If
one looks at what has happened in the institutional Catholic Church
since 1965, the year that Vatican II ended, one sees a
roller-coaster ride of progressive advances and regressive
retreats. Since the reign (and I use that word intentionally,
rather than “pontificate”) of John Paul II the institution has been
on what some call a restorationist path. This refers to the process
of restoring the Catholic Church to the splendor of the pre-Vatican
II days when bishops were princes, the pope was the emperor and the
lay people kept their mouths shut and their wallets open.
All
along there has been a movement among some lay, cleric and
hierarchical Catholics to continue with the vision of Vatican II.
Today, all of the bishops in that movement in the US are either
dead, retired or in exile. The “Vatican II” clergy are growing old,
discouraged, tired and are either retired or have left altogether.
They have been replaced by a couple generations of younger clergy
who often describe themselves as “John Paul II” priests. Others
describe them as the ‘Catholic Taliban,” “the Young Nazis” or words
to that effect. Lately several scholars have written about them and
the assessment is worse than discouraging. It’s frightening.
The
need for deep reform exploded to the surface in January, 2002 with
the revelations in Boston that Catholic bishops had been hiding,
enabling and supporting sexually dysfunctional criminals in the
priesthood. VOTF started off and brought with it hope, a voice for
anger, disillusionment and frustration. Now we are five years down
the road from January 6, 2002. This was not the beginning salvo of
the clergy abuse assault. That happened in summer of 1984 with the
revelations in Louisiana that the bishop there had done was Bernard
Law had done...but Lafayette is not Boston and the Times of
Acadiana is not the Boston Globe.
The
years since have brought staggering changes that no one expected.
Thus far the cost in dollars to the U.S. church that Ray Mouton,
Mike Peterson and I predicted.....one billion.....has been exceeded
and, if all the numbers were revealed honestly, it’s probably
doubled. The costs for California alone, thanks to the narcissism
of Roger Mahony, have gone beyond a billion.
The
U.S. bishops still live in their delusional world as far as clergy
abuse is concerned. The Dallas Charter, the diocesan review boards,
the National Review Board, the Office for Child Protection.....all
are bureaucratic attempts to right the wrongs, make the bad memories
go away, restore trust and faith in the bishops and above all,
create the false image that it’s all over. As Archbishop Gregory
said in Feb. 2004, the “the history of sexual abuse is today
history.” More inaccurate words have never been spoken! Bishops
continue to force victims through incredibly painful and demeaning
court processes in which they and their lawyers do all they can to
revictimize them. In State legislatures throughout the country,
State Catholic Conferences and the local bishops spend millions of
the faithful’s dollars to defeat any legislation that would offer
greater protection to child victims. They insult our collective
intelligence with a variety of false claims based on erroneous
information. They bring in their so-called experts to tell the
legislatures how much they have done and how much they care and how
much they respect our U.S. legal system. The bottom line is that in
State after State, the only opposition to child protective
legislation is the Catholic Church. How ironic! The world’s
largest religious organization which is based on the mission of
Christ and it opposes State laws that do what it not only could not
do, but would not do...protect children from deranged
predators and self-centered institutional enablers.
What
about VOTF? The past five years have been tumultuous. The “growing
pains” that some members speak of are far more than that. What we
have seen has been a clash between the deeply rooted clerical
dependency that has been systematically woven into our very being by
the institutional church, and Catholic Adulthood. It’s a long,
excruciatingly painful process to grow up in the Catholic Church.
Most chronological adults never make it. No matter how liberated
and avant-garde they believe themselves to be, there is still a very
powerful core, deep down inside, that causes dependency feelings to
take over whenever one is faced with the challenge of taking the
risk of not only thinking but acting like an adult when in the realm
of the Church world. To do so means to challenge the clerical
office holders and to express opinions that they do not want to
hear. To do so means taking the risk that some of them might try to
capitalize on the magical thinking that has supported their power by
threatening canonical penalties or equating disobedience to them
with disobedience to Christ.
