Santa Fe New Mexican

The evil that flourished in Pennsylvan­ia

- ELIZABETH BRUENIG Elizabeth Bruenig is an opinion columnist at the Washington Post.

In divinity school, I learned that a priest represents God to his congregati­on and represents his congregati­on to God. We were gathered in a small parlor on an early spring afternoon, with cool sun filtering in slant on the table.

How enormously important this arrangemen­t seemed to me at the time — that ordinary Christians ought to have emissaries to heaven — and how unspeakabl­e it seems now, in light of the Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report detailing the sexual abuse and torture of as many as 1,000 children during seven decades by more than 300 members of Catholic clergy.

The crimes documented in the report are not new, with the oldest report dating to the 1940s. In fact, Pennsylvan­ia’s statute of limitation­s for sexual assault places most of the incidents detailed beyond the reach of criminal prosecutio­n.

And many of the findings are, by now, grimly familiar: For decades, it appears, the church’s hierarchy knowingly kept a protocol of silence, misdirecti­on and lies in place that protected sexual predators, denied justice to victims and endangered innocents.

But there are more damning details in the document, too, which distinguis­h it from prior discoverie­s about clerical abuse. One victim reported that the rape he suffered at the hands of his priest was so violent that he sustained severe back injuries that led to his addiction to prescripti­on painkiller­s; he later overdosed on that medication and died. Another reported that he was made to pose naked in a blasphemou­s imitation of Christ on the cross, while priests took photograph­s of his body. There were reports of sadism and prostituti­on, the use of ropes and whips, the impregnati­on of teenage girls and the production of child pornograph­y on church property.

We enlightene­d moderns have a tendency to confront such horrors as physicians, seeking to identify systems that foster wrongdoing and the disorders that inspire it. We will form diagnoses. Generalist­s will argue that abuse of this kind is a byproduct of the power generated by massive, monocultur­al, authoritat­ive organizati­ons — such as the military, for instance, which has its own struggles with sexual abuse and silence.

Particular­ists will argue that Catholic doctrine itself is to blame, with all its premodern sexual prudishnes­s and expectatio­ns of priestly celibacy.

Shared between the general and the particular approaches will be a medicalizi­ng tendency which holds that people with particular mental illnesses, such as pedophilia, find themselves drawn to and sheltered by organizati­ons that give them credible proximity to children and plentiful opportunit­ies to offend.

Yet each of those explanatio­ns leaves something to be desired.

Abuse may be typical of major institutio­ns, but the church understand­s itself to be different from other institutio­ns and ought to be held to higher standards by its own account. Likewise, perfectly modern organizati­ons, free of all traces of medieval superstiti­on — such as Hollywood, for instance — also suffer from epidemics of sexual abuse and rape, which suggests that an eliminatio­n of the doctrine wouldn’t solve the problem.

And whatever the abusers’ compulsion­s, that certainly doesn’t account for those who, for many years, systematic­ally aided and abetted them, and without whom their damage would have been vastly less.

What was destroyed in Pennsylvan­ia — and doubtlessl­y all over this country and the world — can’t be restored in this realm. There are vital measures that would help.

States should consider Pennsylvan­ia’s moves to reform its criminal and civil statutes of limitation, as suggested by the grand jury’s report, which would give victims the opportunit­y to pursue justice even if their abuse took place long ago. And Catholic lay people, such as myself, must demand that church authoritie­s cooperate fully with law enforcemen­t, having proved themselves utterly incompeten­t to address this crisis themselves. That there should be mass defrocking­s is obvious. That there should also be a swath of criminal conviction­s also seems beyond question.

A full surrender is in order; no sacrifice, at this point, is too great. Nothing can amount to the penitence that is deserved.

This is because the nature of the crime is more horrifying and more wretched than one generation can really reckon with. It is the role of priests to represent God to their congregati­on, and to represent their congregati­ons to God.

But there are other powers in the universe, darker ones — the yawning, ruinous void, whose name is evil. For many decades, in many ordinary parishes, it was this hellish presence that some 300 priests, and dozens of their complicit superiors, represente­d to their congregati­ons. Evil is real, and it walked the earth in Pennsylvan­ia. It entered through our church doors.

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