Tag Archives: Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington

Exit His Excellency

Hat tip to former Green Mountain Daily comrade Apache Trout for putting a bow on the tenure of outgoing Bishop Christopher Coyne of the Catholic Church’s once-powerful Burlington Diocese. Coyne is a true loyalist who did his level best (within the bounds of his ideological worldview) to stabilize the Diocese and perhaps even restore some of its former glory.

Indeed, Vermont was nowhere near the stinkiest set of stables Coyne was tasked with mucking out. He came to Burlington from the Archdiocese of Boston, where he occupied the thankless role of spokesperson during the dismal days of that precinct’s child sex abuse scandal.

The raw statistics show that Coyne was not only unable to reverse the Church’s fortunes, he wasn’t even able to slow the downward momentum. Worse than the membership numbers cited above are the vanishing priesthood (from 276 ordained priests in 1975 to a mere 36 today) and the number of active parishes (from 130 in 2001 to 68 today).

This, for a diocese that used to be a real political power in Vermont and was reduced to making feeble noises of protest during last year’s overwhelmingly successful Proposition 5 campaign.

But then, as Apache Trout noted, the diocese has no one but itself to blame for the dissipation of its moral and social authority.

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Bishop Coyne: “It’s gonna take us a long time”

Well, my substitute hosting duties on The Mark Johnson Show are over for this round. On my last day, Monday, came the interview I’d most been looking forward to*: The Most Rev. Christopher Coyne, Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington.

*And that’s saying something; I had a lot of great guests, and I thank them all.

When Bishop Coyne was installed in January 2014, much was written about his career in the Church, including his years as chief spokesman for the Boston Archdiocese. But little scrutiny was given to that period, which was a crucial one in the history of the modern American Church.

The Archdiocesan spokesman in 2002, carefully choosing his words.

The Archdiocesan spokesman in 2002, carefully choosing his words.

He was the front man for Bernard Cardinal Law during the depths of the child sex abuse scandal that rocked the Archdiocese to its core. It ultimately forced Cardinal Law, one of the most powerful Churchmen in America, to scurry off to a well-appointed hidey-hole in the Vatican, where he still resides.

There were many things I wanted to ask the Bishop. But, in light of the continuing scandals in the Church, the one thing I most wanted to ask about was whether the Church has changed itself, improved, reformed — and how he reflects back on his time defending the seemingly indefensible.

I give him full credit. He answered with honesty and humility. Sure, he was a bit defensive about the institution to which he has devoted his life; but he admitted that the Church had dug its own moral cesspit, that it had no one to blame but itself, and that restoring the compromised moral authority of the Church will take a lot of hard work and a very long time.

It was much more than I expected from a Church lifer. And yeah, I believe he was being sincere.

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