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U.S. Bishops: The Great Inertia




From National Catholic Reporter,11.10.2008.

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U.S. Bishops: The Great Inertia

 

 

By Eugene Cullen Kennedy

 

Published: 

November 10, 2008

 

Pope Benedict XVI has circled the globe,
raising expectations but leaving unfinished business.
In America and in Australia he confessed his shame
at sex abusing clergy, confronted bishops
and met with victims.
And nothing has changed

 

Benedict XVI has followed the same pattern in every country he has visited since his triumphant American tour in April during which television transformed him from the bad rottweiler into the good shepherd. The metaphorical transition was not small and he has capitalized on it as the gently nodding pope urging a kind of détente with secularism and a restoration of large glories to a smaller Church that he will ruthlessly purify of pedophiles. But he goes home, the excited crowds quietly disperse, and we are left wondering if the sex abuse scandal is better or less well understood, while its victims remain unattended and their wounds unhealed.

Although America’s bishops had dutifully nodded, Yes, Yes, to Benedict’s vow to ban pedophiles from the priesthood, they are still pressured to shake their heads and let their lawyers say No, No, to victims seeking compensation for being sexually wounded by members of the clergy. If this sounds familiar so did the reaction of Vatican officials to the pope’s strong springtime words about barring potential sex offenders from the priesthood. They harrumphed vaguely about new legal procedures to deal with the problem and lapsed quickly back into monastic silence. As the days wear away along the western front of the sex abuse scandal Catholics are left with what Emerson described as “the sound of things that almost happen.”

 

In short, despite the expectations raised by Benedict’s being “ashamed” of sex abuse by priests and his seeming concern for victims, for the latter, for Catholics-in-general and for bishops themselves, nothing has really changed in America or anywhere else either. How can this be?


Unresolved Authority

 

This behavior is a feature of the Great Inertia, that pervasive problematic with authority that prevented Church officials from reacting to the sex abuse tragedy before it blew the lid off the crock pot in which they had let it simmer for years. To understand the long top down suppression of information about sex abuse by clergy and its continuing public mismanagement one must re-examine something that we think we already understand, the way authority has been expressed and experienced in the Church.

 

Far from being the smooth absolute of the pre-Vatican II era in which hierarchs supposedly commanded and the clergy obeyed, authority was then exercised in an awkward pas de deux in which priests were far more skilled at handling their bishops than their bishops were in managing them. Good priests who were single-eyed needed no external orders to carry out their work while priests opting for double lives ignored or shrugged regulations off almost casually. The sex abuse scandal could not have developed without the freedom of movement available to priests on the open range of pre-Vatican II clerical culture. The enabling character of authority passively expressed and actively manipulated in old clerical culture was, in fact, described in psychological studies carried out a generation and more ago at Loyola University of Chicago.

 

The psychological research on priests (“The Catholic Priest in the United States: Psychological Investigations” by Kennedy and Heckler, Publications Office, United States Catholic Conference, 1972) was but one of a series of coordinated studies commissioned by the bishops after Vatican II. They included an historical inquiry chaired by Monsignor John Tracy Ellis and a sociological analysis headed by Father Andrew Greeley. A follow-up study of bishops was carried out a few years later at Loyola. (“Toward an Understanding of the American Bishop” by Sheehan and Kobler, 1974, 1982.)

 

While the psychological investigation of American priests identified a strong cohort of mature clergy, it is best remembered for discovering a substantial subset of immature priests who were described as underdeveloped. These latter priests, the report explained, “have not achieved an integrated psychosexual identity…. (M)any of them function at a pre-adolescent or adolescent level of psychosexual growth….The seminary’s passive reward system did not spur these less fortunate candidates to develop internally. Unchallenged to grow, their psycho-sexual development lagged behind and was therefore out of synchronization with their physical and mental growth.”

 

Bishops and Priests: A Shared Ambivalence about Authority


Men functioning at this pre-adolescent level of development lacked “a well thought out or consistent pattern of responses to authority. They may speak about changing it but they would feel very uneasy if they did not have its approval They may perceive it as personally oppressive and yet, for all practical purposes, ignore it … (I)n the day-to-day transactions of their of their lives, it seems clear that these priests do pretty much what they want to do….When regulations get in their way they frequently display real ingenuity in circumventing them.” ( pp. 15, 16)

 

The bishops exhibited complicated feelings about their own authority. Troubled by power, many depended on papal authority to support their administrative decisions. Their whole sense of themselves as worthy pastors derived from the pope’s approval of their actions. They therefore exercised authority less by responding directly to the problem or person before them than fashioning responses that met the pope’s expectations. Their sails were filled with the fair wind from Rome and if they were becalmed they did not know what to do except to wait for the papal breeze to strike up again and carry them to a destination chosen by the pope.


