Solution to Priest Sex Abuse Scandal

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Actually seeing the injustice in one instance I decided to research whether or not it was really an isolated instance and I have confirmed that it is not.

Historically the church has been aware of the problem of abuse by clerics for centuries.
and I have tried to tell you, you are looking back with hindsight. 50 years ago, no one had a clue what the damage was to the victim. It was treated as a mortal sin - one could go to hell over the matter; so people “got” the damage in terms of moral, spiritual issues. They flat out did not get the damage in terms of psychological issues. So the result was “go to confession and don’t do that any more”. The other part you don’t seem to get is that most of the victims were not reporting, so bishops did not have an idea how widespread it was.

Let me try it another way. We had a true pedophile in our diocese; he abandoned his boy-toys when they showed the first signs of pubic hair. The guy had multiple victims; the bishop found out about one or two. The rest came forward years and years later (the priest by then had Alzheimer’s), and the bishop who had to deal with it was several bishops removed from the one on duty at the time of the abuse. No one had a clue; he threatened the boys if they told anyone, and they kept their mouths shut.
As far as how our courts work, they have been generally stymied by the statute of limitations and for you to take the argument defending bishops from the sublime nature of few actual prosecutions to the ridiculous of that meaning no culpability is folly.

The evidence about the culpability is in the $$$ billions that have been paid out , usually with the records being kept sealed and both parties signing gag orders.
Culpability in law is not the same as culpability in fact. And I have not commented on either issue in these posts; if you are insinuating I said there was no culpability, you are not a very careful reader.
As far as defending the dioceses, how about defending the principles of Jesus?
Cute. Irrelevant, but cute. And if the bishops had ignored their counsels’ advice, you would be roasting them for that.
That seems to get lost in the discussion, these cowardly men who defended perversion weren’t looking out for the best interests of their dioceses, they were putting their dioceses at further risk.
No, what seems to get lost in the discussion is the facts and what those facts mean and imply. You are emotionally involved in the issue, and it is causing you to look only through the lens of your emotional response.

People want simplistic answers to complex questions. You want a simple answer and are angry and disgusted it hasn’t come out the way you want. and as a matter of fact, bishops have apologized for the acts of the priests, and the bishops, before them; but it has not managed to find its way to your radar.
As far as justice goes, name one bishop that was sanctioned by the church for engaging in deceit and lying to the flock?
Law. He is now under the thumb of the curia, and has been reduced from Cardinal Archbishop of a major archdiocese to the Church equivalent of a porter. People who are unfamiliar with the Church and its workings simply do not get what the Church did to him. I have seen people say he was rewarded; I don’t know what planet they are from, but they know zilch about the Church hierarchy.

I do.
 
We don’t want justice and we can’t handle the truth.

Peace
That is a true statement; but not the way you thought when you wrote it.

Nothing is going to please you; like Shylock, you want your pound of flesh, and nothing will appease you until it is on the damask tablecloth, quivering, yet not bleeding on the cloth. The Pope himself has apologized, and was immediately castigated in the press for not doing enough. You lack a massive amount of information; you lack the emotional distance to be able to judge the issues factually, and nothing is going to appease you. I wish you well, and would hope that at some point you could come to terms with what aggravates you and find peace.

On a totally unrelated issue, I served in Viet Nam in an area in which Agent Orange was used with a very free hand. I have since contracted cancer, and the VA has denied any connection. What we know now is not what we knew then; the lack of knowledge of the damage caused was profound, and the damage caused was also profound. Likewise, those who were responsible have not come forward and admitted much, if any responsibility. I choose to let the issue go. I am not carrying around a burden of hate, or angst, or sorrow. That was then; this is now. People are people, they are not all-knowing; they are far from perfect. The bishops are human. Some of them have done a better job of handling the matters than others of what occurred years ago on their fellow bishops’ watch. Some of the bishops years ago were at fault; others tried to do the best they could with a problem that was nowhere near as exposed as to its depth and breadth as it is now.

I have seen at least one priest, innocent of the charges made against him, destroyed by lies. I have seen others who were not caught (can’t catch someone if no one calls “foul”) get away with horrible damage to their victims. I have seen victims damaged by their abuser, and then further damaged by their parents, the ones who are their God-given protectors. And I have seen the Church, the bishop, and everyone within shooting distance, damned for not being mind readers. Justice is at best rough and incomplete, and those (like you) who essentially demand impeccability of the Church demand something that even Christ Himself did not promise.

There really is no point in continuing this conversation. I am not going to convince you of anything, and you are so wrapped up in the issue that you do not have the emotional distance to judge matters fairly. I have never said that bishops who did wrong should not be brought up short; that is a matter for the Church, and Canon law has its own practice and procedures which will probably not satisfy your vision of what justice should look like.

I would suggest that you pray not only for the victims, but also the abusers and those who were in authority at the time, and subsequently.

