POWIP Piece of Work In Progress – Former Abode of Dan Collins

6Jul/1113

Fr John Corapi & the Judas Ratio

For years & years, I have loved Father John Corapi. He represents to me something sorely lacking (in my experience) in the Church. Namely, a priest with adequate testosterone. This is no small matter, as many of us middle-aged men find it easier to relate to a priest who we know actually knows something of the carnal struggles we face. That is, when we see ourselves in another, we find the argument & Teaching easier to consume.

Father John Corapi, for those who may not know him, was/is a very significant talent. He had/has all of the right skills and has had a terrific impact on the Spiritual Lives of many of us Catholic Pilgrims. He was/is an impressive orator, possesses an incredible mind and is an impressive theologian.

But perhaps the most impressive aspect of Father John Corapi was that he appeared a modern day St. Augustine of Hippo. One who knew sin and all of her empty promises. One who lived like a pagan and bathed in the false pleasures of our present temporal station until his Conversion. Nothing remarkable about his temptations: drugs and women. It's an old story indeed.

But Father John represented to many of us more than just a man we could relate to. Here was a man who had his moment in the garden. A man pursued by the "Hounds of Heaven". A man whose Monica was, as it were, the Virgin Herself.

What this means is that in Father John, we saw a man who appeared to have done what Christ implores all of us to do: namely, turn away from sin and embrace our Cross(es) and slog on the Pilgrim's Road for the Christ.

That is, in Father John we saw ourselves (only better). We saw someone living the faith. We saw someone unashamed to achieve to the Higher Self through a fiery devotion to Our Lord. We saw a man of love, peace, fortitude, courage, charity... a man of God. We saw our potential.

Today marks an incredibly sad day for the Church, in that...

"Father John Corapi’s religious order has found him guilty of substance abuse, sexual activity and violating his promise of poverty. A July 5 press release from the Society of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity (SOLT) said that while Fr. Corapi was involved in public ministry he had “sexual relations and years of cohabitation with a woman known to him, when the relationship began, as a prostitute.” MORE

I, along with perhaps millions of the Faithful are heartbroken.

In perusing the comments to this story on FB, we see mostly disbelief and resigned sadness. One could even say mourning for this man.

But we also see the typical bashing we have grown to expect. Of those voices, we see the juvenile tauntings  and cries of "hypocrite".

I have treated at length on this topic here before. Only last Ash Wednesday I posted this here on the topic of our claim as Hypocrite:

I will say it again for the benefit of all of my brothers and sisters in Christ. We are necessarily Hypocrites! We are to be Fools for Christ! The bar is necessarily high… and perfection will not be ours on this Pilgrim’s Road. We will necessarily fall short. End up in the woods. We will be lured away from the path. We will fall in the mud, beaten and bloodied. We will be left for dead. We will be surprised when a strange Samaritan (of all things) picks us up and delivers us from our doom.  We are in fact, all of us, in a distant country. We are, in fact, all of us, spending our inheritance on whores. During Lent, we are reminded to identify our faults, our imperfections, our rebellions, our sins, our darkened minds, our injured and hardened hearts… and to orient ourselves toward the Father’s Estate.

The story of Fr. John Corapi is nothing new. In fact, it is as old as the Faith. As old as the Church. We should not be stunned by stories such as these. From the beginning of Christ's Church here on Earth, Judas has been with us. St. Paul himself warns us against the spirit of Judas. St. Augustine, St. Catherine of Sienna, St. Faustina, JPII - all of these and all men and women religious worth their salt have warned, have lamented, and continue to draw our attentions to corruption in the Church... and yes, even Fr. Corapi, has spoken at great length about the dangers of concupiscence. In fact, they each struggled, as we are called to do, to sublimate our lower passions.

As I have postulated for years here on POWIP, there is a Judas Ratio.

The Judas Ratio can be thought to be the 8% (1/12) of any demographic segment (whether professional or otherwise) that can be expected to be complete scoundrels.

