The Legion of Christ: Hope for the Church?

This article appears in the May 2005 edition of The New Oxford Review

 

In the unsettled atmosphere of a Church rocked to its core by clerical sexual abuse scandals, Catholics, facing a dearth of priestly vocations, anxiously cast about for signs of hope. Until recently, one of those signs has been the Legion of Christ. Spurred on by Pope John Paul II’s demonstrative approval of Father Maciel, the Legion’s founder, the Rome based religious order has made enormous inroads in certain U.S. circles. Founded in Mexico in 1941 by Marciel Maciel Degollado when he was a seminarian, the Legion now claims 500 priests, another 2,500 seminarians, eleven universities and over 150 prep schools worldwide. Legionary priests serve in the United States. The order operates a seminary and novitiate in Connecticut. The lay movement associated with the Legion is called Regnum Christi.

But today the luster surrounding the Legion is showing tarnish. There are skirmishes between Legionaries and lay people over schools. Three U. S. dioceses have forbidden the Legion to operate within their environs: the Diocese of Minneapolis-St. Paul, Archbishop Harry Flynn, Columbus, OH, Bishop Emertius James A. Griffin, and Baton Rouge, LA, Bishop Robert Muench. The Legion and its auxiliary lay movement, Regnum Christi, are coming under fire from former members. They accuse the order of manipulation, mind-control, and subversive tactics that could rise to the level of a cult. Former Legionaries and Regnum Christi members have formed a network, ReGain. Through ReGain’s web site, which features news articles and personal testimonies, members say they seek to inform the public of the true nature of the Legion’s policies and practices as well as to provide healing and reintegration for those psychologically damaged by the order. (www.regainnetwork.org) The most explosive situation for the Legion of Christ, however, is the charges made by a number of former Legionary priests that Father Maciel sexually abused them for years beginning when they were children in the Legion’s minor seminaries.

In the United States, the Legion has operated an almost a subterranean existence in Connecticut since the middle sixties. Very little was known about them until the past ten years. In the early 1990s, a Hartford Courant journalist, George Renner, attempted to interview the Rev. Anthony Bannon, the Legion’s national director for a story on the seminary. Bannon’s unexpected refusal to talk to a journalist peaked Renner’s interest, and he began to look more closely at the order. When Renner wrote an article about the Legion in a March 25, 1996 issue of the Courant, he began receiving phone calls about the secretive Cheshire seminary where “200 young men in black cassocks do preparatory studies for the priesthood before further schooling in Spain and Italy.� After meeting with several former seminarians, all of whom complained of being ensnared in a closed system and subjected to fierce control and brainwashing, Renner wrote more extensively about the Legion’s strange practices.

In 2002, the Boston Herald exposed a policy of sexual abuse cover-ups by Catholic bishops nationwide. Once the lid was blown off, hundreds of victims came forward with charges of sexual abuse by clerics. Similar reports of alleged and confirmed cases, the majority of which involved homosexual priests assaulting teen-age boys, appeared in Ireland, Canada, and Australia. An identical policy of hierarchical cover-up and on-going transfer of offending clerics prevailed. In Italy, however, few if any such reports came to light. Journalists claim non-English speaking countries, such as Mexico, Spain and Italy where the Legion is based, operate under different legal codes, and facts about abuse cases are difficult to obtain. This situation allowed Vatican scoffers to claim that the scandals were “an American problem,� one trumped up by an anti-Catholic press, accusations that ill serve the cause of justice.

The charges against Fr. Maciel involve nine men, all former Legionaries. For some, the abuse began when they were barely 12 years of age, and continued until the men were in their mid-twenties. Much of the abuse took place in Mexico, Spain and Italy. Two of the men, Mexican Father Juan Vaca and Spanish Father Felix Alarcon, served the Legion in the U.S. Father Alarcon opened the Legion of Christ center in Connecticut in 1965 and Father Vaca served for five years as the U.S. Legion director before leaving the order. Three of the nine filed a canonical suit against Maciel and have been waiting years for it to be heard.

Just after this past Thanksgiving, the Pope publicly honored Father Maciel at ceremonies in Rome. But the first week of January, 2005, , it was reported that Msgr. Charles J. Scicluna, a Canon lawyer working as Promoter of Justice for the Vatican’s Congregation for the Defense of the Faith (CDF), stated that the long-standing case of former Legionaries who accuse Father Maciel of molesting them when they were in the Legion’s minor seminary, could be reopened. Few people know that the National Catholic Register, a weekly newspaper, is owned by the Legion. To date the Register has refused to report on the Holy See’s new investigation of Maciel.

Determining the guilt or innocence of Father Maciel and investigating the practices of his order, an order that that enjoys enormous power and influence in the Church is crucial. Failing to make an investigation of the credible charges by former Legionary priests would tear at the very integrity of the Church whose duty it is to justice and protect her most vulnerable members.

In 2004, Catholic journalist Gerald Renner and Jason Berry published Vows of Silence – The Abuse of Power in the Papacy of John Paul II. The book is a two-part account of the lives of two very different priests, American Dominican Father Thomas Doyle, and Mexican Legion of Christ founder, Father Marciel Maciel. Doyle was the priest who, in the mid-eighties, warned the U. S. Bishops of the explosive nature of the on-going cover-up of abuser priests. Having given up a Vatican diplomatic career, Father Doyle has embraced the cause of justice for the victims while Father Maciel has carefully built an enormously wealthy empire in the heart of the Roman Catholic Church despite serious accusations leveled against him.

When the scandals erupted in 2002, it came as no surprise to Gerald Renner, whose articles about the Legion of Christ began appearing in the Hartford Courant in 1996. One day a priest notified Renner with a tip about Father Maciel’s “aberration.� He asked Renner to contact Jason Berry. Berry, a New Orleans journalist, covered the 1984 case of the Rev. Gilbert Gauthe, who was criminally charged with sexually molesting eleven boys in the Lafayette diocese. Berry wrote about the case in a 1992 book, Lead us Not into Temptation.

Following the publication of his book, Berry was contacted by former Legionary Arturo Jurado, who in a disturbing interview told him of terrible things Father Maciel had done to him and others. Renner and Berry teamed up to begin what turned out to be an in-depth look at the United States Bishops’ policies, and the charges against the Mexican order. Their six-year investigation of Fr. Maciel and the Legion took them from Mexico City across the Atlantic to the Vatican offices in Rome with multiple points stops in between. The result was Vows of Silence.