Far from being harsh authoritarians, these bishops often felt burdened by the authority invested in them by their being appointed to their posts. Almost all the bishops looked on their episcopal authority, or power, as it had been described in canon law, as a great challenge and, for almost a quarter of them, its reception precipitated a life crisis. Dr. Mary Sheehan describes the bishops’ uneasiness with their authority in this way:

 

This is a large number of men, who average 57 years of age, to find acceptance of their role the most serious crisis of their lives….there is some reason to think that power itself is feared by many of the bishops….they seem to have more trouble with … interpersonal conflicts, rejection of their authority, and their being required to correct people or to say no to them. Thus the bishops as a group of men whom we have seen to be generally …hardworking, well-wishing, religious idealists, can be expected to have difficulty when they are placed in a position which they and many others regard as one which must set limits, coordinate the activities of many, and be the last word within a certain sphere. Many of the bishops seem to conceive of their role as a very powerful one, while they as persons do not even feel authentic, much less powerful….The authority-dependent style… shows itself in several ways: the bishops identify power with role, they feel their responsibility to higher-ups, and ultimately prefer the responsibility to belong to someone higher up, while they control the level below. (pp. 114, 116)

 

The bishops, therefore, held the reins of control loosely over their priests. In an extended analysis of the data on American bishops, Dr. Frank Kobler concluded that, “It is a myth that the Catholic Church in this country is a monolithic, authoritarian entity that gets things done automatically. I know of no group of men who are more free to do as they please and who, in general, do it, than the priests of the United States, if one is to judge this from listening to their bishops.” (“The Roman Catholic Bishops of the United States: A clinical interpretation of the responses of eighty-one (81) bishops to a sentence completion test. Loyola University of Chicago, 1979)

 

The Paternal Style: The Virtue in Doing Nothing


This uneasiness about exercising their authority almost certainly contributed to the bishops’ practice of dealing with their clergy paternally, outside canon law and other regulations when possible, confident that through this informal style they could maintain their control of their priests and of the troubles whose trip wires they snapped regularly. The bishops’ first response to alarms set off at any level in the Church was, and remains, restraint; in short, their default reaction is to do nothing. They are well disciplined in responding by not responding. This is not an accident but a tactic.

 

Doing nothing is not evidence of the bishops’ apathy but rather of their realization, with a few exceptions, that they are ill-advised to use their power too quickly or in too final a manner, especially if they are unsure of what the pope would think of their actions. Doing nothing is better than doing something that offends the pope on whose favorable disposition they strongly depend. This constant raising of their wetted ringed fingers to see which way the papal wind is blowing introduces a note of hesitation into their own exercise of authority. This reinforces their habitual restraint in making decisions and increases their confidence in using a low key, off the record and off the books style in dealing with their priests. It explains the bishops’ deferral of reaction to the 1971 research results about underdeveloped priests as well as their reluctance to respond to the reports of sex abuse by priests that were dropped steadily onto their desks over the next thirty years.

 

Despite the findings that suggested that many priests were poorly developed and might encounter serious difficulties in their work (eventually a number of sex abusing priests would arise from the cohort of priests ordained before 1971 that constituted the research sample) the bishops responded by doing nothing. Most of the bishops then in place were not shocked and probably not surprised to learn that many priests fell so far short of maturity. These bishops were less interested in probing the causes of their priests’ lack of due growth than in keeping their priests functioning in some broadly if minimally acceptable manner, in getting as much out of them as possible even if this was not very much.

 

The “Cover-up and Care for” Ploy


Popes had long urged bishops to be fatherly towards their priests, thereby reinforcing the episcopal paternalism that emphasized the carrot far more than the stick in keeping their priests in slightly wavering line. The bishops’ paternalism towards the Catholic culture in general also enabled them to recruit a confederacy of friendly lawyers, doctors, and journalists to manage a covert recycling system for erring clergymen, including sex abusers. As in the other dominant institutions of the time, the objective was to protect and redeem the offending professional rather than to assist the offended victims. Doing nothing for victims was an integral part of this widely accepted strategy. Only a generation later did an awareness of victims, their suffering and their rights, enter the national consciousness.

 

It is hard to imagine that the bishops understood its implications when they opted for the Cover-Up- and-Care-For policy that other paternal hierarchical institutions employed, for example, in doing nothing in public about the tipsy judge who made a pass at a caddy at the country club, the C.E.O. involved in a hit and run accident, or the rock star who destroyed his hotel room and assaulted a maid. The strategy was simple: Keep them off the front pages under the cover of being sick rather than sinners and get them away for a period of “help” in order to achieve the main goal of returning them to work without ruffling the surface of public consciousness about the doer or the deed.

 

This process was accepted by the bishops because, if it asked no questions it caused no troubles and therefore served “the good of the Church” and pleased the pope by keeping scandals under control and under wraps. This suppressive approach also laid down the tracks of a kind of underground railroad to safe havens for priests who abused their parishioners sexually, their parishes financially, or themselves alcoholically. Following the then accepted principle of returning professionals to their work unscathed and unscarred, troubled priests were spirited quietly away from the scene of their misbehavior for “treatment” at centers, such as the Seton Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, that were experienced in dealing with clergy.

