Can the Church be Saved?

by teejay 4 Replies latest jw friends

  • teejay
    teejay
    Can the Church Be Saved?


    As allegations of sex abuse--and official cover-up--mount, outraged Roman Catholics are urging their leaders to redeem and reform the faith
    BY JOHANNA MCGEARY

    The shock is that so many cases have spilled like stained vestments into public view--not just in Boston but in Los Angeles and St. Louis, Mo., and Philadelphia and Palm Beach, Fla., and Washington and Portland, Maine, and Bridgeport, Conn. The horror is not their singularity but their ghastly similarity: claims of a Roman Catholic priest sexually abusing children, and the church covering it up...

    Frank Martinelli was an impressionable 14-year-old altar boy who yearned to be a priest. He saw a holy future unfolding when the Rev. Laurence Brett, the charismatic young priest at St. Cecilia's in Stamford, Conn., enrolled him in a select teen group dubbed Brett's Mavericks. It wasn't quite the kind of special relationship with a trusted priest that Martinelli expected. On a Washington field trip, Father Brett allegedly fondled young Frank in a bathroom. Martinelli claims that while Brett was driving him home, the priest urged the boy to give him oral sex, blessing it as a way to receive Holy Communion. Like most youngsters 30 years ago, Frank was too ashamed, too scared, too uncomprehending ever to say a word.

    Church authorities had discovered Brett's proclivities as early as 1964. They did not report him to civil authorities or warn parishioners, and they let him minister at ecclesiastical posts around the country. In 1990 when Edward Egan took over as bishop, he met with Brett and later noted, "All things considered, he made a good impression. In the course of our conversation, the particulars of his case came out in detail and with grace." As a result, Egan let Brett come back to Bridgeport as a priest. (emphasis mine)

    In November 1992 Brett confessed to an indiscretion and later to two more--but stayed in the ministry. Then came Martinelli's allegations, and then another accuser surfaced. A week later, Egan finally told Brett he could no longer serve as a priest. In mid-1997 a jury decided the diocese had breached its duty by not warning Martinelli of the priest's predilections and awarded him nearly $1 million. An appeals court overturned the award, and the case was later settled for an undisclosed amount.

    Today Brett is on the run and still officially a priest, despite pleas to defrock him. Egan, now Cardinal and Archbishop of New York and perhaps the pre-eminent prelate in the U.S., is under heavy fire to explain his handling not just of Brett but of other pending cases of priests whose abuses he allegedly hushed up while in Bridgeport. For Martinelli, there's still no solace. He would, he says, have settled for nothing in cash if he just could have got a public apology.

    Thousands of Frank Martinellis and hundreds of Father Bretts cast a dark shadow over the Roman Catholic Church – and so have the U.S. bishops who let the crimes fester. The crisis gathers steam day after day, with perhaps 2,000 priests accused of abuse across the country and hot lines jamming with more victims' calls. It is not just what Boston's Bernard Cardinal Law called "a tragic error" but a spiritual and financial body blow to church authority as well, demoralizing to every man who wears a Roman collar. Lives have been hurt, trust damaged and the credibility of the church to speak on social issues tainted.

    How long does it take powerful institutions to learn that it's not just the crime, it's also the cover-up that damns you? The Roman Catholic Church kept silent for decades about the immoral, even criminal betrayal of its children...

    As the Roman Catholic faithful in America are bidden to rejoice that a risen Christ will save their souls, they now want to hear how their church is going to save itself.
    ________________________

    Time magazine

  • Pathofthorns
    Pathofthorns

    I don't believe it is a fair to say what happened in the Catholic Church is the same as what goes on among JWs.

    The Catholic Church knew these men were guilty. They had multiple accusations and even confessions and yet did nothing. I do not believe for a second that if a JW congregation knew beyond a shadow of a doubt and there were several people coming forward that they were molested by an individual that they would allow someone sactuary in their religion.

    The problem JWs deal with, along with every other organization and society in general is when one individual comes forward with an accusation and the accused denies it. When there is no evidence, what are we to do?

    I hope each of these Catholic victims is able to nail the church in their pocketbooks, just like I hope the same for JW victims if any elder ever covered for a known molester.

    Path

  • pamkw
    pamkw

    Path,

    Elders in congregations do know what is happening, and they do nothing. My sisters and I were molested by my new babtized step father, and the elders blamed us, and our mother. And then told my mother that Jehovah hates divorces, so she could not leave him. After all he never had real sex with us, no matter what else he did.

    There is all kinds of abuse in the wt. Wife beatings, child abuse, sexual abuse, and no one does anything. After all men pretty much get away with what ever they want in the cong. The jws are no better than the any other religion. They are just better at hiding it.

    as far as one person against the other, you error on the side of keeping children save. Do what the public schools do, if there is even a hint of abuse you turn it in. If after an investigation, there is no substance to it, then good. But if there is truth to it, then one more child is saved from a horrible experience.

    the wt lies and says that its people never do anything wrong, that they only love each other. That is the biggest lie of all.

    Pam

  • Pathofthorns
    Pathofthorns

    I am sorry for what happened to you Pam. I don't want to minimize it in any way. I agree bad things go on in the WT world and there are incompetent elders.

    There are many things I wish to write on this subject, but I think it best to wait until a better time.

    I too am frustrated by how things work in this religion and the damage they have caused to people. While I am still unconvinced on the molestation issue, I am thoroughly convinced on many others and would like to see people freed from the pain they have caused.

    I wish you all the best.

    Path

  • bigboi
    bigboi

    Nope. The Catholic Church has always been plaqued by sexual sins. Especially so in the case of priests. This has been going on for centuries. That is unfortunately the fruit of forced sexual repression.

    ONE....

    bigboi

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