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Shamed Ballycastle-born Cardinal ‘blocked sex abuse audit’; Meet the Woman Who Will Lead US Evangelical Lutherans;  World churches leader back interfaith Egypt peace plea

Shamed Ballycastle-born Cardinal ‘blocked sex abuse audit’

News Letter – Disgraced Cardinal Keith O’Brien blocked an independent inquiry into cases of historic sexual abuse a year before resigning over his own inappropriate sexual conduct, the Catholic Church has said.

The Bishops’ Conference of Scotland commissioned a report into allegations of abuse in 2011 but it was halted the following year when Cardinal O’Brien, then president of the conference, withdrew his support.

The cardinal stepped down as Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh in February after three priests and a former priest made allegations of inappropriate behaviour against him.

He issued an apology, saying ‘’there have been times that my sexual conduct has fallen below the standards expected of me’’.

His opposition to an inquiry into Church-related abuse allegations was revealed by the retired archbishop of Glasgow, Mario Conti, in a letter to the Catholic newspaper The Tablet.

Mr Conti wrote: “It was the intention of all but one member of the Bishops’ Conference to commission an independent examination of the historical cases we had on file in all of our respective dioceses and publish the results, but this was delayed by the objection of the then president of the conference; without full participation of all the dioceses the exercise would have been faulty.”

A Church spokesman said: “This refers to a decision taken in 2011 by the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland to commission an independent academic analysis of statistics relating to abuse and allegations of abuse over a 60-year period from 1952 to 2012.

“This project, with the cooperation of each of the eight dioceses in Scotland, started and ran until 2012, at which time, the then president of the conference, Cardinal Keith O’Brien, withdrew from the project. Without the participation of all the dioceses a ‘national audit’ was not possible so the analysis was stopped.”

Following his resignation Cardinal O’Brien, 75, stated that he would play no further part in the public life of the Catholic Church in Scotland and has since left the country for a period of ‘’spiritual renewal and reflection’’.

Monsignor Leo Cushley, who formerly worked on the Vatican’s diplomatic team, was last month appointed his successor.

At a meeting in June, the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland agreed to publish audits relating to the Church’s eight dioceses since 2006.

The reports, to be published in the autumn, “will detail any complaints made about clergy, church workers, volunteers or anyone else and how these complaints were dealt with”, the Church said.

The spokesman added: “Prior to 2006 there was no National Audit and so at present, renewed consideration is being given as to how the statistics which exist for the earlier years can be drawn together and published.
More at –
http://www.newsletter.co.uk/shamed-ballycastle-born-cardinal-blocked-sex-abuse-audit-1-5417911

Meet the Woman Who Will Lead US Evangelical Lutherans

Time – Change has come to one of America’s largest Christian denominations. Last week the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) elected its first female presiding bishop, the church’s top office.

Bishop Elizabeth Eaton won in a surprise 600-287 landslide at the denomination’s triennial Churchwide Assembly in Pittsburgh. A 4 million-member denomination with nearly 10,000 congregations, the ELCA is twice as large as the Episcopal Church, which elected its first female presiding bishop seven years ago. Like most mainline denominations, however, the ELCA faces a membership decline — accelerated by its 2009 decision to allow openly gay pastors. Since then, half a million members have left the denomination.

Eaton, 58, is a Cleveland native and graduate of Harvard Divinity School and the College of Wooster. Her husband, the Rev. Conrad Selnick, is an Episcopal priest. Eaton will be installed on Oct. 5, possibly at Rockefeller Chapel in Chicago’s Hyde Park, and her first day in office will be Nov. 1. TIME caught up with Eaton shortly after her election. “I’m kind of stunned,” she says of her win. She opens up about gay clergy, spiritual direction and, in true Lutheran fashion, Jell-O.

Read more — Interview at: http://swampland.time.com/2013/08/18/meet-the-woman-who-will-lead-evangelical-lutherans-religious-but-not-spiritual/#ixzz2csDVBx51

World churches leader back interfaith Egypt peace plea

World Council of Churches’ General Secretary, the Rev Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, has expressed support for the interfaith calls to action for peace and security in Egypt. He encouraged religious leaders to work together to call for protection and to promote the sanctity of human lives and religious places.

Dr Tveit appreciated a recent statement issued byBayt al-‘a’ila al-misriyya (The Egyptian Family Home) which appealed for the “security measures to protect the churches, the mosques, the national and the religious institutions as well as the sacred places.”

The Egyptian Family Home, an initiative of the Christian and Muslim leaders in Egypt, created in 2011, collaborates with WCC member churches in Egypt, including the Coptic Orthodox Church.