hyderabad (not to mention two other bishops) was happy to sponsor. It was only
the intervention of the Congregation, not any "grave reason", which was at work
here. The Signatura had never denied that the Bishop of Avellino admitted to
Father Gruner that he himself had no cause to deny excardination.
In short, there were no
grave reasons to deny excardination. In fact, there were no reasons at all,
only the determination of the Congregation and the Signatura that Father Gruner
must be confined forever to the Diocese of Avellino.
But the travesty would
grow even deeper. The Signatura still had to address the matter of the
Congregations deliberate interference in offers of incardination by three
successive bishops, as well as the request for excardination from Avellino.
Throughout the
proceedings thus far, the Congregation for the Clergy and the Signatura had
taken the position that the Congregation was merely advising the bishops
on what to do, and merely upholding the Bishop of Avellinos own decrees
against Father Gruner. In the latest decree, however, the Signatura had finally
abandoned this pretense. It now asserted that all along the Congregation had
been acting directly against Father Gruner "in the name of the Supreme Pontiff
with ordinary executive vicariate power . . . as the hierarchical
superior of the bishops." This might
explain why the Promoter of Justice had disclosed the existence of numerous
written and oral interventions by the Congregation against Father Gruner with
the bishops of Anapolis, Simla-Chandigarh and Hyderabad. These interventions no
longer had to be hidden, because under the new theory of the case they were
only routine exercises of the Congregations vicarious papal authority as
the "hierarchical superior" of every Catholic bishop in the world.
The problem with this
breathtaking claim is that the Congregation itself had never mentioned it. All
of its prior decrees were cast entirely in terms of merely upholding decrees of
the Bishop of Avellino. In fact, the Congregation had passed over in silence
Father Gruners objections to its interference in his excardination and
incardination, never once claiming that it had the right to interfere in the
name of the Pope.
To this the Signatura
replied that in July of 1989 the Congregation did indeed openly assert its
supposed vicarious papal authority when Cardinal Innocenti (then Prefect of the
Congregation for the Clergy) issued his letter ordering Father Gruner to return
to the Diocese of Avellino by September 30, 1989, if he had not found another
bishop. But the Signatura failed to mention that Father Gruner had immediately
appealed this directive both to the Congregation and the Pope himself on
grounds that it was clearly outside the Congregations authority, since
the Bishop of Avellino had never given any such order himself and the
Congregation did not have the right to run his diocese. The Signatura also
failed to mention that after Father Gruners appeal to the Congregation
and the Pope, neither Innocenti nor the Congregation itself ever mentioned the
1989 directive again, nor is there a single reference to it in any of the
Congregations subsequent decrees or announcements against Father Gruner
over the next ten years. The Congregations silence spoke volumes.
To this the Signatura
could only reply that "the argument from silence proves nothing." On the
contrary, it proved everything. For if Cardinal Innocentis 1989
intervention had been a valid exercise of the Congregations alleged
vicarious papal authority, the Congregation would certainly have relied upon it
in declaring Father Gruner "disobedient" to "ecclesiastical
authority"indeed, the "vicarious" authority of the Pope himself! But the
Congregation had said nothing about the decree from August 21, 1989 to the
present. Nor had the Congregation ever responded to Father Gruners 1989
appeal against the decree. The Congregation having received the appeal, its
ten-year silence could mean only one thing: that the Congregation knew it had
acted outside its authority and that Father Gruner had been correct in
asserting the illegality of its action.
The Congregations
total retreat from the 1989 intervention demonstrated (better than any
argument) that the Congregation knew it was not the "hierarchical superior" of
the Bishop of Avellino (or, for that matter, any other bishop) and had no right
to issue orders to Father Gruner without the bishops approval. This was
precisely why, in his subsequent letter of October 28, 1989, Cardinal Agustoni
(with Cardinal Innocenti as co-signer) merely requested that the Bishop
of Avellino recall Father Gruner to the diocese, while pretending that it was
the bishops own idea. Meanwhile, having been forced to retreat after
Father Gruners appeal to the Pope, Cardinal Innocenti let it be known
that the name of Father Gruner was never to be mentioned in his presence
againhardly the behavior one would expect from a man who thought he was
acting with the Popes own authority.
