|
Spoils
of the Kingdom:
Clergy
Misconduct and Social Exchange in Religious Life
The University of
Illinois Press, 2006
Anson
Shupe
A
Review by A.W. Richard
Sipe
Rightly it can be taken for granted that communities of faith
seek integrity. At the same time we have to admit that the
history of religions is peppered with misconduct, malfeasance,
crime, and corruption of its elite—its clergy and leaders.
The
beginning of the 21st century is no exception. In
fact, the sexual abuse crisis pounding the Roman Catholic Church
provides for examination, a textbook for case studies of clergy
misconduct. Although there is no monopoly on clergy misconduct
in any one religion, the spotlight on Catholic clergy can serve
all faith communities because of the extent of revealed abuse
and the long history of alternating corruption and reform
recorded in Roman Catholic documents (Doyle, Sipe, & Wall,
2004). The depth of the investigation into clergy malfeasance
now in progress has not been equaled since the Protestant
Reformation.
Every faith community already owes Anson
Shupe a debt of gratitude for his analysis of their
structure of conflict and reform in his classic book In the
Name of All That's Holy: A Theory of Clergy Malfeasance
(1995). There he distinguished the power structure of
churches into hierarchical, that is
episcopal, presbyterian, and
congregational, that is those of more egalitarian make up. He
analyzed how each of the three deal with clergy misconduct and
what resources each has for correction and reform. Each
possesses its particular advantages and limitations in its
capacity for organizational response.
In
this volume Shupe continues his
service to religion and faith communities. Here he focuses on
the function and culture of faith communities. In
the process of asking the difficult strategic questions he
performs a biopsy on the American body-religious and he
diagnoses a cancer. All accurate diagnoses are gifts because
understanding provides a possibility toward intervention,
treatment, and healing.
The
contribution of this book is significant both theoretically and
practically. He poses questions that bring together resources
from sociology, criminology, and religion into a mutually
beneficial working relationship. As he says, "For too long
criminology has ignored organized religion as a major source of
white-collar and corporate crime, and in complementary fashion
religion has shirked from examining its own underbelly." I can
attest to the practical importance of
Shupe's work from the vantage of an expert witness and
consultant in more than 200 civil and criminal cases of sexual
abuse of minors by Catholic priests.
Shupe's
analysis is distinctly sociological. He challenges the reader to
understand why and how such (criminal) behaviors are able to
occur in religious organizations. Clerical elites, not only in
the Catholic Church, consistently try to reduce problems to the
"psychological motives of greedy, weak, or sick personalities.
Clergy malfeasance occurs in a systematic, or structured,
context and is not merely the result of s 'few bad apples in the
barrel,' however discomforting that thought is to any religious
apologists or believers."
Pregnant questions, even disquieting questions must necessarily
be posed to understand the systemic character of religious
groups. But crucial questions are often resisted and rejected,
even when the stakes for restoring integrity to a faith
community are monumental. Why do men and women of faith and
integrity rally behind leaders and clergy who prove to be
unquestionably guilty of misconduct or even crime? Why does the
mass of a faith community remain silent even when it has
awareness and even incontrovertible evidence of clergy misdeeds?
Why do some communities ostracize the whistleblower? How do
faith communities conspire to conceal malfeasance? Why do some
faith communities fragment and others
do not when the misdeeds of a religious leader come to light?
These are the vital questions that Shupe
boldly faces.
Clergy misconduct has always centered on three issues: power,
money and sex. The first Christian church's
synodal records from Elvira in 309
CE deal extensively with clergy malfeasance (Laeuchli,
1972). Power, sexuality and control over ecclesiastical property
were of great concern to the synod fathers. This trend in the
struggles to establish celibacy as a centerpiece of the Roman
Catholic clerical elite (Le Don) has continued throughout
the centuries.
These three areas of concern—power, money and sex—dominate canon
laws and predominate as concerns in church councils. These are
the main areas of concern and clergy malfeasance in the 21st
as well as the 4th century.
