Tuesday, January 20, 2026

PATHETIC

By Tim Rohr


A bishop is a father to his priests and the priests are his sons. 

In fact, the bishop-priest relationship is even more a father-son relationship than the biological father-son because whereas our children can grow up and remove themselves from our authority after a certain age, a priest, and in this case a diocesan priest, makes a Promise of Obedience to his bishop-father for life or at least until a priest is released from that promise by an official act (such as excardination). 

Imagine your son dying. You show up for the funeral but don't bother to attend the burial. Instead you have lunch with friends and let others bury him.

This is what Archbishop Jimenez did. After the funeral, he enjoyed lunch at a nearby restaurant while he let others bury his son, Fr. Michael Crisostomo.

Pathetic.

One wonders what Fr. Mike did to deserve to be treated this way, both in the final months of his life and now in death.

 

5 comments:

  1. Lacking humility. Pathetic indeed.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Jimenez not ready and unwilling to assume responsibilities of an Archbishop. Yet he relishes the Archdiocese-paid vanity trips to Timbuktu, etc. He struts his stuff as peacock “Archbishop” yet unable to discern inherent and basic duties which were entrusted to him by the Vatican. Emerging apuronic tendencies?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Once they become appointed, too many bishops and archbishops treat their special status as royalty, becoming monarchal and dictatorial in behavior and attitude.

    ReplyDelete
  4. How sad that the father chose to only do the Mass, but skip the burial! If I did that at a family funeral and skipped the burial portion I would be scorned forever by my family.
    Why doesn’t Ryan understand this? It must be the same in the Filipino community. Why was his lunch so important?
    Shame on you Archbishop!!!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Archbishop Jimenez has a significant responsibility to look after the welfare of his priests, which includes caring for them when sick.

    This obligation is rooted in Canon Law and pastoral care emphasizing the Bishop's role as a father and brother to his clergy.

    ReplyDelete