It did not take a very
deep knowledge of Catholic teaching to recognize that the Signaturas
newly expansive view of the Congregations
authority would wreak havoc with the
divine constitution of the Church. As the First Vatican Council solemnly
defined, the primacy of Peter in no way detracted from "that power of
ordinary and immediate episcopal jurisdiction by which the bishops, who
placed by the Holy Spirit, have succeeded to the place of the
Apostles as true shepherds, individually feed and rule the individual
flocks assigned to them . . . " As the Council further declared, the local
sovereignty of bishops "is asserted, confirmed and vindicated by the universal
shepherd ..." And what of Pastor bonus, John Paul IIs apostolic
constitution defining the authority of the Congregation for the Clergy, which
states that the Congregation was formed "without prejudice to the right
of bishops ..."?
While the Pope can (and,
indeed, must) delegate certain limited functions to the congregations which
make up the Roman Curia in order to be able to govern a vast Church, even the
Pope must respect the "ordinary and immediate episcopal jurisdiction" of local
bishops as successors of the Apostles, as Vatican I solemnly teaches. By what
right, then, did the Congregation for the Clergy dictate to the Bishop of
Avellino whom he would excardinate, or to the Archbishop of Hyderabad whom he
would incardinate?especially when the Congregation had no reason
for its interventions beyond "worried signals" from the Vatican Secretary of
State?
When he was ordained a
priest Father Gruner had made a promise of obedience to his bishop, not to the
Congregation for the Clergy. Yet the Signatura had now effectively declared
that the Congregation acts as a kind of super-bishop or junior pope, exercising
original papal jurisdiction over every priest in the world, even if
there was no recourse before it. And this is why, according to the
Signaturas newly announced theory, the Congregation had the right to
"order" Father Gruner to return to Avellino on its own initiative in 1989, even
if the Bishop of Avellino had never given such an order himself.
If the Congregation for
the Clergy could issue direct orders to priests on such matters as where they
would reside and which apostolates they could conduct, and priests had no
choice but to obey these orders, what was left of the ordinary power of
episcopal jurisdiction over dioceses? Clearly, it would become an empty
formality. The bishops in each diocese would be merely caretakers of their
respective territories whose judgments could be overruled by the Congregation
whenever the Congregation deemed it expedient.
The Signatura contended
that its expansive interpretation of the power of the Congregation "would not
mean that the bishops are mere delegates to the Congregation or that the
Congregation can act arbitrarily." Given that the Signatura acknowledged that
the Congregation could not act arbitrarily, how could the Signatura uphold the
following sequence of actions: (1) ordering a priest to find another bishop to
incardinate him, then (2) ordering any interested bishop not to incardinate the
priest, then (3) ordering the original bishop not to excardinate the
priest, and then (4) declaring that the priest is "disobedient" because he had
"failed" to find another bishop. Did the Congregations alleged "vicarious
papal authority" include the right to engage in such shamelessly tyrannical
maneuvers? If such actions were not arbitrary, then what would be?
Thus it seemed that even
the Divine Constitution of the Church would have to be adjusted to allow for
the disposal of Father Nicholas Gruner. Naturally, the Signatura had concluded
that the Congregation "rightly carried out the office commissioned to it by the
Supreme Pontiff" when it employed secret interventions, levelled false
accusations and browbeat bishops in order to prevent Father Gruners
incardination in any diocese in the world except Avellino. And why was this
whirlwind of global activity necessary to prevent the otherwise routine
incardination of one priest? Because the bishops should not be allowed to
confirm "de facto his [Father Gruners] irregular condition." In a
Church convulsed by crisis and scandal in so many dioceses throughout the
world, the one thing bishops could not be allowed to do was confirm
Father Gruners "de facto irregular condition." The Congregation
simply had to act in this emergency! In the name of the Pope, of course.
The phrase "de
facto irregular condition" was yet another novelty which seemed to have
been coined especially for Father Gruners case. There is a distinction in
jurisprudence between matters de facto and matters de jure.
