LifeSiteNewsNote: Read Fr. Pavone’s complete statement regarding the decision to suspend him from public ministry here.
Your Eminences and Your Excellencies,
I have decided to suspend Father Frank A. Pavone from public ministry outside of the Diocese of Amarillo to take effect on September 13, 2011. For an indefinite period, I am withdrawing my permission to him to minister outside our diocese and am calling him back to spend time in prayer and reflection. My decision is the result of deep concerns regarding his stewardship of the finances of the Priest For Life (PFL) organization. The PFL has become a business that is quite lucrative which provides Father Pavone with financial independence from all legitimate ecclesiastical oversight. There have been persistent question and concerns by clergy and laity regarding the transactions of millions of dollars of donations to the PFL from whom the donors have a rightful expectation that the monies are being used prudently. These financial questions and concerns have persisted with no clear and adequate answers since the time when Father Pavone was under two previous bishop ordinaries. Since he has consistently refused to subject the PFL to a transparent and complete auditing of all expenditures, I have reasons to be alarmed at the potential financial scandal that might arise if it were the result of my failure to correct Father Pavone’s incorrigible defiance to my legitimate authority as his Bishop.
Additionally, the PFL financial resources have afforded Father Pavone with a formidable civil and canonical counsel which he utilized to rebuff my every attempt at calling for financial transparency. Thus, my decision to intervene and to call him to accountability is meant to express the dire need to safeguard his priestly ministry to which I am obligated as his father and to help the Church avoid any scandal due to the national scope of the PFL’s work. At a certain point, for me to hold all this knowledge about the PFL and to turn a blind eye would increase my culpability and quote possibly amount to material cooperation.
In his relationship to his bishop ordinaries, Father Pavone has gradually lost his need to show appropriate obedience to his Bishop. It seems that his fame has caused him to see priestly obedience as an inconvenience to his unique status and an obstacle to the possible international scope of his ministry. I would venture to say that the supreme importance that he has attributed to his PFL ministry and the reductionist attitude toward the diocesan priesthood has inflated his ego with a sense of self-importance and self-determination. This attitude has strained his relationship with me and has give me the impression that I cannot invoke obedience with him because he is famous. It is my desire to help him readjust his priestly bearing through spiritual and theological renewal in order to recapture that essential priestly hallmark of respect and obedience. It is also my desire to strengthen Father Pavone’s sense of communio sacramentalis with me so that he may be fortified with a healthy zeal to live in an authentic way his sacramental gift and mystery as a priest of Jesus Christ.
If you judged it to be prudent, I would like to ask that you would inform the Christian faithful under your care to consider withholding donations to the PFL until the issues and concerns are settled.
Taking this opportunity to express my esteem and to ask for your prayers, I am,
Sincerely yours in Christ,
Most Rev. Patrick J. Zurek, STL, DD
Bishop of Amarillo
Fr. Frank Pavone's response:
For the past several years, my Ordinary, the Most Reverend Patrick Zurek, Bishop of Amarillo, has given me permission to do the full-time pro-life work that I have done since 1993. In 2005, I made a public promise in a Church ceremony in Amarillo, presided over by a Vatican Cardinal, that this full-time pro-life work would be a lifetime commitment. That's a commitment I promise to fulfill without wavering.Whoa. I get the sense that this is entirely different than the BlackSheepDog incident a few months back.
This past week, however, I received a letter from the Bishop insisting that I report to the Diocese this Tuesday, September 13 and, for the time being, remain only there.
I am very perplexed by this demand. Despite that, because I am a priest of the diocese of Amarillo, I will be obedient and report there on the appointed date, putting the other commitments that are on my calendar on hold until I get more clarity as to what the bishop wants and for how long. Meanwhile, I continue to retain all my priestly faculties and continue to be a priest in "good standing" in the Church. The bishop does not dispute this fact. Rather, he has said that he thinks I am giving too much priority to my pro-life work, and that this makes me disobedient to him. He also has claimed that I haven't given him enough financial information.
Now, although Bishop Zurek is my Ordinary, he is not the bishop of Priests for Life. Each of our staff priests has his own Ordinary, and the organization has an entire Board of Bishops. We keep them all informed of our activities, and of our financial audits.
I want to say very clearly that Priests for Life is above reproach in its financial management and the stewardship of the monies it receives from dedicated pro-lifers, raised primarily through direct mail at the grassroots level. To this end, Priests for Life has consistently provided every financial document requested by Bishop Zurek, including annual financial audits, quarterly reports, management documents—even entire check registers! Priests for Life has been completely transparent with Bishop Zurek and any other bishops who have requested information regarding our management and finances. Indeed, we have 21 bishops and cardinals who sit on our Advisory Board, and they are kept fully informed about our finances.
Therefore, in the interest of preserving my good reputation as well as protecting the valuable work done by the Priests for Life organization, I have begun a process of appeal to the Vatican. This process aims to correct any mistaken decisions of the bishop in my regard and to protect my commitment to full-time pro-life activity for my whole life. We are very confident that the Vatican will resolve this matter in a just and equitable fashion. Because of this confidence, we are not currently making any changes in any positions at Priests for Life, or in any of our projects and plans.
I also want to point out that, according to the canon law of the Catholic Church, because I have begun this process of appeal to Rome, the Bishop's order that I return to Amarillo has been effectively suspended. Nevertheless, because of my great respect for this Bishop and my commitment to be fully obedient at all times, I am reporting to Amarillo this Tuesday, in hopes that I can sort this problem out with the Bishop in a mutually agreeable and amicable way.
