Your Protestant friends should definitely not gloat. Their churches are in the same very leaky boat. There have been several posts on this thread citing articles that describe abuse cases in Protestant churches and organizations.
My husband and I were Evangelical Protestant for 47 years before converting to Catholicism. We were not church hoppers, but we were involved with several churches due to college, moves around the country, etc. EVERY Protestant church that we were involved with experienced a sexual abuse situation.
in my childhood church, a janitor was actually RAPING young teen girls (keep in mind that back in the 1960s, many teen girls were not taught about sex–I wasn’t, and didn’t know about the "mechanics until I was in 9th grade).
In my husband’s childhood church, a youth minister was sleeping with the teen girls in his youth group. He was fired, but there was never a public admission of his crimes.
In the church we attended when we moved away from our childhood home, the youth pastor was sleeping with…someone who was not his wife. We don’t know the details because they were never revealed. All we know is that the pastor “left” the church and the explanation given was “sex sin.”
In the last Protestant church we were in, someone was preying on young teen girls, and sadly, my daughter was possibly one of those girls. Nothing was ever made public, not even to the members.
These are just the churches in my experience. Many of the top Evangelical leaders have been dismissed or are being investigated for sexual sins. One example is Bill Hybels of the Willowcreek megachurch–to me, this is the equivalent of seeing a Catholic bishop caught in sexual sin! Hybels has been a mover and shaker in Evangelical Protestantism for decades!
I personally believe that Protestant churches and organizations are even more inundated by sexual sins among the clergy and lay leaders–please keep in mind that in Protestant churches, lay leaders are often hired to head up various ministries, e.g., music, business, women’s and children’s ministries (many Protestant churches do not ordain women or allow them to be called “pastors”), etc.
When a Protestant church minister is discovered to be guilty of sexual sin in his church, the Protestant leaders have historically dismissed him privately and the denomination (if there is one) removes his license to be able to get hired (called) by another church. I am sincerely hoping that this has changed since we left Protestantism–I HOPE that Protestant churches and organizations report sexual crimes to the police. But I have my doubts–a Protestant church or organization can be totally destroyed by this kind of scandal, especially if there is no denomination to send in an Interim Minister and begin restoration-type ministries in the stricken church. Non-denoms are generally dead in the water when sexual sin (or any kind of sin) is uncovered.