Carl Cannon, White House correspondent for the National Journal says in his review, “Vows of Silence is a must read –investigative journalism at its best, tracking abuses that were decades in the making and go far beyond the American clergy, with responsibility at the highest levels of the Vatican….the book is painstakingly researched, beautifully written and gives sweeping historical context on issues of specific, current relevance. If this were fiction, it would be a chilling narrative. Alas, it is contemporary human history, brought to you by the two American authors who know more about this subject than anyone else writing about it.�

For Catholics longing for orthodoxy, reverent liturgies, a renewed emphasis on devotion, and disciplined Catholic schools, the Legion has seemed an answer to their prayers. The sight of handsome, young men with impeccable manners striding about in black cassocks and “imbued with the vision of John Paul IIâ€� is irresistible. When the Legion of Christ seminarians and priests began courting prosperous, conservative American Catholics — a practice begun in Mexico that has earned them there the dubious title of “the millionaires of Christâ€� — formerly disillusioned Catholics poured money into the order, hoping that sanity was returning to the Church.

Supporters and members of the Legion point to the large number of vocations as positive fruit. But critics charge seminary students are denied any true discernment of their vocations. Instead, through mind-control tactics, the young boys are skillfully recruited and become totally “ownedâ€� by the order — body, mind and soul. The stories coming out of Georgia, Connecticut, Minnesota, Texas and other states are multiplying and becoming harder to ignore. At the least, the testimonies of devout lay parents who have lost their sons and daughters to a tightly closed system that replaces their familial role with that of the order are heartbreaking accounts deserving of attention. Is the Legion truly the hope of the Church, or a Machiavellian deception that threatens it? The question begs for an answer.

END OF NOR ARTICLE

Resources: ReGain Network web site: http://www.regainnetwork.org

Cult like characteristics of the Legion: Discouraging Questioning, Numbing the Mind, Dictating Details –
Paper presented at the American Family Foundation Conference, October 18, 2003 – http://www.regainnetwork.org/pdf/QuestioningDoubtDissentDiscouragedAug.pdf

Vows of Silence – Abuse of Power in the Papacy of John Paul II, Free Press, 2004, Jason Berry and Gerald Renner.

Cecilia H. Martin, author of Confusion In the Pews, is the editor of The Catholic Advocate, http://www.missionsun.net. She writes from Jacksonville, Florida.
February 24, 2005

The following testimony was given to the Ms. Martin with permission to publish along with
Martin’s article. The mother wishes to remain anonymous because her family still suffers from the effect of membership in the Legion.

Married to the Legion: Massive Confusion of Loyalties and Misuse of Vows
A mother’s testimony

‘First Profession Is My Wedding Day!’

Writing to a distraught mother whose son had just taken his first vows as a professed seminarian with the Legion of Christ, a former Legionary priest said: “I pray for him [a seminarian] not so much on his profession day but on the days that follow when the glow is gone; when he is just another number; when he feels unfairly treated…when he tries to talk and no one is there to listen!â€�

Similarly, our large family had gone to Cheshire, CT to be with our son, D___, when he took his first vows. We were amazed when our son told us that this was his “wedding day.�

How could we answer this son, whom we had not seen for two years, who was showing himself to be a complete stranger? How could we point out the obvious, that it was not his wedding day — maybe his declaration that he and his intended were going to live together for awhile, but not a nuptial in any sense of the word that we understood it!

That a seminarian — only two years into his journey toward the priesthood, still discerning his vocation, and free to leave — should speak of his first professions as his “wedding dayâ€� was preposterous. As it turned out, what should have been a joyous day of celebration and support for our son disintegrated into one of the worst days of our family’s history. My husband, who was beside himself with frustration about our son’s claim to be married to the Legion, said to me later, “Well, if he’s married, his new wife is demanding, selfish, and self-righteous.â€�

Lost In A Masquerade

On the day of professions in Connecticut, a large crowd of families, like ours, was waiting outside of St. Bridgit Church after the profession ceremony — and waiting outside and waiting. Twenty minutes passed and stretched into almost forty-five minutes. What was taking so long? We had only that one day to spend with our son, one day that was ours with him after two long years of his novitiate.

We learned later that our son, along with all this class of newly-professed was being “briefedâ€� by his superior about what he could and could not do with us — his own parents and siblings! We learned later that D___ was also taking his secret vow to give complete allegiance and never to speak ill of the Legion.

Thus, to our confusion and growing amazement, D___ spent the entire day with us in aloof and dreamy-eyed silence. Throughout the day, he was distant and did not want to talk with us because he was so swept up in the glorious bubble of the Legionary mythology. He dragged us into every church that we passed along the way to pray. When we parted from him that night, our hearts were wounded; we felt angry and cheated. It would be almost another year before we could see him again, as Legionary seminarians are allowed to go home only two times per year on the birthdays of their parents.

Over the years, there were weddings of his siblings and deaths of beloved grandparents; he was not allowed to come home for them. Not even when his father was sick with a life-threatening disease and facing major surgery was he allowed to come home. Over the many years before his departure from the Legion, our natural bonds of affection were used and abused, and it has been a long road to recovery of the love and trust that were so cruelly severed by the years in the Legion. This is not an isolated incident; it is universal in the Legion and part of Legionary policy, although if asked by a parent of a prospective seminarian, it will be denied.

What To Do

What I want to tell every parent whose son is caught, as our son was once caught in the Legion’s web, is this: your love for your son is bigger than the Legion’s power over him. Let this love be freely expressed, despite your wounded heart. As a mother, however, your pleas and nagging have no effect whatsoever; they may even push him deeper into enemy territory.

Accept the fact, mother, that you have absolutely no power to extricate your son by your own best efforts! But your husband, his father does, though it may not be immediate. Here is where the strength of a man’s protection, by his grace as father of the family, can be cast over both the mother and the son. You, as wife, have only to remain loyal to your husband and not shift your loyalties to the Legion and Regnum Christi; eventually, your son will, like the Prodigal Son, come to his senses and return to his father.

In the meantime, it is important that your son not perceive that he has been abandoned and betrayed by his natural father — as he will one day most certainly be betrayed by his adopted father, the Legion. How can your son ever find his way back home, if you should fall into the trap of the Legion and become a part of what your son will one day flee? In short, stay away from every overture of the Legion, and of your son, to be recruited into Regnum Christi or have your other children recruited into the Movement.

