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Why the epidemic of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church?

By David Walsh
29 March 2002

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Reports and accusations of sexual abuses carried out by Roman Catholic priests
against children and teenagers, mostly male, continue to flood the American media.
On March 20 a former professional baseball player, Tom Paciorek, and three of his
brothers charged a Detroit-area priest with systematically abusing them in the 1960s
when they were adolescents. No charges can be laid because the statute of
limitations on such crimes expired years ago, but the priest in question, now 63, was
immediately removed from his position by Church officials.

The issue of sexual abuse by priests, which has never been too far out of the
headlines over the past decade and a half, has emerged as a national scandal this
year, thanks in part to the trial of defrocked priest John J. Geoghan Jr. in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, on child molestation charges. More than 130 people have claimed
that Geoghan fondled or raped them during the 30 years he served in Boston-area
parishes. He was convicted in February and sentenced to 10 years in a state prison,
the maximum allowable, for his fondling of a 10- year-old boy in 1991. Geoghan also
faces more than 80 civil suits.

Geoghan’s case created a furor in part due to the large number of his alleged
offenses, but also because of revelations that Church officials, including Cardinal
Bernard Law of Boston, were aware of the priest’s behavior from the mid-1980s and
into the 1990s and merely shifted him from parish to parish. After the Catholic
officialdom’s role in protecting Geoghan became public, Law felt obliged to hand over
the names of more than 80 priests accused of sexual abuse in the past 40 years, a
reversal of Church policy.

The Geoghan trial and the tacit acknowledgment by the Boston archdiocese that it
had covered up the abuses opened the floodgates. Since January, accusations
against more than 200 priests in 13 states and the District of Columbia have been
lodged and at least 55 priests in 17 dioceses have been removed, suspended, put on
administrative leave or forced to resign or retire, among them the bishop of Palm
Beach, Florida, Anthony O’Connell. Ironically, O’Connell had taken over the Palm
Beach diocese in January 1998 after then-Bishop J. Keith Simons admitted to
molesting five altar boys during the 1970s.

New accusations about past and more recent abuses (a 35-year-old Long Island
priest pleaded guilty in March to having sex with a 13-year-old boy in 1999 and 2000)
are emerging on nearly a daily basis. This, moreover, is not simply an American
problem. The archbishop of Poznan in Poland was accused earlier this month of
abusing seminarians (and stepped down March 28); the archbishop of Vienna was
forced to resign in 1998 after similar accusations. The Roman Catholic Church in
Ireland agreed this year to “pay the equivalent of $110 million to compensate
thousands of victims of molestation in church-run schools and child care centers
over most of the last century” ( New York Times, March 20). Thirty French priests
have been convicted in recent years of pedophile activities and 11 are currently in
prison. In Australia a former Catholic brother was recently jailed for 10 years for a
series of sexual assaults against young children from 1975 to 1999.

While the public discussion of sexual abuse by priests, at least in the US, only dates
to 1985 (when a Louisiana priest confessed to molesting dozens of children and
received a 20-year jail term), there is every reason to believe that the practices have
gone on for a very long time.

In the past, victims largely kept silent about the abuse, out of shame or fear of the
consequences. In more recent and litigious times, victims have reached settlements
with the Church out of court. There have been an estimated 1,400 sexual abuse
lawsuits launched against priests since 1985. In 1997 a jury awarded $120 million to
victims in a sex abuse case against the Catholic Diocese of Dallas, which finally
agreed to a $30 million settlement. The diocese went bankrupt and closed many of
its agencies and schools. Eventual settlements in the Boston suits could also reach
$100 million. In some cases insurance companies have balked at meeting the cost of
large settlements, claiming the actions were deliberate and not covered by
insurance.

Confronted with undeniable facts or confessions by priests, the Catholic Church has
offered vague and blanket apologies. Pope John Paul II made his first comment on
the abuse scandal March 21, observing that the Church “shows her concern for the
victims and strives to respond in truth and justice to each of these painful 
situations.”

In reality, the response of the Church hierarchy, at least until recently, has been to
suppress the charges entirely when it could, deny them when it could not, and reach
agreements with victims that often included guarantees of confidentiality when it
could neither suppress nor deny the charges. As the background to the Geoghan
case revealed, Church officials have ever been guided by one principle: institutional
self-preservation.

Indeed, the Catholic Church would deserve condemnation simply on the basis of its
decades- long indifference to the psychological and physical suffering of an
unknown, but very large number of its youngest and most defenseless members.