In
the first chapter of this book Shupe
does not exaggerate the scope of the current crisis of clergy
malfeasance in faith communities generally, and particularly in
the Roman Catholic Church in America. Although the current
concerns for integrity in faith communities are perennial, the
media (including the Internet), victims' movements, Grand Jury
reports, criminal and civil cases against ecclesiastical
entities, and public outrage at the behaviors of bishops and
other church elites are being spotlighted for careful
examination, as never before. What are the dynamics of clergy
misconduct and institutional complicity?
Shupe's analysis and insights into the dynamics of clergy
malfeasance and his use of social science are crucial to
understanding the current phenomena.
Roman Catholics form the largest Christian denomination in the
United States (66 million). The clerics who rule it form a
relatively small group. [In 2004, fewer than 43,000 priests and
bishops—only 20,000 active diocesan priests; 9,000 are retired
or inactive & 14,772 religious
priests, i.e. those who belong to Orders such as Jesuits,
Benedictines, Dominicans, etc.]
The Mormon Church and the Catholic Church are examples
of religious systems at the top end of a hierarchical spectrum.
The Catholic Church maintains a monarchical structure. The Pope
in Rome ultimately controls the structure and religious
discipline of the organization. He also appoints every bishop,
but each bishop has autonomous control within his territory
called a diocese. His ecclesiastical authority extends over
Catholic priests, religious institutions, and lay people within
his territory.
The clerical system of the Catholic Church is
homosocial. Only celibate males can
qualify for any ecclesiastical position of authority within the
system. All priests and bishops are required to be celibate:
that is not married and promised to "perfect and perpetual
chastity." In practice this means no sexual activity of any kind
with self or others. (Canon 277)
Shupe's
second chapter is especially useful precisely because he does
not overburden the reader with an exhaustive exploration of
social exchange theory, but he does provide a workable primer. I
find his approach useful for my work since he takes a "pragmatic
epistemological triangulation of methods that appreciates
Post-Modernist suspicions of much social science but does not
throw the baby with the bath." He cites records of adjudicated
legal cases. He presumes, as I have experienced, that court
decisions and convictions, "reflect investigations and
thoughtful deliberations of judges and juries." He gives weight
to personal testimonies of victims that are frequently
circumstantially corroborated. And thirdly he respects media
investigations "that meet high evidentiary standards for legal
purposes."
Celibacy is Le Don, (The Gift) the basic social
exchange of the Catholic Church to its members. It is the core
of the social exchange between the hierarchy/clergy and the
members of the faith community that Shupe
speaks about in the second chapter of this book. The assurance
of the celibacy of Catholic clergy is exchanged for the trust,
respect, belief, support, obedience, and allegiance of the
faithful. They in turn receive comfort, forgiveness, and
salvation. In the Protestant ministry the gift is "servantship."
In the rabbinate the gift is scholarship and interpretation.
Shupe deals with multiple examples
of violation and betrayal of the exchange by clergy misconduct,
All "involve power inequities, conflict, emotional-physical
harm, and often crime."
The responsibility of the Catholic bishop to preserve
his flock from violation is clear. He is responsible for the
celibacy of his clergy. Because celibacy is essential for
ordination and priesthood, a priest who is ordained or assigned
to any parish or ministry in a diocese is by a bishop's
sponsorship de facto certified sexually safe to the
parishioners and the public.
There is no comparable system, religious or secular,
whose hierarchical and homogeneous character is so closely bound
with sex and power. Every priest is educated in a system that
follows the same standardized required curriculum. Every priest
is required to take the same doctrinal oath.
However, the violation of doctrine—heresy—is not the
major betrayal concern of Catholics today. Sexual abuse of
minors is. The Catholic Church's general knowledge of sexual
abuse of minors by clergy is well established and documented.
Multiple regulations were written and promulgated by the Vatican
in 1662, 1714, 1890, 1922, 1962, & 2002. (Cf. Documents of the
History of Clergy Sexual Abuse. Doyle, Sipe & Wall 2005)
Awareness of the problem of priests' and bishops' sexual
activity is not a recent phenomenon. The documents cited are
consistent in their acknowledgement of clerics that have sex
with minors and the existence and prevalence of other violations
of celibacy. It is clear that abuse has been a perennial
problem, not restricted to ancient history or of recent origin.