And I Will Always Love You!�

A practical way that will make an impression on your son is to claim him, despite his protestations. Arrange this before you see your son and have your husband (not you, his mother — your son needs to hear this from his father) put his hands on your son’s shoulders and look straight into his eyes and say, “My son, I love you. If you want to leave the Legion, I support you and will be there for you. A good and godly life is possible outside of this outfit.â€� He will remember that his father said this, even if he is angry at the time.

When my husband said this to our son, on the weekend of the professions, D___ was blazingly angry; he shot back, a reproach: “How can you say such a thing? I’m married to the Church, to the Legion! What if B_____ (a married brother) wanted to leave his wife? Would you support him in doing so?â€� My husband answered with a strong, firm gentleness that I could never have mustered at that moment: “Whatever he — or you do — you are still and always my son. And I’ll always love you.â€� I really think that this gesture helped D___ when, six years after that far off dreamy-eyed day of his first profession he found himself out — alone, sick, and without funds — on the streets, ousted by the Legion to which he had given so many years of his life. But, thanks be to God, he was and remains OUT!

I’m sorry for my friend’s son, as I am sad for our own son, who continues his long recovery. But, I hold tightly to the threads of Faith and of Love — stronger than death. Our son went through a horrible spiritual death at the hands of unscrupulous men masquerading as men of God. There is JUSTICE and there is a God in heaven — a good and gracious God — not the Legionary “godâ€� who is cruel, treacherous, and glamorous.

 

On the LOSS OF PRAYER and ABUSE OF FAITH in the Legion:

A Parent and a Priest’s Experience

 

By Legion and Regnum ex-members

 

The following two reflections may help you understand what we ex-members are going through — and what your own son or daughter may be going through, if the Legion or Regnum Christi has taken hold of their lives, ultimately abusing their faith and depriving them of traditional prayer in their enthrallment.

 

On the LOSS OF PRAYER and ABUSE OF FAITH in the Legion:;

DEAR VISITOR:

Those of us who were not hurt by the Legion’s misuse of devotions still find it possible to employ traditional prayer. Several of us are praying for discernment of the truth; some pray the rosary, others pray a very ancient prayer to the Mother of God: We fly to thy patronage, most holy mother of God. Despise not our petitions, but hear and answer. Some of us, however, cannot find prayer in words, but that does not mean that we do not pray. In the words of the children’s song, God’s Children, some of us, just clap our hands and paws. The following two reflections may help you to understand what we are going through — and what your own son or daughter may be going through, if the Legion or Regnum Christi has taken hold of their lives, abusing their faith and depriving them of traditional prayer in the enthrallment. We would ask you, of your charity, even if you cannot or choose not to join us in prayer, that you please remember that our quest is for truth and justice, and our desire is for healing and goodwill. Thank you.

FROM A PARENT:;

Our son, M , could not pray at all when he came out of the Legion. After he left, he tried to attend Spanish-speaking Catholic Masses, but after a short while he could not even go to Church, without grinding my teeth as he later confided to us.

When we gave him to the Legion, he had spent his youth in a nurturing and wholesome home environment where fun, laughter, singing, and family prayer all had a place. As a family, we attended a beautiful and (on the whole)a reverent liturgy almost every Sunday. On Sunday evenings, our large family gathered for a good meal followed by fifteen minutes of family prayer, with singing, prayer, and, often, extended talk. Although we prayed before meals, we did not pray together as a family on a daily basis. Unlike other more disciplined families who arose at 5 AM for family prayer, or who prayed the family rosary together, we as parents did not want to demand any further devotions from our already very busy teenagers.

Yet, for many years prior to M ‘s entering the Legion, we had prayed the Angelus as a family. Often this took place in the car while going to school in the morning (instead of the usual noon hour)or when we were taking a trip together — if someone happened to remember it when noon came around. For most of us, if not all, the Angelus was experienced as a beautiful, natural, even spontaneous, moment of recollection that we’d pray as easily as humming a tune that everyone knew and would join in. Because of what happened after M _ left the Legion, I want to make clear that prayer was not a MUST DO, but rather a WANT TO DO, a momentary glance to heaven in gratitude for the gift of the Incarnation and the wonder of life.

During his Legionary days in Rome, M and his dad and I prayed the Angelus in churches all over the Eternal City when we visited him there. At that time, we were glad to see that our family tradition still meant something to our son in his religious formation, and, because we didn’t know any better, we approved. I mistakenly assumed that, when we ducked into an ancient church in Rome at the noon hour, we were praying the Angelus because we wanted to do so, as we had done earlier as a family. What I did not realize was that the Angelus — as all acts of piety in the Legion — had become a “must do.” Prayer had become an iron-regimented necessity, if not actually ritualized superstition. Every minute detail of a Legionary’s daily life was determined for him, even how he ate, slept, sat, stood, prayed and spoke.

Wondering how his family could help 44; as an exLC, ease the pain and stress of reentering normal life, I cast back to those things from our common heritage (observed in both Legion and family)that might help him with the transitional process. However, I was very surprised when this effort blew up in my face, over and over again. On one particularly painful occasion, when we were waiting in the car for his sister who had run into the grocery to pick up something for lunch, he absolutely panicked when I suggested that we pray the Angelus together. I had glanced at the car clock and remarked, It’s noon. Let’s pray the Angelus, shall we? And I began the usual opening proclamation:; The angel of the Lord announced unto MaryInstead of the expected reply of, And she conceived by the Holy Spirit! he sat silent. Tension rose in what was a moment of obvious agony, then M let out something like a sob and cried out, I can’t! He jumped out of the car and hurried away to an empty outdoor patio at the side of the store; there he sat with his face turned away for many minutes. Finally, silent and brooding, he had enough control of himself to return to the car. I realized quickly that these attempts to help him to pray simple, familiar, and comfortable old devotions were genuinely traumatic for him. On that afternoon when I proposed the Angelus, his reaction was traumatic in a way that was totally out of proportion. What had triggered such panic? How could it be that no light came through to him? I did not know the answers to these questions for a long time, but it was painfully apparent that for him, prayer was not a comfort; it called up only horror.

