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American cardinal of the Catholic Church (born 1948) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raymond Leo Burke (born June 30, 1948) is an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He is a bishop and a cardinal, and was a patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta from 2014 to 2023. He led the Archdiocese of St. Louis from 2004 to 2008 and the Diocese of La Crosse from 1995 to 2004. From 2008 to 2014, he was the prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura.
Raymond Leo Burke | |||||||||||||||||
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Patron Emeritus of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta | |||||||||||||||||
Church | Catholic | ||||||||||||||||
Appointed | November 8, 2014 | ||||||||||||||||
Retired | June 19, 2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Predecessor | Paolo Sardi | ||||||||||||||||
Successor | Gianfranco Ghirlanda | ||||||||||||||||
Other post(s) | Cardinal Priest of Sant'Agata de' Goti (2021–present) | ||||||||||||||||
Previous post(s) |
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Orders | |||||||||||||||||
Ordination | June 29, 1975 by Pope Paul VI | ||||||||||||||||
Consecration | January 6, 1995 by Pope John Paul II | ||||||||||||||||
Created cardinal | November 20, 2010 by Pope Benedict XVI | ||||||||||||||||
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Personal details | |||||||||||||||||
Born | Raymond Leo Burke June 30, 1948 | ||||||||||||||||
Residence | Rome, Italy | ||||||||||||||||
Education | |||||||||||||||||
Motto | Secundum cor tuum (Latin for 'According to Your heart') | ||||||||||||||||
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Ordination history | |||||||||||||||||
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Styles of Raymond Leo Burke | |
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Reference style | His Eminence |
Spoken style | Your Eminence |
Informal style | Cardinal |
A canon lawyer,[1] Burke is perceived as a voice of traditionalism[2][3] among prelates of the Catholic Church. He established a reputation as a conservative leader while serving in La Crosse and St. Louis. Burke is a major proponent of the Tridentine Mass, having frequently offered it and conferred ordinations on traditionalist priests. He has criticized what he sees as deficiencies in the post-1969 Mass of Paul VI.[4] He is frequently seen as a de facto leader of the Church's conservative wing.[5][6]
Burke has publicly clashed with Pope Francis, vigorously opposing attempts by other bishops to relax church attitudes towards gay people and those Catholics who have divorced and remarried outside the church. Burke has opined that Catholic politicians who support legalized abortion, including American presidential candidate John Kerry and United States President Joe Biden, should not receive the Eucharist.[7][8] While Burke has denied allegations of disloyalty to Pope Francis, a number of Burke's statements have been interpreted as criticisms, once mentioning the possible need to "formally correct" the pope in relation to Amoris laetitia. This has led to a backlash from some Catholics towards Burke.[9][10][11][12]
In September 2015, the Vatican announced that Burke had been reappointed to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, from which he had been removed in December 2013, but not to his more influential positions on the Congregation for Bishops and the Apostolic Signatura. In 2016, he was not reappointed as a member of the Congregation for Divine Worship.[13] In February 2017, Burke was again sidelined when Pope Francis appointed Archbishop Giovanni Angelo Becciu as his special delegate to the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, with exclusive responsibility for the duties which would normally be exercised by Burke as its patron.[14] Albrecht von Boeselager, the order's grand chancellor, announced that this meant Burke was "de facto suspended" from the patronage.[15] Pope Francis reappointed him as a rank-and-file member of the Apostolic Signatura in September 2017. In November 2023, Pope Francis reportedly evicted Burke from his subsidized Vatican apartment and removed his salary as a retired cardinal.[16]
Raymond Burke was born on June 30, 1948, in Richland Center, Wisconsin,[17] the youngest of the six children of Thomas F. and Marie B. Burke. He is of Irish heritage, with ancestors from counties Cork and Tipperary.[18] Burke attended St. Mary's Parish School in Richland Center from 1954 to 1959.[19][20]
The Burke family later moved to Stratford, Wisconsin. From 1962 to 1968, he attended Holy Cross Seminary in La Crosse, Wisconsin. From 1968 to 1971, he studied at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., as a Basselin scholar,[21] receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1970 and a Master of Arts degree in 1971, both in philosophy. He completed studies for the priesthood at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome between 1971 and 1975, receiving a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree and a Master of Arts degree.[22]
During his studies, Burke resided at the Pontifical North American College with 10 future bishops and two future cardinals – Blase J. Cupich and James Harvey.[23] Pope Paul VI ordained Burke to the priesthood for the Diocese of La Crosse on June 29, 1975, in St. Peter's Basilica.[22]
After his 1975 ordination, the diocese assigned Burke as assistant rector of the Cathedral of St. Joseph the Workman in La Crosse, Wisconsin. He also taught religion at Aquinas High School in La Crosse.[24][25][26]
In 1980, Burke returned to Rome to study canon law at the Gregorian University. He received a licentiate in canon law in 1982 and a doctorate in canon law in 1984. He then returned to La Crosse, where Bishop John Joseph Paul appointed him as moderator of the curia and vice chancellor of the La Crosse diocese. In 1989, Pope John Paul II named Burke as the first American defender of the bond of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, the highest ecclesiastical court in the Catholic Church.[22]
On December 10, 1994, John Paul II named Burke as bishop of La Crosse and consecrated him on January 6, 1995, at St. Peter's Basilica. Burke took possession of the see of La Crosse on February 22, 1995.[27]
In 2000, Burke convened the fifth diocesan synod for the diocese, which was followed by the publication of Synod V, acts: celebrated June 11–14, 2000 in 2003.[28] In 2002, he was influential in founding the Canons Regular of the New Jerusalem. This was an order of Augustinian canons who were dedicated to the Tridentine Mass, the traditional form of the liturgy in the Latin Church.[29]
Burke's tenure in La Crosse generated controversy. One issue was the construction of the $25 million Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, with critics saying that the money used should have gone to the poor, Burke defended the shrine as a fruitful way to raise spiritual devotion. A second issue was the diocese's withdrawal from the annual Crop Walk sponsored by the Church World Service. Burke objected to the event because some of the money raised was being used to purchase condoms in developing countries. [30]
Burke also welcomed numerous traditional orders to his diocese, including the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest (ICKSP), whose priests offer exclusively the Tridentine Mass. Two priests left the diocese as a result of his policies.[31][30] Burke closed a number of schools while also raising teachers' salaries. His style was noted by some of his aides to be more formal than that of his predecessor, Bishop Paul. Burke's aides described him as being warm and approachable in private. During his tenure, the diocese continued to participate in charitable efforts while also increasing its moral and political activism.[30]
On December 2, 2003 John Paul II named Burke as archbishop of St. Louis, succeeding Cardinal Justin Rigali.[30][32][33] Burke was installed on January 26, 2004, and was presented with the pallium on June 29, 2004, by John Paul II.