 

The bishops then passed the decision making onto the attending professionals to say when the priest was sufficiently rehabilitated to be returned to work as soon and as seamlessly as possible. They could always lean on the authority of the doctors to justify their paternalistic reluctance to express their own authority – in short, to do nothing – that motivated bishops not to inform the problem priest’s new superiors of his troubled past.

 

Triggering the Sex Abuse Crisis: Gaming the Paternal System


As noted, even the finest priests recognized that this muted episcopal paternalism resembled an alarm system with a 60 second delay. Plenty of time was available for priests bound on mischief to slip inside this domain of absolute power, to take what they wanted and to reset the alarm so that they left no trace of how or what kinds of freedom they had burgled from bishops who did not even know they had been robbed. Sex abusing clerics gamed this episcopal preference to omit rather than commit themselves to action in order to find fire-free zones in which to hunt almost at leisure for their victims. It was almost easy.

 

At this point on the graph of clerical life the passive paternalism of bishops intersected with the freewheeling psychopathy of psychosexually immature priests to create the sex abuse crisis.

 

Their paternalistic bias led the bishops to react, from the first scattered reports in the 70s and 80s to the last headline revelations about the sex abuse crisis in 2002, in their usual manner, that is, as fathers who felt that this problem could be dealt with in the family rather than in court or in the newspapers. This led them to practice an unnerving forbearance in implementing what we might term the Prodigal Son model of dealing with erring clergy. In effect, they killed the fatted calf for them, keeping their riotous behavior quiet, getting help for them, sending them on sick leaves that were hard to distinguish from vacations and returning them to work with nobody the wiser for it. As a consequence, a healthy priest who kept his vows and remained at work without complaint was treated as if he were the prodigal son’s brother, that is, he was taken for granted and went unrewarded and unremembered.

 

Doing Nothing as Doing Something


During the 80s Jason Berry did the first investigative journalism on the cover-up of clergy sex abuse in Lafayette, Louisiana, and Father Thomas Doyle warned the bishops that if they did not address this scandal it would one day cost them a billion dollars. In ignoring both Berry and Doyle, the bishops felt that through their measured passivity they were protecting the Church and pleasing the pope. Others who tried to get the bishops to respond to the increasing reports of sexual abuse by priests were dealt with as if they just didn’t appreciate how well the bishops had the situation under control.

 

One of the latter was the late Joseph Cardinal Bernardin of Chicago. A leader rather than a follower, in 1985 he submitted a plan to the National Conference of Catholic Bishops for a scientific study of the already well identified problem of sex abuse by priests. His proposal was returned to him by the General Secretary of the National Conference with a terse letter saying that the bishops probably wouldn’t do anything about it anyway. Despite continuing efforts by Bernardin and others, the majority of the bishops stuck to their strategy, remaining passively benevolent towards the psychosexually immature priests who sexually abused children. Asserting hierarchical privilege, they continued to juggle the live grenade of this accelerating crisis until it exploded early in 2002 long after sadness beyond summing up had been visited on good and trusting Catholic people.

 

The Collapse of Paternal Clericalism


As its once tight boundaries became more permeable, clerical culture began to collapse from within. The readiness of priests to act out and the reluctance of bishops to act at all spelled the end of this once powerful culture’s cohesiveness. When bishops and priests crossed paths it was in an environment of authority so fogbound that it was hard to tell the difference between them. Priest sex abusers moved like phantoms through the lowered visibility that obscured the once commanding STOP signs of that once fabled culture. This situation may be regarded as an end-stage in the collapse of effective hierarchical authority, a stage in which bishops did not feel free to constrain their priests so that priests felt free of constraints as they searched for psycho-sexual growth through sexual experimentation. The bishops did not realize how anachronistic and ineffective their paternalism had become or how their hesitation in using their authority would make them seem callous and calculating in re-commissioning and re-circulating flawed clergymen to unsuspecting parishes.

 

These bishops were like innocents abroad in a changing world and, 30 years later, seemed stunned and overwhelmed by the unrelenting revelations about how many and in how many seriously damaging ways that priests, often like the underdeveloped priests described in 1971, had acted out their psycho-sexual conflicts on their people during the intervening years. Because the broader supportive cultural net also snapped and gave way, the police, medical experts, and reporters would no longer go along with the bishops’ genial bluffing about clerical problems.

 

Borrowing the Authority of Others


The bishops manifested their willingness to yield to papal authority in accepting with hardly a murmur Pope John Paul II’s 1993 directive Apostolos Suos that operationally ended the initiatives that Vatican II had urged the National Conferences of Bishops to take on their own authority to address problems of their own region. This had led the American bishops to lead the country in a public meditation on nuclear arms and the economy as they developed pastoral letters on these subjects in the 80s. By accepting the terms of Apostolos Suos the bishops agreed to send their future pastoral letters to Rome for approval before publishing them. This surrender of their collegial right to authority from their ordination rather than from papal delegation symbolized the deep need of the majority of the bishops for the approval of the pope and their readiness to depend on his authority rather than their own in running their dioceses.

