Everyday thousands of children are being sexually abused. You can stop the abuse of at least one child by simply praying. You can possibly stop the abuse of thousands of children by forwarding the link in First Time Visitor? by email, Twitter or Facebook to every Christian you know. Save a child or lots of children!!!! Do Something, please!

3:15 PM prayer in brief:
Pray for God to stop 1 child from being molested today.
Pray for God to stop 1 child molestation happening now.
Pray for God to rescue 1 child from sexual slavery.
Pray for God to save 1 girl from genital circumcision.
Pray for God to stop 1 girl from becoming a child-bride.
If you have the faith pray for 100 children rather than one.
Give Thanks. There is more to this prayer here

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Sunday 29 August 2021

This Week's Catholic Pervs and Paedos List > Another Polish Archbishop Punished; NY Priest Removed

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Vatican punishes Polish archbishop over probe into sexual abuse cover-up

BY RACHEL SCULLY - 
08/21/21 03:43 PM EDT 55
 
© Getty Images


The Vatican is disciplining a retired Polish archbishop after he allegedly neglected to respond to cases of child sex abuse at the hands of his clergymen under his leadership, the Archdiocese of Wroclaw announced Saturday.

Archbishop Marian Golebiewski will be banned from participating in any religious or lay public ceremonies, will pay a "suitable sum" to a fund for victims of sexual abuse, and will "live in the spirit of penance and prayer," the statement said. 

The Vatican had investigated the reports of sexual abuse and negligence between 1996 and 2004, when the 83-year-old was the head of the Koszalin diocese, and between 2004 and 2013, when he led the Wroclaw archdiocese, according to The Associated Press.

Golebiewski's case was only the latest instance of sexual abuse or a cover-up in the Polish Catholic church. The Vatican has punished about 10 bishops and archbishops in Poland for cover-ups, according to the AP.

A report delivered to Pope Francis during his 2019 global abuse prevention summit detailed cases of alleged abuse by about two dozen serving and retired Polish bishops and archbishops.




NY Priest removed over allegations of child sex abuse

By Sarah Eames Staff Writer
Aug 26, 2021 Updated Aug 27, 2021 
    
A retired Catholic priest who most recently served two Delaware County congregations was removed from public ministry last week following allegations of child sexual abuse in a claim filed under the Child Victims Act.


Father Gregory Weider
was placed on administrative leave by Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany effective Saturday, Aug. 14

Weider, 84, who retired from the priesthood in 2010, has been serving as sacramental minister at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Margaretville and its mission, St. Anne’s in Andes, according to diocesan officials.

Representatives from both congregations did not respond to an email request for comment by press time Thursday, Aug. 26.

Under the terms of his leave, Weider is not permitted to publicly officiate at sacraments, wear clerical garb or present himself as a priest, according to Mary DeTurris Poust, director of communications for the Albany diocese and associate publisher of its official publication, The Evangelist.

Weider was placed on leave while the independent Diocesan Review Board investigates the claim and while the case moves through required legal process, Poust said.

Poust said she was only aware of one allegation of sexual abuse against Weider. Details of the allegation were not immediately available.

Since his ordination in 1963, Weider served at Blessed Sacrament in Mohawk; St. Anthony in Schenectady; St. Agnes in Cohoes; St. Thomas the Apostle in Delmar; St. Mary’s in Coxsackie; Holy Cross in Albany; Sacred Heart in Watervliet; and Holy Trinity in Schaghticoke, which was the merger of St. John the Baptist and Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Johnsonville, and St. Monica, Valley Falls.

Weider also served as diocesan chaplain for scouting; assistant national chaplain for scouting; chaplain at Samaritan Hospital in Troy, with residence at Our Lady of Victory, and chaplain at St. Mary’s Hospital in Amsterdam.

The Child Victims Act, signed into state law in 2019, more than doubled the statute of limitations for child sex crimes, raising from 23 to 55 the age by which a person must file a civil claim for sexual abuse they experienced as a minor.

The yearlong window carved out for sex abuse victims was doubled last August with a bill signed by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and modeled after similar legislation in other states, which gave claimants longer than a year to file in court. The extension came as the coronavirus pandemic forced the closure or limited operations of many courts across the state.

Claims of sexual abuse by religious officials, scout leaders, educators, coaches, health care workers and family members soared to nearly 10,000 in the days leading up to the Aug. 13 deadline, according to state court records.

Also on the Albany diocese’s list of credibly accused clergy is former Delaware County priest James McDevitt, who was removed from the priesthood in 2009 and convicted the following year of two counts of sexual abuse.

McDevitt, then 64, pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor counts of forcible touching in full satisfaction of 20 counts connected to the alleged sexual abuse of six males. He was sentenced to six years’ probation, fined $4,500, required to register as a sex offender and ordered to submit samples of his DNA for inclusion in the state database.

At the time of his voluntary leave, McDevitt served as pastor of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

Visit rcda.org/offenders to view the full list of offenders.

While other dioceses across the state — including in Buffalo, Syracuse and Rockville Center — have filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy in an apparent attempt to protect their assets that may be subject to later settlements or court judgements, the Albany diocese has not.

“The Diocese has not declared bankruptcy and is doing everything it can to avoid Chapter 11 restructuring,” Poust told The Daily Star.

Scharfenberger, who was appointed Bishop of Albany in 2014, has been “a national leader in responding to the clergy abuse crisis,” publishing the list of credible offenders in 2015, according to Poust.

“All who have been wounded by a public representative of the Church, which is the spouse of Christ in theological terms, have felt at some point that even God has let them suffer or even abandoned them. That is the simple fact, and it cannot be denied. This is the real consequence of abuse,” Scharfenberger wrote in “Coming Clean,” an Aug. 12 column in The Evangelist. “It is, therefore, a constitutive part of the mission of the Church to be devoted to the healing and restoration of survivors, at whatever sacrifice to itself this might require.”

It requires a deep cleansing of the church before you can help the victims of the priesthood.

“If there is anything like a silver lining in the dark cloud that has loomed over the Catholic Church in the United States because of mostly clerics who can no longer hide their sins and crimes behind the collar, living double lives, it may be in the reform of those systemic conditions that gave them cover,” he wrote. “To wit, there is no escape from accountability to society, generally, to the Church or to the persons aggrieved or injured by sexual misconduct as defined by law and, ultimately, to God.”

Anyone who was sexually abused by a Catholic priest or deacon is encouraged by the Albany diocese to report the matter to a law enforcement agency or to the diocese. 

To report an incident of abuse or to seek help, contact the diocese’s assistance coordinator, Frederick Jones, at 518-453-6646 or assistance.coordinator@rcda.org.




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