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To: sitetest
I've never seen comprehensive statistics on Protestant clergy abuse of children. There are fragmented statistics that suggest perhaps at least 400 cases per year or thereabouts (which would have been 20,000 kids over 50 years). But the documents I've seen are fragmentary and likely don't paint the whole picture, and I'm not really sure of the complete context in which they exist, so I usually avoid referencing them.

Yet conclusions have been formed and applied and prosecuted anyway. From post #56:

...in fact, the Church is correct. The clergy from non-Catholic Christian denominations commit inappropriate sexual improprieties at rates which appear to exceed that of Catholic priests. I saw one study that showed that 38% of Protestant clergy had inappropriate sexual relations with their congregants, and fully 12% of these relationships had been consummated in sexual intercourse. This study was of self-reporting Protestant clergy. In other words, the researcher surveyed Protestant clergy, and this is what they admitted to the researcher....

....One study showed that roughly 7 out of every 400 female congregants in Protestant ecclesial communities had been taken advantage of sexually by a Protestant clergy person. I don't know how they're counting congregants. Everyone who claims to be a Protestant Christian? Or just folks who are registered in Protestant communities? Or just folks who actually show up on Sundays? In any event, based on the percentages we've already discussed, that suggests that somewhere between a couple of hundred thousand and a million Protestant congregants have been sexually taken advantage of by a member of their clergy. Yikes!

Still no authoritative source for these statistics has been provided. Still the conflation of "sexual misconduct" and "felony assault" is being made. Still the goalposts are moved, and after wiping one's hands the only acknowledgement forthcoming is 'I've done nothing wrong.'

As I stated before, the real scandal was that 66% of Catholic bishops covered for the 4% of sexual predators among Catholic clergy. Their actions negatively affected 95% of the dioceses in the United States. Their actions cost the Catholic Church over three billion dollars paid in settlements and awards to the victims. Two-thirds of the bishops. Roughly the same percentage that chose not to speak out when Notre Dame honored Obama last spring. Coincidence?

Let's see the comparable statistics for Protestant clergy who intentionally cover up rapists and felons within their ranks.

Related threads:
The Bishops Who Speak... And Those Who Don't
So how many bishops back Notre Dame now?
Kneeling Before the World [Catholic Caucus]
Immunity, Denied (Catholic Caucus)
Sixth Circuit: Vatican Can Be Sued for Sexual Abuse

[Faithful Departed author Philip] Lawler points out that while less than five percent of American priests have been accused of sexual abuse, some two-thirds of our bishops were apparently complicit in cover-ups. The real scandal isn't the sick excesses of a few dozen pedophiles, or even the hundreds of priests who had affairs with teenage boys -- the bulk of abuse cases. No, according to Lawler, it is the malfeasance of wealthy, powerful, and evidently worldly men who fill the thrones -- but not the shoes -- of the apostles. In case after case, we read in their correspondence, in the records of their soulless, bureaucratic responses to victims of psychic torture and spiritual betrayal, these bishops' prime concern was to save the infrastructure, the bricks and mortar and mortgages. Ironically, their lack of a supernatural concern for souls is precisely what cost them so much money in the end.

70 posted on 09/30/2009 7:14:40 AM PDT by Alex Murphy (...We never faced anything like this...we only fought humans.)
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To: Alex Murphy
Dear Alex Murphy,

There are three different sorts of data regarding these questions that I've seen.

The first is the gold standard - where someone endeavors to do a comprehensive account of the behavior in question. The count covers both the numbers of perpetrators and victims. The attempt is made to be exhaustive, and the results are reported publicly. This is the nature of the John Jay study and its subsequent report. The study isn't perfect. One problem with the report is that it merely counted accusations made without any attempt to distinguish between reasonable accusations and accusations that are less likely to be true. Nonetheless, the report is probably as good as it's going to get.

Unfortunately, I'm unaware of any reports of this nature covering Protestant communities and ministers and victims. None. So, from the get go, we're comparing apples and oranges.

The next best sort of data derives from research conducted by social scientists using appropriate research methodologies. This doesn't come near to the standard set by the John Jay report, but it's the best that's been done with regard to the Protestant communities.

Thus, I've relied mostly on this data, flawed and incomplete as it is.

However, I haven't personally seen any methodical research studies that specifically address the question of sexual abuse of children by Protestant ministers. Thus, it's tough to make an apples-to-apples comparison between the scandal in the Catholic Church and the unreported scandals amongst the various Protestant communities.

What this data relates is that although direct comparisons with the data we have for the Catholic Church are difficult to make, it is clear that Protestant clergy have an enormous problem regarding sexual abuse.

That's not deflection, that's just the truth.

And if you want to tell me that a minister who has sex with someone he is counseling (a common scenario) isn't sexual abuse, even if ostensibly “consensual,” then I will say that it is you who is minimizing the enormous problem seen generally among Protestant clergy. A minister who has an illicit affair with a member of his congregation is doing more than just fornicating or committing adultery (As if these were relatively trivial offenses!!). He is committing a serious breach of trust with the sheep of his flock. In some states, it is actually illegal for a minister to have a sexual relationship with someone he is counseling.

