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- <text id=93TT1992>
- <title>
- July 05, 1993: Sex and the Single Priest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 05, 1993 Hitting Back At Terrorists
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 48
- Sex and the Single Priest
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The clerical calling has been sullied by scandal, but what is
- the church willing to do to reform?
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD N. OSTLING--With reporting Adam Biegel/Atlanta and John Moody/Rome
- </p>
- <p> For he who gives scandal, it would be better to have a great
- millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths
- of the sea."
- </p>
- <p> The message thundered out of the Vatican with the force of the
- Gospel from which it was taken. "How severe are Christ's words,"
- wrote the Pope in a letter released last week to America's bishops;
- "how great must be that evil." After years in which the Vatican
- downplayed the sex scandals that have plagued the Roman Catholic
- Church in the U.S., John Paul II publicly acknowledged the enormity
- of the problem. Indeed, the bishops, who have long petitioned
- Rome for special disciplinary powers to deal with the crisis,
- are deeply aware of its dimensions. In June the hierarchy had
- to elect a new national secretary to replace New Mexico's Robert
- Sanchez, the Archbishop of Santa Fe, who resigned from the post
- and his see amid revelations that he had conducted affairs with
- three young women.
- </p>
- <p> The scandals--ranging from clandestine liaisons with adult
- parishioners to clerical pedophilia--have focused fresh attention
- on the life of the Catholic priest and turned him into a suspect
- figure in many eyes. Says Monsignor Edwin O'Brien, rector of
- the North American Pontifical College in Rome: "A priest would
- have to be out of his mind now to touch a kid, even if it's
- just to pat him on the head or tap him on the shoulder." The
- scandals are forcing the American clergy--and, ever so reluctantly,
- the Vatican--to examine the nature and tradition of the priesthood.
- But what can be done? And how much reform is the church willing
- to undertake?
- </p>
- <p> Among young American seminarians in Rome, a sense of siege has
- set in. "Our eroticized society degrades us, and somehow that
- eroticism invades our lives no matter how we fight it," says
- Enrique Lopez, 28, a New Mexico native who knew Archbishop Sanchez
- and who is training to be a diocesan priest. "If Sanchez had
- been embezzling money or something like that, it would have
- been a scandal. But because he was involved in a sex scandal,
- it touched his dignity. I don't think that's fair." Says Lopez's
- fellow seminarian John Riccardo, 28, of Detroit: "How can you
- give up sex? It's such a central value in our society. What
- we're doing is weird; why deny it? But it's wrong to assume
- that because I'm doing this weird thing, I must be weird. People
- figure either I'm not a man because I don't want sex or I'm
- a superman because I can give it up. Both of these are lies.
- The temptations are all there, every day, all the time. The
- key to celibacy is prayer."
- </p>
- <p> For some advocates of change, however, the key to reform is
- dropping the 870-year-old tradition of priestly celibacy. "If
- someone really has a true call to a celibate vocation, God bless
- it," says Eugene Bianchi, an ex-Jesuit priest who currently
- teaches religion at Emory University. "But I think those kinds
- of persons are far fewer than the priests we have." Mandatory
- celibacy, Bianchi contends, encourages sexual immorality, which
- is symptomatic of larger structural problems in what he calls
- a "monarchical, absolutist" church: "The celibate clerical system
- is collapsing, and it is not going to be regenerated."
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, the National Office of Black Catholics, a Washington-based
- advocacy group that grew out of the civil rights movement, issued
- a plea to the Pope to make celibacy optional, to allow more
- Catholics to serve as priests and to help prevent further scandals.
- "We suspect that these publicized stories are only the tip of
- the iceberg," said the document. Some experts insist that celibacy
- is already a mirage. On the basis of work with numerous priestly
- patients, A.W. Richard Sipe, a former Benedictine monk and psychotherapist,
- estimates that only half the clergy obey the rule. Priest-sociologist
- Andrew Greeley believes the number of obedient priests is far
- greater than that, though he once conducted a poll that showed
- a majority of American priests favoring optional celibacy.
- </p>
- <p> Reforming celibacy, however, may not be enough to weed out pedophiles
- among the clerical ranks. The church's role as the dispenser
- of forgiveness has hampered and may continue to intrude on its
- ability to deal with the problem. Says a church official in
- Rome: "When a man comes in either admitting to or accused of
- inappropriate behavior, what can you do? You can listen to what
- he has to say and try to make a determination about what happened,
- why it happened and if it's likely to happen again. Often he
- is contrite, bewildered and offers all the requisite assurances
- that it won't ever happen again. What do you do at that point?
- You forgive, and you hope that it won't happen again. Unfortunately,
- what we're learning from scientific research is that pedophilia
- is a recidivist activity, so it probably will happen again."
- </p>
- <p> Would-be seminarians now undergo extensive psychological testing,
- but, says O'Brien, "like alcoholics, pedophiles can hide their
- behavior from almost anyone and even convince themselves that
- they've overcome it. But unless they're counseled adequately,
- at some time they'll slip, they'll find a way to indulge their
- behavior."
- </p>
- <p> The Pope's pronouncements emphasized to the bishops that Article
- 1395 of the Code of Canon Law permits pedophile priests to be
- defrocked. But that legal instrument has always been available--and at times its implementation has been hindered by the
- conflict between a desire to take action against suspected offenders
- and the need to protect their rights. In March, for example,
- the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette revealed that the Vatican's highest
- court, the Apostolic Segnatura, had overridden Bishop Donald
- Wuerl's disciplinary actions in the case of Father Anthony Cipolla,
- who faced child-molesting charges in civil court. Wuerl had
- suspended the priest pending a verdict.
- </p>
- <p> While the Vatican clearly recognizes the damage done by the
- sex scandals, it believes the problem is a limited, if not distinctly
- American, one. One bishop who recently visited Rome noted that
- "the United States is a very sexual society." And one with a
- special talent for the propagation of scandal. In his letter
- John Paul bluntly criticized the U.S. media, charging them with
- making matters worse by their treatment of the problem. "Evil
- can indeed be sensational, but the sensationalism surrounding
- it is always dangerous for morality." The licentiousness of
- the secular world is another scapegoat. Last week Joaquin Navarro-Valls,
- the Vatican's chief spokesman, said, "One would have to ask
- if the real culprit is not a society that is irresponsibly permissive,
- hyperinflated with sexuality [and] capable of creating circumstances
- that induce even people who have received a solid moral formation
- to commit grave moral acts."
- </p>
- <p> The Pontiff has directed bishops "not to lose heart" or create
- a "climate of discouragement" around celibacy. He also reinforced
- church adherence to the rule of celibacy in his Holy Thursday
- missive to the world's priests, saying "Jesus Christ is the
- same yesterday and today and forever." As for the sinners among
- the ranks, many church officials feel they have little choice
- but to forgive. Says a Vatican official: "We'd all be in a mess
- if we couldn't be forgiven." However, for the women and children
- who have suffered, forgiveness is not only not divine, it is
- certainly not enough.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-