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Silence in the Face of the Homosexual Infestation of the Clergy
Crisis Magazine ^ | November 16, 2023 | Kevin Wells

Posted on 11/16/2023 6:30:57 PM PST by ebb tide

Silence in the Face of the Homosexual Infestation of the Clergy

As long as active clergy homosexual activity persists, the Church will continue to fracture and split, where eventually it will all but collapse and disappear.

I saw the full-moon-sized face and squinted. I stared at his image for several seconds. Yes; it was him.

In the closing frame of Bishop Joseph Strickland’s 2018 USCCB plenary assembly testimony and rebuke to bishops for their concealment of homosexual predator Theodore McCarrick sat a clergy member below the dais, facing the sea of bishops.

He is seen below the dais as Bishop Strickland returns to his seat to trailing applause. Poker players call what the priest did, “a tell.” He addressed a sudden itch by his nose, as if something mysterious and invisible just struck him in the face.

Orthodox. Faithful. Free.

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The priest’s name is Msgr. Jeffrey Burrill, then the general secretary of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. You will remember him from The Pillar’s story two years ago, the one that sent him into hiding and forced him to resign immediately from his position at the USCCB. The Pillar had gathered data showing Msgr. Burrill’s mobile phone was used throughout 2018-2020 to access Grindr, a “hook-up” app designed for people to meet up to have homosexual sex with strangers.    

It was Msgr. Burrill who held a critical oversight role in the Catholic Church’s response to the landslide of sexual abuse and misconduct scandals in 2018. In essence, one of the Church’s assigned watchdogs against clergy predation after 2018 was shown to be in bathhouses and gay bars, where he habitually pursued a homosexual lifestyle. 

You will recall that after the 2002 homosexual clergy abuse scandals, the one elected for a similar oversight role was McCarrick.   

On this autumn Thursday, Msgr. Burrill oversees a parish in a restful village in Wisconsin. Also today, after decades of proven immoral carnality, McCarrick is free to do as he wants. Disgraced Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston bishop Michael Bransfield can occasionally be found presenting himself as a bishop at glad-handing functions in West Virginia. Several-time accused sexual predator, Jesuit priest and artist Rev. Marko Rupnik, has returned to priestly ministry after his removal from the Society of Jesus. It is tedious to proceed because the point must be made: homosexually active clergy members roam untethered and unfenced in America—and Bishop Strickland, the man who tried to stop them, has been punished, and now has no home.

It is everywhere, this leviathan pus that oozes into the worldwide Church. Although it will have arrived decades too late, it is well within reason that men of stamina and sacrifice in the Roman Catholic hierarchy will eventually take on the leviathan—which is active disordered clergy homosexual activity occurring from some of the highest levels of the Church down to the local parish. 

As long as this evil persists, the Church will continue to fracture and split, where eventually it will all but collapse and disappear. Of course, the Mystical Bride of Christ will press on as a hope-filled and bright Alleliah of light, but until the putrid fountain from which many in the Church drinks is acknowledged, drained, and scrubbed clean, Our Lady’s tears will ceaselessly flow. And within a decade or so, the remnant Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger prophesied in 1969 will be wholly realized.

“If you think active priestly homosexuality is something that happened decades ago, you have no idea what is happening in the Church today,” said an individual who has served alongside priests for many years. “It is explosive. The priesthood remains one of the best hiding places on the planet for this dark lifestyle. This problem is current. And it is massive.” This person spoke without rancor, malice, or emotion. He spoke as one who might mention the weather or the score of last night’s hockey game. 

Since Bishop Strickland’s ouster five days ago, three individuals who serve in various Church capacities have told me they believe at least fifty percent of priests in their diocese are active homosexuals. The three individuals are not bomb-throwers; they simply said what they are almost certain is true.

“The Church is entering a period of a type of Babylonian captivity. Anthropologically, with active clergy homosexuality, it’s entered a period of a type of anti-fatherhood. It is the time of an anti-Bridegroom—because it is the inverse of God’s Fatherhood,” a long-time pastor said on Tuesday. “Even good and chaste bishops and faithful clergy have mostly made peace with their surrender to the homosexual culture. They know they will be crushed if they address or speak against it. You must stay silent, or you will be annihilated.” 

