So let’s just dig up dirt on Catholics for the sake of it to make them all look bad. Typical.
Perhaps that is how you look at it.
I look at it a bit differently. I am not sure how many of these cases it will take until this is burned deep, deep into the DNA of any individual currently in the priesthood or coming into the priesthood, say, in the next few centuries.
Bishops are not ordained out of thin air; they come from the ranks of our priests. And it is not only the current bishops (who likely by know have received the message), but future ones who need to have this branded into them so deeply that we can say, “Never again!”
The damage to those who were abused goes much deeper than many, if not most people understand. People who are abused are not only violated in the act, but also carry the damage of that abuse through the rest of their lives. Many were abused so deeply they will never be able to live a normal life. And that says nothing to the numbers who have lost any scintilla of faith.
Not only did these bishops fail the children who were abused; they also failed each an every child who was subsequently abused by the perpetrators who were not removed from the priesthood, or at least from parish ministry. And that failure to sanction might possibly have been enough that a subsequent abuser might have given pause to amend his ways.
Bishops today, if they are listening, know that there is the potential for both civil and criminal penalties for failing to deal with abusers; and priests, if they are listening, know the same.
And we are not dealing with just one diocese; this has happened in just about every diocese out there; nor is it a problem isolated the to the US. If there is anyone out there - and by this, I include the bishops of the world, the Cardinals, and any dicasteries even remotely related to this type of problem, who thinks that this is just because of some strange laws in the US, they need a massive mind adjustment.
This is not just airing dirty laundry. This is about doing absolutely everything possible to try to prevent future abuse.
Dismissing this as just something done to make Catholics look bad is typical of those who do not want to know of the consequences of not only the damage to children, but the wall of silence - which is about the same thing as a wall of complicity - that surrounded these crimes. It was the attitude of not wanting to know about this, or allow anyone else to know about it, which allowed this to permeate a significant part of the priesthood - both that of the abusers and that of those involved in hiding or maintaining silence of the crimes.
And it was not just the stonewalling and hiding evidence. There are numerous stories from numerous jurisdictions of both the child victim and their families of being turned on by the very people who should have been their protectors, and treated as if they - the child and family - were out to “destroy a priest”. The victims were made to feel as if they were the evil ones.
How truly Christ-like.
Not.
He spoke of the use of a mill stone. These cases are the mill stone.