The conduct of the priests guilty of molestation or other forms of sexual abuse
cannot be excused or overlooked. The assaults on (mostly) pre- and post-pubescent
boys, passing through a vulnerable and sexually confused stage in their lives, are
reprehensible and cowardly. The psychological consequences must be all the more
devastating when one considers the relationship involved: children and teenagers
abused in the most intimate fashion by men they have been taught to revere and
trust as the “representatives of Jesus on earth.”

However, one cannot simply leave the matter there. As deplorable as the abusive
priests’ conduct is, we are not inclined in this case, as in any other, to attribute 
it, in
the words of John Paul II, to the “mystery of evil.” The priests in question are not
monsters, they are human beings, some no doubt originally motivated to join the
Church by idealism. They themselves are victims, of the Catholic Church itself.

The attempt by Church officials to blame the behavior on a few individual predators,
overcome by evil, is absurd. That the abuse is a long-standing and worldwide
phenomenon demonstrates it is not aberrant behavior, but something ingrained in
the institution and its practices. Contrary to the pope’s view, there is hardly any
“mystery” whatsoever about the source of the misconduct: it emerges ineluctably
from the inhuman and unnatural celibacy requirement and related medieval
teachings and practices of the Church on human sexuality, associated with the
doctrine of man’s Original Sin. After decades, or perhaps centuries, of concealment,
the psychologically perverse consequences of these teachings and practices have
been exposed for all to see.

The crisis over sexual abuse by members of the priesthood underscores the
profoundly reactionary and anachronistic character of the Catholic Church as an
institution. Its corrupt and hypocritical officials, living like kings, preach against 
sin
and vice, oppose birth control and abortion, inveigh against homosexuality,
enthusiastically advocate censorship and intellectual repression, universally ally
themselves with the powers that be and generally make life miserable for tens of
millions of people.

This mass of social reaction and backwardness must find reflection in personal
relationships both within the Church and between priests and parishioners.

There are a host of questions bound up with the abnormal psychology often found in
the priesthood that are beyond the scope of this article. Eugene Kennedy, a former
priest, now married, has written about the issue. In regard to previous sex abuse
scandals, he writes about “revelations of the miserable, furtive, and immature
personality growth of many priests, of which their preying, helplessly, on young boys,
helpless, was a major symptom.” That this often takes the form of abuse of boys,
while in society at large girls are far more likely to be victims, has less to do with 
the
percentage of homosexual men who enter the priesthood than it does, on the one
hand, with the sexual opportunities available to those deprived of humane and
healthy outlets and, on the other, with an institution characterized, in Kennedy’s
words, by “this movement of men to overcome other men.”

He details the authoritarian and sadistic tendencies he came across within the
Church officialdom, of men whose “sexually toned personality needs ... might horrify
them if they identified these as their own drive to control or to dominate others.”
There is an obvious connection between all this and the notorious repression meted
out in Catholic schools longer than there have been memoirs and novels to record it.

Every aspect of the sexual abuse crisis—the pain and suffering of the victims, the
misery and sexual dysfunction of the priests, the callousness of Church
officials—suggests a diseased institution whose practices and beliefs run counter to
elementary human needs and inevitably breed the unhealthiest of psycho-sexual
climates. The Catholic Church’s essential being flies in the face of modern society.

Priestly celibacy

The strict enforcement of priestly celibacy, it turns out, is of relatively recent 
origin.
There is no reference in the New Testament to compulsory celibacy; in fact, all of the
apostles were apparently married. Frederick Engels, in his essay, “On the History of
Early Christianity,” notes “a phenomenon common to all times of great agitation, that
the traditional bonds of sexual relations, like all other fetters, are shaken off.” As 
the
Catholic Church consolidated itself as a state institution, its tolerance of sexual
freedom decreased and its exaltation of virginity, as a condition closer to the divine,
increased. The first systematic attempts to impose anti-marital laws within the
Church took place in the fourth century, in the aftermath of Emperor Constantine’s
declaration that Christianity was henceforth the official religion of the Roman Empire.

Over the next number of centuries, pressures for celibacy grew, but by and large the
Church failed to convince priests to abstain from sexual relations. By the tenth
century, one historian notes: “Statistics are of course not available, but it is 
generally
agreed that most rural priests were married, and that many urban clergy and bishops
had wives and children.” The most fervent advocate of celibacy was Gregory VII
(1073-85), but the decisive step was taken at the Second Lateran Council in 1139.
Priests became unmarriageable by definition, and those who had married after
ordination were instructed to divorce. However, since the marriage ceremony was
not yet entirely under Church jurisdiction, priests who married secretly continued to
serve. This loophole was effectively closed in 1563 at the Council of Trent, which
introduced the requirement that Christian marriages be witnessed by a priest.

