The press has eaten this stuff up. For ten years, O’Malley
has been the Church’s go-to man where sex abuse is concerned. He
comes to Boston from the scandal-shaken diocese of Palm Beach, Florida,
where not one but two former bishops resigned after admitting to molesting
boys. Before Palm Beach he headed the Fall River diocese on Massachusetts’ south
shore. It was there that what was to become the unifying theme of his
various episcopacies first revealed itself.
In a story recounted in the New York Times, among other places, Bishop
Sean, as they knew him in Fall River, showed up unannounced one night
at a rap session for victims of the notorious abuser-priest Father
James Porter. Lawyers for the victims’ group had shut out all
press and were prepared to turn any Church representatives away.
They were taken aback, however, when the good Franciscan arrived
at their
door.
“Oh no, Bishop, you shouldn’t come in here without your
lawyers,” one of the attorneys present is said to have advised.
But O’Malley was undeterred. “I just want to listen,” he
insisted, and listen he did.
For Sean O’Malley, newspapers have been rough drafts of hagiography
ever since.
The bishop has been all but sainted even by the Boston
Globe, which
first broke the story of Cardinal Law’s ongoing cover-up of abuse
by priests, quickly won a Pulitzer for its tireless coverage, and then
churned out an insta-book well before the scandal was over. Having
proved with Law’s resignation that the pen is mightier than papal
appointment, the Globe now seems to view O’Malley as
the archbishop the press built. And its editors have made no effort
to conceal the
joy they take in their creation. On July 2, the day after it was announced
that O’Malley would take over, the Globe ran what was
probably the largest front-page photograph in any daily paper since
September
12, 2001. Nothing nearly so dramatic as burning buildings, of course:
It was just a press conference still-frame of the brown-robed bishop,
grinning through his beard, his arms spread wide, both palms stretched
open. Above the picture, a hopeful headline: “O’Malley
offers plea, pledge.” Below, the endearing back-story: “New
leader’s life marked by intellect, sense of mission.” Sandwiched
between these paeans, the picture is eleven inches wide. Any larger,
it would’ve needed a centerfold.
That so venerable a watchdog as the Globe was all too ready to take
the O’Malley bait suggests that the Catholic Church may have
just pulled off its most impressive public relations coup since the
Gospels turned a murdered rabbi into a king. But who could blame the
Globe for biting? Bait, after all, tastes good. It’s the hook
you’ve got to watch out for.
“You can’t help but be struck by the contrast between
Cardinal Law’s formality and Bishop O’Malley’s personable,
warm nature,” Stephen Pope, the chairman of Boston College’s
theology department, told the Globe. But: “There could be something
misleading in that -- my impression is that Bishop O’Malley’s
theology for the Church is exactly the same as Cardinal Law’s.”
In other words, though a change of rhetoric and a change
of fashion are at hand, for real change, deep change, Catholics in
Boston will
likely have to wait. Under O’Malley, it will be apologies and
payments to victims and then back to business as usual, back to a church
ruled by the systemic sexual dysfunction that started this mess in
the first
place.
I was at Boston College myself recently, not to talk to the chairman
of theology department but to have lunch, and even in the dining
hall everyone seemed obsessed with the bishop’s appointment.
BC is run by Jesuits, who, as a self-governing religious order, usually
remain aloof where matters such as selecting new men to watch over
parishes are concerned. The school, however, happens to be directly
across the street from the Archbishop’s Residence, which crowns
sixty acres of prime real estate the ever-expanding undergraduate
campus would love to get its hands on.
From the few tables within earshot, I eavesdropped on an excited hubbub
concerning what the future would bring for O’Malley and the Church
in Boston. The prevailing opinion seemed to be that the new bishop
would sell the Residence to get the archdiocese out of the debt so
many abuse lawsuits had incurred. O’Malley’s appointment
meant that victims would be paid; BC would expand; life would go on.
At my own table, one of my lunch partners that day was a canon lawyer,
an expert in the legal system of the Vatican. Eighty years old, fifty
years a Jesuit, he had seen the Catholic Church move toward reform
and away again, toward and away, like some great breathing beast.
“People keep saying they think this guy will bring change,” he
said. “That’s bullshit. He’s not interested in change.
If he was, he sure as hell wouldn’t have the job.” The
canon lawyer winked; he was retired now, and could speak however he
pleased.
“And would you get a load of that guy!” he said. “That
brown robe! That hemp belt! I just got a new belt myself, two weeks
ago when I was in Germany. It’s a very nice belt: Hugo Boss,
fifty-five Euros. But I don’t go showing it off to everybody.”
“You’ve got to admit it makes a good picture,” I
said.
He smirked. “Sure, sure, but you know something?” He leaned
in close, like he was letting me in on a secret, then he whispered, “We’re
not always on camera.”
As for the possibility of O’Malley making a lasting difference
in the Archdiocese of Boston or the wider Church, he said, “He
wouldn’t know how to make a lasting difference if he wanted
to. Know why? No sense of history. The man doesn’t have degrees
in theology or canon law. How is he going to change the Church without
really knowing how it works?
“His degrees are in Spanish and Portuguese literature, for god’s
sake. All that means is he’s probably read Don Quixote in the
original.”
The canon lawyer clucked his tongue then let out a
small laugh, perhaps at the thought of his Church not as a breathing
beast, but as a windmill,
turning its arms when the wind was strong enough, then inevitably settling
back to stasis, never really moving an inch.
“Come to think of it,” he said, “maybe O’Malley
is the right man for the job after all.”