Days after pulling out of the conclave to elect the next pope and vowing to fight the charges against him, disgraced Scottish Cardinal Keith O’Brien admitted Sunday to inappropriate “sexual conduct.”
O’Brien, who until a week ago was the highest-ranking Roman Catholic cleric in England and Scotland, had served as archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh for the last seven years and was made a cardinal in 2003.
After a week of turmoil among Scotland’s 700,000 Catholics, the cardinal said in a statement released by the Scottish Catholic Media Office in Glasgow that “there have been times that my sexual conduct has fallen below the standards expected of me as a priest, archbishop and cardinal.”
He asked for forgiveness for those he had “offended” and from the entire church.
“I will now spend the rest of my life in retirement,” O’Brien said. “I will play no further part in the public life of the Catholic Church in Scotland.”
O’Brien resigned on Monday after explosive charges from unnamed accusers that he had made “inappropriate” sexual advances to four men, three of them priests and one now a former seminarian, starting in the 1980s.
Pope Benedict XVI accepted O’Brien’s resignation — which was already on file and due to take effect within a matter of months — with unusual haste in one of his last official acts before resigning the papacy on Thursday.
O’Brien said he would skip the upcoming conclave to elect a new pope in order to avoid becoming a distraction or media spectacle, leaving Catholics in the United Kingdom without a vote in the conclave.
“In recent days certain allegations which have been made against me have become public. Initially, their anonymous and non-specific nature led me to contest them,” O’Brien’s statement said. “However, I wish to take this opportunity to admit that there have been times that my sexual conduct has fallen below the standards expected of me as a priest, archbishop and cardinal.”
Archbishop Philip Tartaglia of Glasgow has taken over temporary leadership of O’Brien’s former archdiocese, calling the revelations “painful and distressing.”
Trevor Grundy writes for Religion News Service. Via RNS.
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