I do.
 
and I have tried to tell you, you are looking back with hindsight. 50 years ago, no one had a clue what the damage was to the victim. It was treated as a mortal sin - one could go to hell over the matter; so people “got” the damage in terms of moral, spiritual issues. They flat out did not get the damage in terms of psychological issues. So the result was “go to confession and don’t do that any more”. The other part you don’t seem to get is that most of the victims were not reporting, so bishops did not have an idea how widespread it was.

Let me try it another way. We had a true pedophile in our diocese; he abandoned his boy-toys when they showed the first signs of pubic hair. The guy had multiple victims; the bishop found out about one or two. The rest came forward years and years later (the priest by then had Alzheimer’s), and the bishop who had to deal with it was several bishops removed from the one on duty at the time of the abuse. No one had a clue; he threatened the boys if they told anyone, and they kept their mouths shut.

Culpability in law is not the same as culpability in fact. And I have not commented on either issue in these posts; if you are insinuating I said there was no culpability, you are not a very careful reader.

Cute. Irrelevant, but cute. And if the bishops had ignored their counsels’ advice, you would be roasting them for that.

No, what seems to get lost in the discussion is the facts and what those facts mean and imply. You are emotionally involved in the issue, and it is causing you to look only through the lens of your emotional response.

People want simplistic answers to complex questions. You want a simple answer and are angry and disgusted it hasn’t come out the way you want. and as a matter of fact, bishops have apologized for the acts of the priests, and the bishops, before them; but it has not managed to find its way to your radar. Law. He is now under the thumb of the curia, and has been reduced from Cardinal Archbishop of a major archdiocese to the Church equivalent of a porter. People who are unfamiliar with the Church and its workings simply do not get what the Church did to him. I have seen people say he was rewarded; I don’t know what planet they are from, but they know zilch about the Church hierarchy.

I do.
The most telling aspect of your response was regarding the following comment from me:

As far as defending the dioceses, how about defending the principles of Jesus?

Your response:Cute. Irrelevant, but cute. And if the bishops had ignored their counsels’ advice, you would be roasting them for that.

Why would we roast bishops for defending and living by Jesus’ principles? And why would bishops listen to their councils advise if it was contrary to Jesus’ principles?

You were being presumptuous by assuming I would rather be beholden to what an attorney says rather than be beholden to what Jesus taught.

And while I’m emotionally involved in the issue, it is because I know a great deal about what went on and what goes on even today on a diocesan level and from the way your posts seem to be becoming more and more revealing about what you are aware of, especially compared to your early protestations about not knowing much at all, you do as well.

Have a great day.

Peace
 
The most telling aspect of your response was regarding the following comment from me:

As far as defending the dioceses, how about defending the principles of Jesus?

Your response:Cute. Irrelevant, but cute. And if the bishops had ignored their counsels’ advice, you would be roasting them for that.

Why would we roast bishops for defending and living by Jesus’ principles? And why would bishops listen to their councils advise if it was contrary to Jesus’ principles?
I am suggesting that you are simplistic in your understanding of Jesus’ principles. And those who want simple answers most often do not like the results that accrue to them. I really don’t see anywhere that a bishop who has not only a fiduciary but also a moral duty to use the assets of the diocese wisely is failing to follow Jesus’ principles; and you show an amazing amount of naivety of the judicial world.
You were being presumptuous by assuming I would rather be beholden to what an attorney says rather than be beholden to what Jesus taught.
I am aware of what Jesus taught. You are being simplistic about His teaching; again, emotional issues are intruding on wht the real world is about.
And while I’m emotionally involved in the issue, it is because I know a great deal about what went on and what goes on even today on a diocesan level and from the way your posts seem to be becoming more and more revealing about what you are aware of, especially compared to your early protestations about not knowing much at all, you do as well.
You read selectively through your emotional lens. I was pointed as to what I did not know; how you can take that as an overall statement is beyond any logic.

And you seem to be able to magically transpose whatever knowledge you have from your diocese to others you know nothing about.
Have a great day.

Peace
You too.
 
I am suggesting that you are simplistic in your understanding of Jesus’ principles. And those who want simple answers most often do not like the results that accrue to them. I really don’t see anywhere that a bishop who has not only a fiduciary but also a moral duty to use the assets of the diocese wisely is failing to follow Jesus’ principles; and you show an amazing amount of naivety of the judicial world.

I am aware of what Jesus taught. You are being simplistic about His teaching; again, emotional issues are intruding on wht the real world is about.

You read selectively through your emotional lens. I was pointed as to what I did not know; how you can take that as an overall statement is beyond any logic.

And you seem to be able to magically transpose whatever knowledge you have from your diocese to others you know nothing about.

You too.
You are quite right about me thinking Jesus’ teachings were simplistic. He told the apostle through which the bishops derive authority to care for his flock and Jesus paid special emphasis to them about protecting the children of his flock.a

You say to disregard those simple concepts and place a primacy on the bishops fiduciary responsibility to the diocese over the simplicity of Jesus’ teachings.

