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[cnn-photo-caption image=http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2010/images/03/24/sister.jpg caption="Sister Joan Chittister"]
By Joan Chittister
For all the certainty about the facts of the case, there is still an aura of discontent everywhere about the situation surrounding clerical sex abuse in the Church. No one disputes the data now; everyone disputes the nature of the problem. And worse than that, the data simply keeps piling up on all sides.
First, the world called it an “American problem.” As in, those Americans are a wild bunch anyway, what else can you expect?” The Vatican went so far as to dismiss the issue as simply another demonstration of American exaggeration–what the Irish call the American tendency to be “over the top.”
Then Ireland found itself engulfed in the problem and suddenly the outrage was no longer seen as ‘over the top,’ On the contrary, it became a display of integrity. Nor were the numbers seen as being exaggerated by the media. On the contrary, the numbers of child victims, the world began to understand, had, if anything, been minimized.
Now, the boil has broken in Europe, too: in the Netherlands, in Austria, in Germany, and, oh yes, in the Vatican, as well.
Now, the United States is no longer seen as being hysterical about a non-problem but early in its confrontation of it, also a decidedly American trait.
But what, precisely, is ‘it?” What is the real problem?
Note well: After stories of the first few high-profile cases of serial rapes and molestations and their unheard of numbers died down, the focus shifted away from individual clerical rapists to the unmasking of what was now obviously a systemic problem. This prevailing practice of episcopal coverups, of moving offenders from one parish to another rather than expose them either to legal accountability or to moral censure in the public arena, occupied the spotlight. It was a practice that saved the reputation of the church at the expense of children. It traded innocence for image.
But we know all of that. So why doesn’t all of this just settle down and go away? Why won’t these people–these survivors–“just forget about it,” some people said.
The answers to that question is both personal and social.
For some, of course, the need to expose their experiences comes out of the need to heal themselves by reclaiming a sense of control over their lives. To stop living in the shadow of victimage and powerlessness. For others of them, it was because, having had their secret shame exposed, they now found the courage themselves to speak out about the unspeakable ghost that had for so long haunted their lives.
But it is also possible that the survivors go on drawing our attention to the situation because, this time, consciously or unconsciously, they are trying to warn us of a second aspect of the problem, still largely undefined, that is at least as serious–even the incubator, in fact–of the obvious issues of coverup and concealment.
This time, however, it is Ireland, not America, that is ripping away the veil from this even deeper dimension, the one that moves beyond the problems of sexual repression and institutional face-saving. The unmasking of this context requires changes in the church that are in ways more serious–and certainly as important –as is the awareness of the danger of the sexual abuse itself.
The dilemma that really threatens the future of the church is a distorted notion of the vow of obedience and the tension it creates between loyalty to the Gospel and loyalty to the institution–translate: “system.”
In this case, the problem swirls around Ireland’s Primate, Cardinal Sean Brady, a good man with a good heart and a good reputation. Until now. In 1975, then Fr. Sean Brady, a newly certified Canon Lawyer and secretary to then Bishop Francis McKiernan, now deceased, in the diocese of Kilmore, took testimony from two young boys abused by the serial rapist Fr. Brendan Smyth. At the end of those interviews, Brady exacted a vow of silence from the boys which effectively protected Smyth from public censure and enabled him to go on abusing children–including in the United States–for another 18 years. Brady, too, said nothing to no one about the case, other than to his Bishop, ever again. Not to the gardai, not to the courts, not even to the bishops to whose dioceses Smyth had then been sent.
Challenged now to resign because of that failure to give evidence of a crime, Brady’s answer is the Nuremberg defense: he was only following orders; he did not have the responsibility to make any reports other than to his bishop; he was only a note-taker. All of which elements of the situation are now in hot dispute.
But the question is deeper than the simple ones of role and organizational responsibility.
The question is why would a good man with a good heart, as he surely is, think twice about his responsibility to take moral, legal steps to stop a child predator from preying on more children everywhere, some of them for years at a time?
The answer to that question is a simple one: It is that the kind of “blind obedience” once theologized as the ultimate step to holiness, is itself blind. It blinds a person to the insights and foresight and moral perspective of anyone other than an authority figure.
