~ m 4 o o Did they leave OR WERE THEY PHI f OUT? A C H A R A C T E R SKETCH R O N T H E EDITORS OF " T H E CONVERTED CATHOLIC M A G A Z I N E " Did They Leave or Were They Put Out? A Character Sketch on the Editors of "The Converted Catholic Magazine" First Edition No. 38 Printed in U. S. A. February 1, 1949 By OUR S U N D A Y VISITOR PRESS Huntington, Indiana Did They Leave • r Were They Put Gut? A Character Sketch on the Editors of "The Converted Catholic Magazine" Converted Catholic Magazine is published by Christ's Mission, Inc., whose address is listed in the magazine as 756 Seventh Avenue, New York 19, N. Y., but seems actually t o be a t 229 W. 48th Street, the location of the Union Methodist Episcopal Church. The period- ical is edited by former Catholic priests, who use as their slogan "When thou are converted, strengthen thy brethren" (Luke 22: 32). Christ's f i s s i o n was founded by an ex-priest by the name of James A. O'- Connor nearly eighty years ago, a f t e r be- ing suspended by hisjbishop because of drunkenness. Many Catholic clergymen who are relieved of their posts by their Ordinary's suspension, or by an action of their own which automatically term- inates their Catholic ministry, have been wont f o r years, to go to Christ's Mis- sion to receive direction in procuring other work. More recently they are em- 4 D I D T H E Y L E A V E OR W E R E T H E Y PUT O U T ? ployed to assist in editing its magazine or to do field work f o r it, which is profitable today, because of the new or- ganized opposition" to The Catholic Church. The Converted Catholic is sent to near- ly every member of Congress, and to many thousands of Protestant Ministers. Its editors accept offers to "lecture" in places where Catholics are not numerous. On those occasions subscriptions to the magazine are gathered. The present editor-in-chief is one L. H. Lehmann, who was a native of Ire- land, educated at Mungret College, and was seemingly ordained f o r a diocese in South Africa, because he worked there f o r some time. Returning to Ireland he was selected to defend Mungret Apostol- ic College against the Jesuit College at Mungret which, it was alleged, was try- ing to control the f u n d s of the Apostolic College. He worked on this case in Rome, and won a decision which, however, was reversed in favor of Mungret College. Shortly t h e r e a f t e r Lehmann left f o r the United States, and appealed to Arch- bishop Curley to assist him in inducing the late Bishop Barry, of St. Augustine, Florida, to accept him as a priest in t h a t diocese. W e are informed by the Chan- cellor of St. Augustine t h a t Father Leh- mann worked at Lake City, Florida, in 5 D I D T H E Y L E A V E OR W E R E T H E Y PUT O U T ? 1928, and lived at Perry, Florida, until November, 1929, when he entered a civil marriage with a young woman of P e r r y and fled with her in the parish automo- bile. Lehmann, therefore, did not leave the Catholic Church because he became ac- quainted with its errors as he tells his readers, but rather because, violating his priestly vows, he automatically severed his connection with the priesthood. ANDREW SOMMESE A more recently appointed assistant editor is Andrew Sommese. He belonged to the Order of St. Augustine and was graduated f r o m Villanova College. He was ordained following his third year of Theology, but completed a fourth year as a priest-student at the Augustinian College. The Rev. Edward V. Stanford, O.S.A., writes concerning him: During his year as a student priest, he l e f t the College without saying a word to anyone and turned up in his home parish in Brooklyn, ' where he announced to the pastor that he was joining the Diocese of Brooklyn. Realizing t h a t he was mentally unbalanced, the pastor telephoned to Washington and one of the superiors went, to Brooklyn. 6 D I D T H E Y L E A V E O R W E R E T H E Y P U T O U T ? Andrew Sommese returned with this superior willingly to Washing- ton. Upon the advice of his superiors he went willingly to see an outstand- ing psychiatrist in Philadelphia, who diagnosed his case as a mental one of doubtful curability. He was com- mitted f o r a time to the Kirkbride Sanitarium in Philadelphia and lat- er 4 t o Mount Hope in Baltimore; showing some improvement he was released and permitted to visit a married sister in Brooklyn. From then on, his religious superiors were unable to get in contact with him, as his married sister strenuously opposed any efforts a t communica- tion. Later he was accepted by the Lutherans and placed a t a Luther- an church in Philadelphia. I under- stand that he is now married. ANNIBALE MALINVERNI One connected f o r a long time with this organization is the ex-priest Rev. Malinverni. He was a priest in Italy, pastor at a town named Fiesco. His trouble was also marriage. Canon Pelani of the Diocese of Cre- mona, in a letter dated June 19, 1922, directed to Father Montonari, of Los Angeles, s u b s t a n t i a t e this charge. He and his reputed wife came to the United States. D I D T H E Y L E A V E OR W E R E T H E Y P U T O U T ? 