The Annual Appeal was launched in our diocese this weekend, as it has been or will be in many other dioceses, with a sound-tracked video at every Mass and a step-by-step walk-through of the completion of pledge cards. While I sympathize with the committee that came up with that tedious line-by-line approach, it doesn’t wear well on adults.
Instead, maybe give us an honest accounting of where our money has gone, the steps taken to protect and report it, and a picture of the accounting best practices that assure us the money is spent as intended. Maybe that, instead of, “On the first line, write your name. We’ll wait.”
Maybe tell us about the engagement of independent auditors to oversee the implementation of proper internal controls and the production of attested financial statements. An audit is so effective a tool that when Cardinal George Pell, as Prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy, contracted with PriceWaterhouseCoopers to audit the Vatican accounts, false charges were advanced to force him back to Australia. Needless to say, the audit was cancelled, Pell was whisked away from Rome to a sham trial, and he was effectively neutralized as a financial reformer.
No substantial business with stakeholders could dream of not having an audit; it’s the only way the public can be assured that a business is doing what it says on the label. No public company can opt out of an annual audit; it’s in SEC regulations, to protect stockholders.
Why should dioceses be any different? They should be held to a higher standard not a lower, given that they act in the name of Christ. But an audit takes carte blanche away from diocesan employees who are not accustomed to outside scrutiny.
[Dioceses] should be held to a higher standard not a lower, given that they act in the name of Christ. But an audit takes carte blanche away from diocesan employees who are not accustomed to outside scrutiny. Tweet ThisIn the past, we’ve trusted the oversight of bishops and the proficiency and good intentions of chancery staff. That is no longer a prudent strategy, if it ever was. Blind trust with no accountability may actually encourage shoddy behavior.
In truth, how many bishops take personal responsibility for the funds contributed? Many have inherited a command structure in the chancery that actively precludes any possibility of personal agency. “For goodness’ sake, don’t rock the boat, Your Excellency. People won’t like you.”
So, practically speaking, we’re not even blindly trusting a bishop when we give to appeals with no transparency; we’re blindly trusting lay employees who may not be identifiable behind the protective curtain of the diocesan business office.
Here in Tyler, Texas, some of us still wonder why no one in the chancery spoke up for our bishop when he was removed without process. Presented with an appeal relying on trust for those same people, we still wonder. While that is a concern unique to Tyler, it speaks to the assumption that the faithful will blindly hand over money to people who are disconnected from the issues that most deeply concern us.
We have been given no hard information about the financial decision-making and oversight processes, just mention of the seminarians and Catholic Charities, as if that establishes the case.
In our diocese, we can contribute separately to a fund for seminarians. We can contribute separately to the college campus ministry or to the St. Vincent de Paul Society. We can, in effect, bypass the Annual Appeal without neglecting the causes we care about.
That leaves Catholic Charities. Early in 2025, it was confirmed what many of us suspected already, that Catholic Charities was facilitating human and drug trafficking at the Southern border. When an appeal is presented that benefits Catholic Charities, we immediately call to mind the 300,000+ minor children who disappeared into the interior of the country with no protection; the fentanyl highway; the fees that human smugglers demand, so high that a period of indenture (slavery) is required; and the undocumented millions of dollars that were made during the Biden invasion from sex commerce at the border.
I’m not saying the bishops are guilty, but if they ask for money, they should, by golly, address these concerns in some plausible way beyond, “We didn’t do it.”
There were huge grants to Catholic Charities from Biden’s executive agencies, over $2.3 billion during his administration. Catholic Charities of Fort Worth, alone, increased its annual revenue from $32 million to $289 million during the Biden years, with $270 million coming from the government. What would account for an 800 percent increase in funding?
The Federal pipeline has been shut off, for the most part, which means Catholic Charities will have to rely more heavily on Bishops’ Appeals. That’s all the more reason to demand an independent audit with documentation of activities and organizations supported by our dioceses.
While I have hope that our local Catholic Charities of Tyler has not participated in the income from bogus government grants or from trafficking of any kind, credible proof has not been presented to us. No one is even acknowledging that we have valid concerns. We are just supposed to sign the check (or click the “GIVE NOW” button) without solid answers.
I believe that era is over.
The bishops, as a whole, are disingenuous. They have supported abortion and homosexuality through screens of obscuring organizations, especially the Campaign for Human Development—and its dependent NGOs (here, for example)—which was reinstituted in our diocese when our new bishop took office.
The bishops, as a whole, are disingenuous. They have supported abortion and homosexuality through screens of obscuring organizations, especially the Campaign for Human Development—and its dependent NGOs Tweet ThisBishops who provably participated in, or covered up for, clerical sex abuse are promoted by Rome, which could not happen if the USCCB oversaw its own members and had the will to protect the faithful.