Clearly, sexual abuse by clergy has deep systemic roots.
Understanding the sociology of clergy malfeasance is of critical
importance for dealing with and solving this incessant religious
juggernaut.
A great deal is known within the Catholic clerical
system about the sexual activity of its clerics, but in the
social tradition of all hierarchical structures, knowledge of
misdeeds are kept shrouded in secrecy. When I completed a
25-year ethnographic study of Catholic clergy (1960-1985) I was
confident that 6% of Catholic priests involved themselves
sexually with minors. I published estimates of a range of
non-celibate behaviors and celibate achievement in 1990 under
the title, A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy
(Brunner/Mazel).
The Catholic Church like other religious systems has
produced and maintains a social construct that obviates external
and civil oversight as much as possible.
Shupe describes the essence of the construct when he
says, "Power, authority, and public reputation, balanced by
obedience, faith, and trust, are the sociological archetypes of
clergy malfeasance. They form the organizational and emotional
elements of the opportunity structures provided by religions."
The structure is a double-edged
sword—protective and at the same time an instrument of
possible self-destruction. Bishops, priests, and lay Catholics
are all subject to civil laws and authority in regard to sexual
behavior. The ecclesiastical structure crumbles or at least
trembles when external examination or exposure penetrates it.
The power of a Catholic bishop is extensive. When a
Vatican official was asked in 1994 why they had not been more
active in intervening in the abuse crisis in the US the reply
was swift and clear: "Rome cannot understand why the bishops
cannot control the press and the courts better!" Power is not
limited to the control of other institutions. As
Shupe points out "for believers in a
given tradition religious authority is a part of social reality
and represents a very real form of power—usually the more
ecclesiastical (hierarchical) the group the more powerful." The
concept of religious duress has substantiated this
reality in multiple legal cases of clergy sexual abuse.
Bishops and religious superiors in the United States
most commonly concealed the facts when they knew a priest abused
a child or minor. This concealment (pattern and practice)
extended to parishioners, other priests, and most certainly, law
enforcement. This practice is demonstrable at least from 1946
onward. The practice of neglecting violations has also been
firmly in place. This practice is not isolated or even created
by American bishops, but has its origin and sponsorship from the
Vatican that insists that "scandal" should be avoided at all
costs. Documents from 1959 demonstrate that dioceses were
employing secret procedures to deal with cases of sexual abuse.
As recently as May 20, 2002 a judge (P.Gianfranco Ghirlanda, S.J.) on the Roman Rota
(highest Vatican court) wrote in a Vatican approved periodical
that bishops should not report sexual violations to civil
authorities lest the image and authority of the Church be
compromised and victims harmed instead of being protected.
Governor Frank Keating, appointed in 2002 by the US Bishops'
Conference as chair of The National Review Board for the
Protection of Children and Young People to investigate sexual
abuse by Catholic bishops and priests, accused the hierarchy as
behaving like La Cosa Nostra.
Equally demonstrable is the practice of transferring an
offending priest from one parish to another, to another diocese
or to a foreign country. Correspondence between bishops who
exchanged offending priests, and other documents have made clear
the acceptability and frequency of this practice among bishops.
The awareness between bishops of transferring offending priests
was so well accepted that it could be a matter for open
communication between all bishops. A 1963 open letter
from one bishop to all the American bishops asked if
anyone was interested in giving ministerial employment to an
offending priest (treated for abusing minors) who could not be
reassigned in his own diocese.
Civil authorities, traditionally relatively indulgent
toward the "foibles" of all clergy, became increasingly
interested in the operation of the clerical system that denied
knowledge of abuse by its members, when blatantly clear data
proved the opposite. Lay people became outraged. Reports dated
September 1952, from a primary source of treatment for offending
clergy, the Servants of the Paraclete,
stated "Many bishops believe men are never free from the
approximate danger once they have begun [to abuse boys]." There
are records from 1963 reminding bishops of the serious civil
consequences of a priest's sexual behavior with minors, beyond
any spiritual damages. This facility (Jemez Springs), founded in
1947 had, by the late 50's and early 60's a clearly defined
"code" [#3] to identify priest sexual abusers.
