M
mcteague
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Has the Church ever repudiated Father Charles Edward Coughlin? Is there an official or unofficial view of him? Do any Catholics defend him? Just curious.
Thank you
Thank you
ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005516On May 1, 1942, Archbishop Edward Mooney, the new leader of the Catholic Church in Detroit, instructed Coughlin to cease all non-pastoral activities on pain of being defrocked.
A pretty sanitized view, Chad.The book that Jerusha linked to from Amazon called “Radio Priest” is an excellent scholarly treatment of Fr. Coughlin, but uses him more as a backdrop to chronicle the rise of far right movements in the U.S. throughout the 1930s and 1940s. So it’s not strictly about him, but it does spend a lot of time on him.
Fr. Coughlin is responsible for building the Shrine to the Little Flower in Detroit, MI, the first church in North America named after St. Therese of Lisieux. He had a wildly successful radio program that was syndicated and drew in hundreds of thousands of listeners weekly. His economic talks were widely listened to and things were wrote were distributed far and wide. I think though by the time he was threatened with excommunication his star was fading rather fast. By the time America entered the war any talk that even hinted at Fascist or Nazi leanings was frowned upon, plus his donations and syndication deals were drying up or had disappeared by then. He remained as custodian of the Shrine until the mid-1960s and died in 1979, I believe.
He was at one time a very popular Catholic speaker and wisely used radio and mass media to get his message out. In some ways he was really ahead of his time. As the warnings started to come from his bishop and superiors and as he grew more controversial it became more difficult to keep him on the air. He became too polarizing. He eventually lost his influence, but remained a priest his entire life.
ChadS
I wasn’t trying to defend him, you are right he had an intense dislike of Jews throughout his entire life and his speeches included codewords to make sure people knew he was speaking of Jews without actually mentioning them.A pretty sanitized view, Chad.
Fr. Coughlin was overtly anti-Semitic at a time when the Holocaust was in full swing and Jews, (and others: Gypsies, homosexuals, “defectives” , Poles, Catholics, and anyone else disagreeing with the Nazi regime) were being destroyed by the millions. He did the Catholic Church in the US a great deal of harm.
Coughlin’s bishop was very wise to threaten to “de-frock” him.
There appears to be a good piece on Coughlin on wikipedia, to which I refer anyone interested. I quote the following excerpts:None of this really addresses whether the Church officially rebuked and repudiated his statements. His threatened defrocking might have been because of a perceived excessive involvement in politics. I believe Bishop Romero and the liberation theology movement may have also been criticized for the same reason. But that is not the same as making an official statement criticizing Couglin’s antisemitism. Which I would hope was also done.
Which of his views are you interested in seeing defended?Do any Catholics defend him? Just curious.
Thank you
I am not interested in seeing any defended. However, I have noticed an unfortunate tendency to defend certain aspects of church Church history here through some pretty elaborate semantic juggling acts.Which of his views are you interested in seeing defended?