In St. Louis, Burke emphasized the promotion of vocations to the priesthood. He also published a column in the archdiocesan weekly newspaper, the Saint Louis Review. Burke established an oratory for Catholics desiring to worship according to the traditional form. As he had done in La Crosse, he invited the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest (ICKSP) into the archdiocese and ordained priests for ICKSP, both in the U.S. and abroad. His ordination of two ICKSP priests in 2007, in a solemn pontifical high mass, marked the first use in 40 years of the Tridentine rite of ordination in the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis.[34] In 2006, Missouri voters approved an amendment to the state constitution permitting embryonic stem cell research. In reaction, Burke stated that:
"our tiniest brothers and sisters ... will be made legally the subjects, the slaves, of those who wish to manipulate and destroy their lives for the sake of supposed scientific and technological progress."[35]
During his tenure, Burke escalated a long-running dispute over the attempted closing of St. Stanislaus Kostka Church and the ownership of its significant assets. After Reverend Marek Bozek led a Christmas Eve Mass in 2005 despite the archdiocese's previous attempted closure of the parish, Burke "declare[d] that the church was in 'schism'", a designation that led to the excommunication of Bozek and the church's lay board.[36] In 2012, a state court ruled against the diocese and sided with the congregation, now an independent Catholic church, and awarded it full ownership of the significant parish assets.[36]
In July 2006, Pope Benedict XVI appointed Burke as a member of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura,.[37] On May 6, 2008, Benedict XVI named Burke as a member of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, which interprets canon law, and as a member of the Congregation for the Clergy.[38]
On June 27, 2008, Benedict XVI appointed Burke as prefect of the Supreme Tribunal.[39] Over the next several years, Benedict XVI named Burke to several dicasteries of the Roman Curia:
On March 11, 2010, in the wake of the sexual abuse scandal in Europe, Burke said that the Vatican needed to prepare a document that outlined a set of explicit guidelines rooted in canon law. This document would guide bishops and their local tribunals in reporting sexual abuse cases to the Vatican so as to speed up the process of justice. Burke also recommended changes to the high levels of secrecy in the existing\ process.[45]
On November 20, 2010, Benedict XVI named Burke as cardinal-deacon of Sant'Agata dei Goti, the fifth archbishop of St. Louis to become a member of the College of Cardinals. On February 5, 2011, the memorial of Saint Agatha, Burke took canonical possession of his titular church in Rome.[46]
In October 2012, Burke was appointed as president of the Commission for Controversies at the 13th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops.[47]After Benedict XVI retired from office, Burke served as a cardinal electors in the 2013 papal conclave that elected Pope Francis.[48]
On December 16, 2013, Francis made extensive changes to the Congregation for Bishops and declined to reappoint Burke to its membership. Some observers speculated that Francis took this action because Burke took "a more aggressive line than the pope on the Western culture wars".[49] According to the former apostolic nuncio to the United States Carlo Maria Viganò, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick influenced Francis to remove Burke.[50]After ten years as cardinal deacon, Burke exercised his option to assume the rank of cardinal priest, which Pope Francis confirmed on May 3, 2021.[51]
On November 4, 2014, at the 2014 Synod on the Family, Burke stated that "There is a strong sense that the church is like a ship without a rudder." However, he balanced his critique by stating that he did not want it to be interpreted as a criticism of Francis.[52] On November 8th, four days later, Francis removed Burke as prefect of the Apostolic Signatura and named him as patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.[53][54][55] This was a largely ceremonial post that the pope usually bestowed on a retired cardinal or as a secondary job to an active one.[56]
Many thought that Francis dismissed Burke as prefect due to the "ship without a rudder" comment at the Synod.[57] Francis denied it, saying that he wanted a "smart American" to serve as patron of the Order of Malta. Francis also said that he had planned to move Burke long before the Synod took place, as part of a larger reorganization of the Vatican bureaucracy. However, Francis wanted Burke to participate in the synod as the head of a Vatican department.[58]
On September 26, 2015, Francis named Burke a member of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.[59][60]
In early 2017, press reports revealed that Burke and Grand Master Matthew Festing of the Order of Malta had tried to oust the German lawyer Albrecht Freiherr von Boeselager from his position as chancellor of the Order. This was because von Boeslager had authorized the Order to purchase condoms for people in Myanmar, in contradiction to official Catholic teaching on artificial contraception.[61][62] On February 2, 2017, Francis sidelined Burke as the patron of the Order. The pope named Archbishop Giovanni Angelo Becciu as his special delegate to the Order, with exclusive responsibility for the duties normally exercised by the patron.[14] On February 21, von Boeselager confirmed that Burke was "de facto suspended" as patron.[15]