Psychiatric hospitals were used as early as 1936 to deal
with sexually offending priests. The alliance between religion
and psychiatry was firmly established to treat deviant priests,
especially for alcoholism and sexual problems.
Clerical malfeasance and its destructive consequences
are not limited to individuals. Because victimization is a
social and systemic reality it affects five communities of faith
that Shupe considers: "the direct
victims themselves, and their sympathizers/advocates; the
perpetrators, and their elite protectors, and the larger
community, consisting of both congregant-beievers
and non believers."
Secrecy within the Catholic clerical system is the
corner stone of the social construct of clerical celibacy.
Celibacy is the capstone of clerical power. The power structure
of the Catholic clerical elite has done all that it could to
keep the abuse of minors and sexual activity by its members a
secret outside the system. This does not mean that clerical
sexuality is kept secret within the system.
Secrecy is an unwritten but clear code within the system
of the clergy elite. This group often extends its prerogative of
sacramental confessional confidentiality beyond law or reason to
include any material it wishes to keep secret to preserve its
image and at times for its convenience. A bishop responded, "I
only lie when I have to" when chided by a priest for denying
abuse that the bishop knew about. That modus
operendi and justification for
deception is common. This rationalization is often justified by
the traditional moral doctrine of Mental Reservation.
Literally this means that one does not have responsibility to
tell the truth to one who does not have a right to it. The
motivation to save the reputation of the church and the
priesthood from scandal has been paramount since the Protestant
Reformation. Caution about giving scandal is frequent in canon
law (29 times). The dictum "not to
give scandal" is impressed upon students in Catholic education
as early as the first grade.
Cardinals, the men who elect a Pope and form his most
powerful advisors, make a vow to the Pope to keep secret
anything confided to them that if revealed would cause harm or
dishonor to the church. ["I vow…not to reveal to anyone what
is confided to me in secret, nor to divulge what may bring harm
or dishonor to Holy Church"] That promise of secrecy forms a
template within the clerical system to keep internal scandalous
behavior under wraps, "for the good of the Church."
Despite that, highly placed Vatican and church officials
have confirmed knowledge of sexual activity by priests. Cardinal
Franjo Seper
said in 1971, "I am not at all optimistic that celibacy is in
fact being observed." Cardinal Jose Sanchez, head of the Vatican
Congregation for the Clergy said on TV, in 1993, when he was
confronted with documents stating that between 45% and 50% of
priests do not in fact practice celibacy, "I have no reason to
doubt the validity of those figures."
Erving Goffman outlined the
special system of communication in total institutions—prisons,
monasteries and mental hospitals (Asylums, 1961). Until now the
system of communication about sex within the Catholic clerical
system remained unexplored. Few sociologists have recognized
that the celibate clerical system is a circumscribed (total)
institution. Communication within it is unique. A clear pattern
of personal self-revelation even about sexual ideas,
temptations, and behavior is advised and practiced within
that clerical system. This is a power tool that keeps the
clerical elite in control. Primary modes of self-disclosure are
sacramental confession, manifestation of conscience, spiritual
direction, counseling, and communication between a cleric and
his bishop/superior and with other clerics.
Only material shared by a penitent in sacramental
confession strictly binds a confessor to absolute secrecy. I
contend that although the matter of confession is sacred, the
knowledge shared there does enter into the "unconscious"
awareness of the system and does have a profound effect on its
moral function. The penitent is not bound to keep secret what
he shared during the exchange. In fact, the penitent can even be
instructed as part of his penance to "make restitution," that is
to take certain actions to remedy or mend his offence.
Sexual violations by their nature are difficult to
substantiate because the actions are most commonly executed
without a third party observer. The means of determining the
facts of an allegation or the truth of denial are usually
derivative rather than direct. Priests who abuse frequently
instruct or threaten their victims to keep silent. Those threats
include warnings that the young person will go to hell, or that
he, she or parents will be harmed if the abuse is not kept
secret. Other means of insuring secrecy are by connecting the
abuse directly with a religious ritual.