Matters de facto are matters of fact; matters de jure are matters
of law. Violation of the law is a matter de jure, not de facto.
For example, one cannot be a de facto speeder. One has either
violated the speed limit or he has not. To say, then, that Father Gruner was
guilty of only a "de facto irregular condition" was to admit that he had
not actually violated any law of the Church, and that as far as the law of the
Church was concerned, his "condicio" was perfectly legal and thus certainly not
"irregular". The charge made no more sense than a summons for de facto
speeding.
In sum, the
Congregation for the Clergy had spent ten
years under three successive Cardinals, engaging in and upholding utterly
unprecedented interventions to address the situation of one priest whose
situation was not even illegal to begin with, in order to put a stop to an
apostolate whose legitimacy was not even denied. This had to rank as one of the
greatest puzzles in the annals of canon law. Or rather, it was no puzzle at
all: The apostolate was, of course, at the very heart of the matter, but the
Signatura could never admit this. Nor could the Congregation. For how could it
be admitted that all of these factual and legal contrivances had been aimed at
destroying promotion of the Message of Fatima by the only priest who was doing
it effectively on a worldwide basis? To admit this would be to open the door to
a hearing on what the case was really about: the fundamental opposition between
the Message of Fatima and the current agenda of the Vatican bureaucracy, which
was heir to the Vatican-Moscow Agreement and the entire post-conciliar "opening
to the world"an enterprise whose failure had been nothing short of
catastrophic.
All that remained now
were a few loose ends. There was the matter of Father Gruner not being an
Italian citizen. How could he be expected to take up permanent residence in
Italy after an absence of more than twenty years? The bishops order to
return was legally impossible to fulfill. Illegal aliens are expelled from
Italy just as they are from Canada or the United States.
Undeterred by this legal
reality, the Signatura simply observed that many foreign-born priests live and
work in Italy, without mentioning that these priests have proper immigration
status and cannot be expelled. Since 1994 the Bishop of Avellino had taken no
steps to obtain the proper visa for Father Gruner, which would require that the
bishop give the Italian consulate in Canada written guarantees of Father
Gruners financial support and medical coverage. Acting under coercion
from the Congregation, the bishop had simply issued orders to return without
any thought to the legalities involved.
But while the Signatura
evinced no concern about Father Gruners immigration status in Italy, its
own prior decree in 1997 cited supposed problems with Indian immigration law as
just reason to deny incardination in the Diocese of Hyderabad. So, when it came
to Father Gruners incardination in Hyderabad, immigration laws were a
major impediment, but when it came to incardination in Avellino (after an
absence of more than 20 years), immigration laws were no problem at all.
Straining to reach the preordained result, the Signatura had contradicted
itself again.
But the fact remained
that without the Bishop of Avellinos guarantees of financial support and
medical coverage, Father Gruner could not obtain the necessary visa for a
permanent return to Italy. Yet, incredibly, the Signatura had declared in the
same decree that Father Gruner was not entitled to these very things: "The
conditions were not fulfilled according to which Father Gruner would have
merited remuneration for his ministry or social assistance in case of infirmity
or old age." So, according to the Signatura, Father Gruner was supposed to
return to Italy immediately
without a proper visa, without salary,
without medical coverage, and without any provision for his old age.
Presumably, Father Gruner, now almost sixty, could spend five years or so in
the Diocese of Avellino as an illegal alien harbored by the bishop (a period
just long enough to ensure the total destruction of the apostolate, not to
mention Father Gruners personal estate), after which it would not matter
if he was arrested by the Italian police and deported to Canada in the
condition of a pauper.
The Signatura turned,
finally, to Father Gruners objection that he had never received a hearing
before an impartial tribunal because the very members of the Congregation who
were blocking his excardination to another diocese were acting as the judges of
his recourse from the denial of excardination. Shifting ground yet again, the
Signatura announced that Father Gruner was not entitled to an impartial judge
in the Congregation because the Congregation is not a tribunal. Rather,
it was the "hierarchical superior" of all bishops and priests in the Catholic
Church.