In November 2016, Francis removed Burke from the Congregation for Divine Worship. This appeared be in response to the dubia (Latin for doubts) that Burke and three other cardinals submitted in response to the 2016 papal exhortation, Amoris laetitia. The cardinals believed that Amoris laetitia. contradicted Catholic moral teaching in the treatment of divorced persons. Burke had indicated that if Francis did not respond to the dubia, the cardinals would probably issue a “formal correction” of Francis.[13]
In February 2017, Burke presided over a five-judge panel at the church trial of Archbishop Anthony Sablan Apuron of the Diocese of Agaña in Guam on charges of sexual abuse of minors.[63] In March 2018, the court found Apuron guilty and ordered that he be removed from office.[64] In September 2017, Francis reappointed Burke as a rank and file member of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, but he did not regain his earlier position as prefect.[65][66]
On June 19, 2023, Francis named Cardinal Gianfranco Ghirlanda to succeed Burke as patron of the Order of Malta.[67] At that time, Burke was 74 years old, short of the customary retirement age of 75, and that Ghirlanda was age 80.[68] In November 2023, Francis reportedly evicted Burke from his subsidized Vatican apartment and terminated his salary as a retired cardinal.[16]
Burke previously chaired the advisory board of the Institute for Human Dignity, a Catholic-inspired non-governmental organization based in Rome.[69] Burke terminated his relationship with the institute in June 2019 after it was publicly identified with the political program of Steve Bannon.[70]
In March 2015, the Holy League, an organization base in Wisconsin, appointed Burke as its leader. The modern Holy League describes itself as a parish-based network of men united in devotion to the Blessed Sacrament.[71]
Burke's perceived status as an ultra-conservative and opponent of Francis has led to criticism.[11][12] According to a 2015 article in National Catholic Reporter (NCR), some bishops have refused permission for Burke to host conferences in their dioceses, and that a number of priests have accused him of "spreading propaganda against the Pope".[11]
In a July 2019 editorial, the NCR rebuked Burke for wanting to "reconstitute the clericalism that is at the heart of the sex abuse cover-up scandal that continues to undermine the authority of the church." NCR also accused Burke of trying "to replace the dynamism of Francis' model of accompaniment with a return to a statute-bound and static institution in service of itself."[12] NCR labeled him as:
"the modern version of that religious leader that drew some of Jesus' harshest condemnations, those who placed undue burdens on others and pronounced themselves the undisputed bearers of truth."[12]
Catholic academic Mark Silk in September 2023 accused Burke of committing the heresy of "Americanism" condemned by Pope Leo XIII, and of disobeying the pope.[72] In a November 2023 New York Times article, the writer Ruth Graham said that some commentators viewed Burke's conflicts with Francis and the Vatican as symbolic of an ongoing large-scale conflict "between a more progressive Vatican and the American church".[73]
During his Wanderer interview, Burke also criticized the concept of synodality, in which the pope transmits some of his authority to the bishops. "In listening to the Pope, one is given the impression that he is giving more and more authority to individual bishops and Conferences of Bishops. But this is not the Catholic Church", Burke said. He accused promoters of synodality of attempting to effect a "revolution" in the church, which he said would result in Catholicism being practiced differently in various countries, to the overall detriment of the church.[74]
On June 10, 2019, Burke, Cardinal Jānis Pujats, and Bishops Tomasz Peta, Jan Paul Lenga, and Athanasius Schneider published a 40-point "Declaration of Truths" that claimed to reaffirm traditional church teaching. The clerics wrote that such a declaration was necessary in a time of "almost universal doctrinal confusion and disorientation." Specific passages in the declaration implicitly related to several writings by Francis, and some of them were seen as criticism or even opposition.[12][75]
The declaration states that "the religion born of faith in Jesus Christ" is the "only religion positively willed by God." This statement seemingly alluded to the Document on Human Fraternity issued by Francis on February 4th, 2019, which stated that the "diversity of religions" is "willed by God." Following recent changes to the Catechism of the Catholic Church to oppose capital punishment, the declaration states that the church "did not err" in teaching that civil authorities may "lawfully exercise capital punishment" when it is "truly necessary" to preserve the "just order of societies".[75]
Burke is widely viewed as a leader of the conservative wing of the church, and de facto leader in the United States to those who oppose Francis.[76] Shortly after Francis in 2013 declined to reappoint Burke to the Congregation of Bishops, Burke said,
"One gets the impression, or it's interpreted this way in the media, that he thinks we're talking too much about abortion, too much about the integrity of marriage as between one man and one woman. But we can never talk enough about that."[77]
