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      Religious Life Without 
      Integrity
      The Sexual Abuse Crisis in 
      the Catholic Church
      By Barry M Coldrey 
       
 20: SYMPATHY FOR THE CHURCHThe reader who has been prepared to wade thus 
      far will have gathered that this exploration tends to place the 
      institutional church/churchmen in a pejorative light. The tone is 
      criticial — consistently so, and the reason is plain, the church i.e. 
      churchmen and church leaders have done the wrong thing or made the 
      inadequate response. Therefore they are criticised. On this issue, the 
      church has been so often in the wrong. However, is there any heading under which one 
      can sympathise with the harassed churchman in the turbulent world of the 
      1990s, as the church and some of its religious congregations are pounded 
      by unsavoury revelations and grim media scrutiny? There are a few. Many churchmen who have to 
      respond to these allegations are (only) men of ordinary ability who have 
      spent long years outside the mainstream of society in seminaries, church 
      schools, parishes and diocesan offices. They did not enter religion to 
      deal with the secular-protestant middle class society where law, public 
      life, media and the tertiary education world intersect. They are often out of their depth in unfamiliar 
      territory. Intelligent, yes !; tertiary-trained, normally ! but often less 
      intelligent and less trained and much less experienced than the men with 
      whom they must deal in legal affairs, media and the secular-protestant 
      middle class world generally. On the other hand, such churchmen bishops, 
      diocesan staff, school principals have to deal with many ordinary 
      Christians, people in trouble, even in meltdown - men and women with less 
      intelligence, less education and less training than they have themselves. 
      Much less. They are under pressure to keep the church 
      services functioning. Therefore, they cannot practically and decently, 
      accept readily any allegations about other clergy members who come to 
      them...and some of the flock can be so disorganised, muddled, irrational 
      and silly. Moreover, many ordinary parishioners have 
      levels of knowledge fixated at gossip, 'pub talk', anecdote, reminiscence 
      and scatalogical stories. In some areas they may have only vague ideas on 
      sexual abuse except in the extreme situations. An investigation into the 
      Anglican diocese of Tasmania, Australia found that 'abuse' could cover 
      much behaviour which is certainly not legally relevant. It is clear from the submissions that the 
      phrase 'sexual abuse' or 'sexual misconduct' is seen to cover a wide 
      variety of behaviour. It includes physical contact from the person in the 
      ministerial role, such as sexual touch and apparent accidental touching or 
      brushing up against sexual areas of the body; tickling and playful 
      aggression which is uncomfortable to the parishioner. The examples of this 
      include a variety of sexual contacts ranging from the giving of 
      inappropriate gifts, a prolonged hug, pressing against the parishioner's 
      body when hugging, kissing on the lips and sexual intercourse. The conduct 
      encompasses verbal behaviour initiated by the minister, example of which 
      include: sexual talk or innuendo, suggestive comments, tales of sexual 
      exploits or experiences, questions about the parishioner's sexual 
      relationship and the seeking of sympathy for problems occurring in the 
      minister's own relationship with spouse or partner. Crowley, M. and Kohl, 
      T. 'Not the Way of Christ': The Report of the Independent Pastoral 
      Inquiry into Sexual Misconduct by Clergy or Officers of the Anglican 
      Diocese of Tasmania with particular reference to Paedophilia, March 
      1998, p. 21   Perhaps a hypothetical example might help to 
      understand the point being made: 'It is Tuesday morning and 'Mgr. John Carroll' 
      V G, (Ph D) is sitting down to his crowded desk, the day expanding before 
      him: a morning at the paper-leaded coalface; lunch with the bishop; a 
      reception at the Town Hall at five; a meeting of the Episcopal Committee 
      for Peace and Inter-Faith Brotherhood at 8 p.m; a thoroughly normal busy 
      day. There is just time for a glance at The 
      Age (Melbourne, Australia) and an agitated secretary walks in: 
      '...a middle-aged woman and her daughter are in the parlour...it is one of 
      those sexual abuse things...girl weeping...'Father Morrie Battler'. There 
      goes the morning and the day realises the Vicar-General. 'What the hell 
      has 'Morrie' been up to ?' He goes to the parlour...the mother talks 
      angrily; the 24 year-old woman sobs...'That Father Battler ! What he did 
      to my daughter ! He should be castrated.' The V-G thinks she is referring 
      to something that happened yesterday, this week, recently...he asks, but 
      no, she is referring to something seven years ago (or seventeen or 
      twenty-seven) when 'Mollie', the sobbing daughter,was just seventeen or 
      seven. The Vicar gapes ... seven years ago! Why the 
      hell come now ? Why today? It will be only one person's word against 
      another! Why are people so crazy? The mother has an answer...not a true 
      answer, but an answer... (the girl keeps sobbing). In fact, unbeknown to the Vicar-General, 'Uncle 
      Harry' called over the weekend and the family talk turned to 'them priests 
      who can't keep their trousers on and the chance for ordinary decent people 
      to make a few $$$$$$$ out of the bastards' and this advice prompted mother 
      and daughter to pluck up courage to front the church 
      authorities. 'Yes ...' the V-G thinks, 'so the girl was 
      17...no virgin, I'll bet' Enough, the story could be developed 
      indefinitely ... but the point is that many people with whom church 
      authorities have to deal act on the spur of the moment, for low motives 
      and appear silly and irrational to the well-educated, well-organised sort 
      of person. They are hard to take 100% seriously. The problem is that such people are also 
      citizens of the secular state with the same right and duties as the 
      Vicar-General - and in Christian terms are also redeemed and loved by God 
      as is the Vicar-General (to an advanced degree !!!)  
       