Just one story I’d like to share, a personal one, that demonstrates this level of annihilation—and of the manner in which active clergy homosexuality has never played well in the Church. It’s caused millions of Catholics to flee, to become Nones, agnostics, or to join any number of Protestant denominations. It’s placed hundreds of millions of dollars—that could have gone to the poor—into the hands of attorneys and the sexually scarred. 

My story: Numberless people believe the tentacles of clergy homosexuality ended the life of my uncle, Msgr. Thomas Wells, one of the most beloved and devoted priests in the history of the Archdiocese of Washington. 

Now-deceased James Cardinal Hickey of Washington D.C. transferred Msgr. Wells in the late ’90s to build a new church at a parish in Germantown, Md., and terminate a homosexual-priest coven mafia. He helped to accomplish the former but had the tables turned on him as a consequence of attempting the latter when he was stabbed to death in his rectory the summer of 2000. An unshakable conviction, shared by dozens of priests and numberless lay faithful in the Maryland/D.C. corridor, is that his life ended as a direct result of the active homosexuality practiced by priests who lived in the now-bulldozed rectory, that for years had been the site of appalling sacrilege and sin. 

Two priests, Rev. Paul E. Lavin and Rev. Aaron J. Cote, who had served at the parish, were later credibly accused as sexual predators of teenage boys. A third pastor, who seems to have vanished, is widely known to have been sexually active with other men prior to my uncle’s arrival. 

My uncle’s first act as pastor at the parish was to rip out the rectory hot tub, where parties for priests were widely known to have taken place. A secret service agent and police officer involved with the investigatory work told me Msgr. Wells died for one of two reasons: it was “a hit” for what he had learned, or “that his murderer was looking for a ‘trick’ [that night]. Msgr. Wells was murdered because of the homosexual activity that had taken place in that rectory.”

My large family was startled to learn what then-cardinal McCarrick did in the days preceding the trial of his convicted murderer, Robert Paul Lucas. McCarrick issued a letter to each priest in the Washington Archdiocese forbidding them to attend my uncle’s trial.

Very briefly, for readers perplexed by the enormity of the number of homosexually-active priests in today’s Church, I offer this explanation from Monsignor John Esseff, a 95-year-old exorcist and priest of 70-plus years who spends his days offering private retreats for clergy from his small apartment in Pennsylvania. He has heard, arguably, more priests’ confessions than any priest in the world. When Mother Teresa asked him in the early ’80s to begin the work of forming priests, he began to travel to seminaries to present retreats, where he said he repeatedly came face-to-face with the malevolent shadow of homosexuality. When he voiced his concerns and warnings to seminary rectors, he was often politely rebuffed. It was then that he came to realize that a closeted subculture had been set free to roam and deform the spotless Bride from within.

“I began to see that the seminary was the sick womb of Holy Mother Church. Priests became deformed in the belly of the church—or if you were a well-intentioned and good seminarian, you were going to be aborted. The guys who were real, they would just leave. 

“I saw it as demonic. It was easy to piece together—when you’re anti-Eucharist, anti-Mary, and anti-prayer, you’re of the demonic.”

So what to do? Gathered today at the USCCB meetings in Baltimore is much of the “old guard.” Each older bishop is fully aware of, or possibly even involved in the hidden subculture. It can be imagined that every American bishop—young or old, faithful or unfaithful, masculine or the opposite—grasps to some degree the strain of active homosexuality within their ranks and in their own dioceses. It can also be imagined that not a single mention of the scourge will occur throughout the meetings.

Meanwhile, dispiritedness crushes the souls of countless millions of faithful laity who noiselessly beg to be nourished by a shepherd or two who speaks out against it—who understands their identity to protect and guard their scarred consciences. Deliberate Catholics despise the so-called Lavender Mafia, and the piecemeal destruction of the Church’s sacred traditions their sins have wrought. They hate that their children are now questioning the existence of God and of His Natural law. 