And that's really all this article above reports the Church saying - We have our problems and we've attended to them. You have your own problems, why not address them?


A third sort of data comprises a hodgepodge of data sets that suffer from definitional problems, incompleteness, and that they often represent a different set of parameters than those used in the John Jay study. I've avoided this sort of data because it's difficult to draw much from it other than the fact that Protestant communities have a huge nearly-unreported problem with sexually molesting children that seems to go unabated even as the Catholic Church seems to have gotten more of a handle on Her problem.

One source of data that stands out in my mind is the report of various insurance companies that handle Protestant ecclesial communities. These companies pay somewhere between 260 and 330 claims per year, and have done so for a couple of decades or more, for child sexual abuse on the part of Protestant ministers. The last year that I've seen reported was 2006, if I recall correctly. In that year, the Catholic Church throughout the United States received 14 new claims of abuse against children under 18.

This data is suggestive that there have been roughly 15,000 sexually abused children by Protestant ministers over the last 50 years (roughly 300 claims per year X 50 years).

But before this, I've avoided noting this in our correspondence because frankly, I think that those numbers could be off by a factor of two or three or more.

Factors that would tend to suggest that these numbers might be on the high side include:

- One of the companies reports an average of 73 cases per year, seemingly most of child sexual abuse, but an unknown number of those cases comprise abuse against adults (It's ironic that you would choose to distinguish so sharply between abuse of adults and abuse of children. A little bit of “your sins are worse than ours,” an attitude of which we Catholics often are accused in these discussions.).

- These companies only tell us about the last 15 - 20+ years, not the last 50 years, and thus, we have to extrapolate data in a way with which I'm completely uncomfortable. Yet, it we don't extrapolate, we have no data to compare chronologically apples-to-apples to the John Jay data.

Factors that suggest that these numbers drastically minimize the absolute number of victims include:

- The John Jay study included ALL known accusations that hadn't actually been disproven. The insurance company numbers represent claims that are actually credible enough for the insurance companies to be involved.

- The John Jay study endeavored to count ALL claims of abuse. During the time that the John Jay study was conducted, I remember the Church actively seeking out unknown, previously unreported victims through various media. Advertisements ran in Catholic periodicals urging people to come forward with their stories of abuse, no matter how long ago in the past. We had inserts in our bulletins, etc. The insurance companies passively deal with what claims are made to them, and don't endeavor to go out and search for victims not previously identified. One might conclude that the John Jay approach would yield comparatively more cases than the insurance companies’ approach.

- There is no claim to be made that the insurance companies’ cases represent the total universe of cases of child abuse. I imagine that many storefront Protestant groups just don't have the bucks to do everything that a large, established congregation might do, and it wouldn't surprise me if many of these folks don't have liability insurance against sexual abuse.

Furthermore, it's quite likely that many congregations deal with victims in a variety of ways other than having them file claims against their insurance companies. I'm sure that in many cases, victims are urged to keep their mouths shut. I've read of cases where pastors with big reputations were able to keep their many victims under wraps for decades at a time. For every pastor where scandal explodes in his face after many years, how many are still keeping things in the dark? Remember, there is no John Jay College hunting down every conceivable allegation of abuse.

As well, many congregations choose to quietly pay off victims without involving the insurance companies, because otherwise, it will draw wider attention and scandal. I've seen many cases reported like this, where the minister is permitted to resign and go elsewhere and abuse again, as no public notice is ever given of his abuse. Kinda sounds like some of what was charged against the Catholic Church...

But we don't have any conceivable idea of how often or how rare that might be in Protestant groups because... well... no Protestant groups have stepped up to do the hard work that the Catholic Church did with the John Jay study.

We only know that Protestant clergy have raped large numbers - thousands and thousands, possibly some tens of thousands - of underaged children over the past five decades.

These problems suggest that the cases reported by the insurance may only be the tip of the iceberg of sexual abuse against children under 18 by Protestant clergy. Fifteen thousand over 50? Who knows? Maybe 50,000!

But that's speculation, and previous to this, I'd resisted speculating on the numbers of underage victims of Protestant clergy. It's clearly in the many thousands. It's clearly in a similar ballpark as what Catholic priests did, but whether it's roughly the same number of kids, or 50% more kids or 500% more kids is unknowable. So I didn't speculate.

Rather, I focused on the better data, which only deals with improper sexual conduct. Not to deflect, but rather not to introduce shaky speculation into the conversation.

Of course, this really only looks at one side of the equation - how many victims were there? We know that there were at least thousands of children sexually abused by Protestant clergy, perhaps tens of thousands. But by how many clergy? I've never seen ANY statistic regarding that.