The concept originated with my father, Dan Sr., who postulated the thought to explain the “radical priests” during the pedophilia outing that occurred some years back. He said something along these lines: “If the Master Himself had one among his group who would sell Him and his own soul for a bag of cash, isn’t it likely the rest of us will have to suffer the same?” That goes for the Church, our schools, our bureaucrats, our politicians, our businesses (managers and employees alike), our neighbors, our family members, et cetera.

I think there is something to this Judas Ratio business. It may be that some of the 8% are never found out, while others are eventually dis-covered. But, nonetheless, I think it holds.

Let us Hypocrites acknowledge it and be on guard - vigilant. Will we deny Him like Peter? Yes. Will we condemn Him as Pilate? Yes. Will we betray Him with a Kiss? Yes. And in fact, we have done this and more to the Eternally crucified Christ.

This is why we Christians commemorate this Day and are called to contemplate not only The Death of Our Lord – in all of its very human ugliness – but also embrace our guilt in the astroturfing of the Christ. Who put Him to death? Why, we did. Each and every one of us. We betray Him, accuse Him, arrest Him, flog Him, spit upon Him, and yes, we nail Him to the Cross each and every day. We are Judas, Peter, Pilate, all of us. And if we are Blessed, we are the thief who asks the Godman to be remembered. We are the Roman Guard whose spirit is quaked and recognizes that Jesus was/is “truly the Son of God.” MORE

Let us pray that Father John petitions for Mercy and Forgiveness and Healing. Let us pray he does not, in fact, become a charismatic for the Forces of Evil... but instead embraces his Cross and makes his way to Calvary... in Faith, becoming a Saint as he is called to be (as we all are).

Let him comply, knuckle-down, and give up his rebellious spirit...

Petition St. Michael to come to his aid. Petition the Virgin to comfort him. Petition God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit to rush to his aid.

May he be healed. And should he be, perhaps I will celebrate him even more for overcoming his depravity appropriately... that is kneeling at the foot of the most holy and bloody Cross.

Father John Corapi is all of us... hypocrite, sinner, diseased... he is all of us and we are him.

I beg for your prayers! For Fr John, for me, for you, for all of us Judases, Pilates, Pharisees...

None of us is worthy. None of us.

Father John has made significant contributions to the Kingdom, the City of God. Now perhaps God has greater things in store for him. Perhaps like watching PJII persevere while his body betrayed him... perhaps we will witness a human get back on the Pilgrim's Road. Bloodied, beaten... but determined.

God help us all.

Enoch_Root

Person with kids,a beautiful wife, a job. Catholic of the Latin Rite.

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  1. Jesus did not take his message to the perfect, the perfect believers, the Faithful – he took his message to sinners, hypocrites, and sick people. When will more people see that it is overcoming such things, casting them aside, walking a different Path that is what Jesus asked, not that we BE perfect in order to know God.

    To cast aside and denigrate those who fall short is a sad, sad thing.

    I have listened to Fr.Corapi for several years. I have no problem today with the message, just because it came from another ‘imperfect’ human.

    I hope you don’t mind, I posted a link to this on my FB page, with Dan Sr’s quote.

    Well-loved. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 4 Thumb down 0

    • KC – thanks for stopping by. And, of course, you are right. None of us is perfect. And the first step is acknowledging how base we are… to be humble and meek and cognoscente of our fallen-ness. When we are contrite, we are invited to pick up the Cross and follow Him.

      Feel free to do whatever with any piece of this post.

      Again, thanks for stopping by.

      God Bless.

      Like or Dislike: Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0

  2. Nicely turned essay and dead-on.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0

  3. After reading the release issued by SOLT and Rev. Gerard Sheehan regarding the actions of Father Corapi a few things came to my mind.

    I wonder, would a secular business have the freedom to publicly release these sorts of private details about an employee and the reasons for termination? Of course not. A secular business couldn’t mention any if this, even if another business asks during the hiring of that same employee. And a religious order is bound by the same secular laws. This sort of release is grounds for a lawsuit.

    And I’m sure that is exactly what Father Corapi is busy filing as I write.

    Since, as it seems, SOLT allowed Corapi to function as a businessman in the business he was so successful at in his previous life, acquiring property and the wealth that comes with it, why do they now seem so shocked that he entered into contracts with those he did business with? Contracts and the legal protections they afford are just standard business practice.