The imposition of celibacy was met with open resistance. Church officials who
attempted to enforce Gregory’s decrees, for instance, were jeered at, spat upon and
sometimes physically attacked. One clerical opponent argued that Gregory “was
seeking to compel men to live like angels.... By opposing the normal course of
nature, however, he was only promoting unchastity.” Opposition to celibacy endured.
Of course, one form it took came to be known as the Protestant Reformation. Martin
Luther, who married in 1524, asserted there was no scriptural basis for celibacy.

Within the Church itself, many priests continued to ignore the ban on marriage. In
Spain marriage among priests was apparently an established practice in the
sixteenth century. Another historian writes that “Celibacy suffered setbacks during
the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, which proclaimed in 1791 that no man
should be prevented from marrying. Thousands of French priests took wives.”

While the Catholic hierarchy’s original opposition to priests marrying was no doubt
conditioned by centuries of anti-sexual propaganda, it has quite worldly and material
foundations, to be discovered principally in the question of Church land and property.
The ability of priests and various Church officials to leave property to their heirs 
was
of deep concern to Gregory and other popes. Clerics, in some cases, owned
churches and monasteries and passed them on to children or siblings. Secular rule
over Church property could extend for generations. This began to be a pressing
issue during the tenth and eleventh centuries. It is not difficult to see why Gregory
and his supporters denounced both lay proprietorship and clerical marriage.

Historians have asserted political concerns as well, for example, that depriving a
priest of home and family tended to weaken his national feeling, ensured his
subservience to the central authority in Rome and made him more of a malleable
instrument in the hands of the papal autocracy.

None of this explains why the Catholic Church remains so adamantly committed to
priestly celibacy today. After all, rationality would appear to be on the side of 
allowing
priests to marry. An estimated 20,000 men left the priesthood in the US from 1970 to
1995, and an estimated 100,000 worldwide, mostly to marry. A 1990 US study of
young Catholic men found celibacy to be the most significant obstacle to adopting
the priestly life.

Celibacy and chastity, however, are bound up with the anti-rational, mystical
construction of Catholic doctrine. The prejudice against sex (“sex pleasure has been
ordained by God as an inducement to perform an act which is both disgusting in itself
and burdensome in its consequences,” declared a 1929 work by Catholic scholars,
described as “humane”), Immaculate Conception, the virgin birth, the nonsense
about the Holy Trinity and other pieces of Catholic teaching and dogma are
indissolubly bound together. It is very difficult to remove one element without the
entire edifice collapsing.

Indeed the more that humanity’s knowledge of itself and its world has deepened, the
more the Catholic Church has chosen to brazen it out on the doctrinal front. It
continues to defend beliefs that are thoroughly undermined by science and
technology, in reality, by the science and technology of a considerably earlier 
century.
>From the hierarchy’s point of view, for the Church to abandon celibacy and other
practices at this point would constitute an intolerable concession to rationalism and
secularism.

It should be remembered that critical elements of Catholic dogma were only
introduced or codified in the nineteenth century, including the doctrine of Immaculate
Conception (the belief that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was the only person born free
from “all stain of original sin”) in 1854 and papal infallibility in 1870. The Church 
was
consolidating and rearming itself in response to the intellectual menace represented
by the Enlightenment, Darwinism and modernity in general, the threat of social
revolution (European-wide upheaval took place in 1848 and the Paris Commune in
1871) and the growth of socialism. In 1878 Pope Leo XIII issued an encyclical
directed against the “deadly plague” promulgated by “socialists, communists, or
nihilists,” who were now proclaiming publicly “The overthrow of all civil society
whatsoever.”

Another factor no doubt involved in the defense of celibacy is the reality that since
the Reformation it has been one of the issues dividing the Catholic Church from the
various Protestant sects. A significant narrowing of this divide would raise the
question: what distinguishes Catholicism?

Moreover, like any reactionary bureaucracy, especially one with such a vast breadth
of experience, the Catholic officialdom instinctively recognizes that every outmoded
institution is most vulnerable at the moment it attempts to reform itself. After
vigorously preserving priestly celibacy for centuries, for the Church to abandon it
might provoke an uncontrollable crisis. It would not satisfy genuinely reform-minded
critics, and it would infuriate and embitter conservative elements. Far better to 
ignore
the realities of modern life, place priests in an impossible position and endanger
children and adolescents, Church officials calculate, than see the possible unraveling
of the entire institution.






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