 

The bishops were, however, genuinely frightened by the strong reaction of Catholics to their handling of the priest sex abuse scandal. They were not sure of exactly what the pope expected as they nervously prepared for their 2002 meeting in Dallas but, on the basis of the visit of several cardinals to Rome in April, they felt that they needed to respond strongly to this public Catholic furor over the revelations. Unaccustomed to acting on their own authority and more comfortable doing little or nothing in the face of a crisis, the bishops searched for some surrogate authority to stand in for them.

 

This move was more pragmatic than principled as they turned first to a commission of lay Catholics, chaired by the distinguished lawyer Robert Bennett, to investigate the nature, extent, and origins of the scandal. They later demonstrated “delegator’s remorse” at having yielded so much authority to this group and, after its members delivered their report, they declared that the sex abuse crisis was over and attempted to downgrade the commission’s scope and responsibility. Their paternalism had long stayed their hand in dealing with their priests who, after all, were fellow clerics. It bade them to deal very differently with the non-clerical lay people whose authority they had borrowed to support themselves during the most intense part of the crisis. By leading a passive campaign of ignoring them they turned their backs dismissively on them, we don’t need you anymore.

 

Their almost desperate need for the authority of others led them at Dallas, however, to forge a Faustian pact with the law, civil and criminal, thinking that this double agency of external authority would assume responsibility for and clean up the sex abuse scandal for them. The bishops reaped a bitter harvest for their calculated passivity when the law they were glad to lean on during the Dallas meeting attacked the crisis on its own inexorable terms. The bishops reeled as they seemed to learn as if for the first time that sex abuse was not under their control after all but that it was a crime to be punished and an offense for which its victims could seek damages.

 

Further evidence of the bishops’ easily spooked paternalism is found in their almost eager willingness to cut themselves free of the erring clergy they had previously supported. They talked and acted tough towards sex abusing priests at Dallas, adopting Draconian procedures that, for example, led to the removal of clergymen from ministry on the basis of one phone call charging them with sexual misconduct. Exempting themselves from such measures, the bishops were ready to disavow and disinherit the problem priests they had long protected like privileged orphans.


The biggest unreported and unanalyzed development in Dallas was the transformation of the episcopal culture from which its members have never really recovered. In seeking to prop up their authority by yielding the crisis to outside agents of authority, the bishops gave up for good the control they had long kept to themselves and the practical immunity they had enjoyed in running the Church in paternalistic fashion. In the early stages of the sex abuse crisis, doing nothing may have served them well but, in the short run of the public sex abuse crisis, it had done them in.

 

Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye


This paternal style’s ultimate destructiveness for both sex abusing priests and their passively pastoral bishops is found in the manner in which then archbishop of Boston, Bernard Cardinal Law, dealt with Father John Geoghan, a priest ordained in 1962 and therefore a member of the cohort of priests represented in the Loyola psychological research sample of the clergy. His tragic life story suggests that he may well have been one of the subgroup of psychosexually underdeveloped priests identified by this research.

 

Geoghan was reported and admonished and sent off, according to the policies of the time, for treatment at distant facilities and was then reassigned, always with Law’s fatherly encouragement of his archbishop, to start afresh in a parish whose people had no knowledge of his history. After Law finally removed Geoghan from ministry in 1993, he wrote to him in classic paternal fashion, “Yours has been an effective ministry, sadly impaired by illness. On behalf of those you have served well, and in my own name, I would like to thank you….God bless you, Jack.” When the scandal broke, Geoghan was being tried and found guilty for sex offenses and a year later was murdered by another inmate in the correctional facility in which he was serving his 10 year sentence. Not long after that, he paternalistic Bernard Cardinal Law was forced to resign as archbishop of Boston.

 

Doing Nothing as Somebody Else’s Fault


On his visit to Australia, Pope Benedict XVI’s suggested what he must have had in mind when he visited America a few months before: there “was, in the ‘50s, ‘60s and ‘70s, the idea of proportionalism in ethics. It held that nothing is bad in itself, but only in proportion to others…it was possible to think for some subjects – one could also be pedophilia – that in some proportion they could be a good thing.” This intellectual defense exculpates the Church, its teaching and its bishops, projecting the responsibility for clergy sex abuse away from hierarchy onto a cohort of moral theologians who, the Pope clearly implies, provided priests with a rationalization for sexually assaulting those in their care. This is an energetic, not to say tortured, exercise that is, however, compatible with the Episcopal Myth that makes bishops confident of their being placed on the highest level of the Church and divinely guided in their judgments.


