There’s a
saying that, “Power corrupts; and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” When the Catholic Church becomes insulated
and unaccountable to anyone it’s clerics can commit terrible wicked acts with impunity. A recent example of such
corruption follows, along with the writer’s simple, yet deeply insightful,
question.
“A
German Catholic priest admitted 280 counts of child sexual abuse. He said it
never occurred to him that he was doing harm. He was molesting 9 year old boys.
He had pornographic pictures of them on his computer. But he did not think what
he was doing was wrong. What exactly do they teach in Catholic
seminaries? How can anyone grow up in society and be unaware that raping
children is wrong?”
For Catholic
clergy to be so oblivious to moral behavior is not just a sexual felony, which
is bad enough. It not only contradicts every moral precept our Loving God and
Jesus set down, which is worse. But for Catholic clergy to think such behavior
is not villainously depraved reflects an institution that has no sense at all
of what it is supposed to be doing. Sexual felonies committed by Catholic
Church clergy--and worse, the apparent ignorance of morality that attends
them--are a manifestation of deep decay.
To prevent
collapse of the Catholic Church, clergy on all levels must be taught that
everything everyone does counts; they
must be taught specifically and unambiguously that abuse of children and women
is intolerable. Priests and bishops are in a position of monumental trust; it
is critical for them to show, in every way, that all people are worthy of
respect--especially children and the marginalized. The Catholic clergy must
uphold the values Jesus taught and set an example for others.
“By daily acts
that often surprised his contemporaries, Jesus made God’s love for every human
person clear. He made a special effort in the case of the poor, the vulnerable,
the sick, the young and those publicly regarded as sinners. He showed they were
invited into the communion of God’s love. For this reason the Church also, in
all of its actions, [must] make clear the dignity and value of every human
person, especially those most vulnerable.” [Integrity
in the Service of the Church. 2011. Australian Catholic Bishops
Conference.]
It is essential
that clergy be reminded again and again that every person has value; that they
are loved unconditionally by God and must be respected; that raping children is
wrong!
En route to
Mexico on March 22, 2012, Pope Benedict XVI spoke of the drug trade: “It is the
responsibility of the Church to educate consciences, to teach moral
responsibility and to unmask evil idolatry....”
Women priests
can add what the Pope omitted: We must not only TEACH moral responsibility, but
PRACTICE it as well. The Pope further observed, “Marxist ideology no longer
responds to reality. We have to find new models.” The Pope is right about
communism. Now replace, ‘Marxist Ideology’ with ‘Church Hierarchy’ and
paraphrase the Pope’s words, “The Church Hierarchy no longer responds to
reality. We have to find new models.”
April is Child
Abuse Prevention Month. This is a good month for the Church to reflect on the
terrible abuses it’s clergy has committed against children. It is a good month to begin to find new
models, to create special programs that find and stop such sociopaths.
It is a good
month to put aside all the fatuous posturing and excommunicating and balking
about women priests--women ARE priests--and welcome the outreached hand they
offer to help solve the problems in the Church today. It is time for the Church, with both women
and men clergy, to get on with the important business of honoring and
practicing decency and justice within its ranks and throughout the world.
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