On Tuesday, Cardinal Christophe Pierre, the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States, merged the Synod on Synodality with the Eucharistic Revival. He used the familiar Gospel story of the Road to Emmaus to attempt to marry the Source and Summit of our faith with the month-long October event countless Catholic laity question. Cardinal Pierre clearly does not understand the mind of the exhausted American Catholic, who thought he had, alas, stepped from the word salad haze of synodal adverbs and adjectives. 

It is nouns and verbs laity starves for today: adoration, mortification, signal graces, contemplative prayer, sanctity, Hell, etc. Sadly, even a faithful, daily Mass attendee may never once hear any of the aforementioned terms—and that is an enormous and frightening issue. Why? Because it means our Catholic faith is disappearing before our very eyes, in the very place we come to be fed by it—in the Sacrifice of the Mass and from the priestly voice behind the ambo.     

There is a major identity crisis in the priesthood today. It is a rupture. Clergy members who are engaged in homosexual relations cannot properly nourish their flock in the dimension laity deserves—but that’s, perhaps, not the gravest problem. Is the bigger problem that chaste and faithful bishops and priests are too afraid to speak plainly about the homosexual scourge in their Church, and to finally work at cleaning things up? Or is it an even bigger problem than that—is clergy’s reticence to preaching against the rampaging LGBTQ movement contributing to the wide-scale acceleration of the secularization of their parishioners? 

An enormously growing faction of regular Sunday Mass-goers, who ten years ago would have rejected the notion of so-called homosexual marriage, now have no issue with it. In October, when Pope Francis didn’t reject the notion of blessing same-sex relationships in his response to questions presented to him by a handful of bishops, why would a poorly catechized Catholic lay member take issue with it—especially in light of the fact that their pastor does not wade into the Church’s teaching on homosexual acts?    

Bishops and clergy members are called to live a holy life, care for souls, and help to lead folks to heaven. They are called to be unblinking heralds of Truth. But outside the finger of God, until they begin to break from their silence on the homosexual scourge in their Church, we seem headed directly toward schism.

There seems to be only one answer to solving the issue. If a bishop or clergy member ascertains indisputable proof of an actively gay clergy member, he must suggest in private that the individual immediately meets with his superior and tender his resignation. If the individual refuses, he must take the case to an honest bishop or cardinal, and provide a detailed report of what he knows. If this, too, fails, he must go to a member of the Catholic media, and urge the reporter to write the story in full.

Perhaps the greatest problem facing the Church is that in its long-standing comfort, it has repeatedly chosen the path of least resistance. Clergy who lay low with knowledge of a homosexually-active bishop or priest reject their mandate to protect the flock. When a priest quietly ignores the neighborhood’s library transgender story hour or President Joe Biden’s embrace of childhood sex mutilation and homosexual marriage, et. al, it is a stain on his identity.

Christ commanded Peter to tend, care for, and spiritually nourish His flock. The celibate nature of the Roman Church was to liberate the priest to be radically available to accomplish this task. Christ requested martyrs before ascending to His Father. Is there a holy Athanasius among you, one willing to stand among your brethren at today’s meeting to at least begin the conversation? The laity starves for you.  

Our Lady will be guarding you, her little Athanasius, if you do decide to stand up. And it will be you that finally slowed her tears. And I imagine she will tell you as much one day.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Moral Issues
KEYWORDS: frankenchurch; homos; jeffreyburrill; lavendermafia; usccb
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To: metmom

There are no “versions” of Catholicism.

Have you not heard of the Apostles Creed?


41 posted on 11/16/2023 8:35:16 PM PST by ebb tide
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To: metmom; ebb tide
Because if you are going to demand that people submit to Roman Catholicism, the only choice they have is the present one, which you also reject.

Catholics believe in Sacred Scripture / the Teachings of Christ, sacred Tradition handed down by the apostles and recognized saints and also the "Magisterium" of the Church. How the Faith has been, and should be, taught.

The Pope can certainly not change scripture, nor can he change tradition. These things exist above and beyond him. There is not, nor should there, an "old form" or "present form."