And you wonder why the bishops have not only squandered peters pence but the credibility of the church as well ?

Because the bishops listened to the attorneys, cannon and otherwise, they managed not only to fail their fiduciary responsibility, but at the same time managed to their vows of fidelity to the word of God.

BTW, thanks for helping me clarify in my mind what was at one time just a jumble of facts and emotions, you have shown light upon some of the motivations behind church actions and how they were driven by priorities other than those found in Jesus’ teachings.

Peace
 
**The deceit and subterfuge about abuse **was not a victimless crime, in many respects it was a crime worse than the abuse itself because of the thought that had to go into it. It was not a crime of passion or impulse, but a thoroughly thought out rejection of some of our Savior’s most basic tenets.

The deceit continues to plague our church today and diminishes the effectiveness of those attempting to spread the Good News of Jesus Christ. The deceit saps the credibility of our church and enables other belief systems to flourish in the void created by our sins of omission.

And that is not good and it is inexcusable.

Peace
Disagreed. Scandalized. :mad:
 
As far as defending the dioceses, how about defending the principles of Jesus?
You are quite right about me thinking Jesus’ teachings were simplistic. He told the apostle through which the bishops derive authority to care for his flock and Jesus paid special emphasis to them about protecting the children of his flock.a



BTW, thanks for helping me clarify in my mind what was at one time just a jumble of facts and emotions, you have shown light upon some of the motivations behind church actions and how they were driven by priorities other than those found in Jesus’ teachings.

Peace
Peace.

Would you like to elaborate on Jesus’ principles and Jesus’ teachings you referred to? It would be good if you provide your reference as well.

God bless.
 
You are quite right about me thinking Jesus’ teachings were simplistic. He told the apostle through which the bishops derive authority to care for his flock and Jesus paid special emphasis to them about protecting the children of his flock.a

You say to disregard those simple concepts and place a primacy on the bishops fiduciary responsibility to the diocese over the simplicity of Jesus’ teachings.
As I have said, you read very selectively. I said nothing about ignoring any duty to the victim; in your world there is no such thing as balance.
Because the bishops listened to the attorneys, cannon and otherwise, they managed not only to fail their fiduciary responsibility, but at the same time managed to their vows of fidelity to the word of God.
Again, a simplistic and over-broad comment. You and I can agree some bishops failed. By your account, all failed. Your account is so emotionally tinged that a saint could not have met your burden of proof. Many did all in their power to deal with the issues fairly and properly, not that you would ever acknowledge that.
BTW, thanks for helping me clarify in my mind what was at one time just a jumble of facts and emotions, you have shown light upon some of the motivations behind church actions and how they were driven by priorities other than those found in Jesus’ teachings.

Peace
I seriously doubt that things are clarified; more likely just cast in concrete. You can only see through your emotions. That colors all facts according to your preconceived notions.
 
As I have said, you read very selectively. I said nothing about ignoring any duty to the victim; in your world there is no such thing as balance.

Again, a simplistic and over-broad comment. You and I can agree some bishops failed. By your account, all failed. Your account is so emotionally tinged that a saint could not have met your burden of proof. Many did all in their power to deal with the issues fairly and properly, not that you would ever acknowledge that.

I seriously doubt that things are clarified; more likely just cast in concrete. You can only see through your emotions. That colors all facts according to your preconceived notions.
Name one bishop that publicly spoke out to curb abuse before Boston and before his diocese was sued . That will be a pretty clear indication of how many bishops did all they could to avert abuse on their own and for the reason that it was the right thing to do.

You don’t think mothers wrote any letters to bishops and popes? Which one acted upon notice to them of abuse?

We know hundreds of dioceses had abuse and paid millions out, we know priests notified bishops about abuse in there parishes.

So what is the excuse? That a priest didn’t know raping a kid was wrong, that a bishop didn’t know raping a kid was wrong or that the pope didn’t know raping a kid was wrong?

You make it sound as if abuse is rocket science? You are trying to say that what any 10 year old kid knows about forced sex with adults isn’t clear to the leaders of our church?

You don’t give our leaders any credit for the years they have spent studying in Rome and Belgium. You are basically calling them morons for not being able to know that raping kids was wrong and that the message of Jesus about taking care of children is so complicated that they couldn’t figure out that raping kids wasn’t in Jesus’ plan.

You are saying that when the bishops prayed about abuse, the message they got back was so unintelligible that they couldn’t figure out what they were doing was wrong.

The emotion that clouds my judgement is not related to knowing about abuse, it is the emotion that boils up when I hear these ridiculous excuses for why the leaders of our church persisted in enabling abuse for centuries.

They are supposed to be the beacon of light regarding the goodness of Jesus’ message and they can’t even figure out that the abuse of kids wasn’t something to be ignored?

And to have people be OK with all that went on and is still going on is in of itself as unfathomable.

You have to be getting paid as some sort of employee or on retainer of the church to be espousing the views you have, is that the case?

