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BOOK Review

Cardinal Mahony: A Novel
by Robert Blair Kaiser
Reviewed by Susan V. Vogt

As a writer, I love books. As a type A personality, I rarely read novels. (I tend to want my reading to be productive and not just for pleasure so I mostly read for information and self-improvement.) As a VOTF member, I want to reform the church not just rail against it. As a National Representative Council (NRC) member I was given the book Cardinal Mahony: A Novel. It was long. I didn’t expect to really like it, or even read it. From the title I guessed it would be just another diatribe against the hierarchy which, despite any truth in it, would lead more to anger than action.

I was wrong.

On the flight back from the VOTF convention in Providence, my official VOTF work being completed, I was caught with nothing to read. I thought I would give it a try. From the first page I was hooked and couldn’t put Cardinal Mahony down.

Cardinal Mahony taught me some important lessons – not about clergy sexual abuse, episcopal cover-ups, or church politics. I was already well versed in those areas. What it taught me was the value of a story, the value of seeing the good in people, and calling them to live up to their best selves rather than complaining about their faults. Jesus was on to something when he talked in parables even though it often confused and irritated his disciples. He was on to something when he talked with the woman at the well about her future more than her past. It’s a lesson for everyone – especially people who like to talk and write in straight lines like I do. Sometimes fiction can tell more truth and crooked lines can be more effective.

Cardinal Mahony is a “Romero story.” It’s the story of how a person can change and that gives me hope for the church. Instead of railing against all that is bad about a hierarchy that covered up numerous cases of clergy sexual abuse, it tells the story of what would happen if one of those hierarchs changed and did everything for which people in VOTF have been calling. What if he joined us and we were all trying to renew the church together?

For the fact lovers among us, don’t worry, Robert Blair Kaiser includes plenty of background information about what the experts say contributes to sexual abuse of children and plenty of documentation a la quotes from canon lawyer, Tom Doyle, OP. I skimmed through those sections, however, as I was already familiar with that information, as are most active VOTF members. For those not steeped in VOTF and the history of the sexual abuse crisis, however, it’s an educational experience. It was the story that pulled me to keep reading, not the underlying education woven through the novel.

While reading Cardinal Mahony, I couldn’t help wonder what the real Cardinal Mahony might think if he read it. I’d like to think that instead of getting defensive, it would spark his imagination of how an ideal church, a church led by courageous men and women with a talent for inspiring, not just making rules, would look. Cardinal Mahony puts Cardinal Mahony in a very good light. It calls him and us to be our best selves in a church worthy of her founder.

While not wanting to give away the plot, a key action of Cardinal Mahony is that he calls for a national church synod including both bishops and lay men and women. It sounds uncannily like the synod that VOTF leaders are currently exploring in partnership with other national church organizations. Sometimes fiction drives reality.

Susan Vogt is a freelance speaker and writer on marriage, parenting, and spirituality (www.SusanVogt.net). She is a VOTF member and Region 5 Representative living in Covington, Kentucky.

AND …

A note from VOTF member Mary Ann Norpel about Australian Bishop Geoffrey Robinson: About six weeks ago Charlie McMahon, one of our members, was in touch with Bishop Robinson who agreed to come to Philadelphia to speak to us. Later in Fort Benning I had occasion to chat with Tom Gumbleton and he indicated he would like to be in touch with the Bishop in the hope of bringing him to Detroit. I have also been in touch with Terry Dosh [of BREAD RISING (Minneapolis)] to let him know what is going on. Now I understand Bishop Robinson is doing a US tour.” SO! Watch the Vineyard pages and Google for Bishop Robinson’s itinerary.
  • From another VOTF correspondent, “VOTF may also be interested to know that Bishop Robinson has some CD’s of his talks around the country. They are available from AQUINAS ACADEMY 141 Harrington St. Sydney 2000 or contact sandra@aquinas-academy.com.
  • Bishop Robinson’s courageous book, Confronting Power and Sex in the Catholic Church, will be published in the U.S. by Liturgical Press this Spring; it was noted in the December 20, 2007, Vineyard and will be reviewed in the Vineyard following its publication.

Also …

CHOICE Magazine, the magazine of the American Library Association, has chosen Perversion of Power by Mary Gail Frawley-O’Dea as one of its outstanding books of 2007. Reviews also appeared in the Fall 2007 Newsletter of the Division of Trauma Psychology (56) of the American Psychological Association, and in Boston Magazine, The Boston Globe Sunday Magazine, Publisher’s Weekly, American Psychological Association Review of Books, and the “Newsletter of the National Federation of Priests’ Councils.” Click here to read more.

In the Vineyard
December 20, 2007

Volume 6, Issue 24
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