Victims of abuse and their families are the heroes of
the currant drama playing out in America. They are the whistle
blowers that have fought gargantuan odds within and outside the
church to credibly accuse the clerical elite to account for its
malfeasance—hypocrisy.
The Catholic Church considers any sexual activity of a
priest or bishop sinful. The faithful consider it a scandal. It
is not, however, the sinfulness of clergy sex that has brought
Catholic clergy malfeasance to public attention, but the
criminal activity of priests with minors.
Most of the sexual activity of priests and bishops is
not contrary to the civil laws, namely, masturbation, cross
gender dressing, viewing some pornographic materials, etc. and
non-harassing consensual sexual activity with adult women and
men who are free of any power differential or psychic
vulnerability.
Bishops and priests are motivated to keep their own
sexual activity secret, or try at least to restrict knowledge to
as few confidants as possible. (I have found, however, that in
some clerical circles common knowledge of their sex life is
openly acknowledged and joked about.) The protective shroud of
secrecy that shields them is threatened if they are too active
in examining and exposing the behaviors of others, making reform
from the inside difficult.
Additionally, a significant proportion of priests
introduces candidates for the
priesthood to sex. In my experience and studies 10% of priests
report that they had some sexual contact with a priest or fellow
seminarian in the course of their studies. This is a prominent
fact in the histories of priests who abuse minors. This activity
also forms a basis for a network of priests aware of each
other's personal sexual proclivities, behaviors and past
activity. This network forms a formal and informal tangle of
control and blackmail. That very word has been used in
correspondence between bishops and the Vatican. All of these
avenues can and do provide pathways to the specific knowledge of
a priest's sexual actions and proclivities. All the time even a
general suspicion of sex within the clerical system is denied to
the outside.
The "iron law of clergy elitism" that
Shupe explicates in the third
chapter is a brilliant paradigm of the operation of the Catholic
hierarchical system where "political control of the many by the
few" is realized and maintained.
Church authority and priests have been dedicated to
preserve the image of the priesthood before the public and in
the minds of the faithful since it is a fundamental source of
power. That image is defined in the Catechism of the Council of
Trent. "Bishops and priests being, as they are, God's
interpreters and ambassadors, empowered in His name to teach
mankind the divine law and the rules of conduct, and holding, as
they do, His place on earth, it is evident that no nobler
function than theirs can be imagined. Justly, therefore, are
they called not only angels, but even gods, because of the fact
that they exercise in our midst the power and prerogatives of
the immortal God."
Betrayal by an authority that is believed to hold divine
power is hardly able to be absorbed by the believer and is
psychically overpowering to a developing youngster. The
resultant loss of faith and attendant trauma can be and often is
devastating in terms of inhibition and damage to all future
relationships.
When personal sexual betrayal is coupled with
institutional neglect, denial, attack, conspiracy to hide abuse,
protection of the abuser, and self justification, immeasurable
harm is inflicted on the victims, their families, the church
community and society at large. That damage is almost
irreparable.
In chapter four Shupe
analyses the loss of authenticity and the strategies used
to preserve clergy authority—normative, utilitarian and,
coercive. Whatever the variants of adaptation in the social
exchange between loyal or rebellious followers and clerical
miscreants, "the authenticity of any religion, denomination, or
local church is a gift from the lay believers to the
faith community, not an inherent possession leaders or something
given to community by them."
This is the commodity—authenticity—that the Catholic
Church in America is in the dire danger of loosing. In a 2004
survey sponsored by the University of Notre Dame, sociologists
Dean Hoge of Catholic University and
James Davidson of Purdue University found that 85% of Catholics
considered sexual abusive priests a major problem; 77% are
troubled about bishops who have not done enough to stop the
problem; and 62% thought that bishops are still covering up the
abuse scandal.