Peace
 
Peace.

Would you like to elaborate on Jesus’ principles and Jesus’ teachings you referred to? It would be good if you provide your reference as well.

God bless.
Didn’t Jesus say to not rape kids? Or did He just say it some other fashion?

Or maybe I am mistaken and Jesus says to rape kids.Maybe you can show a reference where Jesus supports the raping of kids. You must have one, otherwise you wouldn’t need a reference from me showing that Jesus didn’t want kids raped.

Peace
 
Didn’t Jesus say to not rape kids? Or did He just say it some other fashion?

Or maybe I am mistaken and Jesus says to rape kids.Maybe you can show a reference where Jesus supports the raping of kids. You must have one, otherwise you wouldn’t need a reference from me showing that Jesus didn’t want kids raped.

Peace
Please kindly give reference. Thanks.
 
You have to be getting paid as some sort of employee or on retainer of the church to be espousing the views you have, is that the case?

Peace
No. I learned long ago that complex issues do not give way to simple answers, and that viewing something emotionally clouds one’s view and judgment. I also learned long ago that making absolute statements and making generalizations fail to comport with reality.

You are a very very selective reader. You see only what you want to see, and ignore anything that does not fit exactly into your world view. You are on a tirade about bishops, ignore the fact that I have agreed with you that some bishops failed when they could have done the right thing, and you completely ignore that some bishops did their very best, and it simply was not good enough; that in most cases the bishop overseeing an abusive priest had no indication that abuse was occurring while it was occurring (because the abuse was reported after it had occurred - in many instances decades after it had occurred), most often had no indication of the number of children abused (because neither they nor their mothers came forward), and that the majority of bishops relied on experts in psychology to advise them how to handle the cases (the psychologists were wrong about the capability to cure), and for the most part, handled what appeared to be isolated cases as the mortal sins they were and did not know of the damage that occurred psychologically.

But then, facts don’t matter to you.

Have a great day.

Feel free to take any parting shots you want (as in the quoted paragraph). There is no point in trying to discuss it with you as you read selectively and can’t acknowledge the facts.
 
No. I learned long ago that complex issues do not give way to simple answers, and that viewing something emotionally clouds one’s view and judgment. I also learned long ago that making absolute statements and making generalizations fail to comport with reality.

You are a very very selective reader. You see only what you want to see, and ignore anything that does not fit exactly into your world view. You are on a tirade about bishops, ignore the fact that I have agreed with you that some bishops failed when they could have done the right thing, and you completely ignore that some bishops did their very best, and it simply was not good enough; that in most cases the bishop overseeing an abusive priest had no indication that abuse was occurring while it was occurring (because the abuse was reported after it had occurred - in many instances decades after it had occurred), most often had no indication of the number of children abused (because neither they nor their mothers came forward), and that the majority of bishops relied on experts in psychology to advise them how to handle the cases (the psychologists were wrong about the capability to cure), and for the most part, handled what appeared to be isolated cases as the mortal sins they were and did not know of the damage that occurred psychologically.

But then, facts don’t matter to you.

Have a great day.

Feel free to take any parting shots you want (as in the quoted paragraph). There is no point in trying to discuss it with you as you read selectively and can’t acknowledge the facts.
You are making confused conclusions about my emotions and my tirades regarding bishops. While my emotions regarding the issue may cause me to use more heated language than I usually do, that doesn’t mean that the underlying facts about the way the church has handled abuse are untrue.

So I know first hand about how the church handles abuse issues, how does that disqualify me from accurately commenting on how they handle the abuse issue? Am I too close to the issue to talk about it?

As to taking parting shots, I shared with you my motivation for the way I feel, I tried to guess at yours by reading between the lines and how you parsed your language, and I was wrong ,so what is your relationship to the church and its’ abuse crisis? Maybe it will give me some insight into why you feel the way you do.

Peace
 
While my emotions regarding the issue may cause me to use more heated language than I usually do, that doesn’t mean that the underlying facts about the way the church has handled abuse are untrue.
You may have a wide and deep experience of your diocese. That does not qualify you to speak as if you have knowledge of all dioceses.
So I know first hand about how the church handles abuse issues, how does that disqualify me from accurately commenting on how they handle the abuse issue? Am I too close to the issue to talk about it?
It would seem to me that either you are too close to the issue, or in the alternative, that you do not engage deeply in critical thinking.

I have tried to make a point (actually, several) and I don’t seem to be getting through. I think that there are some bishops who should be “swung on a short rope”. I agree with you that the abuse has been horrible for the victims and for the Church. Where we part company is where you seem to want to paint all bishops, and the Church, with one broad brush.

We have had clericalism - up the wazoo - and clericalism is to an extent part of the source of how we got to where we are. And while clericalism too often arises from the clerics, there are a whole lot of Catholics, particularly “old school” raised three or four generations ago, who bought into that clericalism lock, stock and barrel and were at least somewhat complicit in how the bishops continued in that clericalism.

