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Catholic Scandals: A Crisis for Celibacy? (long but worthy read)
Touchstone Magazine ^ | May 20, 2002 | Leon J. Podles

Posted on 05/20/2002 9:17:21 AM PDT by NYer

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Catholic Scandals:
A Crisis for Celibacy?
The Real Story Behind Clerical "Pedophilia"
& What It Really Means


by
Leon J. Podles

 

The Catholic Church has been the object of much unwanted attention, some of which it has brought upon it-self. Dozens of cases involving clerical "pedophilia" have been tried in the courts, several priests have gone to jail, and various dioceses have had to pay out tens or perhaps even hundreds of millions of dollars (the exact sums are often in sealed settlements) to the victims.

There have been some high-profile cases: Bishop Symons of Palm Beach resigned after he admitted his sins with teenage boys. The archbishop of Vienna, Cardinal Groer, was forced to resign after several seminarians complained that he had molested them. The diocese of Dallas had to pay out $23.5 million in a case involving Rudolph Kos. The bishop of Bayeaux is being prosecuted for not reporting to the police child molestation by one of his priests. And most recently a media storm has raged around the archdiocese of Boston since it became public that a pedophile priest, John Geoghan, was transferred from parish to parish in the 1980s, with the knowledge of the archbishop, Cardinal Law.

In view of this, a long-suffering public often wonders whether the Church would not be better off with a married clergy. Of course, the Latin tradition of clerical celibacy has been under attack for a long time for various reasons (celibacy is never exactly what one would call popular), and the latest scandals have only served to make the question more pressing in the minds of many Catholics.

 

True Pedophilia Is Rare

Philip Jenkins in his book Pedophiles and Priests: Anatomy of a Contemporary Crisis (Oxford University Press, 1996) tries to look at the problem objectively and dispassionately. According to Jenkins (who is not a Catholic), true pedophilia is extremely rare, is perhaps more common among Protestant clergy than among Catholic priests, and is even more common among married laymen. There is certainly a problem in the Catholic Church (and other churches), but it is not exactly what the media make it out to be.

First, as to the nature of clerical misbehavior: Pedophilia refers to sexual desire for pre-pubescent children. This is extremely rare, and only a handful of cases in several decades have involved priests who are true pedophiles.

Almost all the cases reported in the media as pedophilia actually involve an attraction (which a priest has acted on) to adolescent boys who are sexually mature but under the age of consent, which is 18 in civil law and 16 in canon law. This behavior is a variety of homosexuality. Homosexuals are often attracted to very young men because they combine the charm of boyishness with sexual maturity. Such sexual attraction is called ephebophilia, which the ancient Greeks cultivated to some extent but which rapidly fell out of favor as Christianity transformed classical culture.

In the 1960s and 1970s the Catholic Church followed secular psychological advice that sexual involvement with minors should be dealt with quietly and privately, that the youth involved were more likely to be hurt by a public fuss than by the sexual involvement, and that sexual interest in minors could be disciplined and cured.

This opinion changed in the mid-1980s, when many of the cases that had occurred from the mid-1960s onward came to light. In this period of about 20 years, about 150,000 men had served as Catholic priests and religious in the United States. There were about 500 reported (not all proved) cases of sexual involvement with minors, thus involving 0.3 percent of the clergy and religious, and most of the cases involved fifteen- to seventeen-year-old boys. Since not all allegations were substantiated, Jenkins says the evidence "suggests an offence rate of 0.2 percent." The archdiocese of Chicago did a survey of all its clergy files from the years 1951–1991, and found allegations against 2.6 percent of priests, allegations that may have been justified against 1.7 percent of them. Moreover, it found only one true case of pedophilia, which involved a priest and his small niece.

True pedophilia occurs most often within families; celibacy removes most Catholic priests from temptations of that sort. When it comes to pedophilia (not ephebophilia), clergy in churches that do not require celibacy have the same (if not worse) problems. The Catholic Church has been a target because it keeps good records, but the Episcopal Church has a comparable problem, and some of the worst cases have been in fundamentalist and Pentecostal churches—but these cases rarely receive public attention.

Jenkins also shows how the "pedophilia" cases in the Catholic Church (and the bungling way church authorities sometimes handled them) have been used by would-be church reformers as a tool to further their agenda: the end of clerical celibacy (and much else) in the Catholic Church.

Ultimately, the chief beneficiaries of this misinformation and the disorder in the Catholic Church are the secularizers who want to undermine the moral authority of religion in society. The Nazis also were great exposers of clerical scandals, and it was not because of the greater National Socialist purity of heart (both Philip Jenkins in his book and Victor Klemperer in I Will Bear Witness refer to this anti-clerical campaign).

 

Homosexuality Is the Problem

Second, and most important, Jenkins’s analysis indicates that the true nature of the problem in the Catholic Church is not pedophilia, but homosexuality, which can lead to sexual relations with sexually mature but underage boys.

