Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
MikeK said:I always assumed so, but I could be wrong. It's not his voice per se that put mem off, but the vibrato and pomp that he spoke with on his radio program. Something that's missing from the speach that is linked in this thread. When people think they have to orate in a peculiar manner in order to hold my attention, I assume that what they're saying isn't all that noteworthy.
Not that anyone will particularly care, but here are my thoughts on the mess:
1. I concur the sheep dog reference is lifted from Grossman with the black a reference to clerical garb.
2. Yes, he had a money-making company but I personally think that was ingenious because by paying taxes he could speak on political-related issues without the IRS looking to pull his not-for-profit- status. What happened to the profits I do not know.
3. I am not sure what the appropriate response would be from him. Certainly, he has an obligation to follow the bishop. But he also should expose a flawed system if he truly believes he is not getting a fair shake. Seems to me he is trying to do both. He is not asking to say mass publicly therefor following the bishop but he is now trying to put his side of the story out to the public.
4. What bothers me most is the apparent lack of transparency on how this or similar investigations are done. And Corapi is right, you can't prove a negative. This will likely never see a courtroom unless he is able to sue for defamation. He has been asked the proverbial question 'Have you stopped beating your wife?'
4. What bothers me most is the apparent lack of transparency on how this or similar investigations are done.
I'm not a Catholic, and sorry if you find me out of line, but why can't there be transparency? Wasn't it a lack of transparency that helped with the cover up's of all those sexual abuse issues that the Church is now dealing with? A bishop is just as fallible as the Priest.
Something that really took me off guard while I read this thread was the hate..the accusations. Accusations that he is only in it for the money (can't really prove that by watching a youtube vid and a bunch of opinionated blogs can you?) that he has lost sight of how the world works? I even saw an accusation that he therefor must be guilty of the alleged crime! It was just all a bunch of "lets belittle Corapi with a bunch of speculations, and personal dislikes, and then at the end of our rant...I will make a prayer smillie to show that I actually care for him" meh....maybe I'm reading too much into the way he is being treated on here...but it just kinda threw me off.
I'm not a Catholic, and sorry if you find me out of line, but why can't there be transparency? Wasn't it a lack of transparency that helped with the cover up's of all those sexual abuse issues that the Church is now dealing with?
A bishop is just as fallible as the Priest.
I am sorry but they simply cannot be compared.
A bishop is free to be transparent with why he doesn't want so-and-so a priest ministering in his diocese. He simply has no obligation to be transparent. If he simply has a personality clash with one of his priests and doesn't want him in his diocese he is perfectly within his authority to release him from his charge.
Excepting the bishop of Rome of course. But it is nothing to do with infallibility or fallibility.
So, I don’t have much to say about Fr. Corapi. I do have a few things to say about the circumstances surrounding this sad announcement.
From the email I am receiving and a few blogs I have read reacting to Fr. Corapi’s video message, it strikes me that a lot of people are doing neither themselves nor Fr. Corapi any good. Charity requires us to consider the good of others. I can’t see how the way some people are talking about Fr. Corapi does anyone any good.
We are in difficult times right now concerning ecclesiastical relationships. The Church has sustained horrible wounds because of her own churchmen and, during this time of healing, there are bound to be painful moments. When you receive a blow upon a bruise, the pain can be great. I suggest that we avoid poking the bruises are much as we can.
Given what I have been seeing and experiencing, I believe the verse many priests pray every night during Compline in the older form of the Office (Tuesday in the Liturgy of the Hours) is being realized in a particularly intense way right now:
“Be sober and vigilant: because your enemy the devil, like a roaring lion, is roaming around seeking whom he might devour. Strong in faith, resist him knowing that the same affliction befalls your brethren who are in the world. ” 1 Peter 5:8-9.
This is certainly the case in my life right now and I think it is also going on in the life of many priests and bishops who are on the more conservative side of things. The attack is on.
This is one reason why I have been earnestly asking the support of your prayers.
