Roger Michael MahonyKGCHS (born February 27, 1936) is an American cardinal and retired prelate of the Catholic Church who served as archbishop of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles in California from 1985 to 2011. Before his appointment, he served as an auxiliary bishop of the Diocese of Fresno from 1975 to 1980 and bishop of the Diocese of Stockton from 1980 to 1985.
Born in Los Angeles and raised in the San Fernando Valley, Mahony was ordained to the priesthood in 1962. He was appointed auxiliary bishop of Fresno in January 1975 and consecrated bishop in March 1975. Mahony was then appointed bishop of Stockton in 1980. In 1985, he was appointed archbishop of Los Angeles by Pope John Paul II, and became the first Los Angeles native to hold the office. The pope created Mahony a cardinal in 1991, and he voted in the papal conclaves that elected Popes Benedict XVI and Francis.
During his tenure as Los Angeles archbishop, Mahony was instrumental in dividing the archdiocese into five administrative subdivisions and in guiding the construction of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, which opened in September 2002. Mahony has also been identified as a key figure in the cover-up of the Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal, where dozens of abusive priests were moved to other churches rather than prosecuted. In 2007, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles apologized for abuses by priests and announced a record-breaking settlement of $660 million for 508 victims.[1]
In 2011, Mahony reached the mandatory retirement age for bishops and was succeeded by Archbishop José Horacio Gómez on March 1.[2] On January 31, 2013, Gómez relieved Mahony of his public and episcopal duties in the archdiocese, following the release of personnel files documenting priests' sexual abuse during Mahony's tenure.
Roger Mahony was born on February 27, 1936, in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles, the son of Victor and Loretta (née Baron) Mahony. He has a twin brother, Louis, and an older brother, Neil. Roger Mahony attended St. Charles Borromeo Grammar School in North Hollywood and Los Angeles College.[3]
On February 15, 1980, Mahony was appointed bishop of Stockton by Pope John Paul II, as announced by the nuncio, Jean Jadot.[3] Mahony terminated two extern priests for sexual abuse during his tenure at Stockton.
In 1980, shortly after Mahony became bishop of Stockton, a parent wrote to the diocese accusing the Reverend Oliver O'Grady of molesting his two sons. Mahony in 1982 then transferred O'Grady to another parish. Soon more accusations arose from the new parish.[5] In 1984, the local police closed an investigation into O'Grady after a diocesan lawyer promised to keep him away from children.[6] In December 1984, despite the earlier promise, Mahony transferred O'Grady to another parish.
In 1998, Mahony, now archbishop of Los Angeles, returned to Stockton to testify in a civil trial against the diocese. A jury later awarded $30 million in damages to two of O'Grady's victims.[6]
On July 16, 1985, Mahony was appointed as archbishop of Los Angeles by John Paul II, becoming the first native Angeleno to hold that office. He was created cardinal-priest of the Basilica dei Santi Quattro Coronati in Rome by John Paul II in the consistory of June 28, 1991.
The1994 Northridge earthquake necessitated the demolition of the Cathedral of Saint Vibiana. Mahony then began planning the new $190 million Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. Many Catholics were upset about its non-traditional design and high project cost. In response, Mahony noted that foundations and donors were funding the new cathedral, not parishes. He also said that the archdiocese needed a mother church and religious center to unite its people.[7][8] One of the largest Catholic churches in the United States, the new cathedral was dedicated on September 2, 2002.[3]
In 1987, Mahony announced the auction of the Doheny rare book collection at St. John's Seminary in Camarillo, California. The philanthropist Carrie Estelle Doheny had donated the collection, which included a Gutenberg Bible and a first edition of the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, to the seminary during the 1940s and 1950s. Mahony cited the financial needs of the archdiocese and the high cost of insuring the collections as the reasons for its sale. The proceeds would fund an endowment for training new priests.[9]
The auction raised $37.8 million for the archdiocese. However, by 1996 the archdiocese had spent as much as $25 million of the proceeds on other projects, including $1 million to renovate Mahony's residence.[10]
During Mahony's tenure in Los Angeles, the number of priests declined while the number of lay ministers increased. Mahony remarked on this:
"What some refer to as a 'vocations crisis' is, rather, one of the many fruits of the Second Vatican Council. It is a sign of God's deep love for the Church, and an invitation to a more creative and effective ordering of gifts and energy in the Body of Christ."[11][12]
On April 6, 2010, Pope Benedict XVI named Archbishop Gómez as the coadjutor archbishop in Los Angeles to assist Mahony.[15] After the Vatican accepted Mahony's resignation as archbishop of Los Angeles on February 28, 2011, Gómez automatically succeeded him. The formal ceremony of transition was held at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, with Mahony's resignation taking canonical effect, on March 1, 2011.[16]
In his retirement, Mahony said that he planned to devote more time to advocacy for immigrants.[17] He took up residence in St. Borromeo in North Hollywood.[18]