In the following months and years, as we learned the depth of the betrayal of our son, my husband and I came to understand that a monstrous injustice and calculated abuse had been inflicted on him. We learned that our son was not alone in what he had suffered; there were many others. The Legion’s abuse of prayer and manipulation of the religious life for domination and mind control of its members is a hideous violation of a family’s trust and of a young man’s hope. The real effect of this sham formation, this Legionary DE-FORMATION, cuts off a man from friends, family, Church, self, and God. What may have been the worst agony to our dear M _, although he did not say so at the time, was that his intellect still acknowledged objective goodness and beauty — but it was totally inaccessible to him. Little wonder that there are known suicides among those who leave the Legion and Regnum Christi. The good news is that now, a few years later, he is beginning to be able to practice his faith again, to attend church without grinding his teeth — and that is thanks to someone who loves him very much, his wife.

 

FROM A FORMER LC PRIEST:;

Some in ReGAIN have wanted to discuss their experience of loss of the ability to pray. This exchange among former Legionaries and Regnum Christi members has been very revealing of the universal nature of this loss. One young woman, formerly a consecrated RC, confessed that it was during prayer (of any sort)that she felt the strongest suicidal impulses. Another, a former seminarian who was sexually abused, describes the strangling sense of panic that he felt when someone on a bus suggested that they pray the Rosary; the Rosary had been what he associated with the sexual abuse, as it often was prayed following the predator’s abuse.

Personally, after I left the twenty-five years in the Legion, I cast off many of the formula prayers and even formula practices of Catholicism. I believe the exLegionary may be particularly reactionary to traditional, prescribed Formula prayer in all forms — verbal, external, oral — because there was so much of that in the Legion. The universal Church’s depository of prayer through the ages was wrung dry by overuse and abuse in the Legion. After the novitiate, prayer changed as the mind control and manipulation increased. Prayer was experienced neither as a great gift from the tradition nor as a beautiful and ever-new experience of worship. What we in the Legion called Practices of Piety— which we continued after the sap of prayerfulness had left our bodies, minds and spirits — became a variation of rote and duty, a turning the (Catholic) prayer wheel, and it became increasingly abhorrent.

But that rejection does not mean that former LCRCers do not know how to pray. Nor does it mean that the rejection of conventional prayer will be permanent; some — but not all — of us eventually find our way back to the church’s heritage of prayer. I found my interior voice through John Henry Cardinal Newman, that great champion of religious freedom. His poemhymn, Lead Kindly Light was particularly important to me;

Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
Lead thou me on;
The night is dark, and I am far from home;
Lead thou me on.
Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
The distant scene:; one step enough for me.

RECOVERING PRAYER:;

There are many forms of prayer and many distinctions, beginning with the basic:; EXTERNAL (ORAL) PRAYER and INTERNAL (MENTAL) PRAYER. Then, there is also formula prayer and spontaneous prayer. For many former Legionaries, the restoration of prayer begins in the simple movement of gratitude for being able to see beauty in the natural world or for having the freedom to make friendships and enjoy the good things of this world with good company. In short, prayer began with having no expectations. For others of us, the restoration of prayer began in therapy where we began to learn who we really were and the extent of the trauma that we had suffered at the hands of the Legion. In the words of C.S. Lewis, Why should the gods (God) speak to us, until we have faces?

One path to Recovery for the exLC may be a return to the simplest forms, to ‘unlegionary’, spontaneous, forms of prayer. One former LC surprised himself in a black moment when he was wrestling with his Legionary past during the graveyard watch of the night; he tried to pray and what sprang up within him was the night prayer of his boyhood:; Now I lay me down to sleep Another former RC member who loved to garden, resorted to spending many hours in her garden, as she put it,to take the raging fire out of my head and put it in my hands to tend growing things. One day she found herself humming St. Patrick’s Breastplate, which she knew well:; I bind unto myself today Thereafter became part of her daily gardening ritual to sing this great hymn of protection with the well-known central refrain:;Christ be with me, Christ within me, Christ behind me, Christ before me Other former LCRCers turn to techniques of Eastern meditation and mandalic contemplation. Some may despair, considering themselves agnostics, and get on with making a life totally cut off from their painful past.

Fidelity to our own experience and openness to the Holy Spirit can help us find a way, when we freely chose to do so. One way or the other the end of our journey will probably be different from that of those who never went through that ‘purification’ of traditional prayer. As exLCs, some of us may not be able to return to our pre-Legionary practice, but we CAN have a post-Legion life of prayer, a kind of ‘second-born’ life of prayer, distinct from, but not opposed to the ‘once-born’ life of prayer of those who have never suffered its loss, been troubled or challenged. But perhaps, after casting off our Love-Fear of the Abusive Step-father, and finally freely finding our own trusting way home to the Gentle Patient Father, we may some day pray:;

I was not ever thus, nor prayed that thou,
Shouldst lead me on;
I loved to choose and see my path; but now
Lead thou me on.
I loved the garish day, and, spite of fears,
Pride ruled my will:; remember not past years.

So long thy power hath blest me, sure it still
Will lead me on
O’er moor and fen, o’er crag and torrent, till
The night is gone,
And with the morn those angel faces smile
Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile

Conquest Clubs, The truth behind another Legion front

Correspondence with a concerned mother and The importance of your local clergy
By Staff
Mother is alerted by parish priest to CONQUEST being an LC apostolate; she realizes Conquest leaders want to hide connection and deflect questions/criticisms about them and the Legion

 

Conquest Clubs ? The Truth Behind Another Legion Front

CONCERNED MOM wrote:

Q// I am just coming into the Catholic Church. In fact, I am in RCIA now. My neighbor told me about Conquest and I have my son in it. My Priest has told me to take him out, that Regnum Christi, which runs that club, is cult-like. Our leader has talked to me for several hours at a time and is so interested in our participation. There are even highly respected professionals from Regnum Christi involved in leadership. They have so much care and concern for us. I am a single mother in between jobs and it’s weird to get this much attention when you don’t have $$ to contribute.
So these guys have seemed like saints to me.

Our Bishop has not sanctioned the group. I do not know why. But they would like to take us out of town to see masses performed by Legionnaire Priests. I thought all Catholic masses are the same. Apparently there is something special about these. They tell me there is a reverence I will never forget or experience otherwise. Thank you!