You also do not seem to be able to acknowledge that 40, 50 and more years ago, no one really had any clue as to how psychologically damaging sex abuse can be to the victim. It simply was seen as sinful activity, one that could cause scandal in the Church and so the bishops, not aware of the damage issue, mishandled the priests who were abusing. Add to that the fact that such a huge number of victims did not come forward, and we had bishops totally unaware of how big the problem was.

You seem to be unable to see anything but what you want to see. I have never, and never would, say that the issue was “no big deal”. It was of astounding and horrendous proportions. But I am unwilling to say that “all” bishops, or “the Church” did such and such, or failed to do such and such. Some did, some didn’t, and too often people simply don’t care about the facts. Too often people are not willing to do the hard work to sort out who was really responsible, why they were really responsible, and to what extent. As I have said repeatedly; complex issues do not lend themselves to simple answers. Nor do they lend themselves to honest treatment when emotions cloud judgment.
As to taking parting shots, I shared with you my motivation for the way I feel, I tried to guess at yours by reading between the lines and how you parsed your language, and I was wrong ,so what is your relationship to the church and its’ abuse crisis? Maybe it will give me some insight into why you feel the way you do.

Peace
why do I “feel” the way I do? I try to set feelings aside. Feelings cloud any judgment of factual issues. We expect perfection from imperfect people. We grow up expecting that our parents, for example, are all knowing, all wise, all merciful; and instead somewhere along the line we find they are humans prone to mistakes, prejudices, faults, even sins. So also, priests and bishops.

I would like to see justice done. But how is justice defined? One of the posters wants an automatic removal of a bishop if a priest is found to have abused someone. I can’t think of a term I could use to describe that comment that either would not be censored or possibly get me banned. That comment in itself is not worthy of a response; I respond because I don’t want someone else to think in that direction. There is absolutely no aspect of justice in that comment; in fact it is so unjust as to defy any sort of a civil reply.

People hear mostly about this from the public press, and while the press has forced the issue to the point that even the most recalcitrant, clericalist bishop cannot ignore it, the press has had its own agenda and fairness has nothing to do whatsoever with most of the reporting. And so people form their opinions from a press that is doing all it can to form that opinion, never mind the facts.

People do not want to understand how a bishop could let this go the way it has gone. Most of that not wanting to understand is driven by the revulsion to the abuse. But the reality is we need to understand how good men, trying to do God’s work, trying to make the right decision, can have made such a mess of it; justice demands that we examine that reality, that we do the necessary work.

It is far, far easier to condemn, to sweep all together, to ignore or dismiss facts and take a “shoot them all and let God sort them out” approach. That is not justice.

There is an old phrase that in essence says to not judge a person until you have walked a mile in his moccasins. No one seems to want to put the moccasins on; the couch is far too comfortable, from which imperious opinions issue.

I love the Church. Christ never said its leaders would be endowed with impeccability. Throughout history we have had priests, bishops, cardinals and popes who have failed us, often with huge repercussions, and this is no different. That is the reality, and so few want to look at that reality as they (seem to) feel that if they did, they would lose faith, they would lose hope, and would end up denying what is good, right, and salvific about the Church. Christ promised the Holy Spirit and I firmly believe the Holy Spirit is still active and guiding the Church. But Christ did not grant impeccability, nor even necessarily wisdom. We need to understand the difference.

What I can’t seem to get across is we agree in some aspects more than you seem to understand.
 
You may have a wide and deep experience of your diocese. That does not qualify you to speak as if you have knowledge of all dioceses.

It would seem to me that either you are too close to the issue, or in the alternative, that you do not engage deeply in critical thinking.

I have tried to make a point (actually, several) and I don’t seem to be getting through. I think that there are some bishops who should be “swung on a short rope”. I agree with you that the abuse has been horrible for the victims and for the Church. Where we part company is where you seem to want to paint all bishops, and the Church, with one broad brush. …

You seem to be unable to see anything but what you want to see. I have never, and never would, say that the issue was “no big deal”. It was of astounding and horrendous proportions. But I am unwilling to say that “all” bishops, or “the Church” did such and such, or failed to do such and such. Some did, some didn’t, and too often people simply don’t care about the facts. Too often people are not willing to do the hard work to sort out who was really responsible, why they were really responsible, and to what extent. As I have said repeatedly; complex issues do not lend themselves to simple answers. Nor do they lend themselves to honest treatment when emotions cloud judgment.

why do I “feel” the way I do? I try to set feelings aside. Feelings cloud any judgment of factual issues. We expect perfection from imperfect people. We grow up expecting that our parents, for example, are all knowing, all wise, all merciful; and instead somewhere along the line we find they are humans prone to mistakes, prejudices, faults, even sins. So also, priests and bishops.

