Pope sees sex scandal as greatest threat to church

The priests and bishops that have resigned from the Church are just the tip of the iceberg. We’re talking about a couple of dozen individuals in total, and the Catholic Church employs thousands upon thousands of clergymen throughout the world. Based on my research, there are over 400,000 priests worldwide, in addition to deacons, bishops, cardinals, etc. If only 1 percent of these individuals (an EXTREMELY conservative number) is a sex offender or otherwise physically abuses children, we’re talking an absolute minimum of 4000 clergymen that need to be removed from the Church. And again, that is an extremely conservative number, certainly more than 1 in 100 of the men employed by the Church are mal-adjusted individuals. Church doctrine, whether by design or misfortune, solicits misfits into their ranks. Ask yourself this question: What normal individual (man) would be interested in a reclusive life of  prayer and celibacy?

Nevertheless, in truth none of this really matters. I have many friends and acquaintances who are Catholic, and they are all indifferent to the Church’s sex scandal. Their grandparents were raised Catholic as were their parents, as they were, and so are their children. Even with all the kinks in the religious chain, it is almost impossible for people to break free from its shackles. Religion is engraved in people’s psyche, and Catholics will therefore continue to send their children to Catholic schools and churches. People always believe that bad things only happen to “others.” TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press Writer Nicole Winfield, Associated Press Writer

LISBON, Portugal – The clerical abuse scandal represents the greatest threat to the Roman Catholic Church and the crisis was “born from sins within the church” not outside, Pope Benedict XVI said Tuesday on a trip to Portugal.

He called for profound purification and penance within the church as well as pardon and justice.

In some of his strongest comments to date, Benedict said the Catholic church had always suffered from internal problems but that “today we see it in a truly terrifying way.”

“The greatest persecution of the church doesn’t come from enemies on the outside but is born from the sin within the church,” the pontiff said. “The church needs to profoundly relearn penitence, accept purification, learn forgiveness but also justice.”

Benedict was responding to journalists’ questions, submitted in advance, aboard the papal plane while en route to Portugal, where he began a four-day visit Tuesday.

His comments appeared to repudiate the Vatican’s initial response to the scandal, in which it blamed the media as well as pro-choice and pro-gay marriage advocates for mounting a campaign against the church and the pope in particular.

Since then, however, Benedict has called for penance and promised the church would take action to protect children and make abusive priests face justice.

As far as the church’s purification is concerned, Benedict has already been cleaning house, accepting the resignations of a few bishops in recent weeks who either admitted they sexually abused youngsters or covered up for priests who did.

Just last week, the pope took control of the conservative Legionaries of Christ order after it was discredited by revelations that its founder fathered at least one child and sexually abused young seminarians.

More bishop resignations have been tendered and the Vatican official in charge of handling sex abuse cases has said he would not be surprised if the pope asks for more.

While the abuse scandal greatly overshadowed the pope’s press conference, Portugal has not experienced the wave of priest abuse claims that have emerged in other European countries, including the pontiff’s native Germany, as well as Austria, Belgium and Ireland among others.

Portugal, however, is undergoing the same problems that other European nations are experiencing in terms of a financial crisis.

Portugal’s economic growth has been pedestrian for years, averaging less than 1 percent between 2001-2008, and the global downturn brought a steep contraction of 2.7 percent last year. A three-year austerity plan to ease the country’s crippling debt load is expected to bring greater hardship to a people already feeling the pinch.

The pope said the fiscal crisis demonstrated the need for “moral responsibility” in the economics sphere and noted that he outlined his vision for a more ethical financial system in his 2009 encyclical “Charity in Truth.”

___

Associated Press Writer Barry Hatton in Lisbon contributed to this report.

About The Great One

Am interested in science and philosophy as well as sports; cycling and tennis. Enjoy reading, writing, playing chess, collecting Spyderco knives and fountain pens.
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