A/ C-M

By asking you are demonstrating that you are not naive. As an old;; Catholic with a degree in Theology, I am led to believe that the same Jesus is substantially present after the Consecration, no matter who celebrates. There is only one Catholic Priesthood.

I see this Mass out of town piece as an RC recruitment ploy…Evidently you must have some leadership qualities that the LC/RC is after…

I am forwarding this to other women who have been had.
Regain board


C-M wrote:

Q
Thank you for your response and help. I have been going just thinking it was a wonderful club for my son, until I got this response from my Priest who told me to get him out if it was connected with RC. It was surprising to me. So, I started looking up what I could find on Legionnaires and the RC on the Internet. I found you’re Website and remembered my Priest telling me this group was cult-like but he didn’t give many details or say a whole lot about it. That’s why I decided to search further. Now I am very concerned. I’m still in the surprised stage.
I have only been taking my son to the Conquest Club since summer and it was only this past week that my Priest told me this. So most of what I’m learning is what I’m getting off the Internet. It is really a jolt.

I thought this club was the answer to a prayer. Everyone is very kind and friendly and accepting of my ADHD son. I saw this as fruit. I have not had a negative experience yet and wonder why my Priest is saying this. I was totally naive about this until he said that and I started looking on the Internet for more information. I did mention the child abuse stuff and the President of the club went into detail about how the stuff was never proven and the Pope dismissed it. They say that the negative stuff I see on the Internet is proof that they are doing something great because it shows that the Devil is against them. No good thing comes to pass without a lot of opposition.

Is RC the same all over? Or are there local groups that could not be as cult-like? I hope that some of the other women will e-mail me whom you forwarded my e-mail too. I’m still trying to figure out what I’m going to do. It is still a bit of a shock to me.

Thank you so much for your communication.
Blessings and Peace


A/ Dear C-M, Concerned Mother

Keep searching. It is a subtle thing. We are not talking the Moonies or the Jehovah’s .but some of the methodology is similar. very smart, somewhat deceitful recruiting.’love-bombing’.All of us who have left have experienced feeling special AT THE BEGINNING.it wears off.everyone and everything is a means to an end…

The child abuse stuff may stop them in their tracks.
Ask also about pressure tactics and informed consent.
Besides, ‘why the hurry?’ .God is not going to die anytime soon.
Have a good chat with your priest.


Q/C-M wrote:

Thank you very much. The other thing I keep hearing is that all new movements and orders face persecution and this is what happened to this movement and its leader.


A/ Dear C-M, Concerned Mother,

That is another ‘catch phrase’; step back and you will see there is false reasoning;

 

FAULTY AND MISLEADING THINKING.

Ask anyone who knows LOGIC. The LC/RC jump from a generalization to a particular conclusion. Their argument can be corrected as follows;

‘All new movements and orders face persecution’

Answer:

MAYBE,

BUT NOT ALL NEW MOVEMENTS AND ORDERS ARE GOOD AND
HEALTHY.

SO, HOW DOES THAT PROVE THAT THE LEGION/REGNUM, because its NEW, IS GOOD AND HEALTHY?

That is why they would be afraid of arguing with a priest or a person with philosophical training;
‘Ordinary people’ -including Catholics – can be seduced by the catch-phrases, the appearances of holiness, and the ‘quick solutions to very complex problems’. They are glib.


Q/C-M wrote:

Thanks again. I see your point. I was told that our Bishop doesn’t approve of the RC in our diocese because his specialty is the formation of priests and he does not believe this should happen until college age. Legionary Priests can start as young as 12 and there is at least one school in the US where children this age can go. I can apply the example you just gave me to their reasoning for sending young boys into training to become Priests.
However, as unhealthy as this practice seems to me, I’m just in RCIA and still learning, it’s been going on in the church for years and also is accepted by the Pope.
What I am wondering after my discussion last night with the doctor they said wanted to speak with me is this. Is this Boys Club about formation and Christian Fellowship? I have only looked at it as a comparable replacement for the Monday night boys group I always had my son in at another church. This doctor last night tells me he would be very happy if any of his boys showed a desire in the priesthood and would send them to the school that does this if they did. Is there another purpose, and that being to draw young boys into the Priesthood? I guess they like to get them before they become too influenced by the world.
I don’t see how a 12 year old or even any adolescent could adequately discern this calling. But I think these parents see it as sacrificing their sons for the Church. It’s not just about being a boys club is it? I think I’m catching on.


A/ Dear C-M, Concerned Mother,

You are catching on. These clubs, from the LC/RC point of view, are (and ARE called from the inside by the members); ‘OPEN MEANS OF RECRUITMENT’. It’s just that they are camouflaged to look like other ‘harmless’ groups. These are a MEANS TO AN END.
This is what Regain calls ‘deceit’, ‘deceitful methods and strategies’.
MEANS OF GRADUALLY DRAWING BOYS TO THE LC SEMINARY;
THEY DO HAVE ONE, TWO OR THREE OF THESE JUNIOR SEMINARIES IN NORTH AMERICA, MASQUERADING AS RESIDENTIAL HIGH SCHOOLS. compared to other religious orders who may have similar schools, the LC/RC recruitment strategies are high powered and deceitful, often separating children from their parents too early and too strictly.

‘Spiritual Direction” is often used to split the youth from parental influence and oversight, and seduce them into pre-mature commitment against the parents’ wishes, under the pretence of this being The Will of God.

WHY JUNIOR SEMINARIES?

Junior seminaries were barely mentioned by the Church’s latest Ecumenical Council, Vatican II, 1962-65. They are mentioned in passing in number 3 of the official document on priestly formation. Even so, the Legion is not in compliance with this paragraph as it separates the children too much from their parents and relatives, and from the outside world.

Junior Seminaries arose after the Council of Trent in the 16th century, and were used more extensively in ‘Latin’ and 3rd world countries, for several reasons:

  1. To prevent the boys from engaging in sex too early, and shepherd them towards celibacy. Remember that in some supposedly Catholic countries, fathers initiate(d) their sons into adolescence by bringing them to brothels! (One would hope that this is not the custom presently among American Catholic families). However, this extreme protectionism may still have some weight among Catholic families with a ‘siege mentality’ who are scared out of their mind by the world, the flesh, and the devil. Especially by the flesh!

    The problem here was that boys at these seminaries often never really made a free and informed choice for celibacy because they were too secluded and had no contact with their peers and with females.

