The fact of the matter is that Archbishop Burke had no choice. Contrary to popular belief, the board was not excommunicated by Burke, the board excommunicated themselves
I’m amused that some people on this site critical of Burke are relying on what “the media” are reporting, ignoring the fact that the media has been opposed to His Excellency right from the very beginning. For example, when St. Stan’s had a “vote” to determine whether Burke was right or not in demanding that the lay board hand over the parish, the Post-Dispatch reported that 90% of the parish voted to oppose it. What they did NOT report, however, was that in actuallity, 90% of the parish REFUSED TO TAKE THE POLL BECAUSE THEY SAW IT AS A PUBLICITY STUNT TO EMBARASS BURKE.
I really had decided to just let this go and not take up the issue any further but some of these claims have got to be addressed. For starters it is curious to claim that Archbishop Burke was right to do as he did, excommunication, in one breath and then in the next to make the observation that he didn’t really do anything in his own right but that it was the board of St. Stanisalus who were responsible for the the actual excommunication. Only one person was responsible for the action of excommunicating those people and that was Archbishop Burke, you can’t have it both ways. The archbishop didn’t even have the tact to notify the board members directly but instead simply released the notice of excommunication to the media. Then there is the question of whether 90% of the parish voted against the archbishop or wasn’t allowed to vote on the matter. Archbishop Burke’s defenders claim that the vast majority of St. Stanislaus families actually supported the archbishop but weren’t allowed to voice their stance. The archbishop’s defenders can believe as they like but a glance at mass attendance betwen the new Polish parish set aside by the archbishop and St. Stanislaus tells the actual story. The 90% plus majority did not support the archbishop but again it is another curious attempt to have things both ways by saying that numbers don’t matter on the one hand and then adding that the numbers are really on the archbishop’s side. Finally the simple truth of the issue is that Archbishop Burke’s actions seem to go a long way towards confirming the suspicion by most that his intent all along was to close the parish and aquire the parish funds for the archdioscese use. Was that his right to do so? As a question of cannon law it appears that it is indeed his right if he so chooses but there is a world of distinction between having a right and doing what is right. The Post Dispatch, the local St. Louis newspaper, really does have an rabid anti Catholic bias (betcha didn’t think that the previous poster and I had anything that we could agree on did you) and is milking this story for all that they can in order to give the church a black eye but Archbishop Burke has played into their hands time and time again by his actions and statements. The St. Louis Review, the archdioscese newspaper, is little more than the archbishop’s opinion rendered in print and so the folk of the archdioscese are left with no reliable and unslanted reporting source from which they can follow this story. The result is a jungle telegraph of sorts and along the line, as the story makes the rounds from parish to parish, the archbishop has developed as the clear loser. Let us be very clear about this. The archbishop’s authority is being seriously erroded by his own actions at a time when the church can least afford the injury. I believe that is the very reason that media outlets like the Post Dispatch have been so gleeful in their coverage of this. There is a hard core knot of supporters of the archbishop who are very sincere in their admiration of the man, which is their right, but the best thing that any of us can hope for now is that this story will just go away. If both sides,both sides, will let it go and stop releasing new press statements claiming either conspiracy or satan’s involvment the sane people of the archdioscese can begin damage control. If not it will fester like an open wound and spread like an infection. In event that nobody has noticed, just across the river in the Bellville Dioscese a majority,a majority no less, of the dioscese priests held a meeting and publicly expressed a lack of confidence in their bishop. While their problems are not directly related to the situation here in St. Louis the whole St. Stanislaus affair has created an atmosphere where there is always the smell of smoke on the breeze and that bodes ill for all of us. St. Stanislaus parish, and yes, the great majority of its members, is no longer a part of the St. Louis Archdioscese. Whether they left of their own accord or were diven out let us let them go in peace with no further recriminations.