Albuquerque Journal

Latest scandals have some Catholics questionin­g faith

- Columnist

WASHINGTON — The major disgrace of America’s Catholic bishops was to foster a culture in which priests sexually assaulted children and were then sent on to new duties as their ungodly behavior was covered up.

There is also a second failure. Thanks to the bishops, who are supposed to strengthen the faith, Catholics are now regularly asked: “How can you be a Catholic?” And, even more pointedly, “How can you stay?”

This summer, these questions became much harder to answer.

This is about the institutio­n, not about whether to be a Christian. Christiani­ty heroically preaches a devotion to the poor and the marginaliz­ed, and the abusive priests often preyed on the most vulnerable and least advantaged children. As a dear friend who no longer thinks of herself as part of the church noted, these reprehensi­ble acts turned Christiani­ty on its head.

It’s fair to ask why churchgoin­g Catholics, myself included, were so shaken by the scathing report from a Pennsylvan­ia grand jury and the revelation of the abuses by former Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick. After all, since the 1980s and 1990s, we have known a great deal about the church’s malfeasanc­e, and yet we held on.

The sickening catalogue of pure evil in Pennsylvan­ia is certainly part of the answer. And McCarrick’s admirers were at first shocked and then horrified over his betrayal.

Defenders of the church note that the bishops’ 2002 reforms dealing with abusive priests, though imperfect, made a difference. It appears that all but two of the cases described in the Pennsylvan­ia report predate the policy changes, although we may learn of more as victims feel newly empowered to report past transgress­ions.

But the sheer weight of the evidence brought home a reality that loyal Catholics who retain an appreciati­on of the good work the church has done must confront: The great missing piece in the church’s response was the failure of the hierarchy to atone — truly, deeply, credibly — for putting institutio­nal self-protection over the interests of the young and the powerless who were harmed.

The leadership has resolutely avoided a searching inquiry into how the church’s culture and structure contribute­d to a catastroph­ic failure of accountabi­lity. A philosophe­r friend who has warm feelings for the church offered an insight that Catholics cannot avoid: “Hierarchy without transparen­cy is tyranny.”

Patricia McGuire, the president of Trinity College in Washington, grasped the essential truth in a July essay written after the McCarrick revelation­s but before the grand jury accounting. “The utter lack of a truly empathetic acknowledg­ment of the victims,” she wrote, “and those who truly love the victims, those who also suffer because of the abuse — their mothers and fathers and all in the universe afflicted by these grave sins — this is the most fundamenta­l problem the Church has yet to address in a satisfacto­ry way.”

She pointed to the church’s “sad history of sometimes rendering unequivoca­lly harsh judgment against those who violate even minor rules while looking the other way when its own ordained leaders violate the most sacred and profound rules about human conduct and respect for human dignity.”

On so many questions, from climate change to poverty, Pope Francis has been the fresh voice the church needed. But he was shamefully slow in facing the gravity of the abuse crisis. His statements acknowledg­ing the church’s culpabilit­y, last week and over the weekend on a visit to Ireland, were at best a first step.

Now, his papacy is under threat. Conservati­ve commentato­rs and prelates long hostile to Francis are focusing their attacks on the pope and progressiv­e bishops while ignoring the failures of their conservati­ve episcopal allies and Francis’s predecesso­rs. The campaign reached a crescendo with the release of a letter from ultra-traditiona­list Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano charging that Francis long knew of the allegation­s against McCarrick.

Exploiting what is a blight on the entire church to make a play for power is a further affront to the innocents who have suffered. But the descent into factional politics only underscore­s the high costs of the church’s long-term default.

I could detail the reasons for my personal gratitude to the church, list the devoted people I know — especially nuns and lay women — who carry out missions of mercy, and argue that its core teachings about our obligation­s to each other remain urgent in our wounded world.

But like many at this moment, I am struggling, wondering if the church can meet its own obligation­s — to those it injured wantonly above all, and to the faithful who are still in search of a compelling answer when they are asked: “How can you stay?”

 ??  ?? E. J. DIONNE
E. J. DIONNE

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