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David_Zampino
Guest
This is the sort of information which is difficult to source (as in "XYZ Journal of Professional Counselors). But talk with priests, bishops, mainline Protestant ministers, etc. who range in age from abou 50 to 70, and ask them what their Pastoral Theology professors and Counseling Professors taught about this type of situation. (As an example, my dad is 63 years old and attended Berkeley Divinity School at Yale University in the mid 1960’s. As another example, my spiritual director is a Jesuit priest, about 67 years old – Yale Divinity).Could you provide a source for this information. I would like to have this information the next time this topic comes up (as it often does).
Thanks.
Look at the pattern of the abusers. A very significant percentage seem to have come from the seminaries about the same time and are of a similar age. They were taught by (and as assistant pastors were supervised by) pastors who were taught the “feel-good” nothingness which passed for counseling and psychology in the 60’s and 70’s.
Seminary training in the 1960’s and 1970’s was, in many respects, so poor, that problems were almost inevitable.
Blessings,