John Fleming (Australian priest) explained

John Fleming
Birth Date:12 June 1943[1]
Birth Place:Port Lincoln, South Australia, Australia
Nationality:Australian
Education:University of Adelaide
Australian College of Theology
Griffith University
Spouse:Alison
Children:3
Parents:Thomas Robert and Gwenda May Fleming[2]
Module:
Child:yes
Years Active:1970 – present
Religion:Christian
Church:Anglican (1970-1987)
Roman Catholic (1995-)
Ordained:1970 (Anglican)
1995 (Roman Catholic)
Congregations:St. Nicholas Church, Chiswick
Church of the Good Shepherd, Plympton

John Irving Fleming is an Australian priest and bioethicist. He was the founding president of Campion College.[3] Fleming was originally an Anglican priest but later became a Roman Catholic priest. He is currently suspended from public ministry and is living in retirement in South Australia.

Early career and background

The son of an Anglican priest, Fleming graduated with a BA from the University of Adelaide, a Licentiate in Theology from the Australian College of Theology and a PhD in philosophy and bioethics from Griffith University.[3] His PhD thesis was titled "Human rights and natural law : an analysis of the consensus gentium and its implications for bioethics".[4]

Career

Fleming was a high-profile Anglo-Catholic priest in the Anglican Church of Australia's Adelaide diocese. He was ordained in 1970. He became a Roman Catholic in 1987. Although married with three children, he was given a papal dispensation permitting his ordination in the Catholic Church in 1995.

As an Anglican priest in the early 1970s he was a university chaplain and priest in charge of St Paul's Church in Adelaide and dean and vice-master of St Mark's College at the University of Adelaide. From 1977 to 1978 he was assistant curate at St. Nicholas Church, Chiswick, in West London; and from 1978 to 1987 was the rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd, Plympton, in Adelaide. As a Roman Catholic layperson, from 1987 to 1995 he was the founding director of the Southern Cross Bioethics Institute. As a Roman Catholic priest, he continued as director of the institute from 1995 to 2004; from 2001 he was also a faculty member of the John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family. He was the founding president of Campion College from 2004 to 2009. He was an adjunct professor of bioethics at the Southern Cross Bioethics Institute until its closure in 2012.

Fleming served on a number of bioethics boards including as a foundation member of UNESCO's International Bioethics Committee (1992-1996). From 13 July 1996 to 13 July 2016, he was a corresponding member of the Pontifical Academy for Life.[5] Fleming was a member of the SA Council on Reproductive Technology (1998-2004) and a member from 2002 of the Gene Technology Ethics Committee set up under the Australian Gene Technology Act 2000.

Fleming was a weekly columnist of The Advertiser in Adelaide and presented radio programs for a number of years. In 2005, while president of Campion College in Sydney, he hosted a short-lived talkback radio program on 2UE.[6]

Community

Fleming was an elected delegate to the 1998 Australian Constitutional Convention associated with Australians for Constitutional Monarchy.[7] In 2003, he was appointed by the Howard government to the council of the National Museum of Australia with his term ending in 2009.[8]

Personal

Fleming is married to Alison and they have three children.

Allegations of abuse

Five years after his appointment to Campion College, media reports were published alleging sexual impropriety by Fleming with three people when he was an Anglican priest some 37 years previously. Nigel Hunt, a journalist for The Advertiser and Sunday Mail, wrote that these allegations were known to the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide, the Most Reverend Leonard Faulkner, at the time of his Roman Catholic ordination.