I would like to see justice done. But how is justice defined? One of the posters wants an automatic removal of a bishop if a priest is found to have abused someone. I can’t think of a term I could use to describe that comment that either would not be censored or possibly get me banned. That comment in itself is not worthy of a response; I respond because I don’t want someone else to think in that direction. There is absolutely no aspect of justice in that comment; in fact it is so unjust as to defy any sort of a civil reply…

…I love the Church. Christ never said its leaders would be endowed with impeccability. Throughout history we have had priests, bishops, cardinals and popes who have failed us, often with huge repercussions, and this is no different. That is the reality, and so few want to look at that reality as they (seem to) feel that if they did, they would lose faith, they would lose hope, and would end up denying what is good, right, and salvific about the Church. Christ promised the Holy Spirit and I firmly believe the Holy Spirit is still active and guiding the Church. But Christ did not grant impeccability, nor even necessarily wisdom. We need to understand the difference.

What I can’t seem to get across is we agree in some aspects more than you seem to understand.
I do not disagree that we may agree on many aspects of the issue,but in some respects we differ on what we should be doing as a church now.For instance I am less inclined to have bishops “swinging from short ropes” and instead am looking for a solution that eases victims and their families toward a more Christlike release of pain from the whole situation.

In many respects it is too late to address most of the actual acts of abuse in any substantive punitive manner, but that is more of the temporal realm anyway. Aside from actions that distance abusers from further opportunities to abuse or to send a quiet signal to the whole of the clergy about abuse, there are few practical measures still in play.

The issue that is closest to my heart and soul is a wish that mothers of victims not receive release from the torment inflicted upon them by the church - only when the shovelfuls of dirt impact their coffins.

And the reason I feel that way is because you and I do share a feeling of love for our church. The way the curia has handled the abuse issue has sent a message to many of the faithful that the sacrifice of the individual mothers will more significant than the sacrifice made by members of the curia. That the pain felt by mothers will be more intense than the pain felt by those that engaged in the condoning of abuse and those that also engaged in subterfuge to “avoid scandal”.

On a much wider scale the way the curia has tolerated the infliction of pain upon mothers is the crux of the bigger issue regarding the effects of the abuse issue upon the church. It is one of the reasons the church has lost so much moral credibility within the congregation and in the eyes of the world. It calls into question what we believe as a faith and acts as a deterrent to getting the work of Jesus done.

It is naive to think that tolerating the rape of children has not had had any bearing upon how the congregation looks upon its faith or how the world views the church. To pretend that somehow it is all a result of confusion and inability to see that what happened was actually not God’s plan is folly.

It is also folly to insist that the curia is doing all it can to alleviate the pain of faithful Catholics who have continued to suffer because of the way the church has decided to handle the issue of clerical abuse.

Peace to you and all the other victims of abuse, because if we are Catholics, we share the pain of the victims and their mothers , because our faith has also has been abused.

Peace
 
I do not disagree that we may agree on many aspects of the issue,but in some respects we differ on what we should be doing as a church now.
I don’t think we disagree on the “should”. we disagree on the “is doing”. I will go back to my previous comment; you may well know what is occurring in your diocese. That does not, by it’s occurrence or lack thereof, carry over into any evidence that other dioceses are doing or not doing the same.
For instance I am less inclined to have bishops “swinging from short ropes” and instead am looking for a solution that eases victims and their families toward a more Christlike release of pain from the whole situation.
My main focus is the same; however, I still think that Rome has not acted in instances where it could act more decisively.
The issue that is closest to my heart and soul is a wish that mothers of victims not receive release from the torment inflicted upon them by the church - only when the shovelfuls of dirt impact their coffins.
The statement appears a bit over-dramatized. Again, what is occurring in your diocese is just that - in your diocese. I know that in my archdiocese, our archbishop has met not only with victims but also with families. Such meetings usually are very private; some do not occur because victims will not meet; others because families (the mothers) will not meet; and some do not occur because the mother is long dead (I am referring to some of the older cases).
The way the curia has handled the abuse issue has sent a message to many of the faithful that the sacrifice of the individual mothers will more significant than the sacrifice made by members of the curia. That the pain felt by mothers will be more intense than the pain felt by those that engaged in the condoning of abuse and those that also engaged in subterfuge to “avoid scandal”.
The “curia” is not responsible as you would have them. the curia refers to the administrative body of the Church, consisting of various departments, courts, officials, etc. all functioning under the authority of the Pope. The dicastery which has responsibility for issues concerning sexual abuse is the one headed by Cardinal Levada. It is not his job to meet with mothers; it is his job to determine what may happen in the instance of laicization of a priest. It is the bishop’s responsibility, if anyone’s, to meet with victims and families. Again, you make broad, sweeping generalizations concerning the Church. We agree that the face-to-face meeting between the bishop and the victims and families is an important and necessary meeting if there is to be healing. making a blanket statement that such is not occurring is incorrect.
On a much wider scale the way the curia has tolerated the infliction of pain upon mothers is the crux of the bigger issue regarding the effects of the abuse issue upon the church.
See my prior comments; not the duty of the curia, nor its responsibility.
It is one of the reasons the church has lost so much moral credibility within the congregation and in the eyes of the world. It calls into question what we believe as a faith and acts as a deterrent to getting the work of Jesus done.
People are extremely rapid to assign responsibility for acts when they do not know who is actually responsible. That will never change, nor will it ever give true credibility to their claims; however, those who also do not know the facts will blindly continue to accept the assignments.
It is naive to think that tolerating the rape of children has not had had any bearing upon how the congregation looks upon its faith or how the world views the church. To pretend that somehow it is all a result of confusion and inability to see that what happened was actually not God’s plan is folly.
The truth is never a folly. And the use of the term “tolerate” is part of the problem. You and I can both agree that certain bishops failed miserably to do what they needed to do. Where we part company is where you hold the bishops, who tried to do right, to an impossible standard. A bishop cannot address cases which have not come forward. A bishop who’s own experts say a person can be treated and cured of this issue is not morally responsible when he acts in good faith on the best advice he is given. And a bishop who is subject tot he clericalism that has existed in the clergy for centuries upon centuries is going to be impacted in the decisions he makes because he has to weigh the alternatives he has at hand and make a decision today. When he makes his best efforts to do so and is wrong, we cannot demand that he had done differently. I certainly can say with 20-20 hindsight that the attempt to avoid scandal to the congregation of the priest and to the larger Church was a wrong decision. However, I cannot and will not say that because a bishop made a wrong decision, that he was a bad bishop. One needs to look far more closely at the issue.