I would like to note that, unlike other organizations, which have sometimes been critical of the Church hierarchy or other institutions within the Church, Priests for Life has always remained 100% supportive of the Bishops, never criticizing any Church official, and always acting as a megaphone for the Bishops' pro-life statements. Moreover, we serve dioceses and their priests and laity without asking for any speakers' fees, and distribute millions of pieces of pro-life literature to dioceses completely free of charge. We do not seek parish collections, and we work to reinforce in each diocese the local pastoral plan which the bishop wants to implement for pro-life activities.
We are committed to going forward with that same spirit, regardless of the recent action taken by Bishop Zurek.
In the interest of full transparency, I would like to make it known that I do not receive any salary or financial remuneration from either the Diocese of Amarillo or from Priests for Life. Priests for Life, as a Private Association of the Christian Faithful, does provide for my residence and the expenses associated with the ministry, but these expenses are very small. Though, as a diocesan priest, I have never taken a vow of poverty, I have basically chosen to live in that fashion in solidarity with the pre-born children we are trying to protect—who are the poorest of the poor.
I want to be clear that I do not harbor any ill will towards the Bishop of Amarillo, nor do I foster suspicions about his motives. I am merely confused by his actions. It is impossible for me to believe that there is no place in the Church for priests to exercise full-time ministry in the service of the unborn. We do it for the sick, the poor, the hungry, and the imprisoned. But where in the Church is the place where a priest can exercise the same kind of full-time ministry for the children in the womb? That is the question that is at the heart of my own calling.
I am confident that we will be able to resolve this difficulty soon, without any harm to either my own reputation and without any slowdown of the valuable pro-life work we do at Priests for Life
5 comments:
While I always have reservations about priests who become ‘famous’ and have no knowledge of Fr. Pavone other than seeing his name crop up in the media frequently, it’s hard to reconcile the two statements.
The bishop’s description of Father Pavone’s ‘incorrigible defiance’ and refusal of an outside audit doesn’t square with Father’s assertion of transparency and that all requested financial documents have been provided to Bishop Zurek.
Obviously the bishop has some concerns as he is asking other bishops to advise people to withhold donations to PFL. Additionally, if Fr. Pavone has repeatedly refused an outside audit, there may be cause for the bishop’s concern. So why not have an audit and clear the air - one way or another?
As usual with these things, there’s probably more to this than is apparent right now.
It seems Fr. Pavone and Priests for Life have not only already had an independent audit, but have also made it available to all on their website at http://www.priestsforlife.org/audit.htm
Secondly, dispite it no longer being necessary for Fr. Pavone to go into Amarillo in light of his appeal to the Vatican, he has gone anyway. Is this the kind of "disobedience" the bishop mentioned? I wonder what it takes for it to be considered a good level of obedience.
If Fr. Pavone were in fact so out of line to warrant such a reaction from the bishop, where has Bishop Zurek gone just as Fr. Pavone is arriving to Amarillo as was asked of him? If it's the bishop's goal to "help him (Fr. Pavone) readjust his priestly bearing through spiritual and theological renewal in order to recapture that essential priestly hallmark of respect and obedience. It is also my desire to strengthen Father Pavone’s sense of communio sacramentalis with me so that he may be fortified with a healthy zeal to live in an authentic way his sacramental gift and mystery as a priest of Jesus Christ.", isn't the bishops presence a necessity?
Perhaps when Bishop Zurek reappears, he can clarify what constitutes obedience, not just to Fr. Pavone but to the rest of the Catholics as well. Perhaps he can also explain why he essentially abandoned his priest who was in need of his guidance as he would claim.
Can anyone tell me who this Bishop Zurek person is?
I just read the letter he sent to his brother bishops and then released to the abortion-friendly news media. Wow! Has anyone read the bishop’s letter? He levels some pretty ludicrous charges. He even accuses Pavone of failing to provide him with a “transparent and complete” audit of Priests for Life.
I was shocked when I read it. So I went to the Priests for Life website to see if they had a response.
Boy, did they! Has anyone seen all the financial information Pavone has sent to Zurek? It’s a boatload of documents, records, audits, transactions. It’s all there for the world to read. A bank manager doesn’t ask for half as much from someone applying for a million dollar loan!
In fact, it doesn’t seem like Bishop Zurek is concerned about financial oversight at all—it sounds like all he’s interested in is financial persecution! Why does this Bishop seem so hell-bent on trying to destroy Priests for Life?
Is he simply jealous of Fr. Frank? His letter reads like the jealous and petty ravings of a high school girl who just got beat out for prom queen! He’s upset because Fr. Frank is so “famous.” Give me a break!
All I know is this that, based on everything I’ve read, what Bishop Zurek did to Fr. Frank Pavone is nothing less than a hatchet job. In one short letter, this petty little man has done more to damage the pro-life movement and endanger innocent babies than anyone from Planned Parenthood or NARAL ever could.
What a sad day for the pro-life movement in America. It’s an even sadder day for the bishops here in the U.S. First it was under their watch that abortion became the law of the land. Then they sit around for 40 years and do next to nothing while millions of babies are slaughtered. And now one of their own Bishops is trying to single-handedly destroy a true pro-life hero—Fr. Frank—the person in the Church who is doing the most to win the battle for Life.
Way to go, Bishop Zurek. Happy now?
It would seem, especially in light of past experience, that charity, patience, and trust in the Church's judicial system would be in order. Of course, that charity is extended in the form of a tidal wave of prayer on behalf of Bishop Zurek, Fr. Pavone, and everyone else involved. Sadly, given the salvos and justification of positions presented, someone is going to end up with egg on their face. Let's hope this can be worked out in an equitable and satisfactory manner. However, if we jump to conclusions, as some will no doubt do on both sides, it will only be the worse for all of us.
Agreed Father.
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