Despite the many papal protestations of regret about clergy sex abuse and sympathy for its victims the use of such externalization explains why the sex abuse crisis has never been resolved. According to such reasoning, hierarchs can claim that “We didn’t do anything. We are the real victims of a deviant generation of priests who were led astray by untrustworthy moral theologians.”

 

Somebody else is to blame here, somebody else is always to blame and we need not examine ourselves, our teachings, or our traditions to find the real wrongdoers here. This not very artful argument increases the pressure on bishops to defend the concept of hierarchy and supports their avoiding public responses as they handle the problem on their own in their preferred paternalistic style. This makes their already difficult lives even more difficult and less relevant to those of their people.
The pope therefore comes and goes in America and Australia, expressing regret to victims and talking to bishops about the sex abuse scandal and offering theories about its origins. And nothing happens. That is exactly what one would expect. “Doing something” is not what bishops do. When they appear to do nothing they are, by their lights, passively and paternally defending the Church.

 

Passive Authority and Virtual Sex Abuse


“Doing nothing” was and remains the bishops’ pragmatic paternalistic response to the problems of their priests and in dealing with almost all challenges except those that arise from non-clerical organizations, such as Call to Action or the Voice of The Faithful. Bishops feel that they can be righteously stern fathers with lay groups whose members they treat like children, perhaps because such groups unintentionally set themselves up for this reaction by at times treating the bishops as fathers, that is, by seeking their approval for speakers or meeting locations or just for their general good will and cooperation in making administrative processes more transparent.

 

The bishops’well recognized master motive for exercising their authority with passive benevolence towards priests and passive indifference to laypeople remains today what it was all these lost and gone years since the priest studies were published. We can understand now that Call to Action was exactly the right name for the movement that arose as a response to the bishops’ preference for inaction, for making a virtue out of doing nothing “for the good of the Church.”

The bishops do not realize, of course, that this use of their power exactly parallels the way a sex abuser uses power over those who lack power. They would be horrified if they recognized that in their efforts to raise up their clergy they have first had to put down their laypeople in ways that humiliate and demean them. Some younger clergy are gratified by this process and do not understand that by this lordly approach they extend the sex abuse crisis into a new virtual phase in which all laypeople are potential victims.

 

The crucial difference between their treating adult laypeople as if they were children and in treating child-like priests as if they were adults is a function of the clerical status of the clergy and the lower caste lay status of groups of dedicated laypeople. Ignoring these lay groups is one way of passively expressing their authority by doing nothing. This doing nothing finds its operational equivalent in the systematic taking away of the laypeople’s role in handling the sacred vessels at Mass and in doing anything more inside the sanctuary than altar boys have done since time immemorial. The dynamic of the recent spate of regulations to keep laypeople at a distance from the Eucharist and, for example, to bow before its reception, is to give ordinary Catholics nothing to do of significance in the liturgy, to diminish and demean them in order to prop up the clerical state. They say in effect, we have power and you do not and we are going to use it negatively on you.

Benedict’s projection of sex abuse away from hierarchy reinforces its members’ already powerful sense of (a) being special, (b) being privileged, and (c) being fundamentally benevolent rulers. Hierarchs have thereby painted themselves into a corner. Their preference for the passive benevolent style helps us understand, however, why, after the Pope has come and gone and supposedly confronted them about the sex abuse crisis, nothing has changed. Uncomfortable with their own authority, borrowing it from others, principally the pope, in their vaunted seeking “the good of the Church,” the bishops are not going to start using or sharing any of their own authority to address the problems of the American Church. Perhaps they remain convinced that doing nothing beats the risk of making a big mistake. And perhaps they are willing to wait for their justification at the Last Judgment. Perhaps they expect God to speak as Will Rogers did of the Depression era Congress, “They didn’t do anything but that’s exactly what we wanted done.”

 


Historically, lay people

Submitted by SantaChingada (not verified) on Wed, 11/12/2008 – 20:55.

Historically, lay people used to be way less organized than Bishops and curia; and they did not work according to an agenda. Most Catholic conferences are long established; and they have focused on maintaining their autocracy by the means of self-deification, self-indulgence, justification of their mistakes by pretending they weren’t there, actively participating in illegal coverups, violating the law and the trust of the laity, lying about miracles, fabrication of saints to keep the people distracted from real issues, etc.

 

Recently in Canada, a public Catholic hospital was going to take over the general hospital in the same area, but the residents protested the takeover and it failed. Sex abuse is no longer a secrecy matter that is going to be protected by an infamous secrecy order written in Latin by the hand of the Pope. People are more aware of abusive behavior by the Bishops than they used to be as a public. Now the Bishops’ words are no longer incontestable, but the laity has learned how to raise questions, because the abuse of power by these men has become too visible to be ignored.

 

It is from such a contradictory position that these men, who actually should not be even trying to explain the sexuality of the society, are still attempting to rule from their own hypocritical anti-prostitution and anti-abortion podium. In situations where prostituion is a non-coerced choice by an informed woman and a consenting man, neither party to a transaction should be penalized. If two consenting adults would like to get married and enjoy their life partnership, there is no justification for legal measures impeding their freedom of choices, no matter their gender.