Burke in early 2014 denied that Francis planned to change Catholic teaching on moral issues. He said that people "hardened against the truth" would claim that Francis wants to change church teachings that today's secularized culture rejects. He also said "their false praise of the Holy Father's approach mocks the fact that he is the Successor of Saint Peter", and that he consequently "rejects the acceptance and praise of the world".[78][79] Francis spoke favorably of Burke in 2017, saying, "I do not see Cardinal Burke as an enemy." He also called Burke "an excellent lawyer."[80]
An interim document from the 2014 Synod of Bishops softened the Catholic Church's language on LGBT Catholics, artificial contraception, divorced Catholics and Catholics in civil marriages. Burke said that the response to the document by some bishops showed that "a great number of the Synod Fathers found it objectionable." In an October 2014 interview with The Catholic World Report, Burke said the interim document "lacks a solid foundation in the Sacred Scriptures and the Magisterium [the teaching authority of the Catholic Church] and gives the impression of inventing a totally new, what one member of the Synod called 'revolutionary', teaching on marriage and the family."[81]
In an October 17, 2014, interview with BuzzFeed News, Burke said that if "Pope Francis had selected certain cardinals to steer the meeting [synod] so as to advance his personal views on matters like divorce and the treatment of LGBT people", he would not be observing his mandate as the leader of the Catholic Church.[82]
In an interview with The Wanderer on January 10, 2019, Burke denounced Francis's September 2018 Holy See–China Agreement. This was an agreement between the Vatican and the Chinese Government on Catholic jurisdiction in China. Burke call the agreement "in effect ... a repudiation of generations of martyrs and confessors of the Faith in China".
On June 10, 2019, Burke, Cardinal Jānis Pujats, and bishops Tomasz Peta, Jan Paul Lenga, and Athanasius Schneider published a 40-point "Declaration of Truths" claiming to reaffirm traditional church teaching. The bishops wrote that such a declaration was necessary in a time of "almost universal doctrinal confusion and disorientation." Specific passages in the declaration implicitly related to several writings by Francis, and some of them were seen as criticism or even opposition.[12][75] The declaration states that "the religion born of faith in Jesus Christ" is the "only religion positively willed by God," seemingly alluding to the Document on Human Fraternity signed by Pope Francis on February 4, which stated that the "diversity of religions" is "willed by God." Following recent changes to the Catechism of the Catholic Church to oppose capital punishment, the declaration states that the church "did not err" in teaching that civil authorities may "lawfully exercise capital punishment" when it is "truly necessary" to preserve the "just order of societies".[75]
In September 2019, Burke and Schneider published an 8-page letter denouncing what they alleged to be six theological errors in the working document for the Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon region and asking that Francis "confirm his brethren in the faith by an unambiguous rejection of the errors." Burke and Schneider criticized the document for its "implicit pantheism," support for married clergy and a greater role for women in the liturgy, and for what they considered to be excessive openness to pagan rituals and practices common among the Amazonian peoples. The cardinals asked the laity and the clergy pray at least one decade of the Rosary and fast weekly for the rejection of such ideas over a 40-day period, from September 17 to October 26.[83]
In 2007, the singer Sheryl Crow, an advocate for embryonic stem-cell research, was scheduled to perform at a benefit concert for the Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital in St. Louis. Burke stated that by hosting Crow, the hospital would give "...the impression that the Church is somehow inconsistent in its teaching."[84] He requested that the hospital revoke the invitation; when the hospital refused, Burke resigned from its board on April 25, 2007.[85]
During the 2004 US presidential election, Burke stated that he would not give the eucharist to US Senator John Kerry or other Catholic politicians who publicly supported abortion rights for women.
"One of the problems I have is bishops who say to me, 'Well, this is unheard of in the church's practice.' Actually it goes back to St. Paul in the (First) Letter to the Corinthians, when he says: The person who eats and drinks the body and blood of Christ unworthily eats and drinks condemnation unto himself,"
Burke also wrote a pastoral letter in 2004 saying Catholics should not vote for politicians who support abortion or other "anti-life" practices.[86] Burke in June 200 clarified his position, stating that one could vote for a pro-abortion politician and not commit a mortal sin, if one believed there was a more significant moral issue than abortion at hand. However, he also stated that he could not think of such an issue.[87] In a September 2008 interview with Catholic News Service, Burke said that "the Democratic Party risks transforming itself definitively into a 'party of death', because of its choices on bio-ethical questions", especially elective abortion.[88]In 2008, Burke urged Saint Louis University to discipline its men's basketball coach, Rick Majerus. This came after Majerus publicly supported abortion rights for women and embryonic stem cell research at a campaign event for US Senator Hillary Clinton.[89] Burke stated:
"When you take a position in a Catholic university, you don't have to embrace everything the Catholic Church teaches. But you can't make statements which call into question the identity and mission of the Catholic Church."
