Houston Chronicle

Pope’s sex-abuse conference has some expecting disappoint­ment

- By Jeremy Roebuck

In what could be a defining moment for his papacy, more than 100 top Catholic bishops from around the world will travel to the Vatican Rome this week for a conference aimed at dealing with the issue of clergy sex abuse.

Pope Francis is the first church leader to convene such a meeting to discuss the issue. And after a year in which high-ranking church officials resigned in scandal, the conference that opens Thursday could present an opportunit­y for him to dispel criticism that he has responded sluggishly as the crisis continued worldwide.

But should his four-day event fail to deliver, the pope risks cementing the impression among detractors that he remains resistant to meaningful change.

Sex-abuse victims are expected to set up shop outside the Vatican as the prelates meet privately.

“They know that this is a very high-stakes meeting,” said Massimo Faggioli, a theologian and scholar of church history at Villanova University. “The attention here in Rome is already similar to what you’d see for a papal conclave.”

Cardinal defrocked

As if to signal his seriousnes­s, Francis this weekend took his most meaningful step to date by defrocking Theodore McCarrick, a former cardinal and archbishop of Washington, D.C., after the church found him guilty of sexually abusing minors and adult seminarian­s.

Though the Vatican had defrocked hundreds of priests for sexual misconduct since the worldwide crisis began nearly two decades ago, McCarrick is the first cardinal in modern history to be expelled from the priesthood, the most serious penalty the church can impose.

Before that significan­t move, Francis and his aides in recent weeks had sought to temper expectatio­ns for this week’s conference. The pope suggested last month that anticipati­on surroundin­g the conference had grown well beyond anything the meeting itself could deliver.

“Let me say that I’ve perceived expectatio­ns that are a little inflated,” he said. “We need to deflate those expectatio­ns.”

Francis has pledged to attend every day of the meeting and described his goals as educating bishops on accountabi­lity, responsibi­lity and transparen­cy, and explaining how to properly handle complaints from victims.

Late last week, the event’s organizers still had not released a full schedule, although they have urged attendees to meet with victims in their own countries before showing up in Rome.

The lone American on the planning team - Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago - told the Associated Press last week that he expects the church will have made “significan­t progress” toward abuse prevention by the end of the week.

But neither he nor the rest of the committee has offered any sign that the conference will end with the type of sweeping pronouncem­ents hoped for by some victims and their advocates in the United States.

Still, some experts identified steps the pope could take before the meeting ends, such as making the U.S. church’s “zero tolerance” policy for abusive priests the worldwide standard. The Vatican also could instruct all bishops’ conference­s to adopt anti-abuse guidelines or to draft protocols for handling claims against prelates who mishandle complaints from victims or are accused of abuse themselves, they said.

Those steps are likely to seem underwhelm­ing in the United States, where bishops adopted similar reforms more than a decade ago and still are grappling with demands from church members to do more, including strengthen­ing measures to hold themselves accountabl­e.

Harsh year for U.S.

The last year has been particular­ly bruising for the U.S. hierarchy, starting with McCarrick’s resignatio­n in July as the sexual-misconduct allegation­s against him emerged.

A Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report followed, along with the removal of several more prelates accused of abuse.

Now, some Catholics say they have more faith in the U.S. Justice Department or the dozen or so state attorneys general who are investigat­ing the church’s handling of sex-abuse claims than they do any promises from church leaders that they can police themselves.

“Many U.S. Catholics feel a sense of urgency and that this is a real crisis,” said Kathleen Sprows Cummings, a University of Notre Dame historian who runs its center for the study of American Catholicis­m. “But the Vatican is an incredibly inefficien­t and cumbersome bureaucrac­y that’s inflexible and doesn’t change easily. For Rome, this is urgency.”

 ?? Gregorio Borgia / Associated Press ?? Timothy Law, from left, president of the Ending Clergy Abuse organizati­on, and Denise Buchanan and Peter Isely, founding members of the group, gather Sunday in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican ahead of a conference aimed at addressing sex abuse by clergy.
Gregorio Borgia / Associated Press Timothy Law, from left, president of the Ending Clergy Abuse organizati­on, and Denise Buchanan and Peter Isely, founding members of the group, gather Sunday in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican ahead of a conference aimed at addressing sex abuse by clergy.

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