 Something of the above syndrome may be 
      operating in the recent charging of Monsignor James Murray, Parish Priest 
      of St Mary's, Geelong, Victoria with indecently sexually assaulting three 
      times in six months a woman in her (then) twenties, a woman whom he did 
      know well. The events are alleged to have happened 26 years ago. The 
      following is from a newspaper columnist: he questions the police decision 
      to lay charges in such a case 26 years after the event. (Bolt, A. 'The 
      case of Monsignor James Murray', Herald Sun, 5 August 1999, 
      p. 15) 'There is the difficulty of proving an alibi 
      twenty-six years after the event. Or of proving the accuser's state of 
      mind at the time, to explain why she might have misinterpreted or 
      exaggerated an accidental contact. Nor could a man prove easily his 
      accuser had had other stresses which might have caused the hurt she now 
      blames on the alleged assault.  
       
 Malicious (or Idiot) Accusations against 
      Priests/BrothersArchbishop John Ward of Cardiff has publicly 
      forgiven the woman who accused him of sexually abusing her when she was a 
      child. In a statement read before his homily at the Charism Mass in St 
      David's Cathedral, Cardiff on Maundy Thursday, Archbishop Ward said: 'I am 
      nothing as a Christian, religious, priest and bishop if I cannot forgive. 
      This has not been easy, especially given the pain and anxiety caused to so 
      many people.' He added that he was looking forward to resuming and 
      continuing his full ministry. The archbishop, who was applauded by the 
      congregation as he processed into the cathedral, had been the subject of a 
      police investigation after a woman had alleged he sexually abused her when 
      he was a parish priest in Peckham, south London, in the early 1960s. 
      Archbishop Ward was never charged with any offence and on 24 March the 
      Crown Prosecution Service recommended that the investigation should be 
      dropped for lack of evidence. ('Archbishop forgives his accuser', 
      The Tablet, 17 April 1999, p. 541)  
       