Shupe accurately identifies
the concept of reactance in relation to social exchange
issues applicable to the crisis of the Catholic Church. Now
exposed are: "how hierarchies and their religious authority
protects their agents; how victims are initially devalued in
favor of the institution and its agents; how various strategies
and tactics are implemented to contain scandals of clergy
malfeasance and revealed by moral entrepreneurial insiders and
outsiders; how victims and their advocated mobilize to seek
equity." The exposure to lay Catholics and the public of this
wide spread and profound knowledge of sexual activity by
Catholic priests within the clerical system has brought the
Church to an epic sociological confrontation. It cannot continue
with the social structure that has maintained it.
The revelation of clergy sexual abuse was the torch
light that signaled to the inside—the Catholic community
of faith—and the outside—the wider public audience—that
the Church's authenticity is questionable. The hierarchical
responses, predictable by Shupe's
critique of social exchange and the clergy elite, fanned the
flame by their denials. They fed the conflagration with the
revelation of their complicity, conspiracy to deceive, and cover
up of crime.
Religions lose their success (in sociological
terms) when they lose their domination. That is their
ability to "influence behavior, culture, and public policy in society." Shupe utilizes
Rodney Stark's definition of domination that he equates with his
own idea of authenticity: Both believe that two arenas of
authenticity and legitimacy are incumbent on churches: the
internal community,
comprised of believers and supporters; and the external
community of society at large. "Religious elites' successful
influence in any one community does not ensure their groups'
successful preservation of authenticity in the other. In the
long run an authentic religious community must maintain
some enduring balance with both."
The Catholic Church in America enjoyed a high degree of
"successful authenticity maintenance" from the 1930s to the
1980s. Internally, growth in membership, flourishing vocations
to the priesthood and religious life, growth of schools and
universities, and building programs were unparalleled.
Externally there was enough broad acceptance of Catholic
religion to entrust a Roman Catholic, John F. Kennedy, with the
presidency of the United States for the first time. The movies
of the 30s, 40s and 50s glorified priests like Father Flanagan
of Boys' Town. The most popular actors of the time—the likes of
Spencer Tracy, Edward G. Robinson, Carl Mauldin, Bing Crosby and
Frank
Sinatra—all played staring roles of attractive and heroic
priests. Bishop Fulton Sheen ran stiff competition to Milton
Berle in prime time TV.
All of internal and external image of authenticity that
placed the Catholic Church on Tier 1 of
Shupe's authenticity maintenance scale is gone. It is
currently no longer dominant because knowledge of sexual
activity once secret within the clerical
system, has become progressively more public and
undeniable. Le Don has been violated. The cap-stone of celibacy
that once merited trust now receives derision.
Under overwhelming pressure to save some semblance of
authenticity the US bishops' commissioned the John Jay College
of Criminal Justice in 2002 to conduct a study of sexual abuse
by Catholic priests. It released its report on February 27,
2004. The report states that 4,400 (4%) American priests over a
50-year period have been alleged abusers of minors and that
between 3% and 6% of priests do abuse. The researchers believe
that their figures of abuse are low because the activity is
under-reported.
Current figures for the Boston Archdiocese, one of the
best-studied areas, reveal that 7.6% of its priests had sexual
contact with minors during that period of time. The diocese of
New Hampshire records a rate of 8.2% abuse. Higher rates of
sexual abuse are not reserved to one region of the country. The
diocese of Tucson, Arizona had 25% of its active priests in 1986
as alleged abusers. Belleville, Illinois dismissed 10% of its
priests for sexual misconduct already in 1996. Between 2002 and
2004 an additional 700 active US priests have been relieved of
their ministerial duties because of alleged abuse of minors.
Fewer than 200 offending priests have been incarcerated for
their crimes, raising public indignation to an astronomical
level.
The Catholic elite combined—via the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops—established in June 2002 a
National Review Board to report on the "Crisis in the Catholic
Church in the United States." The report was delivered and made
public on February 27, 2004. The report was critical of church
authority, its continuing denial, its impulse to avoid scandal,
its defensiveness, and above all its secrecy.
The review board was specific: bishops, the church
elite, failed repeatedly to report incidents of possible crime
to civil authorities and discouraged victims and families from
reporting them. The report came close to acknowledging the
power/celibacy/secrecy triad of the clergy elite structure when
it wrote: "priests either explicitly or implicitly threatened to
reveal compromising information about a bishop if the bishop
took steps against the [abusive] priest." (p.111) And finally
the board pointed out the "overemphasis on secrecy" that guided
the bishops to neglect adequate investigation and oversight of
offences.