Saint Louis University refused Burke's request, stating that Majerus had a right to express personal views when not serving as a university representative.[89]In March 2009, Burke called on American bishops to withhold the eucharist from Catholic politicians who support abortion rights for women.[90] The bishops' failure to do so, Burke said, "is weakening the faith of everyone. It's giving the impression that it must be morally correct to support procured abortion."[90] He also said that any American president who promotes and implements "anti-life" legislation could be an "agent of death".[90] Burke later said that he made his remarks not as prefect of the Apostolic Signatura, but simply as an American bishop.[91] Two months later in May, Burke stated,
"Since President [Barack] Obama clearly announced, during the election campaign, his anti-life and anti-family agenda, a Catholic who knew his agenda regarding, for example, procured abortion, embryonic-stem-cell research, and same-sex marriage, could not have voted for him with a clear conscience."
During the election, Obama had not officially called for same-sex marriage, but had advocated same-sex civil unions.[92]In February 2013, Burke commented on the Irish abortion debate, stating that, in accordance with canon law, priests should exclude politicians who support abortion from receiving the eucharist.[93] Burke has stated that anyone who supports abortion cannot receive the eucharist.
"I can't imagine that any Catholic wouldn't know that abortion is a grievous sin, but if they don't, once they've been told, then they either have to cease to support abortion or accept the fact they are not a Catholic in good standing and therefore should not present themselves for Holy Communion,"[94]
In 2017, Burke said that Donald Trump's victory in the 2016 US presidential election was a win for anti-abortion causes.[95]In an August 2019 interview, Burke criticized Catholics who disagree with the church teachings on certain issues.
"I've had non-Catholic leaders of government in this nation tell me that they were certain that the Catholic teaching on abortion and so-called same-sex marriage have changed because so many Catholics on Capitol Hill are regularly supporting this kind of legislation. And that's a scandal,"
Singling out US Vice President Joe Biden, Burke told such people not to attempt to receive the eucharist. "It's not a punishment. It's actually a favor to these people to tell them don't approach, because if they approach, they commit sacrilege." Burke in August 2019 denounced US Senator Kamala Harris for her criticisms of US District Judge Brian Buescher and his affiliation with the Knights of Columbus Burke said that people "need to look at that kind of statement for what it is and say this isn't a person who I want to be the leader of my nation."[96]
In June 2008, Burke as the archbishop of St. Louis applied an interdict, which excludes a person from church ministries and the sacraments, to a Sister of Charity, Louise Lears, judging her guilty of three grave canonical offenses against the Catholic Church's faith and teachings. Lears, a pastoral worker and educator, had publicly stated her belief that all of the church's ministries, including the priesthood, should be open to women.[97] Lears received the interdict after attending an ordination ceremony, which the church does not recognize, of a woman to the priesthood at a Jewish synagogue by the WomenPriests movement.[98]
In January 2015, Burke gave an interview to an organization called the New Emangelization [sic] Project. The group was formed to confront what it called a "man crisis" in the Catholic Church. In the interview, Burke agreed the so-call "feminization" of the Catholic Church was alienating male Catholics.[99] He claimed that "radical feminism" had "assaulted the Church and society since the 1960s has left men very marginalized" and led the Church to de-emphasize issues important to men, such as chivalry and sacrifice.[100]
Burke has specifically criticized the introduction of female altar servers as a side effect of this feminization. He claimed that female altar servers discouraged boys from serving. "The introduction of girl servers also led many boys to abandon altar service", Burke said. "Young boys don't want to do things with girls. It's just natural. The girls were also very good at altar service. So many boys drifted away over time."[99] Burke also linked the decline of men entering the priesthood with the decline of male altar servers. Burke has said that it requires
"...certain manly discipline to serve as an altar boy in service at the side of a priest, and most priests have their first deep experiences of the liturgy as altar boys. If we are not training young men as altar boys, giving them an experience of serving God in the liturgy, we should not be surprised that vocations have fallen dramatically."[99][101]
In an August 2015 interview with the Independent, Burke blamed pedophile priests on "radical feminism which has assaulted the Church and society since the 1960s."[102]
Burke is a strong critic and opponent of moves to soften Catholic attitudes towards the LGBTQ community and to permit greater acceptance of gay people within the church.[103][102] In a 2013 interview with The Wanderer, Burke said that same-sex marriage,
"...is a work of deceit, a lie about the most fundamental aspect of our human nature, our human sexuality, which, after life itself, defines us. There is only one place these types of lies come from, namely Satan. It is a diabolical situation which is aimed at destroying individuals, families, and eventually our nation."[104]
In an October 2014 interview with the Huffington Post, Burke referred to same-sex relationships as "profoundly disordered and harmful", stating that parents should not "expose [their] children to that."[105] He suggested that parents not allow contact between their children and sexually-active LGBT people, including at family gatherings such as Christmas.[106] In November 2014, Burke argued that Francis had never approved homosexual acts, adding that it was "impossible to find positive elements in an evil act."[52]
Speaking in Oxford after the May 2015 same-sex marriage referendum in Ireland, Burke said that he struggled to understand "any nation redefining marriage ... I mean, this is a defiance of God. It's just incredible. Pagans may have tolerated homosexual behaviors, they never dared to say this was marriage."[107] Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh distanced himself from Burke's remarks, urging individuals "to try to be respectful and inoffensive in language" wherever possible.[108]
