Pro-life supporters denounce Father Pavone over election Facebook video

By Rhina Guidos

WASHINGTON (CNS) — Pro-life supporters in the Catholic
Church are denouncing activist Father Frank Pavone for what he said was an “emergency
situation” on the eve of the U.S. presidential election.

“What did he do?” wrote Ed Mechmann, a public policy
director whose areas of concern include pro-life issues, in a blog for the Archdiocese of New
York. “He used a dead aborted baby, laying naked and bloody on an altar, as a
prop for his video.”

But Father Pavone, no stranger to controversial situations,
said he was trying to drive home, in a visual and impactful way, what it meant to choose
one presidential candidate over the other on Election Day. Father Pavone,
appealing for votes for Republican presidential candidate Donald J. Trump, said
he was showing “the Democrats’ support of baby-killing.”

“I’m showing the reality,” he said in an interview on
Election Day with Catholic News Service. Father Pavone is a member of Trump’s
Catholic advisory group.

But some say what he did, how he did it and where he did it —
a body on an altar via Facebook Live — amounts to desecration of a body and also
is sacrilegious because it was done on an altar, which should be used only for
sacramental purposes, not to advance a political candidate.

“When a photo of a pro-life priest with a naked corpse of an
unborn child on an altar is used to get out the vote, it’s time to say: ENOUGH!”
wrote Dominican Father Thomas Petri of Washington on Twitter Nov. 7.

Mechmann, of the New York Archdiocese, wrote: “It is hard
for me to express in calm, measured terms, the revulsion I feel about this.”

But Father Pavone said that everyone should be repulsed by
the act of abortion and that’s what he was trying to show.

“You can’t do it with words,” he said, about why he chose to
do a Facebook Live video.

Father Pavone said he was alone, in a chapel with the body, which
he said was given to him by a pathologist who had received it from an abortion clinic.

“This person had enough of a conscience to say, ‘I’m not
going to throw it away’ and gave the body to a pastor, and the pastor, knowing
my role, contacted me and we both arranged to honor the child with a viewing,”
he said.

But the viewing was a very public affair. By Election Day,
it had been viewed 707,000 times. Father Pavone said he has apologized to
those who were offended and has posted an apology but has not taken
down the video.

He said he has not heard directly from the Bishop Patrick
J. Zurek of Amarillo, Texas, his home diocese, but church members
need to communicate with one another instead of posting criticism publicly, he
said, adding that anger should be directed at Democrat Hillary Clinton, who
supports abortion.

He said he doesn’t see what he did as desecration or
improper in any way.

“I don’t know what in the world these people are talking about,”
he said. “What did I put on the altar? This is a human child.”

He said he has bishop advisers and canonical advisers, as well
as legal advice, when he undertakes actions that help him advance his cause
against abortion.

“I am always welcoming advice,” he said.

In 2014, New York Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan cut ties with
Father Pavone and his group
Priests for Life, saying the priest refused
to allow an audit of the group’s finances. Priests for Life is based in Staten Island, New York.

Father Pavone was ordained a priest of the New York Archdiocese in 1988 but was incardinated into the Amarillo Diocese in 2005 by Bishop John W. Yanta, then head of the diocese, who served on the organization’s board of advisers. In 2012, the Vatican Congregation
of the Clergy issued a decree allowing Father Pavone to minister outside the
Diocese of Amarillo,  but he still must
obtain specific permission to do so from Bishop Zurek.

Father Pavone told CNS the bishops have never supported his work.

The Diocese of Amarillo has not issued a statement about the Facebook video and whether it will take any action against the priest. But Father
Pavone said he is not concerned.

“I don’t belong
in Amarillo, to tell you the truth,” he said. “The bishop (Yanta) invited me. I have no
reason to be there.”

The Catholic blog Patheos, whose bloggers condemned Pavone
in several posts over the incident, pointed out that the Code of Canon Law
spells out how the altar should be used and that Canon 1239 says that it “must
be reserved for divine worship alone.”

“It is a violation of canon law, which states that the altar
is consecrated for one purpose and one purpose only,” wrote Patheos blogger
Scott Eric Alt. “It is consecrated for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. It is
not consecrated so that a dead child can be placed there as part of a political
stunt to lobby for a favored presidential candidate.”

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Follow Guidos on Twitter: @CNS_Rhina.

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