42 posted on 11/16/2023 8:49:21 PM PST by PGR88
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To: PGR88
These things exist above and beyond him. There is not, nor should there, an "old form" or "present form."

there most certainly is though.

I'm old enough to remember when Vatican 2 was implemented and the uproar it caused.

And if there is not different forms, then what's with the current broohaha over traditional Latin masses and the current one?

43 posted on 11/16/2023 9:03:27 PM PST by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.)
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To: PGR88

Your analogy fails because we have Scripture and the leading and guidance of the Holy Spirit.

And even in the aforementioned fields, the teachers use the relevant book, they don’t teach what they feel like.

Jesus’ command to people was *Follow Me.* He didn’t say to follow a religion or humans who set themselves up as some kind of spiritual authority.


44 posted on 11/16/2023 9:07:32 PM PST by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.)
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To: metmom
Your analogy fails because we have Scripture and the leading and guidance of the Holy Spirit.

So if that's all you need, why do churches have pastors? Why even go to church?

45 posted on 11/16/2023 9:41:02 PM PST by PGR88
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To: PGR88

God gave churches elders, overseers, prophets, apostles, teachers, and deacons and the qualifications for those positions are found in Scripture as well. (1 Corinthians 12, 1 Timothy 3, Titus 1)

Why go to church? Because we are commanded to not forsake the assembling of ourselves together (Hebrews 10:25) and as a means to minister to each other and encourage and pray for each other. It’s good to hang out with other believers, and for corporate worship.


46 posted on 11/16/2023 11:40:01 PM PST by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.)
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To: ealgeone
And all that is built upon faith in Christ and only Christ. It seems some Roman Catholics have a problem with that. I can understand why.

Ah, so is your faith community not built on the Father, the Holy Spirit, their union with the Messiah in the Holy Trinity ? Does it have no continuity with the scripture just posted ?

Hating Catholics (and no, they are not all "Roman") does not make a church.

So much hatred against "Roman Catholics" will make one blind.
47 posted on 11/17/2023 3:20:31 AM PST by af_vet_1981 ( The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began)
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To: Ken Regis; StrictConstructionist; ebb tide; metmom

There is only unity in the faith. All religion is man-made (see James 1:27), full of half-truths and outright lies. Please show me any religion not corrupted, that doesn’t twist and turn with cultural demands.

Faith is a gift from God, only God imputes righteousness for all who believe - just as he did with Abraham in Genesis.

Doesn’t matter if protestant or catholic or even moravian, all are still religions, and in the case for Christian based religions they add and subtract from God’s word.


48 posted on 11/17/2023 3:42:06 AM PST by BrandtMichaels ( Why I Oughta! One of these days... Bang, Zoom, To The Moon!)
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To: PGR88

“Religion is free and personal and doesn’t require a church or any clergy.”

I get the gist, but is true if Christainity is substituted for ‘Religion’ which is not to be desired, except in the form of a persinal relationship with Jesus
Christ.
“Yet people will do this for Christianity”

Not really.
Christians are never alone, they always have a Teacher.

Jesus lives within us, and we live in Him.

And he has given us the Mind of Christ.

Our book is the Bible and the Holy Spirit guides us into all understanding.

So when we read The Word, we ask/pray for The Holy Spirit to reveal undestanding to us.

Jesus=Rabbi=Teacher.


49 posted on 11/17/2023 3:44:51 AM PST by Syncro (God is Good--Facts is Facts)
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To: ebb tide; Christian

The Rock upon which God built hiscchurch was / is Jesus.

He long was the Rock way before Peter was proclaimed a pebble.


50 posted on 11/17/2023 3:52:50 AM PST by Syncro (God is Good--Facts is Facts)
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To: BrandtMichaels

That’s why being a Christian is not having a religion.

It is having a personal relationship with Jesus.


51 posted on 11/17/2023 3:56:28 AM PST by Syncro (God is Good--Facts is Facts)
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To: PGR88

In your example, how did calculus, physics ,biology and even philosophy come about?