  1. Public education was sadly lacking and so the seminary gave them a better grounding. (This is no longer the case in most countries.)
  1. They started learning Latin (remember everything was done in Latin, even university lectures) and Greek, the official Church languages, from early on. Language learning continues to be one of the reasons for a traditional seminary.

Your pocket Church historian


Q/C-M wrote:

Dear Regain;
Thank you so very very much!! I think I am seeing the light. I finally know what is going on and why my Priest and Bishop have problems with it and why what LC/RC folks say what they say. I get it!! I really get it!! I really do want to thank you for the time you have spent writing to me on this. I see the truth now. I was so confused when I started writing. Everything looked and seemed so wonderful and then my Priest said to get my son out and then I was confused and trying to piece puzzle pieces together. I feel like a huge weight has been lifted off my shoulders. I cannot thank you enough ;


A/ Dear C-M, Concerned Mother,

Today you made my day! That is one of the goals of Regain; to warn and educate Catholics about the dangers of these ‘sect-like organizations’ inside the Catholic Church. I am sorry to say that other converts have fallen prey to deceit, learning the truth later to their chagrin. We are about to implement a new section on our webpage Q and A, and our conversation seems to confirm the need to set up a place where others can access the ‘wisdom’ of Regain
members; to INITIATE other Catholics into the ‘Mysteries’ of the Legion of Christ.

Would you allow us to use some of our correspondence -carefully editing out any identifying information- as a way of enlightening others? Our recent conference in Atlanta has been a great eye-opener to us, as we experienced the confusion and anxiety of catholic parents vis-? -vis the Legion/Regnum and realized we must try to give a specifically Christian and Catholic answer to the cry for help.
Yours in Christ,
– – – – – –

Q/C-M wrote:

Dear Regain;

I am quite certain that you made my day too!! I think that what you want to do with the Q and A section is a wonderful idea. I am only glad that I had a priest who set up my red flags and that you were there to help me figure out what was going on.
My Priest knew they weren’t answering his questions. In fact, they returned his e-mail with a question as to what did he mean by these questions. Then they told me that my priest was being deceptive because they knew he knew the answers to what he was asking. I was the person in the middle.

I don’t know about other locations but here in the XY area, on the surface, this looks like a wonderful club. I know now from using your Website that I was even lied to. The club President told me that RC started this club as their main goal and to help these boys go out and change the world. And, I was also told that RC does not always decide to become affiliated with Conquest. I learned from your Website how Legionaries, RC, Conquest, schools, universities, other Websites all are linked together. RC here did not present it that way. It was like they chose to affiliate with Conquest and start this club.

I am just truly grateful to you for helping me finally see and understand. I think that they should be up front that these clubs are formed with the intention of recruiting for vocations. If I had not been so curious about my priest not approving of the group and wondering why, I never would have found Regain or e-mailed people who really knew. When would I have found out? When my son decided at age 12 that he wanted to become a Priest and they tell me to send him off to a school where he decides his future before he is even old enough to make that decision? The way I see it now, it wouldn’t likely be a true calling from God on his life at this point, it would be the heavy influencing of Conquest leaders.

You really did make my day. And I’m certain that your time and answers have spared our family much future pain. I do hope others will be led to you for help as well.
This is beside the point now, but I am left wondering about the child abuse allegations and the self-flagellation stories. All of which are adamantly denied by RC. It was even compared to the persecution that St. Francis faced when he started the Franciscan order.

May the Lord bestow blessings, love, and peace in your life.
– – – – – –

A/ Dear C-M, Concerned Mother,

Unfortunately, lying is very common; I mean, bare-faced lying.
And the piece about St. Francis is another common ploy, but rather preposterous; there could not be two people more different than Marcial Maciel and Francis of Assisi; Francis left luxury and fame to embrace poverty and anonymity; Marcial left a simple life in Cotija, a one horse town in provincial Mexico, to embrace luxury and glory.As for the Legionaries and the Franciscans, we are talking for now about several centuries of self-less service to the Church and the faithful, and the proven holiness of hundreds of members of St. Francis’ Third Order, religious and lay. Besides, there is that famous Franciscan humility!

Regain

Marcial Maciel – Our Father Who Art in Helicopter

The Importance of Being Father Maciel

 

An internal Legion of Christ memo, and some excerpts from the Constitutions of the Legion of Christ

 

Our Father Maciel Who Art in Helicopter

PREMATURE COMMITMENT

Thy Kingdom Come!
MEMORANDUM
6 of June, 1999
TO: Padre. M. A,, L.C.
FROM: Padre M.R.,L.C.
RE: Helicopter for Nuestro Padre in Medellian, [Colombia, South America]
Dear Father M.
In order to facilitate Nuestro Padre’s transportation during his stay in Medelian we can rent a helicopter. Here are the details:

  1. Company: HELISERVICE LTD.
    Tel: 2559596-2852376-2855562. Telefax 2855545
    Aeroparque- Olaya Herrera. Hangar NA °:35
    Cra. 67 NA ° 04-61 Medelian.
    Owner: Armando Rguez. Cell: 033-5000735
    Administrator: Beatriz Tamayo Ospina. Cell: 033-5048730
  1. . Days: Wednesday 9 June: Airport-Cumbres LC High School.
    Friday 11 June: Cumbres-Llano Grande, Llano Grande-Cumbres LC High School.
    Sunday 13 June: Cumbres HS – airport.
  1. Capacity: 6 persons (but they told us to bring only 4).
  1. Cost: $700 dolls total. (With no deviation from chosen routes, must be direct).
  1. . Other conditions: no helicopter from any company may fly after 5:00 p.m. They allow take-offs from Rionegro airport only up to 5:00 p.m.

We researched another four companies and the cheapest was $1400 dollars. Besides, HELISERVICE is the one with the best helicopters.
Thanks for all your help.
Yours Affectionately in Christ, M.R, LC

 

Manipulating Virtue to Build a House of Cards – Reflections on LC/RC

What is the most that Catholic parents can give their children? An appreciation for who they are as children of God, to know the name of their Redeemer and the price He paid for their sins, a good, solid family life in the Domestic Church, and an understanding of the grave battle of good versus evil that will prevail in our midst unto the consummation of the world. It would seem that these things are enough, but they are not – for unless a person also understands his free will and how to discern his vocation amidst all the confusion of the world, he may fall prey to those who would even misappropriate the truths of the faith for a dubious end.