 

Such are considerable domains in the reconstruction of ethics and true morals, that should be responded to under the new updates in bioethics and the science of life. It is no longer acceptable that these men, who actually come from a history of sexual phobias and unspeakable aberrations from their true humanity, are still allowed to persist manipulating the choices of real people who are living their own real sexual experiences, people who are choosing to opt for their own liberty.

How is it, that we are all here allowing these men to dictate over our sexuality and life options, if we are and not them, the ones who carry the responsibilities of procreation, sexual activity, loyalty and accountability towards our sexual partners, legal accountability for our activities,etc.? If any lay person would be found sexually molesting children, the weight of the law would fall immediately on that individual, with immediate charges and imprisonment. But, in the case of the clergy, their status allows them to not only getaway with crime and aberration, but they blatantly pass around such loathsome orders such as the Crimen Solititationis, the Crime of Solicitation, currently a Letter of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith (Holy Inquisition), acting like true mafia bosses for the protection of their own evils, in a blatant disrespect of the victims, of the society and of the laity that grants them the elevated status of divine speakers for the dummies who believe in their (un)holiness?

 

They can come up with inventions about the holiness of a Jewish mother, whose virginity has been turned into an imposition of dogma under the threat of losing the soul for eternity (caution, purgatory is very long, but hell is even longer…), but the reality is, that Catholics have only generated a culture that has suppressed women unto their going insane. Any detached review of historical record will prove that women have been led to mental illness by the imposition of the dogmatic anti-Feminine dogma invented by these men. Let us think for instance an women nuns who have been declared “Saints” by these men. The way the curia has treated women is worth a class action law suit in the defense of Women’s Rights. The whole sexuality of lay human beings has been twisted and replaced by the sickness and shame of the makers of this insanity religion. In recent centuries, women who entered the convents were given a lash and they were ordered to use it as often as possible. The nuns were taught to discipline themselves, by chastising themselves several times a day. What kind of normality is going to be passed on to us, from such a sick sexual history of the Catholic faith? Of course we live under a permanent condition of putrified teachings that have been imposed on us through the sickened morals and ethics of the men who created this insane and unacceptable dogmas that would not even pass a test for discipline to be applied on dogs and donkeys with any animal rights organization. Any basic research in the most elementary public library will show how nuns were indulged to punish themselves with whips, flails, chains, broken glass, using needles and nails to inflict their breasts, praying barefooted in winter, thonged, had hot wax poured on their skins, wallowed in thorns, forced to pray upside down… only to then feel they were impregnated by Jesus Christ himself…! If these behaviors are evidently psychotic today, then why are Catholics still being taught that these women were “Saints”? Not to mention the pathology of degenerated spanking practices that led those women to feel they were being sexually “impregnated” by Jesus Christ… Those women were being made crazy without sex, which is documented by some of their famous insane unholy nuns. Teresa from Avila wrote that she was seeing “the flag of the Lord erected” which turned “into the highest tower” and while “the trees filled with sap”. The poor woman was craving for a real lover…! And those sadist men had the nerve to call such out of whack practices, ‘holy” to then canonize them as saints, after they died in insanity…! All of those women who are claimed as “Saints” by the Catholics, in reality were only victims of human rights violations and twisted mental health practices against women.

 

How do they have the nerve to question if someone is a good Catholic or not, if in reality all of us Catholics are faced with the terrible burden of having to rescue ourselves out of such insane traditions of sexual aberration and degenerated practices? The Bishops are out of whack, no one should listen to them, but instead some immediate action should be taken to get them off circulation, for the protection of the public. They should be immediately ordered to undergo psychiatric treatment and obligatory tantric sex as therapy for the rescue of their sanity. At the moment they are not in the capacity of dictating anyone’s sexual morality and practice.

 

This is another “excuse”

Submitted by Kay Goodnow (not verified) on Sat, 11/15/2008 – 16:23.

 

This is another “excuse” article. I, for one, am sick of hearing “the reasons they did this are…” followed by excuses.

Facts of the matter are: Priests and nuns abused children. Bishops, cardinals and the pope(s) chose to protect the almighty dollar at all costs. That, of course, meant throwing away children and vulnerable adults.

 

Benedict XVI came to the US and later went to Australia. He told the bishops and cardinals what to do and how to do it. Nothing happened. Why not?

Because bishops and cardinals are still working to save the almighty dollar.

 

Women are still considered second class citizens. They are put on this earth to service men, and provide children on an annual basis so that those children can be entrusted to a church that will abuse them.

 

These men are not shepherds. They are out of touch with reality and do not understand the concept of the human condition. They behave like spoiled brats while they gyrate in their glorious robes and live in mansions.

 

Worst of all, they lie through both sides of their collective mouths. They are spiritually challenged and belong in jail, preferably in a jail in Rome.