Someone figured it out, wrote books about it and passed it on. Others took that and expanded upon it etc. Every subject you mentioned is the same with the exception of philosophy which is basically learned logical reasoning which I’d say 50% of society has none.

There’s many folks who can pickup a calculus, physics and biology book and figure it out, no teacher required if the book is written well.

Look at colleges today... Kids come out dumber than when you went in...

Religion is no different. It started, is history, folks wrote about it, summarized it over many years from thousands of manuscripts and scriptures and put it in a book. There’s different many versions of the bible just pick one you like.

Who’s to say the manuscripts and scriptures written and chosen for the bible were all accurate accounts? You don’t, and that’s where hope and faith come in... You assume they are because you want to believe they are. Some have been proven others have yet to be, again faith.

As I stated, religion is personal and free. Doesn’t require a church or clergy.

If that’s what you or any wants and need have at it. I don’t.


52 posted on 11/17/2023 4:03:05 AM PST by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: ebb tide

You are hilarious.


53 posted on 11/17/2023 4:08:45 AM PST by Ken Regis (I concur. )
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To: Some Fat Guy in L.A.

This would stop if the Roman religion required priests to be married to a woman. Like the Apostles were.


54 posted on 11/17/2023 5:53:00 AM PST by Old Yeller
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To: metmom; ebb tide

Yes, Jesus established His One Holy Apostolic Catholic Church on Peter for saints and sinners as a path to salvation. Jesus is building His church through baptized members. Matthew 16

Some of whom have left the practice of the Catholic faith orto follow men and women that have established “christian churches” without the full faith of Christ’s teachings and follow false beliefs.

The Catholic Church hopes that all will return to the full belief and practice of God’s Truths, even those sinners in the leadership of the Catholic Church and those that have left for other religions or no religion.

Even Napoleon who tried to destroy the Catholic Church returned to Confession and the Mass before his death.

Each of us has a choice to accept the teachings of Jesus or reject them. And to follow them and live according to His commandments.


55 posted on 11/17/2023 5:58:05 AM PST by ADSUM ( )
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To: ADSUM; metmom

Would that also include wearing man-made idols known as scapulars or miraculous medals as some have processed to trust in?


56 posted on 11/17/2023 6:04:50 AM PST by ealgeone
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To: StrictConstructionist; ebb tide

One can say they believe in God, but not have faith or believe His Truths.

The Catholic Church is the Body of Christ composed of its baptized members on earth, in Purgatory and in Heaven. 1 Cor 12:13


57 posted on 11/17/2023 6:05:44 AM PST by ADSUM ( )
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To: af_vet_1981
AF, your debate skills are lacking in this matter.

But you do raise an interesting question. Hating Catholics, which you then define to not all be Roman.

Care to expand on what you mean by Catholic but not necessarily Roman?

58 posted on 11/17/2023 6:10:08 AM PST by ealgeone
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To: ADSUM
ADSUM, you continue to live up to your screen name as you’ve added sum to the Bible.

Purgatory is a non-biblical belief. If the shed blood of Christ is insufficient to cleanse a person of all sin then nothing will. We’re either forgiven of all sins as the Bible teaches or we’re not. If it’s the latter then there is nothing to cleanse us of sin.

59 posted on 11/17/2023 6:23:05 AM PST by ealgeone
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To: ebb tide
I would assert that Catholicism is the true faith for lots of reasons, some are here:

It has confession and absolution for people so that they would not be driven mad by their sins, nor be mistaken about what constitutes a sin in their case.

Because it draws hatred and ridicule way out of proportion to the typical religion bashing by heathens, especially gays and those in Hollywood.

It emphasizes the most important commandments, among them Mass and the Eucharist, which are very condensed remembrances of what Jesus did while on earth. They are done very formally in fulfillment of his strict commandment at the Last Supper -- every word in the Mass refers to scripture related to Him, especially the New Testament, and the ceremony has been perfected over 1700 years, recent abuses of it notwithstanding.

The Real Presence of God at the Mass in the form of the Eucharist.

IMHO.

60 posted on 11/17/2023 6:36:05 AM PST by caddie
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