How do you handle someone whoose faith has been shaken by abuse?

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The other day, I encountered a young man who no longer goes to church because his faith was shakened by priest’s sexual abuse.

What do you think is the best appoarch with such a person?
 
The other day, I encountered a young man who no longer goes to church because his faith was shakened by priest’s sexual abuse.

What do you think is the best appoarch with such a person?
It depends.

Was he personally abused?

Does he know somebody who was?

IOW, what’s the context?

Then, what is his personal knowledge of Christianity? What was his practice and his knowledge ‘before?’

Is there a particular situation in which rejection of Catholicism would have ‘benefit’ to the person?

Does he really wish to explore Christianity right now or even if he says he’s “open”, is he still reacting? Does he meet even the gentlest approaches with ‘yes but’? IOW, is he ‘ready’ to even consider that there might be, certainly not a justification (for there is absolutely no justification for abuse, ever), but that what he thinks this ‘means’ for Christianity might not be true itself? Would an attempt to talk make him even angrier and less likely to listen, not just now but later?

So a lot depends on the person himself.

I know it can be difficult when one sees a person struggling, and one knows the reason they are struggling is something ‘wrong’, and one wants to set it ‘right’. . .but a lot of people leap into ‘apologetics’ out to ‘win the battle’ (one particular argument) and wind up ‘losing the war’ because they get so focused on ‘proving they’re right’ that they completely alienate even those who might have been amenable to dialogue under the right circumstances.

So I would want to know a lot more about the young person and his situation before- and only if the time was right, right now–I would try to ‘handle’ him by dialogue.

But one thing I could do right away and in fact, would do, and would do as long as I had breath–pray for this young person and indeed for all people.
 
Tantum’s advice is right on. The point is to figure out whether this person is just looking for an excuse to renounce the Church. If that is his motive, reasoning with him may be futile.

But if he is amenable to the principles of sound reasoning … I would gently ask him if he would chuck the United States Constitution because many of the people who have sworn to uphold it (politicians especially) have busily and scandalously done just about everything they could to betray it.

Lay men and women who are most disappointed in the conduct of the clergy are the very lay men and women that are needed most to help support the good clergy and the needed reforms in the Church.
 
A priest molesting a boy has nothing to do with the word of God.
The priest is obviously a pervert who needs help, but that has nothing to do with God.
Thats like saying all pet owners are bad because there are some pet owners who abuse their pets. It does not apply to the majority. The priest sinned. Pretty badly if you ask me, and I do not believe he should ever be allowed to preach as a priest again, but what does the priests sick actions have to do with the word of God? Nothing. It was an issue completely separate from God’s word.
 
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