Why does the “flock” continue to permit itself to be fleeced? They’ve been brainwashed, hoodwinked, cheated and abused so badly they don’t even know it happened.

 

Caveat emptor!

It takes a village to

 

Submitted by mike ference (not verified) on Sat, 11/15/2008 – 16:49.

 

It takes a village to protect and cover up crimes against innocent children. It’s anybody’s guess just how long the sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church has actually been going on and how long church hierarchy have sat back and ignored or enjoyed the problem. Sadly,village idiots like Nicholas Cafardi and most Catholic Church Hierarchy seem to be to confused about what to do when children are sodomized, raped and fed horrible lies about harming brothers and sisters or being condemned to hell for not going along with dysfunctional sexual freaks disguised as Catholic priests.

Just Dial 911


Mike Ference

 

I read Dr. Nicholas P. Cafardi’s, dean emeritus of Duquesne University School of Law, feeble opinion of what went wrong in the clergy abuse scandal. I may not have a PhD after my name and give little damn about canon law but I know what to do when grown men sexually attack innocent girls and boys

Before I offer my solution, let it be known that I have not retreated to a mountain getaway, fasting for months on end, seeking divine intervention to find a solution to the problem of a Catholic priest exploiting a young child as a sex toy. Nor did I need to consult with head honchos at the Vatican to guide me through this convoluted decision process

 

On the contrary, the resolution was simple and could have saved the Catholic Church about 2 billion dollars and still counting (includes fees for lawyers and PR firms), but far more importantly, may have saved so many victims and their families some of the agony they were forced to endure because of the pimp-like attitudes and actions of the people left in charge to protect God’s most precious merchandise, His most beloved, children of the world.

Well, here’s my solution to priests sexually abusing young children and church hierarchy always seeming to be too confused to know what to do, just dial 911.

 




    3 Responses to “U.S. Bishops: The Great Inertia”

  1. clevelandgirl Says:

    (Comment I posted to ncr – don’t know if it will be accepted…)

    The sad bottom line is that every Catholic parent is a pimp who is prostituting their child(ren) to RCC Inc, whether that child has been sexually abused or not.

    Every parent a pimp.

    Every child a prostitute.

    The central myth of xtianity started with the rape of a young girl, a young girl whose parents pimped her to a temple to be a “dove” or child prostitute. RCC Inc/xtian dogma takes this truthful picture and puts a pretty coat of paint on it – lots of pretty angels, bright light, birdies, and a girl who says “Oh, my, that was sex and I’m impregnated? How wonderful! I’m so happy I was chosen to be raped by Mr. Pedophile God!” Any young child “given” to any temple of any religion was a de facto sex toy for the priesthood of that religion (Jewish, Pagan, Egyptian, whatever).

    Mary’s parents were pimps.

    Mary was a child prostitute and rape victim of a PEDOPHILE “god”.

    It ALL starts there. Then, you layer on the shepherd/sheep metaphor, and you’ve created a bicameral system of shepherds (slave owners, pimps, butchers, commodity buyers and sellers) and sheep (slaves, prostitutes, the used, abused, consumed, bought, and sold). The true relationship of the shepherd to the sheep is fleece ‘em, screw ‘em, kill ‘em, eat ‘em.

    Then, you layer on a pseudoimperial structure to the pimps (priesthood) and prostitutes (everyone else) and reward the socio/psychopaths who join that imperial power structure and punish everyone else (normal people) just for being alive. Parents, being the good representatives of that imperial hierarchy on a micro scale, do their best to emulate the priesthood out of duty and faith by following the tyrranical example of those in that power structure, hoping one day that one of their children will be chosen by the pedophile god to join that hierarchy, and are foolish enough to hand them over. They don’t pimp their children at school age, they pimp them on the day of their baptism, when they hand their child over to two other representatives of this pimp/prostitute system in a symbolic handing over of their child, a surrendering of their child as physical, capital property of RCC Inc. That child then becomes a new slave, a new prostitute, who will then, if not chosen for the imperial hierarchy, have children that they will then pimp to RCC Inc. It goes on and on, generation after generation. It doesn’t matter if a parent’s child escapes abuse – they have given at least tacit permission for RCC Inc to do with that child as they please.

    An organized criminal child rape cult…

    Then, you sucker those children into the system by engaging them in rituals of cannibalism “eat his body, drink his blood, then we’ll sing a song of love” and punish them if they don’t comply with beatings that provide sexual pleasure for the member of the power structure who inflicts that beating.

    Been thinking about this cannibalism thing – is RCC Inc training its sheeple to be zombies like in Night of the Living Dead, or vampires (but then, for many years, no catholic was allowed at ordinary communions to consume the blood, not even at their first communion, which is why one had to choke down that dry bread without any wash – that was only reserved for the imperial representatives)? Or are the sheeple the zombies and the priesthood the vampires?

