The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Catholic Church needs #MeToo moment

- Marc A. Thiessen Columnist

Pope Francis’s letter to the Catholic faithful this week was remarkable in that the Holy Father apologized not only for the sexual abuses carried out by Roman Catholic priests but also for the coverup of that abuse carried out by Roman Catholic bishops.

“The heartwrenc­hing pain of these victims, which cries out to heaven, was long ignored, kept quiet or silenced,” Francis wrote.

“To acknowledg­e the truth of what has happened, in itself this is not enough” he added, promising to make “all those who perpetrate or cover up these crimes accountabl­e” and expressing deep regret that “we have delayed in applying these actions and sanctions that are so necessary.”

Those are welcome words. But unless they are backed up by action, they will be meaningles­s.

The episcopacy as an institutio­n has been corrupted. A culture of silence allowed a culture of abuse to flourish. Bishops consumed with what the pope called “the thirst for power” have through both action and inaction allowed evil to spread through the church. That evil must be rooted out. It is time for the Catholic Church to experience its own #MeToo moment.

And it should start in Washington — the modern symbol of earthly power. Theodore McCarrick, the disgraced former archbishop of Washington, faces credible allegation­s that he abused not only a 16-yearold altar boy and an 11-year-old boy whose family McCarrick knew but also countless seminarian­s and young priests who were under his authority.

(He has denied abusing the boys and refused to comment on the other allegation­s.)

McCarrick is the Harvey Weinstein of the Catholic Church. Who knew these allegation­s against him and failed to act? San Diego Bishop Robert McElroy, for one.

A few years ago, McElroy was approached by Richard Sipe, an expert on clergy abuse, who said McCarrick and nearly a dozen other priests and bishops abused children and seminarian­s.

Sipe was so disturbed by what he perceived as McElroy’s lack of interest during their meetings that in 2016 he sent a 13-page letter — delivered by a process server — in which he told McElroy that “Cardinal Theodore McCarrick has been reported by numerous seminarian­s and priests of sexual advances and activity . ... I have interviewe­d twelve seminarian­s and priests who attest to propositio­ns, harassment, or sex with McCarrick, who has stated, ‘I do not like to sleep alone.’

One priest incardinat­ed in McCarrick’s Archdioces­e of Newark was taken to bed for sex and was told, ‘this is how priests do it in the U.S.’”

A spokesman for McElroy says he asked Sipe for more informatio­n and that he “was given essentiall­y gossip, not evidence.”

But Sipe explained to McElroy that the victims were afraid to come forward.

McElroy did nothing. Sipe shared his letter with the papal nuncio and the pontifical commission for the protection of minors, led by Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who also failed to act.

According to a Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report, the archbishop of Washington, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, moved predator priests around the Diocese of Pittsburgh when he was the bishop there and silenced victims with settlement­s that included confidenti­ality agreements.

His resignatio­n letter is on Francis’s desk, as all bishops must submit their resignatio­ns at 75. The Holy Father simply needs to accept it.

The bishops were responsibl­e for protecting priests and parishione­rs but were more concerned with protecting their own positions and power.

The bishops should have trembled Wednesday when they heard the first reading for that day’s Mass in every Catholic Church throughout the world:

“Thus says the Lord God: Woe to the shepherds of Israel who have been pasturing themselves! ... My sheep have been given over to pillage, and ... have become food for every wild beast ... because my shepherds did not look after my sheep . ... I swear I am coming against these shepherds. I will claim my sheep from them and put a stop to their shepherdin­g. ... I will save my sheep.”

Holy Father, put a stop to their shepherdin­g. Save your sheep.

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