In an April 2017 interview with the Tablet, Burke described homosexuality as an "ailment" which is not genetic but largely depended on a person's environment.[109]
In August 2017, Burke criticized Cardinal Reinhard Marx's assertion that Germany's recent legalization of same-sex marriage should not be a major concern for the Catholic Church there. Burke said Marx's remarks showed how the church lacked "the clarity and the courage to announce the Gospel of Life and Divine Love to the radically secularized culture". Burke alluded to so-called diabolical errors spreading from society to Church leaders, raising concerns that the "end times" were nearing, and once again stating that homosexual acts were sinful. He insisted that the correct approach would distinguish between the love for the person and the hatred Catholics "must always have for sinful acts".[110]
In a 2019 interview with the Wanderer, Burke chastised some of his fellow bishops for their supposed failures in keeping church teaching. He believes there are "pressure groups" within the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) had been attempting to soften the church's attitude on homosexuality. He accused them of trying to remove the description "intrinsically disordered" from the discussion of homosexual acts in the catechism, a change which Burke said is "not possible." Burke went on, "There is definitely within the hierarchy of the United States an element which is not coherent with the Church on these issues." He then criticized prelates who "promote Fr. James Martin ... within their dioceses." Martin was an American Jesuit who had written articles and made television appearances on improving Catholic treatment of LGBTQ members. Burke alleged that Martin "is not coherent with the Church's teaching on homosexuality" and said that such promotion is "an indication to us that there is a serious difficulty within the hierarchy that must be addressed."[74]
In February 2019 Burke penned an open letter with Cardinal Walter Brandmuller addressed to Francis, calling for an end of "the plague of the homosexual agenda," which they blamed for the sexual abuse crisis engulfing the Catholic Church. They claimed the agenda was spread by "organized networks" protected by a "conspiracy of silence."[111]
Burke has opposed any change of church doctrine that would allow Catholics with civil divorces to remarry or receive the eucharist once they enter a second civil marriage. In 2013 he co-authored a book with cardinals Gerhard Ludwig Müller and George Pell on the subject.[112]
In an interview in the German daily Die Welt on April 24, 2015, concerning the Fourteenth Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, Burke renewed his criticism of German Cardinal Walter Kasper, whose "merciful" solution for remarried divorcees who wish to receive communion was discussed at the 2014 Extraordinary Synod.
“We are bound by the Magisterium. But some Synod Fathers, above all Cardinal Kasper, want to change it. So I had to make myself very clear. Clashes at Synods, incidentally, are nothing unusual. Think of the early Councils, the Arian heresy, for instance, when Athanasius even became physically aggressive”,
Burke also mentioned that John Paul II had ruled out women's ordination “once and for all”.[109]
Burke, along with three other cardinals, issued a set of dubia, or doubts, to Francis, asking him to clarify various points of doctrine in his 2016 apostolic exhortation, Amoris laetitia and on general Christian life. The other cardinals were Italian Carlo Caffarra and Germans Brandmüller and Joachim Meisner. Since the 2014 synod, some bishops had begun allowing Catholics who had been divorced and remarried to receive the eucharist, despite the fact that such persons are traditionally said to be committing adultery and living in mortal sin and therefore ineligible to participate according to official church law. A footnote in Amoris laetitia was seen as allowing that under some circumstances. Burke said that if divorced and remarried Catholics were permitted to receive the eucharist, "then the Church's teaching on marriage is finished."[113]
The four cardinals submitted the dubia in private, followed by a public letter ("Seeking Clarity: A Plea to Untie the Knots in Amoris Laetitia") in November 2016, asking Francis to clarify various points of doctrine. The first dubia asked about the reception of the sacraments by the divorced and remarried. The public letter asked about fundamental issues of the Christian life and referenced John Paul II's encyclical Veritatis splendor.[114][115][116] In April 2017, following no reply to their letter, the cardinals requested a meeting with Francis, but received no response.[117]
On April 7, 2018, Burke, along with Brandmüller and Schneider, participated in a conference rejecting the outline proposed by German bishops to allow divorced and remarried Catholics to receive the eucharist. Citing chapter 19 of the Gospel of Matthew, Burke disputed the notion that anyone, including the pope, had the authority to accept divorced and remarried Catholics as full members of the church. During the conference, Burke expressed the belief that a "public correction" of a pope in error can take place after a private one has been ignored or rejected. "As a matter of duty, the pope can be disobeyed," Burke said. He added that "the Roman pontiff can dispense with the law only for the purpose of preserving its purpose, and never for subverting it."[118]
In an interview with Crux Now on September 6, Burke said that he shared fellow dubia signatory Caffarra's "profound sadness" that the dubia never received a response, and wondered whether such sadness contributed to his death. "The dubia must have a response sooner or later," Burke said. "It's a simple response: Yes or no. That's all. It's not complicated."[119]
At a July 23, 2011, Burke spoke at a conference in Kansas City, Kansas, on end-of-life care, sponsored by the St. Gianna Physician's Guild. He said that suffering does not cause a person to have less meaning in his life, nor does it give the government the right to decide if that person should live or die:
"No matter how much a life is diminished, no matter what suffering the person is undergoing, that life demands the greatest respect and care. It's never right to snuff out a life because it's in some way under heavy burden."[120]