In the area of family sexual abuse, I have had cases in which the mother flat out failed to protect the child(ren). She was not an active abuser, but most certainly was a passive abuser. Many, if not most of those mothers were themselves abused (although not necessarily sexually). One does not have to approve of the dynamics at work to understand it; and if one understands it, one spends a whole lot less time condemning the persons involved, and possibly has some compassion for those mothers. Compassion does not equate with approval, but many take it to mean the same thing.
 
I don’t think we disagree on the “should”. we disagree on the “is doing”. I will go back to my previous comment; you may well know what is occurring in your diocese. That does not, by it’s occurrence or lack thereof, carry over into any evidence that other dioceses are doing or not doing the same. My main focus is the same; however, I still think that Rome has not acted in instances where it could act more decisively.

The statement appears a bit over-dramatized. Again, what is occurring in your diocese is just that - in your diocese. I know that in my archdiocese, our archbishop has met not only with victims but also with families. Such meetings usually are very private; some do not occur because victims will not meet; others because families (the mothers) will not meet; and some do not occur because the mother is long dead (I am referring to some of the older cases).

The “curia” is not responsible as you would have them. the curia refers to the administrative body of the Church, consisting of various departments, courts, officials, etc. all functioning under the authority of the Pope. The dicastery which has responsibility for issues concerning sexual abuse is the one headed by Cardinal Levada. It is not his job to meet with mothers; it is his job to determine what may happen in the instance of laicization of a priest. It is the bishop’s responsibility, if anyone’s, to meet with victims and families. Again, you make broad, sweeping generalizations concerning the Church. We agree that the face-to-face meeting between the bishop and the victims and families is an important and necessary meeting if there is to be healing. making a blanket statement that such is not occurring is incorrect.

See my prior comments; not the duty of the curia, nor its responsibility.People are extremely rapid to assign responsibility for acts when they do not know who is actually responsible. That will never change, nor will it ever give true credibility to their claims; however, those who also do not know the facts will blindly continue to accept the assignments.

The truth is never a folly. And the use of the term “tolerate” is part of the problem. You and I can both agree that certain bishops failed miserably to do what they needed to do. Where we part company is where you hold the bishops, who tried to do right, to an impossible standard. A bishop cannot address cases which have not come forward. A bishop who’s own experts say a person can be treated and cured of this issue is not morally responsible when he acts in good faith on the best advice he is given. And a bishop who is subject tot he clericalism that has existed in the clergy for centuries upon centuries is going to be impacted in the decisions he makes because he has to weigh the alternatives he has at hand and make a decision today. When he makes his best efforts to do so and is wrong, we cannot demand that he had done differently. I certainly can say with 20-20 hindsight that the attempt to avoid scandal to the congregation of the priest and to the larger Church was a wrong decision. However, I cannot and will not say that because a bishop made a wrong decision, that he was a bad bishop. One needs to look far more closely at the issue.

In the area of family sexual abuse, I have had cases in which the mother flat out failed to protect the child(ren). She was not an active abuser, but most certainly was a passive abuser. Many, if not most of those mothers were themselves abused (although not necessarily sexually). One does not have to approve of the dynamics at work to understand it; and if one understands it, one spends a whole lot less time condemning the persons involved, and possibly has some compassion for those mothers. Compassion does not equate with approval, but many take it to mean the same thing.
The curia is the body composed of people who lead the church. Taken as a whole they have been remiss in alleviating the pain of abuse .