Neither the media nor the Church have made it clear to the public that most of the abuse cases involve teenage boys, for this would focus the issue on the problems of homosexuality, a topic that is not politically correct. By not making thisclear, the media has given the impression that the Catholic Church attracts sick priests who like little children, as opposed to homosexuals who like teenage boys (not a good thing, but not as disgusting as pedophilia).

No one knows what percentage of clerics is homosexual, partially because it is not easy to define a homosexual, a modern category that contains many hidden, dubious assumptions. Is a homosexual a man who has ever felt the slightest sexual attraction to another male, or a man whose desires are largely directed to other men, or a man whose desires are exclusively directed to other men, or a man who acts on these desires, or a man who structures his personality around these desires?

Certainly an occasional homosexual desire does not make a man homosexual any more than an attraction to his secretary makes a heterosexual married man an adulterer. Temptations are often given to test the soul. What most people mean by a homosexual is a man who acts on a sexual desire for a man or whose personality is structured around that desire.

What percentage of clerics are, in fact, homosexuals in any of these senses? Donald Cozzens, the rector of the Cleveland Roman Catholic seminary, in The Changing Face of the Priesthood, quotes figures from 23 percent to 80 percent. He suspects that the priesthood has become or is rapidly becoming a gay profession, one in which heterosexuals are increasingly uncomfortable.

From my own experiences with clerical homosexuals, I suspect that the figure is well under 20 percent, although this is still 7 to 8 times the occurrence in the general population. The Vatican’s request for better screening has been ignored like everything else the Vatican says. Indeed, the guidelines put out by the American bishops clearly envision the possibility of accepting "gay" candidates if they agree to be celibate.

In the 1960s, I thought I might have a vocation, and I applied to a seminary program. Other applicants and I went through a psychological evaluation that may have been aimed at weeding out general nut cases and homosexuals. It failed on both accounts. In retrospect I would guess that a quarter of the people in the program were homosexuals or effeminate. My roommate was a homosexual, and when he approached me, I left the seminary within hours. CLICK HERE FOR FULL ARTICLE



TOPICS: General Discusssion
KEYWORDS: catholicchurch; catholiclist; celibacy; homosexuality; marriedclergy; protestantreligions
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To: Siobhan
I have it from my morning e-mail that we must brace ourselves for a detailed dossier on an American cardinal to be released shortlly. It will detail his homosexuality, his lies, his 'associations' and his complete infidelity to his ordination vows.

God help us! This is getting uglier by the day!

21 posted on 05/20/2002 12:05:35 PM PDT by ThomasMore
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To: american colleen
from Notre Dame -- McSomething

Oh No! McBrien! One of the big name dissenters (IMO, heretics) in the Church. His book, 'Catholicism' is banned (officially) from use in seminaries. Although the real liberal ones covertly use it and worse. see 'GoodBye, Good Men'.

22 posted on 05/20/2002 12:12:05 PM PDT by ThomasMore
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To: tiki
I am glad of it. I want them all outed. I want to know where we stand. BTW, what is church teaching on receiving Holy Communion and hearing mass when there is not Priest about because of war or other calamitous circumstances. What are we to do? V's wife.
23 posted on 05/20/2002 12:22:05 PM PDT by ventana
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To: ventana
Funny you should ask because I've been wondering the same thing. Our new priest is in the National Guard and will be gone many Sundays throughout the year. I saw a book in his office about communion services so I think that will be what will happen. It is what is happening in his former parish because he hasn't been replaced by the diocese.

At a retreat one time a priest told me that they could have a central mass and then give consecrated hosts to lay people to take back to their own churches for communion services.

24 posted on 05/20/2002 12:30:26 PM PDT by tiki
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To: ThomasMore
Remember that even Our Lady submitted to purification. In any case, such rules may have originated in the desire to give women a kind of "grace" period when they could be free from the demands of their husbands!
25 posted on 05/20/2002 12:38:35 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: ThomasMore
Very well-thought out post. I couldn't agree with you more.
26 posted on 05/20/2002 12:39:47 PM PDT by Gophack
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To: tiki
This was the way they did it in the early Church,wasn't it, except was it not the bishop who celebrated the mass? The priest derives his power to consecrate from the bishop, I do believe.
27 posted on 05/20/2002 12:41:35 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: RobbyS
The priest derives his power to consecrate from the bishop, I do believe.

That's absolutely correct!

28 posted on 05/20/2002 12:55:56 PM PDT by ThomasMore
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To: ThomasMore; tiki; siobhan
Yes, it is McBrien. How come this guy is all over the networks... it irritates me because I'd love to see them interview one of the fine priests on EWTN instead of that guy. Wouldn't you love to see Fr. Groeschel on O'Reilly?

