St. Paul, Minn., Sep 19, 2018 / 15:56 pm
In a column in The Catholic Spirit last week, Auxiliary Bishop Andrew Cozzens of Saint Paul and Minneapolis reflected on the light being shone on sins committed by members of the Church, and God's ability to bring good out of evil.
"As the psalms teach us, we should not be afraid to acknowledge our deep feelings to God in prayer," Bishop Cozzens wrote Sept. 13. "Acknowledging our feelings is the first step to bringing them into the light of God, so we can begin to see with his eyes. As we keep praying, we will begin to see how God is bringing good. We will receive from God his way of seeing."
The bishop prefaced his column with St. Paul's exhortation to a virtuous life from his epistle to the Ephesians, and he then said that "All of us have felt the pain of the "works of darkness" which have once again come to light in our Church."
The Saint Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese's bankruptcy is coming to an end, he wrote, as the Pennsylvania grand jury report was released and "we were horrified by … the widespread corruption that seems to surround the life of former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick."