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FickleFreckled
Guest
The Dallas Diocese issued a news warning today regarding two men claiming to be a bishop and a priest, who are preying on the Hispanic community, particularly illegals, and selling sacraments. They’re telling people that they have to have money for hotels while they’re here. The implications are frightening and should be shocking, but I’m not shocked and here’s why: I’ve worked in a healthcare-related field since 1995 and have had the opportunity to work with, and run into, many chaplains. In that time, I’ve worked with a former RC priest who wore a roman collar, badmouthed the Church often, and blessed marriages without benefit of annulment of first marriages. I’ve worked with a chaplain who claimed to be an Orthodox bishop ordained by the Orthodox Church in America, and who seemed to have the proper ordination documentation, although it was not a clear copy. On investigation, the Orthodox Church in America had never heard of him, and the OCA address shown on his ordination papers was for an unrelated private residence, not the OCA seminary. I’ve seen several resumes of Protestant ministers applying for chaplaincy positions who specifically state in their resumes that they are qualified to provide the sacraments for Catholics. I’ve heard about, but not seen, men who wear clerical black and collars who claim to be priests, who bring the sacraments to nursing home patients and who can’t be traced to any area churches. About a year ago, a hospice opened in my area that was named after a treasured and popular Catholic devotion. I assumed it was Catholic and called them. I was put through to the head of chaplaincy services, a woman who called herself Mother so-and-so. I thought she was a nun. Nope. She’s a priest who calls herself Catholic. It was so apparent by the name they’d given the company that they intended to make a strong appeal to Catholics. Neither adjoining diocese knew the hospice existed yet, although one was very familiar with her.
In this huge, primarily Protestant area, there’s little understanding about the significance or validity of sacraments. It’s frightening to me to think that if I am dying, the person who comes to my bedside might be a fraud.
In this huge, primarily Protestant area, there’s little understanding about the significance or validity of sacraments. It’s frightening to me to think that if I am dying, the person who comes to my bedside might be a fraud.