 

I note these observations as a wife and mother, a Catholic familiar with the Legionaries of Christ for over a dozen years in a variety of locations, and a former member of the Regnum Christi lay Movement. What led me to the following conclusions is not so much my catechesis in the faith, which is quite thorough, but actually my brokenness and human malformation which finally has made clear where some of the defects of the spiritual direction lie. Let me first be clear in stating that there is nothing unorthodox about the faith as proposed by life in the Movement, nor would they ever offer any teaching contrary to the Magisterium of the Church – herein lies the attraction this group holds in the eyes of Catholics weary of liturgical abuses and timid shepherds. Neither would I ever accuse any particular member of duplicity or lack of sincerity in his zeal for souls or enthusiasm for strengthening the Church at large. Virtually every member I have met on every level has been burning with love of Christ and earnest in his or her desire to bring Gospel values to a thirsting world. The problem rather lies in the methodology and its manipulation ofvirtue.

 

The watchwords of the Legion of Christ and the Regnum Christi Movement (for brevity, from herein, I will refer to the Movement to indicate both the clerical and the lay sides) are charity and unity. Clearly, these are two key virtues and they indicate the priority that Christ put on love, as the only supernatural virtue that would last and His great desire for unity among His followers, as indicated in His Final Discourse. The only drawback possible in speaking about charity and unity are the way in which they are lived in the Movement.

 

The prime vice to be fought at all cost in the Movement is negativity – found in speaking forthrightly about the defects of others, discussing the actions of others in anything less than positive words, repeating details of unfortunate events or conversations that have taken place, or relaying any information that does not speak well of persons, apostolates, or institutions. I received this teaching as Christ-centered and tried to live up to always speaking positively of people and events. It was even stressed that to recount a sin was to commit that sin again in the telling, and we were to console Christ by living charity in this way.

 

It took me years to see that defining charity in this way led to harm on several levels. First of all, it was impossible to truly gauge what was happening in some apostolates and sections because honest assessments were not allowed. Assuming the best of intentions and putting a positive spin on events made for upbeat conversations, but they were ultimately based on an inherent dishonestly. After years of only speaking well of everything and hoping that the appropriate fraternal corrections were being made by the right people, each member of the women’s section found herself isolated in her frustrations, alone in her assessments, and unable to clarify what was truly wrong with the apostolic work she was trying to achieve. Forbidden from frank speech because of the tenor and charism of perpetually happy conversations around her, she has been taught it is a grave sin against charity to speak – dare we say, honestly!

 

Having been raised in a dysfunctional home and being familiar with the duplicity of alcoholism, it is evident that pretending all is well and refusing to name certain wrongs can be part of enabling behavior. To feed lies in the name of unity and to preserve peace at any cost is a way of life that many are familiar with – and yet it can be a sign of strikingly unhealthy life. Repeating expected responses, parroting platitudes, and creating perpetually positive environments is unrealistic and unsettling to the observer. One wonders about the authentic individuality that is sacrificed for the ideal, even when the ideal is supposed to be Christ. The similarities between ignoring the proverbial elephant in the living room and the honest realities of day to day life in a fallen world leave much room for thought to the honest person.

 

The harm to children can be immense when they are encouraged to ignore their feelings of dislike, their very instincts that are instructing them to back away from a person or an activity for whatever reason. Not all people are likeable, many perfectly acceptable activities are unpalatable to some people, and the unique characteristics of all must be respected. Thus, children are undermined in an important way when they are constantly told to be positive, to embrace everyone cheerfully, and to participate in group activities generously against even their own maturing instincts. This is not charity but plastic happiness; children who are perpetually unable to express dark feelings or negative reactions in a misguided attempt to fight sin will not know themselves as Christ would want them to which is essential to maturing and deepening real charity in their lives. Feelings are not sins and authentic reactions have to be respected in their own right for the sake of the dignity of the child.

 

On both the child and the adult level, the unity forced by this type of charity is not authentic either but forced and superficial. On a theological level in dialogue between denominations, there are members of the faithful who want to share Holy Communion with others outside the Catholic Church as a step towards unity of all Christians, and yet the Church says no. Her firm teaching is that unity will flow from sharing in the fullness of the truth first, not that outward appearances of unity will lead to mutual understanding. In the same way in the Movement, we see that such unity based on inhibition of true feelings, lack of honest dialogue, and less than total respect for authentic relationships is not real unity but lockstep conformity, cookie cutter spirituality, and false joy. The disparity will finally come out in one form or another, and indeed does in one disillusioned member after another leaving the group.

 

Generosity

 

One of the most dangerous approaches to the discernment of vocations – both to the consecrated life and the priesthood – is generosity. Though countless anecdotes and testimonies, it is clear that all young men and women who are received into the Movement’s houses of formation for discernment are encouraged to be generous with God. Who could dispute the need for that! But with young souls who have been well-catechized in the truths of their faith, this virtue has a tendency to be manipulated. It would appear – granted, from the outside looking in – that the default mode is that all persons are assumed to have a vocation; it is simply then a question of generosity. Elbow to elbow with zealous young Catholics, the young person is compelled to forget himself, to sacrifice his or her comforts, and to give all to God, Who cannot be outdone in generosity. Even letters from home may encourage the same attitude and discourage negative thoughts or the possibility of leaving as giving up. Honest doubts are interpreted as temptations of the devil which have to be banished.

 

To suggest that one may not have a vocation is simply to cease to be generous with God and a sign of failure. This is not authentic discernment but coercion and group-think. Truly, heroic examples of virtue among one’s peers can spur on the faint-hearted but my assessment after many years on the atmosphere of these houses is not one of freedom and honest recollection but manipulation of piety and love of God to shame youngsters into stepping into vocations that may not truly be their calling. In allowing the child at a tender young age to live in this atmosphere of discernment, the parent is only exchanging one peer-group (the typical secular self-absorbed mall rats) for another peer-group – granted one that is focused on piety and virtue, but it is a peer-group none-the-less and has all the same tendencies to discouraging individuality and self-knowledge.