7 WILLIAM EDMOND BURKE This former priest is now listed as "field representative" in the November, 1948, issue of The Converted Catholic Magazine. Burke was ordained a priest f o r the Diocese of Scranton, Pennsylvania, in 1931. The Chancellor of Scranton has supplied us with the following informa- tion concerning his career: A f t e r a few years he became a problem case due to heavy drinking and other infractions of clerical pro- priety. His language was violent and his behavior gave scandal. Com- plaints were also received about his failure to pay just debts. Around 1940 he disappeared with a woman older than himself and is said to have attempted marriage civilly with her. Many who knew him are of the opinion that he is not entirely nor- mal mentally. In fact he was sent a t one time to an institution where care is provided f o r alcoholics and mental cases. He has recently - become the tool of bigoted and unscrupulous groups who delight in exploiting such an apostate in an attempt to discredit the Church, and he appar- ently has no scruple in serving such 8 D I D T H E Y L E A V E O R W E R E T H E Y PUT O U T ? a nefarious purpose f o r whatever monetary returns he may derive therefrom. JOSEPH ZACCHELLO A young Italian ex-priest, who was connected with The Converted Catholic Magazine a year ago, but who now seems to 'be finding it more profitable to go out on his own as a publisher of books and tracts with the backing of anti-Catholic organizations, is Joseph Zaicchello. He was born at Stalino, a town in the Province of Venice, Italy, and attended a Preparatory Seminary in Piacen^a. Zacchello came to the United States and finished his fourth year Theology here, preparatory to Ordination on October 22, 1939, f o r the Congregation of the F a t h e r s of St. Charles. His first assign- ment was to St. Callistus Parish, Chi- cago, where he gave considerable trouble to the pastor, Rev. Sylvio Zanoni, which resulted in his transfer. He spent a short while a t St. Franeis Cabrini Parish, Chicago, a f t e r which he was moved, because of a threatened scandal, to St. Joseph parish, New York. Here he lasted only a few months, hav- ing attempted marriage in February, 1944. I t was only a short time until he procured a civil divorce and attempted a second marriage. 9 D I D T H E Y L E A V E OR W E R E T H E Y P U T O U T ? Zacchello is still a young man and is credited with having edited a dozen pam- phlets and books, one of which is en- titled "The Priest Who Became a Chris- tian." The Converted, Catholic Magazine de- fends the Protestant viewpoint against the Catholic one on every doctrine and the enemy viewpoint on matters relat- ing to history. It, therefore, confirms Protestants in their inherited and ac- quired prejudices. Of course the only reason why these former Catholic priests are with such an enterprise is the livli- hood they are able to receive f r o m it. Clare Boothe Luce told the writer t h a t she has received f r o m ministers from every part of the country copies of The Converted Catholic, with a note to the effect t h a t she should read it if she wishes to learn "the t r u t h about Roman- ism." She also told that an ex-religious who left his Community went to the office of The Converted Catholic to see whether they could form any contact f o r him f o r employment and they offered to let him work in their own office. A f t e r only three weeks he bfecame disgusted because he discovered that there was no sincerity among any of the editors; that they could not believe what they 10 D I D T H E Y L E A V E OR W E R E T H E Y P U T O U T ? were writing f o r Protestant consump- tion; that he, therefore, left them. The campaign by The Converted Cath- olic has given an impetus to the circula- tion of anti-Catholic Tracts, among them the stories of Maria Monk and Margaret Shepherd, self-styled