Bishops gather together to moralize against the president that many of us voted for, as though the Catholic Church has become a Democrat stump, the rest of us be damned. Instead of preaching and teaching the universal Catholic truths, they concern themselves with politics and their bank accounts. They spend more time agitating against communion rails and the Latin Mass than preaching the Gospel.
They have, in nearly every way, thrown out the moral authority they should have had by ignoring Christ as though they have any authority within themselves apart from Him. And then they ask us for money and hope we will continue to give blindly. Bishops have been withdrawing moral capital for decades and not making deposits. The whole structure is broken.
Dear bishops, we are tired of the never-ending scandals and your pretending that nothing is amiss. We are tired of being used by you.
If a particular bishop is innocent, let him at least address our concerns and give us solid, documented reasons to believe he is truthful. A clean, independent audit report would be the most direct way.
Bishops, there are capable accounting firms in every diocese of this country.
Excellent article. I have actually come to the belief that most of our bishops are either Universalists, atheists, or Pelagians. In the case of the first two they have no fear of judgment, no matter how much damage they do to the Church, and in the case of the latter they think they can earn their salvation, using standards that they themselves set. Regardless, most have no business even being a lay catechist, much less a bishop.
However, there is the old saying “money talks”. If you are lucky to have a parish church that has a reverent/more traditional novus ordo mass and/or priest, or even luckier (like me) to have a personal parish dedicated to the TLM (which means that it was set up before Traditiones Custodies, since that bans future ones from being set up), then it is a good idea to donate to parish appeals *through that parish*. This is because it gives the bishop financial incentive to keep that parish going as-is, and parishes like this will serve as a driver of reform in the future.
But a lot of Catholics these days are not so lucky (for example those living in Chicago and Charlotte). In cases like these, when one is aware of how evil these bishops are, one actually makes oneself complicit and a party to their evil by donating to a parish appeal. Don’t even give penny to it.
Financial insolvency will ultimately be one of the main driving forces for reform. We already saw this when the USCCB’s federal funding for immigrant resettlement was eliminated and they were forced to lay off staff – nearly all left-wing individuals who treat the Church like an NGO and undermine its orthodoxy. The more programs that dioceses have to cut and the more staff they have to lay off the closer they become to true reform.
Quite possibly the most heterodox part of the Catholic Church is that of Germany, which is supported by Catholic tax payers there, and is thus also probably the most disproportionally wealthy part of the Catholic Church anywhere on earth. This wealth is what corrupts it. If the laws are ever changed to eliminate this Church tax most of the Catholic Church there will simply disappear over a short time, along with its heretical influence on the universal Church. What will remain will be a tiny remnant of orthodoxy.
I have been wary of the lack of financial transparency and the attitude of the Bishops to sweep inconvenient truths under the rug since first grade. At that time our priest and his brother defrauded the school building fund of $250,000, a building that was under construction with bills that had not yet been paid. My dad brought the issue to the Bishop who basically told him “tough luck” so the priest & his brother moved on and I transferred to a public school. I learned to trust but verify but since there is no verification nor financial controls within the Catholic Church I do not trusts priests nor Bishops, an approach that was further verified when I served on the Financial Committee of a parochial grade school where the priest & church secretary conspired to “fix the books”.
Thanks Sheryl. Your article, that is some/any thoughtful Catholic Media post regarding this issue, is long overdue. Your courage is appreciated. Be safe. Be BLEST with sufficient Grace to get thru the day(s).
Still: I suppose if a Bishop fails to ‘produce’ money (for the purveyors of evil who administer it), he’ll be castigated by a hierarchical system far removed from the pilgrims in the pews.
For the most part the only purpose most bishops serve is to extinguish any remaining credibility the Church might have. As the author stated, ongoing scandals and payouts to the tune of billions of dollars and north of 40 bankruptcies of dioceses continue to demonstrate nothing has changed in the hierarchy of the Church. The USCCB is a criminal enterprise gorging itself on federal funds from human trafficking. The results of those actions are playing out in Minnesota and across the country today. We are nothing but a revenue source for these impostors as they demonstrated when they locked the doors of our churches during Covid. Thugs such as Martin in Charlotte gleefully crush true believers for the simple reason that they can. For the most part these are not holy men, they are not even decent men as their actions continue to demonstrate time and time again. The fact that they have the gall to ask for money demonstrates their complete lack of any sense of reason or justice. They hate us. They speak nothing of the deaths, corruption and ongoing problems they have helped cause. They Invoke truly saintly people like Mother Cabrini and their empty platitudes of what would Jesus do further demonstrate there is no limit to the depth they will sink. After prayerful consideration I am going to give them $1. It’s not that they deserve it, but it demonstrates that I have very very little hope that anything will change. I weep for what they have done to the Church of my Saviour and I do pray for their wretched souls. I look forward to the day when we hit bottom and these rodents are gone.
Many excellent points to consider.