Blind obedience is itself an abuse of human morality. It is a misuse of the human soul in the name of religious commitment. It is a sin against individual conscience. It makes moral children of the adults from whom moral agency is required. It makes a vow, which is meant to require religious figures to listen always to the law of God, beholden first to the laws of very human organizations in the person of very human authorities. It is a law that isn’t even working in the military and can never substitute for personal morality.
From where I stand, if there are any in whom we should be able to presume a strong conscience and an even stronger commitment to the public welfare, it is surely the priests and religious of the church. But if that is the case, then the church must also review its theology of obedience so that those of good heart can become real moral leaders rather than simply agents of the institution.
A bifurcation of loyalties that requires religious to put canon law above civil law and moral law puts us in a situation where the keepers of religion may themselves become one of the greatest dangers to the credibility–and the morality–of the church itself.
This article also appeared in the National Catholic Reporter at NCRonline.org


Father,
Forgive them for they know not what they do
an open letter to President Barak Obama that I have already sent to him a month ago but now it has maybe some relevance due to the political situation between Israel and the US. up to you to decide I have also sent you this letter through our freindship page of facebook
"Dear Barak,
you stand for Change and Hope but in the Middle East you went on the George W. foot steps "Road Map", Two State Solution. The real change would be a real chance for peace in this region tormented with wars since the beginning of this century. As I have tried to explain in my earlier message to you the real cause of all what I call "Irrational Islamic Terrorism” (IIT) is the problem of Palestine which lies on the roots of the Middle Eastern and maybe World crisis.. In short the real change would be a "One State Solution", a state where Jews could live in peace and be guaranteed to stay and live in their "promised Land" for a long time to come (they cannot live there, under these conditions for long and they know that already; it is only a matter of time) but also the Palestinian should have the right to live in this land of their fathers too.
Paradoxically, it is the Islam or the teachings of the Koran (see-the Tauba Sura) that allowed the Jews to come to Palestine in the beginning of the last century and after the Second World War when they were displaced and mal treated by almost all European nations to find peace and accoliance/reception by the Palestinian people, because of these teachings’. According to these teachings’ even the non-Muslims and non-believers they are to be protected, taken care of and well treated when they are misplaced or are refugees. Only weakness and selfish and ruthless rulers of the Moslem world has led tolerance and real knowledge to fade away!.. ... thus if you add one plus one of the above and blend it with human psychology you will get the “Irrational Islamic Terrorism” (IIT) which implies the following sentence: “we welcomed you (Jews) and gave you protection and hospitality when you were weak and displaced but now you occupy our land and kill our children… we shall fight you until the end of time… Jihad”
This is the inner vehicle/engine of Jihadists and IIT. If you take out this engine you will get peace in the Middle East and most probably in the whole world which means also a lot for the national security of your country! The equation is very simple and really not difficult to solve if one understands the inner logic and the mechanism behind this psychology and may be you would be able to end a century of war and suffering in the Middle East of both Jews and the Palestinians!... according to my humble opinion.
We have a precedent case South Africa, in which they have overcome all hatred and division and today SA is hosting the world football championship in 2010. A new democratic state in Palestine in which Jews and Muslims live together would spread all over the Middle east and may be overcome the ruthless Tyrannies in these countries around Palestine.
Only YOU could bring this change (and you might not be able to do it if you waited too long you too would lose the magic of power) in the area and you must do it with resolution and determination otherwise both parties would fight against this change and against you.
The British "gave" Palestine to a "terrorist group" so at the time they were called by the same British: the Zionists.... (so-called "Home Land" for the Jews on the expense of the whole population of Palestine) and what they have created? Nothing but again terrorism!... . The British could have given the power to the socialist party at the time in which Jews and Palestinians were united to fight for freedom of Palestine. You can change that and many would help you in this believe me! This is the solution in my very humble opinion and the eradication of IIT and the end of the Afghan and Iraqi wars and you would have the legacy and merit of the Nobel Prize...
warm regards
Farouk
Very interesting subject , appreciate it for posting . "The friendship that can cease has never been real." by Saint Jerome.
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