Although the board interviewed eighty-five individuals
including sociologists Dean Hoge and
Andrew Greeley before it wrote its report, the result it offers
is superficial. It touches on crisis problems and organizational
mistakes, but it leaves the structure of abuse firmly in place,
untouched by the benefit of any real sociological analysis so
available in Shupe's work.
There is no evidence that moral leadership from within
the clerical elite has spearheaded any of the current reviews of
clerical behaviors. In fact, overwhelming evidence exists about
past and present church resistance and obstruction of legitimate
investigation of illegal and destructive activity by clergy. The
major reason for interference and this lack of leadership is the
fear of further exposing the extent of secrecy and sexual
activity within the clerical system.
Obstructionism prevails over and above the scandal of
sexual abuse of minors. The twelve Grand juries empanelled so
far to investigate Catholic clergy malfeasance and the reports
published, clearly expose a pattern of neglecting proper
investigation, supervision, discipline, and failure to report
abusing priests to legitimate civil authority. Collusion to
intimidate victims and conspiracy to conceal abuse is also
prominent in the judgement of all
four reports so far made public. Reports conclude that Church
authorities themselves are not capable of dealing with
the problem of sexual abuse of minors by their clergy.
The most recent maneuver to obstruct a solution to the
sex abuse crisis was unveiled in Portland Oregon on July 12,
2004 when the Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy protection. This
action has monumental consequences—many of them unforeseen—for
the Catholic Church in America. Other church elites have
considered it and decided against it, but others are actively
pursuing the same path. The stratagem goes far beyond local
concern. The Office of the Justice Department in Washington D.C.
is taking an active interest in the case. The Catholic Church
can no longer slip beneath the radar of external scrutiny. The
financial books of the church are likely to be as revealing of
misdoing in the hands of an oversight bankruptcy judge as the
sexual records have been in hands of grand juries and
plaintiff's lawyers.
External oversight, self-reports, and mechanisms
established by the bishops in their 2002 Dallas meeting to
regulate abusing priests has impacted but not overturned
institutional secrecy. Church authority generally maintains its
reluctance to cooperate with legitimate civil authorities in
their investigations of abuse and those ultimately responsible
for abuse. Attorneys General and District Attorneys from several
jurisdictions have given examples of this obstructive behavior.
The clerical culture is still largely resistant to the degree of
accountability and transparency needed to assure victims and
society at large that they are safe from sexual abuse by
priests.
The current standing of the Catholic Church in the midst
of its still-unfolding crisis places it among groups on Tier 4
of Shupe's authenticity maintenance
classification. That is my judgement
not that of the author. Groups in this category are discredited
in the eyes of virtually all audiences. Rodney Stark confines
religions in this group to the "graveyard of American religious
pluralism." It would be a mistake and a gross exaggeration to
equate the Catholic Church in America with sects the likes of
Heavens Gate. But the Catholic Church for all its history and
wealth is in a situation similar to its predicament at the time
of the Protestant Reformation. Then it died in half of the
European continent.
The church's resurrection from that Petit Mort
did revitalize itself and its mission. Its dominance, so
prominent in prior centuries, was divided and shared not only
with secular powers, but also with other religions as never
before in its existence. It re-birthed itself with the
solidification of its hierarchical structure and power on the
foundation of secrecy and the consolidation of celibacy for its
clergy elite. Its social exchange contract for lay obedience,
faith, and trust was reestablished.
That contract is in the process of being irreparable
shattered. This time period does not mark the end of the
Catholic Church, but it does herald a new restructuring—a
reformation. The coming reformation of the church will not be
accomplished without the tools of social science.
The value of Anson Shupe's
contribution to the understanding of clergy malfeasance far
outstrips any current crisis in any one faith community. The
elegance with which he interweaves understandings of sociology,
criminology and religions is unequaled. His contribution is
classic and fundamental. It will endure because it is also
practical. |