On January 31, 2013, Gómez relieved Mahony of all of his remaining public and administrative duties.[19][20] Mahony remained "a priest in good standing" and could still celebrate mass, but could no longer speak publicly or exercise a bishop's responsibilities. such as performing confirmations.[19][21] Critics called Gómez's action "purely symbolic punishment" and "hand-slapping...a nearly meaningless gesture", and noted that Mahony remained "a powerful man" in the church.[20]
In May 2013, after officiating at a confirmation service, Mahony told a Los Angeles Times reporter that the ban on confirmations was "news to him". Mahony added, "I've been doing them every week and I'm going to be doing them every week... So go home."[26]
In 2018, a group launched a petition drive calling on the archdiocese to remove Mahony from St. Charles Borromeo Parish. On September 16, 2018, demonstrators gathered in front of St. Charles Borromeo Church during a church service to protest Mahony's involvement in the sexual abuse scandal.[27]
In 2021, Mahony criticized “The Mystery of the Eucharist in the Life of the Church”, a resolution proposed in the USCCB. The resolution called on bishops to ban communion to Catholic public officials who supported abortion rights for women.[28] Mahony stated,
“First of all, we are a democratic republic. Our country’s path is one of separation of church and state. And so, it’s a very difficult position for politicians, Catholics, who are pressured by some in the Church to make all of the decisions based on Catholic Church doctrine.” [28]
In 1992, Mahony published a pastoral letterFilm Makers, Film Viewers on the topic of television news and the entertainment industry. In the letter, he rejected film censorship, instead advocating that filmmakers and television writers strive for "human values" when portraying sexual situations and violence in their products.[29]
Mahony personally lobbied the US senators from California, Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, to have the US Senate consider a comprehensive immigration reform bill, rather than the House bill.[32] Mahony also blamed the US Congress for the illegal immigration crisis, due to its failure to act on the issue over the previous 20 years. He supported instead the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006.[33][34]Neither plan passed Congress.
Mahony in September 1997 published a pastoral letter on the mass entitled "Gather Faithfully Together: A Guide for Sunday Mass".[35] The letter called all parishes to plan and celebrate each Sunday mass in order to deepen the faith-life of all Catholics through the eucharist.[36]Mother Angelica, the host of a popular program on the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN), commented that the pastoral letter was inconsistent with existing official liturgical directives set by the Vatican.[37]
In 1988, Mahony adopted what he termed as a zero-tolerance policy on sexual abuse allegations against clergy. In 1992, at a national meeting of Catholic bishops, Mahony stated that the church needed to do more to combat sexual abuse of minors. In 2002, he ordered the removal of 12 priests in the archdiocese from ministry due to credible accusations of sexual abuse.[38]
In February 2004, the archdiocese issued the Report to the People of God. The report contained an apology from Mahony for the failing of the archdiocese in handling accusations of sexual abuse. It included a detailed list of priests and circumstances in cases of known abuse. It also described the development of archdiocesan policy related to sexual abuse, and case studies of accused priests. It included details of the most significant cases in the archdiocese's history. However, Report to the People of God failed to include information on 33 priests who were accused of sexual abuse, but whose cases lacked confirmatory evidence. Despite strong criticism from the media, the archdiocese blocked the release of this information.[39][40]
In 2007, the archdiocese apologized again for abuses by priests and announced a legal settlement of $660 million to 508 victims, averaging $1.3 million per plaintiff. Mahony described the abuse as a "terrible sin and crime". The agreement settled all outstanding civil lawsuits at that time against the archdiocese.[1]
In 2013, after Mahony's retirement as archbishop, the archdiocese released memos written by Auxiliary Bishop Thomas John Curry to Mahony in 1986 and 1987, discussing potential legal accountability for priests accused of sexual abuse. Curry recommended that the archdiocese encourage priests seeking therapy to avoid using therapists who might report them to law enforcement. At the same time, Mahony wrote the director of the Servants of the Paracletes center in New Mexico, which treated priests who had committed sexual abuse. Mahony wanted to prevent any of his priests at the center from returning to Los Angeles. He cited possible lawsuits by their victims, whom the archdiocese had been assured that the priests would never return.[41]
In February 2020, Mahony was named as a defendant in a lawsuit where he was accused of shielding convicted ex-priest Michael Baker.[42]In April 2021, Mahony was accused in a lawsuit of sexually molesting a teenage boy.[43][unreliable source?][better source needed]
^Davis, Margaret Leslie (2019). The lost Gutenberg : the astounding story of one book's five-hundred-year odyssey. [New York]. ISBN9781592408672. OCLC1076371236.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Mahony, Roger. "As I Have Done for You: A Pastoral Letter on Ministry". Archdiocese of Los Angeles.
^Official Catholic Directory 1982–2010. New York: P.J. Kenedy & Sons.