ex-nuns, who have been dead f o r many years and who were frequently exposed during their lifetime as f r a u d s . They never were nuns.. Some years ago Our Sunday Visitor published a book of 160 pages entitled "Defamers of the Church," which con- tained the records of more than one hun- dred people who toured the country dur- ing The Menace days, nearly all of whom were mountebanks capitalizing on the bigotry incited by The Menace and the sister sheet The Appeal to Reason, both of which had a weekly circulation of more than 1,000,000. Many Protestant clergymen who invited these f a k i r s to speak f r o m their pulpits later became ashamed of themselves f o r having kept such bad company. Christ's last words to the Apostles, it seems, are unfamiliar to them: "Blessed are ye when men revile you and perse- cute you and ill-tibat you and say all kinds of evil things about you untruly. Rejoice and be glad because your re- ward is very great in Heaven." D I D T H E Y L E A V E OR W E R E T H E Y P U T O U T ? 11 How Explain Why does the fallen priest turn against his Church? That question is answered by one of them who recently returned to the Church, full of repent- ance not only f o r his apostasy, but even mòre because he had "taken up a bitter pen to write against the mother I once loved so well." He tells us that he never liked the designation "ex-priest," but would pre- f e r t h a t the renegades be referred to as "stray shepherds," having in mind t h a t the lost sheep were still of the fold, > and that the lost shepherd still belongs to the fold. He refers t o "injured pride" as the chief reason f o r the "stray shepherd." In some cases he found his superior, his bishop, or his pastor against him, and by degrees his nerves became taut. In that attitude "his judgment failed him," and "God seemed f a r away," while the devil was very close by, "filling his ears until he could hear nothing else, with the suggestion 'you will go mad un- less you make the break now.' " A f t e r the break "the stray shepherd goes into the wilderness, finds his new life beset with hardships, including the difficulty of finding suitable employ- ment." He writes : "Enemies of the Church rejoice over the ex-priest. When- 12 D I D T H E Y L E A V E O R W E R E T H E Y P U T O U T ? ever possible they contact 'liberated' priests who have, 'quarrelled with Rome.' They make a noisy f u s s over them and invite them to lecture and tell their stories. "When he meets another who is in the same predicament as he is, he dis- covers that they are out not because of 'lack of f a i t h ' in the Catholic religion, but (because, of a hidden nostalgia, and while they may profess 'never to go back,' between them they will say: 'if you are around when I am dying call a priest f o r me, no matter what I s a y . ' " They feel h u r t because their former confreres in the ministry and all the Catholic laity who knew them have turned against them, and the new "friends" they make a r e not actually friends, but distrustful. In fact this "stray shepherd" writes t h a t "lost shepherds are saddened to see Catholics betraying their religion, and are heartened when they hear that one of themselves has made his peace with God." He thinks t h a t Catholics should expect a certain percentage of the clergy to go astray even though they retain their faith, and t h a t these should be prayed f o r rather than persecuted, because their blunder consisted in opposing grace, and 13 D I D T H E Y L E A V E OR W E R E T H E Y P U T O U T ? what they now need most is the pene- t r a t i n g grace of God. Do you ask how all this fits those "who are editing The Converted Catholic? We are certain that much of it fits. The con- versation, reported above, which Mrs. Luce had with one of them, points to that. But of course, they would be re- ceived back only a f t e r they would agree to apologize to their readers f o r the things which they wrote so untruly, cal- v culated to strengthen the prejudices of those not of the faith. This becomes, however, increasingly more difficult to do with time, because of their continued resistance to grace, . week by week, month by month. But Bernard Fresenborg, the author of "Thirty Years in Hell," which many a Protestant minister has in his library, did t h a t thing, so did Paul Miraglio, who gave scandal by the pen and wrote from the bitterness of their hearts rather than from the convictions of their minds. Has It Ever Occurred To You