Jesus
Christ was all about love. He also was a man of action. Whenever
he encountered the religious hypocrites of his day he didn’t sit
down to tea with them and exchange sweet nothings so that nobody had
any ruffled feathers. If he blew his top when he encountered a
bunch of hucksters selling birds at the temple can you imagine what
his reaction would have been if he’d dropped down to earth during
the early days of the reformation? Martin Luther would have ended
up the pope and the Roman church bureaucracy would have been
vaporized. What would have been his reaction had he appeared at the
chancery in Lafayette, LA in the summer of 1984 when the churchmen
and the lawyers were putting together what they thought would be
legal agreements that would pay off some families and insure their
silence. Even better, how do you think he would have reacted
reading the Boston Globe on Sunday morning, January 6, 2002.....the
Feast of the Epiphany? I suspect that the epiphany the Globe
brought that morning would have been followed by another “wake-up
call” of cosmic proportions. Bernard Law might have found himself
propelled, not to a palace in the Vatican, but to the outer reaches
of Greenland to teach catechism to the natives on the edge of the
North Pole.
In
addition to the anger, distrust, frustration, disillusionment and
spiritual aridity the institutional Church has caused because of its
totally inept response to the evil of clergy abuse, there has been
another equally toxic reaction and that is the profound feeling of
nausea in reaction to the self-serving public relations campaign of
the U.S. hierarchy by which they continue to try to flip the whole
mess around, make themselves look like victims and demonize anyone
who has ever challenged their collective stupidity, cruelty and
total lack of compassion.
Is
there hope for change from within?
As
far as reform etc. is concerned, I have lost all realistic hope that
the institution will change for the better in my lifetime. The
present crop of bishops, courtesy of John Paul II, is far less
pastoral, less theologically educated and more clericalist and
monarchical than any I can remember. I see no hope and only constant
signs of discouragement. I believe in VOTF but I do not believe that
they will ever accomplish any meaningful structural change. It’s
simply impossible for any such change to happen unless it starts at
the top. The Catholic Church is a monarchy. Period! Getting a
pastoral council up and running here and there is nothing. Sitting
down to tea with a bishop is no more than a sop to keep the
activists. They are not able or willing to bend or change their
approach in something as vital as clergy sexual abuse so why expect
them to even think about giving up any of their power in anything
else.
The
hot button issues that the popes have told us we can’t even talk
about will remain discussed by lay and clergy alike and closed in
the minds of the pope and the bishops. All you have to do is look at
the stream of Vatican decrees re-introducing the pre-Vatican II
version of the Latin mass to stomping on theologians to get the
picture. The young conservatives lap it up and seem to play at
church as if it’s some sort of surreal dress-up game. What many
fed-up people are doing is simply walking away and finding an
alternative faith/worship opportunity that is less toxic and more
Christ centered.
I am not much
interested in working for internal church reform anymore mainly
because my experience within the structure over the past two decades
has been so painfully revelatory for me. It is way too toxic. Life
is short and being part of the Christian community is supposed to be
joyful and not poisonous. I have turned to reading the books of John
Shelby Spong and find they give me hope and a voice to my
theological ideas and related feelings. I do not expect everyone to
be where I am at because no one else has been on my journey. As a
matter of fact, one of the more painful breakthroughs I have had is
that it’s not only inappropriate but simply wrong to project
that we are all on the same spiritual wave length and that some are
right and some are fundamentally wrong about the way
they believe.
I
don’t see any hope in trying to bring about meaningful reform of the
structures. One or the other group may convince a local bishop to
take an enlightened approach, but then the day will come when he
retires and is replaced and then it’s a crap shoot as to what
happens.
