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But we have already had people say that 1/2 to 1% of priest molested. That is hardly a subculture
A lone Raven
A lone Raven
For one Apostolic succession, two they consecrate the Host to become the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, forgive sins in Jesus name etc…(seems more than just a “profession”) Celebacy has zip to do with that, you are puting way too much emphasis on a discipline.Celibacy is what makes a priest special. Without celibacy how will priesthood differ from any other occupation? Celibacy is meant to be a sacrifice. Our religion is based on sacrifice.
I’ve heard ~2%, but that’s not where I’m getting a homosexual sub-culture I got that from books I’ve read on the subject from people with firsthand experience and that I trust.But we have already had people say that 1/2 to 1% of priest molested. That is hardly a subculture
A lone Raven
I agree that the subculture exists in pockets around the US. But we must remember that the Church is world wide and the US and Europe while important in the eyes of the world, are not of special importance to God. It may well be that the Church is safe and sound, but the American Church needs a good overhaul.I’ve heard ~2%, but that’s not where I’m getting a homosexual sub-culture I got that from books I’ve read on the subject from people with firsthand experience and that I trust.
americancatholic.org/News/ClergySexAbuse/But we have already had people say that 1/2 to 1% of priest molested. That is hardly a subculture
A lone Raven
It seems to me that one point is being wrongly taken for granted by some people – the idea that Church leaders have always understood it to be the “right” and “moral” thing to turn its matters of wrongdoing over to secular authorities; and by not doing so, Church leaders were intentionally and deliberately circumventing justice. This strikes me as a terribly invalid and anachronistic assumption. It’s a little like saying the Church was complicit in 18th century slave-trading, because surely the “true Church of Christ” would have known that slavery was immoral and would have opposed it.My problem is with the 39 page document itself, that I actually sat down and read intently, and how it fits into 40 years of cover ups and silence from our Bishops. When every case you find shows Bishops doing the polar opposite of the right thing to do, you begin to wonder about the leadership of this institution you are following, and how internal documents affected their decision making. It would seem just on odds one Bishop would’ve stopped enabling pedophiles, but it does appear from this document that they had a policy to handle matters of sexual malfeasance by clergy, and that it was to be done in “utter secrecy”.
Sorry but you contradict yourself twice. You said that celibacy is the highest level for a man, so then how can I possibly put too much emphasis on the discipline? And if celibacy is the highest level for a man then how will non-celibate priests improve the church?For one Apostolic succession, two they consecrate the Host to become the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, forgive sins in Jesus name etc…(seems more than just a “profession”) Celebacy has zip to do with that, you are puting way too much emphasis on a discipline.
I’m not against celebacy Jesus was celibate, Paul was celibate it is the highest level for a man, and that option should be open to priests. I happen to think that modern day, we could fix the priesthood and attract more healthy heterosexual men with a married priesthood.
I’m not a reformer, if anything I was more traditional. But I’m also not blind to the problems, and think that a married priesthood can go a long way to bring masculinity back to the priesthood, also all male altar servers so young men can start discerning the priesthood early. Let them wearthe traditional cossack’s let them klnow they are an intrigal part of the liturgy.
I think this may be why this document is being used by the media to point fingers at the Vatican and the Catholic Church in its general. The only problem is that truth is butchered in the process. This type of witch hunt makes as much since as blaming the Jack Daniel distilleries for the Congressional page memos just because Foley pointed the finger at demon liquor. A criminal, when cornered, will almoast always point at someone else. It just takes some one as gullible as the BBC to believe it.“Of course, a bishop couldn’t use this document to cover up denunciation of an act of sexual abuse,” Morrisey said. “The document simply wasn’t made for that purpose.”
You make it seem as though the rest of our society has always been open about abuse. Fifty years ago, families of children who were abused by other members of the family or neighbors or family friends (cases not involving a priest) were also unlikely to report such abuse. You are missing the cultural context in which our entire country has pushed these kinds of crimes under the table until recently. Yes, this kind of cultural denial certainly was present in the American church as well. But it was a reflection of our larger cultural denial that these kinds of things happen to children. I once read an article about a woman, now middle-aged, who at the age of 3 was being abused by uncle when her mother walked in to the room. Her mother said to her, “This never happened” and it was never discussed again. I think it’s naive and simplistic to portray the American bishops as covering up abuse by priests as a vast conspiracy, when clearly we are dealing with bishops and other church leaders who did know how to handle what was happening. If it wasn’t even spoken about, how could they have had a plan in place to deal with it or to even recognize it?The most interesting statistic you will notice is not once were authorities notified in over 50 years and thousands of cases. Not once?
This is quite true. Acts such as these were routinely handled “in house”, both in families as well as institutions. I can remember numerous incidents like this as a child where it was handled and then snuffed out. Bishops tended to send these priests away for a while, and later, for treatment, believing that this would cure the problem and, very importantly, preserve the dignity of the institution.You make it seem as though the rest of our society has always been open about abuse. Fifty years ago, families of children who were abused by other members of the family or neighbors or family friends (cases not involving a priest) were also unlikely to report such abuse. You are missing the cultural context in which our entire country has pushed these kinds of crimes under the table until recently. Yes, this kind of cultural denial certainly was present in the American church as well. But it was a reflection of our larger cultural denial that these kinds of things happen to children. I once read an article about a woman, now middle-aged, who at the age of 3 was being abused by uncle when her mother walked in to the room. Her mother said to her, “This never happened” and it was never discussed again. I think it’s naive and simplistic to portray the American bishops as covering up abuse by priests as a vast conspiracy, when clearly we are dealing with bishops and other church leaders who did know how to handle what was happening. If it wasn’t even spoken about, how could they have had a plan in place to deal with it or to even recognize it?