From the BBC:
"Pope Francis: 'About 2%' of Catholic clergy paedophiles"
Pope Francis has been quoted as
saying that reliable data indicates that "about 2%" of clergy in the Catholic
Church are paedophiles. The Pope said that abuse of children was like "leprosy" infecting the Church,
according to the Italian La Repubblica newspaper. He vowed to "confront it with the severity it demands". But a Vatican spokesman said the quotes in the newspaper did not correspond
to Pope Francis's exact words. The BBC's David Willey in Rome says there is often a studied ambiguity in
Pope Francis' off-the-cuff statements. He wants to show a more compassionate attitude towards Church teaching than
his predecessors, but this can sometimes cause consternation among his media
advisers, our correspondent adds. When is a papal interview not an interview? Sunday's edition of La Repubblica
devotes its first three pages to an account of a conversation between Pope
Francis and editor Eugenio Scalfari, which took place last Thursday. Papal
spokesman Federico Lombardi said in a sharp note that it was not an interview in
the normal sense of the word, although he admitted it conveyed the "sense and
the spirit" of the conversation. Mr Scalfari does not use a digital recorder, and Father Lombardi said Pope
Francis never checked the accuracy of the interview.
Until now, the Vatican has declined to quantify the extent of clerical sexual
abuse scandals in the worldwide Church. Statistics are usually available only
for countries in the developed world. In the developing world, information is
usually only sketchy. In the interview, Pope Francis was quoted as saying that the 2% estimate came
from advisers. It would represent around 8,000 priests out of a global number of
about 414,000. While the incidence of paedophilia as a psychiatric disorder in the general
population is not accurately known, some estimates have put it at less than five
percent. "Among the 2% who are paedophiles are priests, bishops and cardinals. Others,
more numerous, know but keep quiet. They punish without giving the reason," Pope
Francis was quoted as saying.
"I find this state of affairs intolerable," he went on. Above the interview La Repubblica ran the headline: "Pope says: Like Jesus, I
shall use a stick against paedophile priests." Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi denied that Pope Francis had said
that there were cardinals who were paedophiles. Last year Pope Francis strengthened the Vatican's laws against child abuse
and earlier this month begged forgiveness from the victims of sexual abuse by
priests, at his first meeting with victims since his election. Many survivors of abuse by priests are angry at what they see as the
Vatican's failure to punish senior officials who have been accused of covering
up scandals. Asked in the same La Repubblica interview about the celibacy rule for
priests, Pope Francis recalled that it was adopted 900 years after the death of
Jesus Christ and pointed out that the Eastern Catholic Church s.) allows its priests
to marry. "The problem certainly exists but it is not on a large scale. It will need
time but the solutions are there and I will find them." Father Lombardi also denied that these were the Pope's exact words.
^ This is a huge disgrace that the Catholic Church needs to address openly. Apparently, Pope Francis was trying to and then the underlings in the Vatican came out to change his words to sound better. I don't have much faith in what the others say as they are part of the problem and not the solution (as the Pope is.) The Catholic Church needs to screen all the priests, monks, cardinals, nuns, etc that are currently in the Church and remove those that do not follow the teachings of Jesus. That probably won't ever be done because it is too massive and would tarnish the Church even more, but I don't see Catholic trusting the Church again unless they are completely open and honest with us and remove the corrupted sinners from their midst. A sad fact from all of this is that young men and women are no longer trusting the Catholic Church and are refusing to attend mass or go to seminary to replace the aging priests and nuns. ^
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-28282050
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.