VOTF
has pledged to support Priests of Integrity. There has to be a lot
more to this than words and an annual award. There are plenty of
good, decent, hard-working priests out there, the center of whose
mission and life is not the bishop, pope or Vatican but Jesus
Christ. They will never be bishops. They need to be encouraged but
not pitied because these men have an inner strength that is grounded
in something far deeper and stronger than loyalty to the monarchical
system. Maybe what VOTF needs to do is challenge the thousands of
priests still in denial who continue to moan and groan because the
identified sexual abusers make them all look bad. Not so! What
makes Catholic priests look bad is apathy, fear and apparent
subservience to a system that is outmoded, unproductive and enabling
of those who would victimize others. How many priests have looked
at the landscape and privately expressed shame, disgust and anger at
the sexual abuse nightmare and the bishops leading role in it....and
how many of these same priests have refused to speak out even to a
small group for fear of retaliation by the bishop who can’t see past
the walls of his imaginary kingdom.
VOTF
has pledged support for the victims of clergy sexual abuse. This
should be the number one priority. Why? Because everything about
the clergy abuse nightmare is everything that is wrong with the
institution. This is not one of many problems. This is THE
problem. People are now getting excited over the revelations of
embezzlement and financial mismanagement in Church throughout the US
and the world. This is terrible, but we are talking about money
here and not human lives. The sex abuse nightmare is a
culture of emotional and physical devastation and spiritual
murder. If the local VOTF chapters can’t make support and defense
of victims their first priority, they should close down. If the
national leadership equivocates or cowers in fear of what the
bishops will think if they take strong and courageous stands, they
need to quit.
A
word of wisdom from my military days: “Either lead, follow or get
the hell out of the way.”
I
respect those who continue to work for internal church reform. I am
on the board of ARCC (Association for Rights for Catholic in the
Church). I respect my fellow board members. I don’t believe the
institutional Church cares one bit about individual rights or due
process when it comes to lay people or lower ranking clerics or
anyone who thinks creatively. It cares greatly about protecting the
rights and assuring due process for those who are bishops and
above.....There are exceptions however. If a bishop stands up for
what is right and has the courage to express his stand, he will
quickly find himself cast out of the sacred club and into the real
church with the rest of us. Tom Gumbleton, probably the only
real bishop in the U.S., publicly has stood with victims. The
Vatican acted quickly. He was fired on orders from the top because
he “broke communio with the bishops.” Bravo for Tom! He did
what Jesus would have done.
I
don’t want to expend much more energy tilting at windmills in the
world of Catholic Church reform. I have no hope that it will
happen. I don’t want to spend any more time trudging through what
can best be described as a swamp of toxic waste. I believe change
will happen because it has happened over the past few years. It has
not taken place through dialogue with the hierarchy however. It’s
happened when the Church office holders (I intentionally don’t use
the word leaders) have found themselves face to face with
powers greater than themselves like the law enforcement agencies or
the civil court system. That’s where the change will take place.
That’s why I have consistently urged VOTF leaders to totally support
all efforts at legislative change that will provide greater
protection to victims.
There
has been a vast amount of change and progress since I first became
involved in 1984 and especially since 2002. The institutional
Church and its bishops would have done nothing to stop
institutionalized sexual abuse and done nothing to help the victims
it has known about were it not for the fact that we have forced
them to do something. If good people back down and believe the
nonsense propagated by the public relations machines of the
individual dioceses and the National conference of bishops, then we
will be back on the road to returning to where we were in 1983. It
happened before and it could happen again and it happened before
because the hierarchy had too much power, too much influence and too
little accountability. That has changed but it hasn’t changed
enough. There are still countless men and women of every age who
cannot come forward to disclose the devastating abuse they have
suffered. As long as the clerical-celibate system remains basically
untouched, there will always be victims of sexually dysfunctional
priests and spiritually dysfunctional bishops.
Is
there any hope at all? Yes! The hope is not in the institution or
in bureaucratic policies, programs or empty pronouncements. The
hope is in the ever increasing number of deeply committed men and
women who are being compassionately present to people in need and in
pain. These are the men and women of any denomination or belief
system or of no denomination but still with a powerful belief system
who work with each other to get right to the heart of Christ's
message without stopping at any denominational door to get approved
by any bishop in order to express charity.
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