We know that roughly 4,000 priest abused roughly 11,000 children. Does that 3:1 ratio apply to Protestant clergy? I have no idea. For one thing, we know that most Catholic priests were guilty of abusing one or two children, and a small subset abused very large numbers of children. Is that the statistical model that would apply to Protestant clergy? I have no idea. No one in the Protestant communities has done the hard work to figure it out. That that data doesn't exist at all is hardly the fault of the Catholic Church.

That's another reason I preferred to look at research data that focused on percentages of Protestant clergy who were sexually abusive (and again, having sexual intercourse outside of marriage with a member of your own congregation is certainly abusive, even if "consensual"). How those statistics relate directly to the Church's problem is difficult to say. But it certainly sustains the comment that these problems cross all religious groups, and that folks doing the pointing might wish to look to clean up their own houses.

Thus, it isn't a matter of Catholic disciplines or our theology that has been at the root of these evils. It's sin. And it's sin that crosses all religious borders and boundaries. AND THAT'S REALLY THE POINT.

As for “covering up,” well, definitions change. We say that two-thirds of Catholic bishops “covered up” abuse by Catholic priests, but that definition now appears to be:

- if the case wasn't made public;
- if prosecution wasn't sought against the offender. - if the offender wasn't expelled from the priesthood.

Frankly, as I've discussed previously, and which you seem to have studiously ignored, the standards were different 30 and more years ago.

Before the 1980s, the standard way of dealing with accusations of abuse included:

- Making an internal investigation of the charges;
- If the charges could be reasonably sustained, working with the victim and the family of the victim, always providing outside counseling at the Church's expense, coming to terms on any other financial settlement, and asking whether the victim and family wished to advance beyond these actions.
- Prosecution was discouraged because folks in the mental health community had counseled that this was often harmful to the victim.
- In many communities, law enforcement and judicial officers preferred that the Church deal with Her own problems and keep them out of it.
- The abuser was always sent off for therapy. In some cases, these men were laicized outright. In other cases, they were reassigned to posts where they would not come into contact with children. I remember reading about one case where then-Archbishop Hickey of Washington appointed a man to be the chaplain at the maximum security prison in Richmond.

Unfortunately, in a subset of cases, victims were truly silenced, were truly stonewalled, and abusers were reassigned to places where they would abuse more children.

THESE CASES truly represent cover-ups and scandal.

The cases where the above-mentioned guidelines were followed may represent a flawed methodology, but not cover-up and scandal. It was well-known which priests were reassigned to the two therapy centers in the United States, one in Maryland, and one in Arizona. Dioceses often made no secret of the assignment of priests to these two places, and everyone knew what that meant.

In a number of cases that I can personally recall, priests REFUSED to go to the therapy centers, as it was pretty much a silent confession of guilt of child sexual abuse. These priests were suspended, and in at least one case, the suspended priest broke off and formed his own pseudo-Catholic “church,” and took with him some 80,000 souls.

Since the mid-1980s, however, the Church's guidelines have included alerting law enforcement whenever a priest abuser is discovered. Not all dioceses followed this protocol in all cases, but I know that in my own archdiocese, every single priest against whom allegations were made from 1986 on was turned over for further investigation to law enforcement. That's over a decade-and-a-half BEFORE the Boston Globe broke the “news” about Catholic priest sexual abuse.

But turning folks over to the authorities represented a change on the part of not just the bishops, but the mental health professionals, and to a large degree, law enforcement itself.

To allege that prior to that time, if a priest wasn't turned over to authorities, that that represented a “cover-up” is to be anachronistic.

Nonetheless, the bishops aren't covered in glory with regard to all this. Many of them (not two-thirds, but a substantial number) DID truly cover-up, and DID reassign priests wrongly, and DID treat victims poorly, unjustly. And I suspect that some other bishops knew what these bishops were doing and turned a blind eye.

But the charge that two-thirds of Catholic bishops “covered-up” isn't sustained.

“Let's see the comparable statistics for Protestant clergy who intentionally cover up rapists and felons within their ranks.”

Unfortunately, because Protestants generally have been satisfied to look the other way and generally charge that this is a Catholic problem, because Protestants haven't done the hard work that Catholics have done, and because the various Protestant ecclesial groupings just aren't the juicy media targets that the Catholic Church is, there are no comparable statistics. Because unlike the Catholic Church, which paid big bucks to find out and report as much of the bad news as they could pay someone to find, none of the Protestant ecclesial communities have had the guts to find out.

The frequent charge that this all came about as a result of priestly celibacy or the "evils" of Catholic theology is not sustained, as these problems - sexual abuse by clergy, and yes, significant numbers of sexual abuse of children by clergy, exist in the Protestant communities as well.

That Protestants generally seem to have had a problem to own up to their own problems, preferring to blame distinctive features of the Church rather than face the fact that the problem crosses religions, is hardly a sin of the Catholic Church, of Catholic bishops or priests, or Catholics generally.

To fail to recognize that this is the failing of each and every Protestant group is a major case of deflection and projection.


sitetest

71 posted on 10/01/2009 7:22:07 AM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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