    Master/slave
    Pimp/whore
    Dominance/submission
    Sadism/masochism
    Shepherd/sheep

    Not feeling sorry for any of those monsters called bishops who did nothing just to cover their feckless behinds. Not feeling sorry for the monster pedopriests unleashed on unsuspecting girls and boys. Not feeling sorry for the parents that were sucked in and pimped their kids. The only people who are doing the right thing are the people who *leave* this system, refuse to participate in it, speak out against its evil, stop contributing to it monetarily or any other way. Those of us survivors who speak the truth in the face of vilification (especially female survivors, who are called liars and worse because we point out the lie in the “gay” theory that the right wing nutjobs of RCC Inc cling so desperately to). The sooner RCC Inc is dead and no longer functioning on this planet, the better the world will be. Until then, no one is safe from a life of prostitution to a pedophile/pimp god-concept.

    Not feeling sorry for any catholic who reads this and is offended – being pimped, used, and abused offended *ME*, so I don’t care who I offend with the truth of the violence in the system (that *originates* in the fundamental dogma) and the culpability of every participant.

    RCC Inc must die – it must be sucked dry of all its money, power, influence, and control. Catholics, *leave*. You don’t need anyone as an intermediary between you and divinity, let alone monsters in dog collars and sad, twisted up women (who are prostitutes until they gain power, then they’re madams of RCC Inc). I’m calling on catholic women to leave – forget about womenpriests, about “changing the system from within” – that system is diseased beyond repair.

  2. Thill Says:

    When human organizations and earthly presumptions take over Christian Faith the Power is always corrupting. What is left? In Catholicism a dissolute laity, left to pray for this very sick and disfunctional group. Now I know what “Tears from Heaven” means.

  3. clevelandgirl Says:

    Thill, so-called Christian “faith” is inherently disordered at its roots. Its primary contamination is the Abramism of the OT, where women and children are property and all crimes against them are property crimes that require compensation of their “owner” (i.e., father, brother, husband, adult son).

    The secondary contamination is the central myth that just being born human makes us spiritually disordered, bad, evil, etc. (begun by Eve in the garden, itself a false myth and unhistorical – if this myth collapses under its own falsehood, then there’s no purpose for salvation) and that this disease (which was invented by the church and for which there is no proof that we have it) can be “cured” by belief in jesus and involvement in the Christian religion.

    The third source of disorder is the expression of the central myth, taking historical reality and prettying it up so that it all looks nice and sweet and wonderful and acceptable – Mary was pimped by her parents to the local temple as a servant or “dove” (with no real thought as to just what those servants were doing there – what? dusting the furniture?), Mary was happy to be raped by “god”, angels came to her to tell her she was raped by “god”, little birdies and white light appeared to make it all pretty. This was all made up to make the birth of “jesus” “different” and “special” from that of ordinary humans. Many gods, god-men, and sons of god had something unusual about their birth in myth – look at Hercules as an example.

    The fourth disorder is that believers must engage in cannibalism of their god to be made whole and good. Has anyone raised christian ever given *serious* thought to just how sick this is? A friend got the disgusting and repellant implication of this when he was prepared for his first communion in the late 1940s and refused to participate. For this, he was beaten horribly by a nun who got off on beating him. If you really think about the communion song “Sons of God” (notice no daughters are referred to here) is a light little ditty about “eat his body, drink his blood, then we’ll sing a song of love, la de da, la de da, la de da…” WTF????????!!!!!!!!!!! Teaching *kids* to sing about eating human flesh and drinking human blood (oh, that’s right, modified because it’s really god’s flesh and blood, so it’s OK)?

    the fifth disorder inherent in the system is the set up of a hierarchy who everyone is required to address as “father”, “brother”, “sister”, and “mother”, who then are allowed by virtue of their position and power to rape and abuse us at any time – and our *parents* give them permission to do so by pimping us to them just like Mary was pimped to a temple. Just the use of familial titles for these overlords is digustingly incestuous – unless you think it’s OK for biological family members to rape and assault you, too, then you don’t get how sick incest is.

    So, we’ve got (1) women and children are property, slaves, subhuman; (2) an imaginary disease passed on through female blood from an imaginary ancestor for which only one religion has the “cure”; (3) the rape of a little girl that made the god-man who is now our imaginary friend, the example of which is repeated by countless sociopathic clergy so as to demonstrate their godlikeness; (4) ritual cannibalism as part of the cure for the imaginary disease; and (5) clergy that are set up as surrogate family members who then commit incest against any and all members.

    Thill, I’m being nice about this, but you suffer from craniorectal impaction and are a sheeple who accepts the role of the shepherd (fleece ‘em, screw ‘em, kill ‘em, eat ‘em) in your life. Sadly, you are one of millions of “coppertops” that power the machine of RCC Inc/christianity – Take the RED pill please and get out of the Matrix!!!! It’s all a construct to keep you in thrall, and it’s screwed up at its very roots!


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