The Palm Beach Post

Pope: Priestly abuse scandals driving Catholic faithful away

- By Nicole Winfifield and Jari Tanner Associated Press

TALLINN, ESTONIA — Pope Francis acknowledg­ed Tuesday that priestly sex abuse scandals are outraging the Catholic faithful and driving them away, and said the church must change its ways if it wants to keep future generation­s.

Francis referred directly to the crisis convulsing his papacy on the fourth and fifinal day of his Baltic pilgrimage, which coincided with the release of a devastatin­g new report into decades of sex abuse and cover-ups in Germany.

Francis told young people in Estonia, considered one of the least religious countries in the world, that he knew many young people felt the church had nothing to offfffffff­fffer them and simply doesn’t understand their problems today.

“They are outraged by sexual and economic scandals that do not meet with clear condemnati­on, by our unprepared­ness to really appreciate the lives and sensibilit­ies of the young, and simply by the passive role we assign them,” he told Catholic, Lutheran and Orthodox young people in the Kaarli Lutheran Church in the Estonian capital of Tallinn.

He said the Catholic Church wants to respond to those complaints transparen­tly and honestly.

“We ourselves need to be converted,” he said. “We have to realize that, in order to stand by your side, we need to change many situations that, in the end, put you offfffffff­fff.”

It was a very public admission of the church’s failures in confrontin­g sex abuse scandals, which have roared back to the headlines recently with revelation­s of abuses and cover-ups in the U.S., Chilean and now German churches.

On Tuesday, the German bishops conference released a report which found that some 3,677 people — more than half of them 13 or younger and nearly a third of them altar boys — were abused by clergy between 1946 and 2014.

The report, compiled by university researcher­s, found evidence that some fifiles were manipulate­d or destroyed, many cases were not brought to justice and that sometimes abusers were simply moved to other dioceses without congregati­ons being informed about their past.

The abuse scandal, which erupted in Ireland in the 1 9 90s a nd subs e quently in Australia and the U.S., now threatens Francis’ own papacy since his record as cardinal and pope has proven uneven on the topic. A former Vatican ambassador has accused Francis of rehabilita­ting an American cardinal who slept with seminarian­s.

Francis has declined to respond to the accusation­s, but the Vatican is expected to.

Francis’ visit to Tallinn marked the last stop in a fourday pilgrimage that also took him to Lithuania and Latvia. The trip aimed to encourage the Christian faith in the Baltics, which saw fififififi­five decades of Soviet-imposed religious repression and state-spon- sored atheism, as well as the World War II-era occupation by Nazi Germany.

Francis has been warmly welcomed in the region, even if Catholics are only a majority in Lithuania. Estonia only has 6,000 Catholics nationwide, but residents still seemed to welcome Francis’ inclusive message. Some 10,000 people flflocked to his fifinal Mass in a chilly but sun-soaked Freedom Square near Tallinn’s charming medieval center.

“For me, it’s in my heart what I believe, and I think Francis is this kind of ‘papa’ who wants to change,” said Marko Tubli, a Tallinn resident. “A church is not like ‘You must be this way and this way.’ It is more open.”

Upon arriving Tuesday, Francis praised Estonia’s social and economic transforma­tion in the quarter century since the 1991 Soviet collapse. But he warned that a certain “existentia­l ennui” can set in when societies lose their cultural roots and put their faith in technologi­cal progress alone.

“One of thee vi den te ff ff ff ff ff ffec ts of technocrat­ic societies is a loss of meaning in life and the joy of living,” he said. Interperso­nal and intergener­ational bonds can be lost, depriving young generation­s of foundation­s to build a common future, he said.

Estonia is considered one of the most tech-advanced countries in Europe and one of the least religious societies in the world. More than half of Estonia’s 1.3 million people profess no religious affiffilia­tion. The Lutheran and Russian Orthodox churches count the most followers.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis reaches out to a child as he arrives to celebrate a Mass in Freedom Square, in Tallinn, Estonia on Tuesday. Pope Francis concluded his four-day tour of the Baltics.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis reaches out to a child as he arrives to celebrate a Mass in Freedom Square, in Tallinn, Estonia on Tuesday. Pope Francis concluded his four-day tour of the Baltics.

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