 Professional InvestigationsAt this point, some religious leader may say 
      (or scream): how do you know whether Father X or Brother Y is living 
      grossly at variance with his religious commitment ? It maybe granted that 
      Father X is seen regularly pairing with Sr Mary Begonia but so what 
      ? - or Father X is the subject of endless rumours around the parish — and 
      beyond — over the 'cousins' or cousins he has staying regularly at the 
      parish house, but who is to say that anything untoward is occurring 
      ? This is written — 15 December 1999 — and the 
      revised document 'Integrity in Ministry' has been made widely 
      available to priests, Religious, the laity and the media for some time. 
      General impressions are favourable. However, this writer noticed that there was 
      nothing by way of the need for investigation on occasion to find the truth 
      where rumours and/or unsigned allegations coalesce to focus on one priest, 
      Brother or church worker. Investigation, leading to the truth, can 
      liberate as well as provide the evidence by which a priest or 
      Brother is confronted with the reality of his unsatisfactory 
      conduct. Religious Congregations and Bishops require the 
      capacity for professional investigation to find the truth where rumours 
      swirl around a colleague - or where his external conduct over a period 
      gives reasonable cause that all is not as it should be. Over the last two months, Providence provided 
      the writer with a classic case how an investigation should NOT be 
      conducted. The writer sensed that he was the subject of a ridiculous, 
      amateur investigation by certain older Catholic men, whether coming 
      from the Knight of the Southern Cross, Catenians, St Vincent de Paul 
      Society, National Civic Council or whatever. He was not being followed in the street, but 
      individuals — looking out of place — were hanging around the writer at the 
      Melbourne Cricket Ground, a professional Institute, or a (very 
      respectable) youth leadership foundation...and the individuals were not 
      merely investigating, but evesdropping, spreading lies, attempting 
      pathetic entrapment schemes. All members of the Province Leadership Team 
      were simultaneously confronted with what was occurring and while nothing 
      was admitted the "investigators" within a few days appeared to be backing 
      off and looking very foolish. However, may we draw good out of evil and sense 
      out of this silliness. (My "party joke" among secular friends is that "I'm 
      one of the few virgins among the "celibates" in the Archdiocese of 
      Melbourne"... followed by (universal) laughter and then a suggestion that 
      despite its troubles, the situation is not quite that unsatisfactory in 
      the Archdiocese of Melbourne) What the above showed was that amateur 
      investigations (complete with rumour-mongering and entrapment efforts) are 
      nonsense. However, investigation maybe necessary and therefore it has to 
      be professional investigation. Professional investigation may cost money but 
      the process implies discretion, secrecy, registration, code of practice, 
      written reports, accountability — and payment. It may have been too harrowing to discuss 
      investigation in Integrity in Ministry, but without the 
      capacity to move to abort problems.  
       
 Bad media publicity: does it matter 
      ?During the last ten years, the Catholic Church 
      in many Western English-speaking countries has had something of a 
      battering over the child abuse scandals and related matters which vary 
      from country to country. However, life goes on. Priests and Brothers 
      wear civies, their public reputations (collectively) are downsized, but 
      life does indeed go on. One thinks of the childhood refrain of many years 
      ago: 'Sticks and stones....' It is the point-of-view here that bad 
      publicity does matter, when linked to the issues of scandal and clerical 
      hypocrisy which have been mentioned already. An example may assist in 
      understanding the point made. Consider the post-World War II 'church of 
      silence' in many communist countries of Eastern Europe: the church was 
      attacked regularly in the state-controlled media, but committed Christians 
      and many ordinary citizens would take the state - controlled media with a 
      'pinch of salt', because the media was state-propaganda. In major Catholic 
      countries, the church probably lost nothing from media 
      criticism. However, the situation has not been this way in 
      the English-speaking world since 1985. The reason is clear: in spite of 
      exaggerations, the plain fact is that many priests, Brothers and church 
      workers have done the wrong thing; and church authorities have often done 
      the wrong thing in trying to cover up the infidelities of the 
      past. Hence the media exposes, substantially 
      accurate, have the effect of giving scandal to the work of the 
      church.  
       
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