 

It is also evident that women are invited to consecrate themselves after a remarkably short association, with the understanding that their private promise is as binding before God as the vow of a religious sister. The difference is simply canonical in that her promise is to her superior rather than to a bishop. Many a young woman has married Christ within the structure of the Movement with less than a year of formation or discernment on the basis that others can see her vocation, even if she cannot. Knowing that the world is thirsting for chastity and eschatological signs of purity, surrounded by generous souls who compete in games of virtue, and guided by superiors who are encouraged to meet quotas, the young woman considering her vocation is prey to manipulation which, despite appearing to build the Kingdom, does not respect her freedom and latitude to really consider her future. She then joins a hierarchy of women who recruit others into their houses of formation and the cycle continues through schools, youth groups, and spiritual direction of other youngsters too immature to see possible manipulation of their good intentions. This is not to dispute the need to build the Kingdom of Christ, or the need to counter the widespread licentiousness with purity – but the atmosphere in the Movement is not free of coercion and peer-pressure of the very young to choose a way of life before they really can know themselves.

 

The guilt and anguish of women leaving this way of life is intense since they feel they have failed Christ, lacked in generosity, and reneged on a promise to God Himself. They cannot see that they were encouraged to take the promise without enough prior formation or that it was not entirely freely given. Like any person reeling after a divorce, the feelings of these people are dark and confused, with enough sorrows to last for years.

 

Obedience

 

This virtue is extremely hard to discuss properly by lay persons who have not taken vows outside of marriage, thus I will give impressions solely concerning the docility of lay members of the Movement who receive spiritual direction in Regnum Christi. I speak here from first-hand experience as well as from a wide array of testimonies given in confidence when I say that it is enormously difficult after a while to trust direction given by an organization that has clearly defined goals that are based on numbers and pre-ordained avenues of apostolates. One is invited to join Regnum Christi after a very short introduction, sometimes within the course of a week-end retreat, and immediately told thatGod saw you from all eternity as Regnum Christi. One is taught that this is not an addition to one’s way of life but the very foundation of it and that there is a way of doing everything through the methodology. In fact, it is said that the methodology is blessed to the point that, like the Magisterium, one can never go wrong when using it. It is sufficient for holiness, it is comprehensive in scope enough to color one’s entire life, and integration with this methodology is a key pursuit of all members from that point on.

 

While in the Movement, I didn’t mind the way of life, which can be similar to the habits of any particular family (the way to say the rosary, which prayers to say at various points of the day, the vocabulary used for discussion, etc.) but what this subtly does is to allow the tentacles of the methodology to touch all aspects of prayer life until the Movement becomes essentially the gatekeeper between the soul and Christ. Since the normal daily, weekly, and monthly acts of piety are simply those of a serious Catholic, they cannot be seen as excessive, but appropriate to the life of any lay faithful. The problem becomes simply confusion over ownership. It becomes a trademark of sorts, as though these acts of piety performed (in a slightly unique way) become Movement property and cannot exist without the methodology afterwards. (After leaving, many acts of piety have to be dropped and picked up one by one in a fresh way, to appropriate them for their own beauty and value once again.)

 

Spiritual direction, based on a Program of Life, seems at first glance to be a marvelous way of pursuing self-knowledge and growth in virtue, but unfortunately as many have seen, it can be a subtle form of manipulation which ultimately serves the Movement and not necessarily the particular soul. We were told that the Holy Father specifically wanted the Regnum Christi Movement to grow a hundred-fold and thus recruitment was stressed at every turn. If one could see the good in one’s life that the Movement had helped to bring about, then one would want to share that good with everyone. Friends were targeted for recruitment, relationships were pursued for their possible help with the apostolates, and contrary to all teachings about the dignity of the human person for his own sake, all relationships were mined for building Kingdom. Souls were being lost, evil was permeating society, and no stone was to be left unturned in culling vocations to the Legion or Regnum Christi.

 

The greatest casualty of this zeal is the domestic church – the family. Children are encouraged to join youth groups according to age and sex where formation would take place, women would form women, men the men, business leaders the business leaders, college students the college students, and so forth. Each of our children had streamlined activities to the point that there was little family time left. If we were not at a meeting, performing a particular act of piety, on a retreat or at a recollection, we were praying over a list of potential recruits that would have otherwise simply been known to us as our friends or acquaintances. We were trained in Covey’s techniques of Seven Habits of Highly Effective People for the sake of the Kingdom, and there was little genuine interaction left since, out of obedience and integration, all was for The Cause.

 

Thus spiritual direction no longer was a method of going deeper, being still with God, or climbing the ladder of perfection, it was a manipulative tool to serve an organization whose lifeblood was always new recruits and new sources of donations of money and precious time. Mothers became worn out and their children often took a back seat to Movement business. Discerning children tried to withdraw from their clubs and groups as a way of rebelling against the people who were causing the family to fray at the edges and yet their parents – through the same spiritual direction – clamped down against sin and selfishness. Obedience to this spiritual direction out of misguided virtue led to disobedience in the family and often was the very cause of such disharmony. Putting on Christ and outdoing one another for all those souls tragically has more than once undermined the souls closest to us and alienated them from the Christ they really need.

 

Conclusion

 

These brief reflections on some key virtues have been made to allow some to see the Movement from another perspective – from the point of view of a woman who did her best for many years to live the methodology and integrate her life according to how she was told that Christ saw her from all eternity. The freedom I felt at leaving the Movement was enormous and certainly unanticipated when I considered breaking away. I had anticipated suffering from guilt about letting Christ down, in imagining the souls that would perish due to my lack of generosity, and I knew that the compilation of testimonies gathered across the miles was defined as backbiting and negativity in Movement terminology. But there also came a tremendous freedom in speaking clearly, honestly, and forthrightly after so many years of gloss and spin. One can only really see the big picture when one does step out and ask for one’s real experiences with team life. What is astonishing is the similarity of experiences across the board, and it becomes evident thatcharity and unity – as used by Legion methodology – have become clever tools for what is essentially isolation and ignorance.

 

I love Christ, I am a faithful member of Holy Mother Church, and I want nothing more than to become a saint, but with the manipulation of virtue in the Movement, for whatever end-game, the house of cards of Regnum Christi cannot be one of the Mansions mentioned in the Gospels. The house I want is built with honesty, sincerity, and integrity which, in due time, I found that here are unfortunately in short supply.

 

To contact this author further about her testimony or with questions, please write to GiselleSteMarie@yahoo.com

 

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