But the Congregation
itself had never denied that it was acting as a tribunal in Father
Gruners case, nor had it ever claimed that it was acting as Father
Gruners hierarchical superior. Rather, the Congregation had declared that
the right to an impartial judge in "administrative proceedings" in the
Congregation was "not foreseen by legislation", and the Signatura had upheld
that position in one of its earlier decrees. The Signatura had contradicted
itself yet again.
To conclude this point,
the Signatura declared that, in any event, Father Gruner had received a
hearing before an impartial tribunalnone other than the Apostolic
Signatura! But the Signatura had yet to grant Father Gruner a hearing, having
decided at every juncture of the proceedings that Father Gruners case was
not worthy of discussion"manifestly without any foundation whatever."
As the Signaturas
final decree had made clear, for Father Gruner an "irregular condition" meant
any condition in which he would be able to engage in his apostolate, while a
"regular" condition meant only one thing: permanent confinement in Avellino as
a virtual pauper and slave of the bishop with no prospect of excardination to
any other diocese. And this preposterously restrictive view of incardination
had been presented in all seriousness as nothing more than the teaching of
Vatican IIthe most liberalizing council in Church history!
Merely to summarize the
Signaturas final decree against Father Gruner was to demonstrate the
shameless injustice of the entire proceeding against him:
1. While the law of the
Church states that priests can live outside their dioceses with merely presumed
permission, Father Gruner could not do so even with written permission
repeatedly affirmed over 16 years by three successive bishops of Avellino.
2. While the law of the
Church (as well as natural law) states that priests can engage in private
apostolates without episcopal approval, Father Gruner could not do so even
with episcopal approval (from no less than three bishops), even though
his apostolate is admittedly legitimate, supports orphans and is considered
Gods work by an Archbishop of more than 27 years standing.
3. While excardination
cannot be denied except for a grave reason, Father Gruners excardination
could be denied without any reason, besides an "irregular condition"
consisting of nothing more than conduct which the Code of Canon Law not only
does not prohibit, but positively allows.
4. While Italian
immigration law prohibited Father Gruners permanent residence in Italy,
Father Gruner must still return after an absence of 20 yearswithout a
proper visa, without salary, without medical insurance, without provision for
his old age. This he was expected to do even though under Canon Law (Can. 22)
the Church agreed to be bound by Italian Civil Law on immigration, and even
though Father Gruner could be arrested and jailed as an illegal alien on
Italian soil.
5. While claiming that
Father Gruner had been given an "impartial" hearing in the Signatura,
Grochelewski had refused to admit the case for discussion by the judges of that
same tribunal.
For Father Gruner only,
Vatican II and the Code of Canon Law comprised a straitjacket no other priest
in the Church was wearing. Meanwhile, priests truly in need of straitjackets
were roaming the Church out of control, demanding, and getting, freedom for all
kinds of private undertakings, many of them openly inimical to the
Churchs teaching on faith and morals. Knowledgeable Catholics were well
familiar with the cases of globetrotting dissident priests and nuns who were
allowed to inflict incalculable damage on the Church for years and even decades
without the slightest disciplinary action being taken against them by the
Vatican: the Boffs, the Kungs, the Foxes and the Currans of the post-conciliar
Church had the whole world at their disposal, including the mass media, for the
spreading of their poison. Not one of them had ever been threatened with the
suspension from priestly orders about to be imposed on a priest from Canada
whose only offense was to conduct a legitimate Fatima apostolate rather too
effectively for the Vatican Secretary of State.
As the Signaturas
final decree against Father Gruner was being readied in the summer of 1999, the
supposed "resolution" of the case of Father Robert Nugent and Sister Jeannine
Gramick provided an apt example of the invidious double-standard at work in
Father Gruners case.