In 2012, during negotiations between the traditionalist Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX), which was in a canonically-irregular status with the Holy See, Burke expressed optimism that the Society's members would reconcile themselves with the Vatican. He referred to the Society's members as people who "have the Catholic faith and the love of the sacred liturgy."[121]
The talks with SSPX eventually failed. In July 2017, Burke said that SSPX was "in schism" and that it was "not legitimate to attend Mass or to receive the sacraments in a church" of theirs, and that faithful Catholics should avoid SSPX liturgies. He criticized Francis's openness towards SSPX, stating that "There is no canonical explanation for it, and it is simply an anomaly", because while they were not excommunicated, they also were not in full communion with the Catholic Church.[122]
In Summorum Pontificum, a July 2007 apostolic letter, Pope Benedict XVI authorized wider use of the Traditional Mass in Catholic churches. This mass had been largely superceded after the reforms in the 1960s of the Second Vatican Council and the introduction of the mass of Paul VI (Novus Ordo). Burke supported the restoration of all or some parts of the traditional mass. He termed it as part of a "reform of the reform", modifying what he sees as deficiencies in the implementation of the newer Mass of Paul VI. In 2012, Burke said the following regarding the liturgical changes that took place after the Second Vatican Council:
There was a stripping away, a changing of the form of the rite that in my judgment was too much. You can't take a living reality, the worship of God as God has desired that we worship him, and tamper with it without doing violence and without in some way damaging the faith life of the people.[4]
In a 2017 interview with the Catholic Herald, Burke referred to Summorum Pontificum as "the most splendid contribution of the pontificate of Pope Benedict XVI".[123] Over the years, Burke has frequently offered the traditional form of the Mass, including regularly performing ordinations for the ICKSP and the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, both traditionalist groups whose priests offer only the older form of the Mass.[11][34][124][125]
In March 2011, Burke said that too many priests and bishops treat violations of liturgical norms as something that is unimportant, when they are actually "serious abuses" that damage the faith of Catholics. He criticized a perceived lack of reverence in the way the modern liturgy is sometimes conducted, stating "If we err by thinking we are the center of the liturgy, the Mass will lead to a loss of faith."[126][127] At the same time, Burke is known to wear lavish regalia and "is one of the few cardinals who dons cappa magnas, the long trains of watered silk that can look like scarlet lava flowing down from his throne" as well as "velvet gloves and extravagant brocades.[128]
In a 2015 interview, Burke reiterated his concern that man has become center of mass, saying that "In many places the Mass became very priest‑centered, it was like the 'priest show.' This type of abuse leads to a loss of the sense of the sacred, taking the essential mystery out of the Mass. The reality of Christ Himself coming down on the altar to make present His sacrifice on Calvary gets lost."[100] Burke blamed modernization of the liturgy after the Second Vatican Council for declining Mass attendance.
"In some cases it actually became hard for people to bear because of illicit insertions, foreign agendas, and imposition of the personalities of priests and congregations into the liturgy to the point that people began to think that the Mass was some sort of social activity...If one understands what the Mass truly is — Christ Himself coming down from Heaven to renew the sacrifice of Calvary — how could you possibly not be there on Sunday?" he asked.[104]
Burke condemned Traditionis custodes, a July 2021 motu proprio issued by Francis which effectively reversed Summorum Pontificum by placing limits on priests offering the Traditional Form of the Mass. Burke said that he could not understand the document's assertion that the Novus Ordo form represented the "unique expression" of the Roman Rite of the Mass, because the Traditional Form "is a living form of the Roman Rite and has never ceased to be so". While Francis described the traditional mass as something that had become a tool to promote schism in Christianity, Burke said that he had not seen such tendencies in practice. He alleged that Francis' document was "marked by harshness" towards those who attend mass in the older form and criticized the fact that it took effect immediately, which in his view did not give adequate time for those affected to study its meaning. Burke stated that Francis did not have the authority to eliminate the traditional mass.[129][130]
The 2012 Synod of Bishops meeting focused on "The New Evangelization". In written comments to the synod, Burke criticized "antinomianism", the belief that grace exempts Christians from obedience to moral law, stating that it is "among the most serious wounds of society today," and is responsible for the legalization of "intrinsically evil" actions such as abortion, embryonic stem-cell research, euthanasia, and same-sex marriage.[131]
In a 2016 interview, Burke said there is "no question that Islam wants to govern the world" and that he feared "being forcibly under an Islamic government". In his subsequent book, Hope for the World: To Unite All Things in Christ, Burke says:
Islam is a religion that, according to its own interpretation, must also become the State. The Koran, and the authentic interpretations of it given by various experts in Koranic law, is destined to govern the world. ... In reality, there is no place for other religions, even though they may be tolerated as long as Islam has not succeeded in establishing its sovereignty over the nations and over the world.[132][133][134]
Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin said that Burke's remarks were unhelpful at a time when Europe was still wavering in the aftermath of a series of terror attacks.[135]