That the real ex-priest is one who either was guilty of gross misconduct in the Church, f o r which he was expelled from the ranks of the priesthood, or who lost all f a i t h in the supernatural? That, if the former, he was "without 14 D I D T H E Y L E A V E O R W E R E T H E Y PUT O U T ? a job" and out of revenge attacks the Church, to which he owed his all, in which he sincerely believed, and whose standards of morality must have been much higher than his own, or he would not have been ejected? That, if the latter (pne who volun- tarily relinquised connection with t h e Church), he never speaks about the Church except in terms of endearment, unless he finds it profitable to affiliate with some rationalistic organization? That no real ex-priest can make charges of corruption against the Church without acknowledging t h a t he was long a party thereto, and would still be, had he not been relieved of his charge by his bishop? That the ex-priests, Slattery and Se- guin, now availing themselves of "big- otry's opportunity," came over to the States years ago from another country, where they were given to habitual in- temperance; that they unsuccessfully sought Catholic bishops in this country to take them in; that they took to the lecture platform when they were "down and out" both in relation to the priest- hood a!nd their pocket-books? That these men, a f t e r years of delib- eration solemnly vowed to remain chaste and unmarried; that the Al- mighty accepted such a vow, and that, 15 D I D T H E Y L E A V E O R W E R E T H E Y PUT O U T ? therefore, they violated a most sacred obligation when they married? That people welcome these imposters without Questioning their antecedents? That they would not be out enlighten- ing (?) other people if there were not 25c per dupe in it for themselves? That all but a very few on the lec- ture-platform, who represent themselves as priests, are "bogus" or fakes; that most o i them were never Catholics, but prepared their tirades from books writ- ten in Know-Nothing and A.P.A. days? S O M E OF O U R L A T E S T FIVE C E N T P A M P H L E T S (If you order less than 4 for 25c, the price is 10c each postpaid) 1 So Y o u T h i n k Y o u ' r e T o u g h ? 2 W h y N o t Investigate the C a t h o l i c R e l i g i o n ? 3 D o e s It M a t t e r M u c h W h a t M a n Believes? 4 Is O n e R e l i g i o n A s G o o d A s A n o t h e r ? 5 H o w to Get M a r r i e d . 6 W h y Y o u S h o u l d Be a Catholic. 7 Y o u t h a n d C h a s t i t y . 8 T h e Bible A n A u t h o r i t y O n l y in Catholic H a n d s . 9 C a t h o l i c A n s w e r . 10 Criminality A m o n g T e e n - A g e r s : W h y ? 11 D o n ' t K i d Y o u r s e l f A b o u t D r i n k 12 W h i c h Is C h r i s t ' s T r u e C h u r c h ? 13 C o m m u n i o n Prayers for Every D a y . 14 T h e Catholic N u r s e M a k e s T h e H o l y H o u r . 15 W h a t T h i n k Y o u of C h r i s t ? — S t u d y of His Divinity 16 O u r D a i l y Bread. 17 Is P a p a l Infallibility R e a s o n a b l e ? 18 C a n O u r Priests Forgive S i n s ? 19 Does C o n f e s s i o n M a k e S i n n i n g E a s y ? 2 0 Catholic B o y E x a m i n e s H i s Conscience. 21 i n d u l g e n c e s : W h a t A r e T h e y ? 2 2 Fr. Q u i z A n s w e r s L u t h e r n Slurs. 2 3 Let U s K n o w T h e Pope. 2 4 Catholic W o m e n In the H o m e . 2 5 T h e Real Presence: F a c t or Fiction. 2 6 T h e Catholic Press in the W o r l d T o d a y 2 7 W h a t It M e a n s T o Be A Catholic M o t h e r . .28 A r e Y o u Sincere? 2 9 T h e Catholic S t u d e n t M a k e s the H o l y Hour. 3 0 T h e H o l y Eucharist a n d Reason. 31 C a n Indulgences Be B o u g h t ? 3 2 R e l i g i o n ' s A B C ' s for the Educated. .33 Is the C h u r c h W o m a n ' s E n e m y ? 3 4 " T h i s Is M y B o d y . " 3 5 T h e M y s t e r i e s , of the H o l y R o s a r y 3 6 Catholic A c t i o n : W h a t Is It? 37 A L i v i n g W a g e T o d a y . 3 9 T h e H o l y H o u r (5 forms). 4 0 Falling in Love. 41 M a r i n e s in Action. 4 2 A s the M o r n i n g Rising. 4 3 Prayers for the Family. 44 Until D e a t h D o Us Part. 4 5 Catholic M a r r i a g e : H o w A c h i e v e It* 4 6 M a r r i a g e : Catholic or M i x e d ? 4 7 W h y A t t e n d S u n d a y M a s s ? 48 C o m p a n y K e e p i n g : W h e n Is It a Sin? 4 9 A i d s to Purity. Prices subject to change without notice. $4.00 per 100, plus transportation. O U R S U N D A Y V I S I T O R , Huntington Indlano 1 I L