Since 1977
Nugent and Gramick had traveled the globe
under the auspices of their so-called "apostolate", New Ways Ministry, openly
contradicting the Churchs settled teaching on the intrinsically
disordered nature of the homosexual condition. It took seven
years for the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and
Societies of Apostolic Life to order Nugent and Gramick to sever their ties
with this "apostolate", whereupon they simply resigned as officers but
continued their involvement in the organization in open defiance of the
Vaticans order. Another four years elapsed before the Vatican
established a commission to "study" the teaching of Nugent and Gramick. Another
six years went by before the commission issued its 1994 "findings" that
Nugent and Gramicks "ministry", while exhibiting "positive aspects", had
"serious deficiencies" which were "incompatible with the fullness of Christian
morality." In other words, Gramick and Nugent were spreading immoral teaching
throughout the Catholic Church.
Having received the
Vatican Commissions findings, the Congregation for Institutes of
Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life "recommended" disciplinary
measures, including "some sort of notification"some sort of notification,
after seventeen years of open disobedience and contradiction of Church
doctrine.
Then the Congregation
discovered, to its great surprise, that Nugents and Gramicks false
teachings involved doctrinal matters which should be considered by the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). It promptly turned the whole
matter over to the CDF, having failed to impose any discipline whatsoever on
Nugent or Gramick.
In 1996after
nineteen years of spreading error in the Church Gramick and Nugent
were asked by the CDF to answer questions about their erroneous views and to
affirm the Catholic teaching. The CDF deemed their responses "not sufficiently
clear", at which point it openedopened!a doctrinal investigation of
the two, after a mere nineteen years of complaints about them.
Another year went by
before the CDF announced what has been known from the beginning, that
Nugents and Gramicks teachings were "erroneous and dangerous."
Instead of imposing discipline, however, the CDF asked them both to
respond to the CDFs conclusions.
Still another year
passed before the CDF received Gramick and Nugents responses, which it
deemed "unacceptable." But still no discipline. Instead, in 1998after
21 years of false teaching and disobedienceNugent and Gramick
were asked to formulate declarations expressing their agreement with
Catholic teaching! They sent in their statements, but neither declaration was
acceptable.
Finally, on July 14,
1999 twenty-two years after Nugent and Gramick began their career
of dissension from Church teachingthe CDF announced that their false
doctrine had caused "confusion among the Catholic people and harmed the
community of the Church." And what was to be the penalty for all the 22 years
of confusion and harm they had caused to souls? No suspension or reduction to
the lay state for either, but merely an order that they cease ministering to
homosexuals or holding offices in their respective religious institutes! They
were not ordered to cease preaching their errors against the Faith, which had
been published in two books, or even to retract their errors. And this was all
the Vatican was willing to do to remedy nearly a quarter century of serious
damage to the Church.
The
comparison with Father Gruners case
was nothing short of sickening. Unlike Father Gruner, Gramick and Nugent were
never even threatened with suspension or reduction to the lay state. Unlike
Father Gruner, Gramick and Nugent did not suffer any interference in their
basic canonical rights on the theory that the pertinent Congregation was acting
in place of the pope with direct authority over their immediate superiors.
Unlike Father Gruner, Gramick and Nugent were not subjected to secret
interventions, secret letters, or secret "resolutions"; they had been notified
of every step in the proceedings and given opportunity to respond. Indeed,
throughout the Nugent and Gramick affair obsequious deference was shown to
their rights. After 22 years of brazen disobedience and heterodox teaching,
they suffered minimal punishments and remained, respectively, a priest and a
nun in good standing, free to continue undermining Catholic moral teaching on
the grave disorder of the homosexual conditionwith untold damage to the
faith and morals of Catholics, especially the young.
Yet Father Gruner, a
morally upright and orthodox priest, had been summarily pronounced
"disobedient" and subject to suspension from the sacred priesthood without ever
having been shown to be in violation of any law of the Church, much less a
basic moral teaching. As Cardinal Agustoni had stated in his letter to the
Bishop of Avellino in 1989, Father Gruner would even be defrocked and reduced
to the lay state if he would not agree to be silenced. Defrocked for
preaching the Message of Fatima, while public heretics received a slap on the
wrist after decades of dancing with the Vatican.
The conclusion was
inescapable: There are two standards for the administration of justice in the
post-conciliar Church. The first standard is for those who preach heresy and
violate Church law. These are given every available procedural right before any
sort of minimal penalty is imposed, if indeed there is ever a penalty at all.