Before the 2016 United States presidential election, Burke met with Steve Bannon, a close advisor to Donald Trump.[76] The pair met several more times,[136] and Burke was for years a strong ally of Bannon.[137] In 2013, Burke was named president of the board of advisers to Bannon's Dignitatis Humanae Institute, an academy set up by Bannon to train right-wing Catholic activists.[137] In 2019, however, Burke resigned from the board and cut ties with Bannon because of the latter's stated intent to make a film adaptation of Frederic Martel's work In the Closet of the Vatican. Burke said that "I disagree completely with a number of Mr. Bannon's statements regarding the doctrine and discipline of the Roman Catholic Church."[137][136]
In February 2017, after Trump was elected president, Burke said that he did not "think the new president [would] be inspired by hatred in his treatment of the issue of immigration." In 2017, Burke met with the right-wing Italian nationalist Matteo Salvini, head of Italy's Northern League and an opponent of Francis on immigration and dialogue with Muslims.[95]
In 2018, Burke condemned the family separation policy of the Trump administration, saying, "A solution to the situation has to be found which avoids this practice of separating small children from their parents, that's clear."[138]
In May 2019, Burke said that "to resist large-scale Muslim immigration in my judgment is to be responsible" and "a responsible exercise of one's patriotism"; he cited a book called No Go Zones: How Sharia Law is Coming to a Neighborhood Near You, by former Breitbart News reporter Raheem Kassam, in support of his contention that immigration of Muslims to Europe and the U.S. was harmful. Burke said that Muslim immigration was because Christians were "no longer ready to defend the moral law" and expressed fears of demographic shift because "Christians are not reproducing themselves."[139]
In 2018, Burke described ongoing sex abuse scandals in the church as "an apostasy from the faith". He added that "principally, it starts with the idea that there can be legitimate sexual activity outside of marriage, which of course is false, completely false". Burke called for prayer and acts of reparation in the midst of the crisis.[140] In 2019, Burke said that "lay faithful who are well-prepared" in dealing with sexual abuse cases "should be called upon to investigate and help get to the bottom of" the church's clergy abuse problem, while also stating that any group of people investigating abuse cases must ultimately report and answer to the pope.[74]
In 2019, Burke was reported to have received, together with other influential U.S. Catholic leaders, substantial monetary gifts from West Virginia bishop Michael J. Bransfield, who had resigned following allegations of sexual misconduct. The gifts had been reimbursed by the diocese.[141] Burke said that the gifts that he received were "generous" but "not lavish," and that he had used them to make charitable donations.[142]
In December 2020, Burke criticized global responses related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Referring to it as "the mysterious Wuhan virus", he said that the virus is being used by "certain forces ... to advance their evil agenda" and to force people to become "subjects of the so-called 'Great Reset,' the 'new normal,' which is dictated to us by their manipulation of citizens and nations through ignorance and fear."[143][144]
In 2021, Burke raised objections to COVID-19 vaccination.[145][146] He has denounced vaccine mandates and compared them to "state-mandated microchipping".[145][143][144] Burke stated that the setting of vaccine mandates "violates the integrity of" citizens.[146] In December 2020, referring to COVID-19 vaccine development, Burke said that the use of fetal tissue in vaccine development is "rightly abhorrent," saying it is "never morally justified to develop a vaccine through the use of the cell lines of aborted fetuses."[146] The Vatican ruled in December 2020 that "when ethically irreproachable COVID-19 vaccines are not available (e.g. in countries where vaccines without ethical problems are not made available to physicians and patients, or where their distribution is more difficult due to special storage and transport conditions, or when various types of vaccines are distributed in the same country but health authorities do not allow citizens to choose the vaccine with which to be inoculated) it is morally acceptable to receive COVID-19 vaccines that have used cell lines from aborted fetuses in their research and production process."[147][146][148] Burke has also criticized social distancing.[146]
In August 2021, Burke announced he had tested positive for COVID-19; he was hospitalized and placed on a ventilator for several days.[149][150][151] On August 28, Burke said that he had been transferred out of the intensive care unit and that his health condition was improving.[152] On September 26, Burke announced that he been moved from the hospital and was making slow but steady progress in his rehabilitation from COVID-19 and he hoped to be able to resume normal duties in several weeks.[153]
On July 10, 2023, Burke was one of five cardinals who signed a letter to Francis expressing concerns that the upcoming Synod on Synodality would undermine traditional Church teaching, particularly on matters related to sexuality, the role of synodality in the Church, the issue of whether teaching could change with time, and the ordaining of women as priests. The letter posed a series of questions which the Pope was asked to clarify. Francis responded one day later. The cardinals found his response unsatisfactory, and wrote him a second letter, dated August 21, in which they rephrased their questions so that they could be answered simply as "yes" or "no." Francis did not respond, and in October, the cardinals made their letters public.[154][155]
During his tenure in St. Louis, Burke was awarded honorary doctorates in humane letters by two US Catholic universities, Ave Maria University in Ave Maria, Florida, in 2005,[156] and Christendom College in Front Royal, Virginia, in 2007.[157]
Archbishop Robert Carlson of St. Louis created the Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke Chair in Canon Law at St. Louis's Kenrick-Glennon Seminary.[158] In May 2011, the Franciscan University of Steubenville in Steubenville, Ohio, awarded Burke an honorary doctorate.[159]
In 2012, St. Mary's Parish School, which Burke attended as a child, named an addition as he Raymond Cardinal Burke Annex.[19][20]Aquinas High School in La Crosse (where Burke served on the faculty) named a new addition the Bishop Burke Hall in 1997 and the Cardinal Burke Hall in 2011.[24][25][26]
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