    I’m not excusing Corapi for any misdeeds or insubordination. My guess is that he’s crossed the line between priest and business owner fairly often, both out of necessity and desire . And with wealth comes temptation, precisely the kind that an addict should avoid.

    But what I think we’re going to see now is his order, led by the normal, touchy feely, progressive, socially just, limp wristed administrative apparatchik that is so common in a highly bureaucratic Church organization, will be checked at every move by a well prepared, professional businessman that has decided to fight instead of play nicey-nice. And because these apparatchiks seldom face any real dissent they will begin to act in ways similar to a child stomping its foot when it doesn’t get its way. Hence the public release of private information.

    And Corpai has taken the ball out of their court and placed it in his. He has refused to play the apparatchik game of wearing down an opponent with bureaucratic ineptitude and sloth and instead brought the battle to them.

    And so far, at least according to the rules of engagement in the chosen field of battle, Corapi is kicking their butts.

    While it’s always terrible when scandal crosses the threshold of the Church door I’m still going to watch this carefully. Both sides are hiding things that need to be aired publicly, for the good of the Church.

    God seems to be in the process of tearing everything down now to rebuild it as He wants it to be and I suspect that all this is just part of that job. In the end, right will win out and evil will be swept away. Prayers of protection would seem to be in order.

    Hot debate. What do you think? Thumb up 6 Thumb down 3

  4. Enoch,

    I agree with your essay regarding Fr. Corapi, I also admired him because of his faults and subsequent conversion. I wanted to emulate his steadfast adherence to the principles of catholicism because I was the same as he, an alcoholic and drug abuser who has some 24+ years of sobriety. We all fall and it is what we do after that fall which is the most important. He needs to accept and ask for forgiveness from God not man for his personal failings. I will pray for Fr. Corapi and agree that the hounds of hell are upon us every waking moment and it’s a difficult fight.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 3 Thumb down 0

    • Yes. Prayer is what is needed. It is what Sinful Woman down-thread reminds us Fr John of 2006 would prompt us to do.

      God Bless & keep you.

      Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  5. Honestly, Corapi 2011 is not Corapi 2006. Yes, we’re all sinful, we all fall. I hope he WANTS to get back up, but frankly, his Black Sheepdog persona seems narcissistic and nutty to me. He has to want to get back up, first.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 3 Thumb down 0

  6. I couldn’t check out the story yesterday, so I didn’t know what SOLT was asking him to do.

    So, it will be pretty clear cut if he wants to be obedient or not.

    Even supposing SOLT is incorrect in what it has said it’s found, he is supposed to be obedient. And so if he decides it will be ME, ME, ME…. well, sorry, dude. You’re wrong. It’s not about you.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 3 Thumb down 0

  7. Enoch, read “Screwtape Proposes A Toast”; you cannot have Great Saints if you do not have Great Sinners, because they are forged from the same raw material of someone who is prepared to do precisely what he likes regardless of what the neighbors say. He has to choose Good, or Evil, but once he or she has, they will go as far as needed.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

  8. Sometimes, people are paranoid because someone is following them. I do not believe that all of the facts are in yet in regard to Father Corapi. Defintely, there were those who were “out to get him”. His message was great. The “vessel” was flawed. He himself talked of Christ using evil for the better good. I believe that something good will come out of this mess. The Church in America, according to Malachi Martin, has been infiltrated by evil. Father Corapi sensed this but was brought down by his own shortcomings. This does not mean that evil does not exist in the American Church. There is a group centered in gay rights which has taken control of the “con” on the bridge. They are using every scam to secretly plot their desired goal. Father Corapi is only “one piece of the puzzle”. Cardinal Burke, here in St. Louis, was jettisoned in much the same way. There is a plan. Read Malachi Martin and follow events unfolding in Boston through the Bryan Hehir blog.

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  9. Like others, I will be looking for further details–as I sense that this isn’t all of this story.

    It is dangerous to base your own character on recovery of any kind, moral, criminal, even health. There is a built-in risk that you will fall again, and then what happens to your persona?

    This is probably more inherently risky for people like Corapi than for his followers.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1 Thumb down 0


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