Pope’s decree gives archbishop power to overhaul order

— The pope has granted broad powers to the archbishop he selected to overhaul the Legionaries of Christ after revelations that the order’s founder led a double life.

http://www.arkansas…">Vatican guide to lay readers

A decree approved by Pope Benedict XVI and published Saturday on the Legionaries’ website said Archbishop Velasio De Paolis can override the Legionaries’ own constitutions as he goes about overhauling the order and purging it of its institutional abuses.

The conservative order once praised by the Vatican for its orthodoxy and ability to recruit priests fell into disarray starting last year as it admitted that its founder, the Rev. Marciel Maciel, sexually abused seminarians and fathered at least three children.

In a May 1 statement, the Vatican said Maciel had created a system of power builton obedience and deceit that allowed his criminal and immoral misdeeds to go unchecked for decades. It said the Legionaries needed to be profoundly purified to survive, with the order’s essential spirit redefined, its founding constitutions revised and the systemic abuse of authority corrected.

In the decree dated July 9, the Vatican said De Paolis would have broad powers ofgovernance to carry out those tasks: He will oversee the commission revising the constitutions. He will have authority to decide who becomes a priest in the order and where current priests are based. He will approve decisions about the order’s schools and seminaries, all extraordinary administrative matters, and transfers of the order’s assets.

The order’s current leadership, accused by critics of having covered up for Maciel’s misdeeds, remains in place “unless it becomes necessary to provide otherwise,” the decree said.

Questions about the fate of the current leadership and control of the Legionaries’ finances have swirled since the Vatican announced it was taking over the order. News reports have estimated the Legionaries of Christ has assets totaling $33 billion in a holding companyheaded by the order’s current No. 2.

Appeals against De Paolis’ actions go to the pope, the decree stated.

Maciel founded the Legionaries in his native Mexico in 1941. The Legionaries now claim a membership of more than 800 priests and 2,500 seminarians in 22 countries, along with 70,000 members in its lay movement, Regnum Christi.

Front Section, Pages 18 on 07/25/2010

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