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Related: About this forumThe Catholic church is still making excuses for paedophilia
Source: The Observer
The Catholic church is still making excuses for paedophilia
Cardinals around the world are joining the pope at a forum on tackling abuse. But only radical reform can solve the crisis
Peter Stanford
Sun 17 Feb 2019 07.00 GMT Last modified on Sun 17 Feb 2019 07.34 GMT
When the first meeting in the Vatican of cardinals from around the world to discuss clerical sexual abuse was announced, hopes were high among Catholics. Finally, it seemed, the courageous, mould-breaking Pope Francis was going to force through root-and-branch reforms to tackle the scandal that has done such damage to the reputation of the institution he leads.
Yet even before 180 cardinals assemble on Thursday in Rome for this unprecedented four-day summit, the chance of such prayers being answered is looking increasingly remote. The Vatican press office has been downplaying the event as simply an opportunity to remind senior clerics of the patchy efforts that global Catholicism has made this past quarter of a century to address the thousands upon thousands of cases of priests molesting, abusing and traumatising children in their care.
To be fair, a reminder is no bad thing, since there is a long list of bishops around the globe who still make negative headlines because they refuse to take this crisis seriously, and put protecting the institution before the victims of predator priests.
Even in the Vatican itself, the powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith has refused a very basic request from the Commission for the Protection of Minors, set up by Francis in 2014, to send a letter acknowledging receipt of every new report of abuse that reaches it.
There is so much that the summit could insist be done better, but it will require the pope to come out fighting. And on that score, the omens are not good. On his return flight from his latest overseas trip to a World Youth Day gathering in Panama at the end of last month Francis offered scant encouragement. The problem of abuse will continue, he told reporters, as if it were as inevitable as the sunrise. It is a human problem.
-snip-
Cardinals around the world are joining the pope at a forum on tackling abuse. But only radical reform can solve the crisis
Peter Stanford
Sun 17 Feb 2019 07.00 GMT Last modified on Sun 17 Feb 2019 07.34 GMT
When the first meeting in the Vatican of cardinals from around the world to discuss clerical sexual abuse was announced, hopes were high among Catholics. Finally, it seemed, the courageous, mould-breaking Pope Francis was going to force through root-and-branch reforms to tackle the scandal that has done such damage to the reputation of the institution he leads.
Yet even before 180 cardinals assemble on Thursday in Rome for this unprecedented four-day summit, the chance of such prayers being answered is looking increasingly remote. The Vatican press office has been downplaying the event as simply an opportunity to remind senior clerics of the patchy efforts that global Catholicism has made this past quarter of a century to address the thousands upon thousands of cases of priests molesting, abusing and traumatising children in their care.
To be fair, a reminder is no bad thing, since there is a long list of bishops around the globe who still make negative headlines because they refuse to take this crisis seriously, and put protecting the institution before the victims of predator priests.
Even in the Vatican itself, the powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith has refused a very basic request from the Commission for the Protection of Minors, set up by Francis in 2014, to send a letter acknowledging receipt of every new report of abuse that reaches it.
There is so much that the summit could insist be done better, but it will require the pope to come out fighting. And on that score, the omens are not good. On his return flight from his latest overseas trip to a World Youth Day gathering in Panama at the end of last month Francis offered scant encouragement. The problem of abuse will continue, he told reporters, as if it were as inevitable as the sunrise. It is a human problem.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/feb/17/catholic-church-still-making-excuses-paedophilia-pope
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The Catholic church is still making excuses for paedophilia (Original Post)
Eugene
Feb 2019
OP
PJMcK
(22,886 posts)1. They know who the abusers are
The Churchs corruption is institutional and will not change until fundamental reforms are implemented.
dlk
(12,364 posts)2. It's About Maintaining Strong Centralized Control and Maintaining the Patriarchy
They are looking for a workaround when addressing the rampant sexual abuse--how to address the problem and not cede any control.
Me.
(35,454 posts)3. It's All About The Money