The second standard is for those who incur the wrath of certain Vatican
functionaries by too successfully promoting some element of traditional
Catholicism. These are deprived of due process and subjected to an absurdly
strict and unjust interpretation of the law.
The net result was an
intolerable paradox in the post-conciliar Church: Those who violate the law are
given the benefit of the law, while those who obey the law are deprived of its
benefit.
And so the triumph of
Father Gruners opponents in the Vatican Secretariate of State would
appear to be complete. Five members of the Apostolic Signatura had signed a
"definitive decree" which contradicted not only the law and the facts, but the
Signaturas own prior pronouncements. Never mind that this final decree
had changed the rules of the game and shifted ground to entirely new arguments
that Father Gruner would have no opportunity to answer. Although the
proceedings had been a travesty, the preordained result had finally been
obtained. Now it would simply be a matter of announcing to the world that
Father Gruner had been "suspended" for his "disobedience".
But it would not be so
simple as that, after all. For there was yet another surprise in store for
Father Gruners canonical executionersanother gift, perhaps, from
Our Lady of Fatima. It would come once again from the Archdiocese of Hyderabad.
Some four months before
the date of the Signaturas final decree, Archbishop Arulappa had sent to
Father Gruner his own decree in the matter of Father Gruners
incardination in Hyderabad. The Archbishops decree was a forthright
rejection of the Congregations arbitrary declaration that the
incardination of Father Gruner in Hyderabad in 1995 was "non-existent":
"Having reviewed the
documents of Father Nicholas Gruner, including the letter from the Diocese of
Avellino, dated August 4, 1989, I am satisfied that my decree of November 4,
1995, incardinating Father Gruner into the Archdiocese of Hyderabad is valid
and effective, and he is validly incardinated as a priest of the Archdiocese of
Hyderabad from that date . . . After due discernment, I am convinced that I am
acting correctly though I was partly misled by influential people. I
strongly feel that the good work he is doing in spreading devotion to the
Immaculate Heart of Mary should not be hampered for the present, especially
through undue canonical or juridical pressures. May Jesus Christ be
Praised!"
The Archbishop had taken
a stand against the corruption of justice in the Church, again giving objective
confirmation to the reality of Father Gruners persecution.
The Archbishops decree had been
forwarded to the Bishop of Avellino in August of 1999, and the bishop has yet
to reply. Would the Congregation exercise its newly-acquired "vicarious" papal
authority, issuing a "papal" order nullifying an Archbishops decree? Or
would it concede that it had no authority to do so and remain silent, as it did
after the 1989 intervention? If so, how could it be claimed that Father Gruner
had been "suspended" for "disobeying" the Bishop of Avellino, when an
Archbishop in India had decreed that Father Gruner was a priest of his
Archdiocese, not Avellino?
The Congregation and the
Signatura had embarked upon a travesty with their first unprecedented decrees
against Father Gruner in 1994 and 1995. Now the travesty had acquired a
dimension they could not have anticipated when they first began to interfere in
the rightful jurisdiction of bishops.
For years Father Gruner
had been made the victim of a law written for just one man. The Archbishop of
Hyderabad had recognized the divine truth that a law for one man is no law at
all, but lawlessness. Since Vatican II the Church has been plagued by
lawlessness and scandal in places high and low. But here, now, in the case of
this priest, the laws of the Churchlaws which applied to all the
faithfulwere being upheld by a prelate who would not tolerate their
corruption any longer, not even by his fellow prelates in the Vatican.
The case of Father
Nicholas Gruner has not yet been closed. Nor has the cause of Our Lady of
Fatima been ended, for Heaven will not allow it to end until Her promise has
been fulfilled. "In the end, My Immaculate Heart will triumph".
The Fatima Center
In U.S.A. - 17000 State Route 30, Constable,
NY 12926 In Canada - 452 Kraft Road, Fort Erie, ON L2A 4M7 Call
toll-free 1-800-263-8160 Web: www.fatima.org E-mail:
info@fatima.org
Return to Table of Contents
|