BTW, I have "heard" (on FR) that the outed Cardinal will be from the East Coast, but O'Reilly did not elaborate which part of the country the priest will be from.

I'm not going to be shocked, I don't think. I mean, how much more shocked can we get? The revelation of the Cardinal's name will only serve to highlight why the scandal has gone unchecked and hopefully, the can of worms will be emptied out.

29 posted on 05/20/2002 1:00:41 PM PDT by american colleen
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To: american colleen
Wouldn't you love to see Fr. Groeschel on O'Reilly?

It'll never happen. Fr. Groeschel is far to orthodox for O'Reilly(semi-liberal).

and hopefully, the can of worms will be emptied out.

Unfortunately, I don't think we've seen even the tip of the iceburg. The American hierarchy are "up to their necks in alligators" and they are closing in. I'm just wondering who will be left standing?

30 posted on 05/20/2002 1:34:01 PM PDT by ThomasMore
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To: ThomasMore
I'm just wondering who will be left standing?
The married, ex-Anglican priests? : )
31 posted on 05/20/2002 1:48:46 PM PDT by eastsider
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To: eastsider
I'm not worried about priests. I know many a devout and holy celibate and CHASTE priest. It's the bishops I'm concerned about. How many are out there that are actively homesexual and who will refuse to step down? Then what's next? Excommunication? The storm is picking up and reaching gale force!
32 posted on 05/20/2002 1:55:43 PM PDT by ThomasMore
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To: sinkspur
He isn't writing for people like you. But you, along with the rest of us, already knew that.
33 posted on 05/20/2002 2:23:30 PM PDT by SMEDLEYBUTLER
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To: NYer
A Special Responsibility

Because of the chronic hostility of the world, the Church must maintain the discipline of celibacy with great strictness.

A definite bump for this Special Responsibility -- maintain celebacy with great strictness. Christ never said it would be EASY to follow him.

34 posted on 05/20/2002 2:27:05 PM PDT by Salvation
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To: SMEDLEYBUTLER
In Semeinaries, New Ways for a New Generation.

Hope here?

35 posted on 05/20/2002 2:31:13 PM PDT by Salvation
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To: ThomasMore
"I'm not worried about priests. I know many a devout and holy celibate and CHASTE priest. It's the bishops I'm concerned about. How many are out there that are actively homesexual and who will refuse to step down? Then what's next? Excommunication? The storm is picking up and reaching gale force!"

I think I would guess "MOST OF THEM." I think we have holy and chaste bishops in America. But I don't think there are more than a few. My biggest worry over this is how many of them are going to lie, dissemble, backtrack, obfuscate, mumble, and lie some more. The fooey is going to hit the fan soon. I am sure that even if most of these bishops are not actually GUILTY of the sins of pederatsy and abuse, 99% of them have covered for a priest (or another bishop) who IS guilty. This isn't just a can of worms: It's the whole bait shop.

36 posted on 05/20/2002 7:12:24 PM PDT by redhead
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To: redhead
I think we have holy and chaste bishops in America. But I don't think there are more than a few. My biggest worry over this is how many of them are going to lie, dissemble, backtrack, obfuscate, mumble, and lie some more.

If the bishops say, as I think they will, that Canon Law dictated much of what they did, will that surprise you?

The Vatican, through a couple of mouthpieces, is still saying that documents don't have to be turned over to civil authorities, and that parishioners don't have to be told that the "new priest" is a perv, lest his reputation be sullied.

The density goes all the way to Rome.

37 posted on 05/20/2002 7:24:07 PM PDT by sinkspur
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To: sinkspur
I pray to God that don't use that Nuremburg Trials line of reasoning. I was only following Canons. I was only following orders. Lord have mercy. Christ have mercy. Lord have mercy.
38 posted on 05/20/2002 7:29:57 PM PDT by Siobhan
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To: ThomasMore
Good deacons like your soon-to-be self will be left standing, and lay people like me will stand alongside you praying the Chaplet of Divine Mercy ceaselessly and with the greatest fervor.

Perhaps 12 bishops out of 400 will be left. Maybe 1 Cardinal. A few priests. Nonetheless, Christ will rebuild his Church as he did in the time of St. Francis, and reform it as He did in the time of St. Catherine of Siena, and renew it as he did in the time of St. Teresa of Avila and St. John of the Cross.

39 posted on 05/20/2002 7:33:37 PM PDT by Siobhan
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To: Siobhan
I pray to God that don't use that Nuremburg Trials line of reasoning.

I'm with you on this, but, the fact that all these bishops seemed to act in the same way, that they transferred priests who were proven abusers, leads me to think that they were operating from 1)Canonical requirements or 2) An ingrained culture that put protection of the reputation of the Church above all else or 3) both.

40 posted on 05/20/2002 7:33:48 PM PDT by sinkspur
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