In 2011, Fleming returned to Adelaide where he continued to work as a priest. He initiated a defamation case against the Sunday Mail regarding several stories published on the complaints and investigations.[9] [10] These matters had been finalised by SA Police and by the Catholic Church. The Anglican Church ceased investigations on 24 November 2020.[11]

From 7 October 2014[12] and the end of September 2016, Fleming pursued a high profile, but unsuccessful, defamation action against The Advertiser and the Sunday Mail in the Supreme Court of South Australia regarding reports of alleged sexual misconduct as an Anglican priest.[13]

Fleming appealed against the dismissal of the claim for damages for defamation to the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia. On 29 September 2016 the appeal was unanimously dismissed when the court found no errors of law were made in the earlier judgement. Costs were awarded against him.[13]

Fleming applied for special leave to appeal with the High Court of Australia, the application was refused because two judges stated that it did "not raise a question of general importance. None of the applicant's proposed appeal grounds enjoys sufficient prospects of success to warrant a grant of special leave. Special leave should be refused with costs."[14] [15]

It was decreed under canon law on 9 February 2017 by Philip Marshall, vicar general of the Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide, that Fleming was to immediately cease all forms of ministry.[16] The decision was later criticised by David Flint[17] in The Spectator and Augusto Zimmermann[18] in Quadrant, they both state judicial failures and comment on the relevance of the Briginshaw principle to the decision.

In June 2021, Fleming lost an appeal against the denial of a clearance to work with children following a Working With Children Check heard by the South Australian Civil & Administrative Tribunal.[19]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Family Notices. . . Melbourne . 19 June 1943 . 25 December 2012 . 2 . National Library of Australia.
  2. http://anglicanhistory.org/aus/cci/index.pdf Fleming, Thomas Robert in Cable Clerical Index
  3. Campion College Australia Names Its First President, Campion College, New South Wales . Catholic News .
  4. Fleming, John Irving . Griffith University. Division of Humanities. . Thesis (PhD) . Human rights and natural law : an analysis of the consensus gentium and its implications for bioethics . 1992 . . 25 December 2012 .
  5. Web site: Former members Rev. FLEMING Irving . Pontifical Academy for Life . About us . 23 February 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170731195018/http://www.academiavita.org/about_us_members_former.php#93 . 31 July 2017 . dead .
  6. News: It's good to be a priest, says talk-back host: A conversation with Fr John Fleming, bioethicist and Campion College president . Marilyn . Rodrigues . 30 October 2005 . . Sydney . https://web.archive.org/web/20170425024749/http://forums.avemariaradio.net/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=41501 . 25 April 2017.
  7. Web site: Appendix 1: Delegates to the 1998 Constitutional Convention . John . Warhurst . 29 June 1999 . Constitutional Convention to Republic Referendum: A Guide to the Processes, the Issues and the Participants, Research Paper 25, 1998-99 . Australian Parliamentary Library . Canberra .
  8. Web site: Appendix 1: Council and committees of the National Museum of Australia . National Museum of Australia . Annual Report 2009-10 . 2010 .
  9. News: Priest move 'disrespectful' . Hunt, Nigel . . 15 May 2011 . Adelaide, South Australia .
  10. Fleming v Advertiser-News Weekend Publishing Company Pty Ltd and Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd. SASC. 2012. 58. auto.
  11. "In the matter of Dr John Fleming: Decision of the Professional Standards Board", 24 September 2020.
  12. Courts Administration Authority of South Australia, Civil Lists
  13. Fleming v Advertiser-News Weekend Publishing Company Pty Ltd and Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd & ANOR . SASCFC. 2016. 109. auto.
  14. Fleming v Advertiser News Weekend Publishing Company Pty Ltd & Anor . 7 . HCA . 2017 . . auto.
  15. News: Disgraced Catholic priest Father John Fleming loses final bid to overturn defamation verdict . Hunt, Nigel . 9 February 2017 . The Advertiser. Adelaide. 9 February 2017 .
  16. Statement from Vicar General on Fr John Fleming . Marshall, Philip . 9 February 2017 . . 14 February 2017 .
  17. https://www.spectator.com.au/2020/03/guilt-by-accusation/ David Flint, (14 March 2020), Guilt by accusation: The more serious the allegation, the more satisfied one must be of the proof
  18. https://quadrant.org.au/magazine/2020/12/when-judges-get-it-wrong-the-case-of-john-fleming/ Augusto Zimmermann, (December 2020) "When Judges Get It Wrong: The Case of John Fleming"
  19. Sean Fewster, (20 June 2021), Ex-priest fails in bid to work with kids, The Sunday Mail, p. 13