He asked the priests to accept his “contrition for any suffering I have caused, as well as the grace to find, with you, ways of healing, ways of offering fruitful guidance in this darkness.”
A copy of the letter was published online Aug. 30 on the website of the Catholic Standard, archdiocesan newspaper of Washington.
An introduction to the letter on the website said it was attached to an email where the cardinal said: “In this time of so much distress and pain, I send you this letter in the hope that it might tell you of my desire to be close to you and the people entrusted to your pastoral care, particularly as you prepare for this weekend’s Masses.”
The cardinal said he celebrated Mass at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle on Aug. 26, “as so many of you did in your own parish church” focusing on the “spiritual context for so much of the pain, suffering, darkness and disillusionment brought on by the sexual abuse of children and young people by priests and its cover-up by bishops.”
“Whatever our response to this spiritual crisis, it has to begin at the altar — and in prayer,” he wrote.
He said the Mass focused on praying for abuse survivors and for the whole church “wounded by the shame and horror of these egregious actions.”
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“It is our people who also bear a deep hurt because they love their church and do not know what is coming next,” he wrote, adding his appreciation for the priests’ actions in being there with parishioners “even when there is so little to say, other than prayer.”
The cardinal said he also prayed during the Mass for archdiocesan priests, noting: “Each priest — all of us — somehow bears the joys and sorrows of one another because we are all rightly seen as sharers in the priesthood.”
He asked them to let parishioners know in upcoming weekend Masses Sept. 1-2 that he recognizes and shares their pain.
“Let them know I wish I could wipe it away even though that is simply not possible. I would give anything, as would all of us, to turn the clock around and have the church do everything right,” he wrote.
The cardinal said he joins Catholics in “sorrow for all that has happened” and pleads for their “prayerful support as I with you and them try to do whatever I can to help move this church closer to the pathway that leads us from this darkness.”
He said he planned to speak at a Sept. 2 Mass about “how we as a church — all of us laity, religious and clergy — might begin with faith strengthened in prayer to discern that level of reform rooted in accountability and transparency that would permit the church to enter a new era.”
Cardinal Wuerl also asked the priests to “hold close in our prayers and loyalty our Holy Father, Pope Francis,” noting that “increasingly, it is clear that he is the object of concentrated attack. At each Mass we pray for him by name. As we do so with our voices may we do so as well with our hearts. ”
The cardinal ended his letter by saying he hopes archdiocesan priests “sense something of my anguish for those who have suffered and my sorrow for any of my failures to be there for both the abused and all who now feel a sense of alienation.”
“In my heart, I now ask myself what is the way I can best serve this church that I, too, much love,” he wrote. “Would you please let the faithful you serve know of my love, my commitment to do whatever is necessary to right what is wrong, and my sincere solidarity with you and them.”
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My loyalty is only to the teaching of the Catholic Church, and not, as Cdl Wuerl’s wants, to any man, like the Pope. What Cdl Wuerl suggests, that we again circle the ‘abuse’ wagons around the hierarchy is exactly how we got into this mess.
I love our holy Catholic church having grown up with my faith, attend parochial school and high school, and love the Latin Mass.
I know now why all of this is happening, and it has been evolving for many years since the communists infiltrated Holy Mother Church with 1100 homosexual, faithless men into our seminaries many years ago to destroy her from within, resulting in the mess that we now have today. I do not accept Cardinal Wurhl;s fake apology as this has for him been a life style and career-long issue. I must forgive him, however, because it is God’s word, and His to forgive. He, the Pope and all of these involved priests, bishops, cardinals must go, now. The Church needs to be purged and purified and returned to its pre-Vatican II state (which is where it all started downhill). We must return to where the Holy Eucharist, body and blood of Christ is given the respect, reverence and dignity it deserves (on our knees and on the tongue, offered only by a priest).
Our Savior, Jesus Christ is the one who is most offended by these crimes. It is He who will ultimately judge. There can be no excuses. We must return our church to holiness. Pope Benedict predicted that we would be a smaller church but a holier church. So be it. God’s will be done!
Prayer and reparation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, is something we Catholics can do to sooth our souls and the Sacred Heart of Jesus. God bless our Church and all of the good and holy clergy who are suffering with us.