The enemy hates priests and bishops. Let me say that again. The enemy hates priests and bishops. When priests and bishops start making inroads, they will be attacked with intensity.
But priests and bishops remain men and remain sinners. We need the support of prayers especially regarding the primary goal of saving our souls. We must, for the love of God, help each other.
I will keep Fr. Corapi on my prayer list, and will remember him in a special way, hoping that through the help of the Holy Spirit, who bends the rigid and heals the broken and consoles those who are in pain, he will have some peace whether he is able to return to active ministry or not, whether he wants to or not. He is a priest forever and he is my brother in that indelible mark received from Christ the High priest. And because he is a priest forever, the devil will not relent in attacking him until he dies. Nor will the devil relent in attacking anyone who has authority over him.
It is what we signed up for, but sometimes it can be very hard.
Please remember, please, that all priests are human beings and subject to the afflictions of the world the flesh and the devil. If you look at them in some other way, you do them and yourselves a disservice
It absolutely is a fair comparison. Allegations were kept quite and not properly investigated. This appears to be total swing of the pendulum, everyone knowing about the allegations, with the question remaining as to the quality of the investigation. I don't think anyone is questioning the authority of this or any bishop. I think what may be in question is rationale for the exercising of the authority. No, the bishop does not have to explain himself; but it would/could make things make a whole lot more sense.
If Corapi is a scoundrel then I want to know.
About Fr. John Corapi with observations about our times | Fr. Z's Blog – What Does The Prayer Really Say?
Another good perspective from Father Z in part:
But one aspect that I know a bit more about and that troubles me is his comments about the bishop of Corpus Christi, Michael Mulvey. Firstly, even though Bishop Mulvey was only recently appointed to Corpus, I assume that Corapi is speaking of him and not the former bishop when he made his comments.
I met Bishop Mulvey (when he was Father, and then Monsignor) during my ten years in Austin. I heard Mass from him many times and talked with him as well. He always struck me as a priest with a very gentle spirit. Not all priests have that gift, but he did. I understood that he was involved in the ecclesial movement Focolare, which seemed to fit his personality well.
The man is deeply distraught — that much is obvious. I'll also venture the guess that he's either over-medicated or — perhaps worse — under-medicated. He strikes too many discordant notes, sends too many mixed signals. Corapi is a very polished and very experienced public speaker; in his right mind, he'd know the importance of consi.
With the Corapi news, it's a question many are asking. A few years ago, Jimmy Akin posted a good and clear-headed summary that, as far as I know, still holds: 1) He can't celebrate any of the sacraments except for hearing deathbed confessions. It is especially noted that he can't give homilies.
Fr. John Corapi has published a statement—also available in video form—in which he has announced that he is leaving active ministry as a priest. He's right. He is. And he has. Unless something extraordinarily improbable occurs, he will never again function as a Catholic priest. And it's his fault.
You don’t have to look far to find a lot of wide-ranging reaction to the Big News around the blogosphere.
First up, Max Lindenman, who says something a few people have wondered about in e-mails to me:
The man is deeply distraught — that much is obvious. I’ll also venture the guess that he’s either over-medicated or — perhaps worse — under-medicated. He strikes too many discordant notes, sends too many mixed signals. Corapi is a very polished and very experienced public speaker; in his right mind, he’d know the importance of consistency. Perhaps he was under some sort of pressure to put out this statement in a hurry. But even if he couldn’t recognize the bizarreness of his message, you’d think somebody close to him would step in and say, “Say, John, don’t you think we ought to tweak that?”
Makes me wonder whether he’s getting bad advice, or more likely, is getting good advice, but disregarding it.
From the email I am receiving and a few blogs I have read reacting to Fr. Corapi’s video message, it strikes me that a lot of people are doing neither themselves nor Fr. Corapi any good. Charity requires us to consider the good of others. I can’t see how the way some people are talking about Fr. Corapi does anyone any good.
Is it too late for Fr. Corapi?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?