You seem to be focussed on the historical reasons and excuses for why abuse festered and grew. I don’t care about that, that falls in the “lack of impeccability” category. In your last post, you are even blaming mothers for the abuse of their kids. Its time to stop the blaming and solve the pain issue before it goes away because of the death of the mothers involved.

I am concerned with now. The church’s leaders still leave mothers of abuse victims painfully hanging in the wind regarding how their faith in the church has been misplaced.

If you think that is OK, then I don’t think whatever we discuss will amount to anything.

Peace
 
You seem to be focussed on the historical reasons and excuses for why abuse festered and grew. I don’t care about that, that falls in the “lack of impeccability” category. In your last post, you are even blaming mothers for the abuse of their kids. Its time to stop the blaming and solve the pain issue before it goes away because of the death of the mothers involved.
Blaming? I don’t have to blame; the facts speak for themselves. Again, you missed the point. It is not about blame, it is about compassion. It is about understanding people, what they do and why.
I am concerned with now. The church’s leaders still leave mothers of abuse victims painfully hanging in the wind regarding how their faith in the church has been misplaced.
I am concerned about the now also. However, I try to not speak in universals when specifics are more accurate. You paint with a broad brush; I have been trying to convince you that your genralizations are not accurate, while the substance of your comments is accurate; the question is to what extent. You make it universal, and it is not.
If you think that is OK, then I don’t think whatever we discuss will amount to anything.

Peace
I have tried to tell you what I think, but you do not listen well - or perhaps, rahter, read well. You read selectively. I really don’t think it is my inability to articulate my position; but you read my example of family sexual abuse and reacted as if I was blaming mothers; you completely missed my comments about compassion.

It is not a matter of my thinking something is ok. It is a matter that what we will discuss will not amount to anything, because you cannot seem to read what I actually write.

I am not trying to beat you up. But I will go back to what I said before: it is my impression that you read what I write through an emotional lens, and your emotions are distorting what I am saying. You feel passionately about the issue. I have moved beyond the passion, but that does not mean I have no concern.
 
Blaming? I don’t have to blame; the facts speak for themselves. Again, you missed the point. It is not about blame, it is about compassion. It is about understanding people, what they do and why.

I am concerned about the now also. However, I try to not speak in universals when specifics are more accurate. You paint with a broad brush; I have been trying to convince you that your genralizations are not accurate, while the substance of your comments is accurate; the question is to what extent. You make it universal, and it is not.

I have tried to tell you what I think, but you do not listen well - or perhaps, rahter, read well. You read selectively. I really don’t think it is my inability to articulate my position; but you read my example of family sexual abuse and reacted as if I was blaming mothers; you completely missed my comments about compassion.

It is not a matter of my thinking something is ok. It is a matter that what we will discuss will not amount to anything, because you cannot seem to read what I actually write.

I am not trying to beat you up. But I will go back to what I said before: it is my impression that you read what I write through an emotional lens, and your emotions are distorting what I am saying. You feel passionately about the issue. I have moved beyond the passion, but that does not mean I have no concern.
I don’t read what you write through emotional lenses, I don’t even really dwell on the subjects you bring up .When I counter your substantive arguments is just out of sense of intellectual challenge .

The abuse happened for whatever reasons and the pain remains, I don’t see the church addressing those concerns about how the pain has affected victims and their families.And that is what concerns me. That lack of concern among our church’s leaders points to the serious disconnect between them and the congregation and to what Jesus taught and that shows a way of church thinking that is unexplainable and inexcusable.

Peace
 
I don’t read what you write through emotional lenses, I don’t even really dwell on the subjects you bring up .When I counter your substantive arguments is just out of sense of intellectual challenge .

The abuse happened for whatever reasons and the pain remains, I don’t see the church addressing those concerns about how the pain has affected victims and their families.And that is what concerns me. That lack of concern among our church’s leaders points to the serious disconnect between them and the congregation and to what Jesus taught and that shows a way of church thinking that is unexplainable and inexcusable.

Peace
I understand that you don’t see it, but that does not mean that it does not occur.

As stated earlier, much of that is done in private; it is not a public issue, so you and I will generally not know much about it unless some mention has been made. I have seen the mention made, a tiny paragraph that was buried in the news, several times. The fact that I have only seen it several times does not mean that is all that has happened; it only means that is what I happened to see reported.

If you missed the mentioning, I am trying to tell you. Again, sweeping broad generalizations sound great and a lot of people do that; it doesn’t mean that the generalizations are the truth. They are at best only part of the truth, and sometimes not much of it at all.

Look: You say “That lack of concern among our church’s leaders”.

If you said “That apparent lack of concern among our Church’s leaders” we migh be able to get somewhere. But you don’t; you make absolutes. Just because you personally are not informed of the concern of the Church leaders does not mean they are not concerned, are not seeking to help heal the wounds, are not doing all in their power to address the issue.

It only means you don’t see it.
 
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