USCCB: Role of therapists in sex abuse crisis needs attention, some bishops say
Print Friendly VersionBy JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
Orlando, Florida
So far, the most animated discussion during the spring meeting of the U.S. bishops was sparked by the latest update on a John Jay College study of the causes and context of the sexual abuse crisis – with early indications suggesting that the crisis was driven to a large extent by broad social changes in the 1960s and 70s, as opposed to factors internal to the Catholic church.
Reaction during floor discussion appeared to suggest that many bishops don’t want to shoulder the burden of blame for the crisis by themselves, with several suggesting that researchers take into consideration the advice given at the time by mental health professionals. In some cases, bishops said, therapists advised that abusers could be returned to ministry following treatment.
At least one bishop also expressed concern with public impressions that the church is “shifting the blame” for the crisis to homosexual priests, something he described as “wrong” and “unfair.”
The update, the second so far from the John Jay team, was presented to the full body of bishops this morning by Ms. Maggie Smith and Dr. Karen Terry.
Smith told the bishops that a peak in incidents of sexual abuse by priests in the 1960s and 1970s, followed by a plateau or sharp decline in the 1980s, parallels similar patterns with three other behaviors in the broader society: divorce, pre-marital sex, and drug use. Though Smith did not directly make the point, the data suggests that changing sexual and social mores in the 60s and 70s were significant factors in all four cases.
Further, Smith described differences in the time lag between ordination and the first act of abuse for priests ordained in different periods. Priests ordained before 1959, the research shows, waited 13 years before committing their first act of abuse. Those ordained in the 1960s, on the other hand, waited an average of eight years, and those ordained in the 1970s just four years.
“While the influences of the social forces of 1960s and 70s are visible,” Smith said, “we do not yet know whether and how the vulnerability to sexual abuse differs for each group.”
Incidents began to decline in the 1980s, Smith said, at the same time that the broader cultural approach to sex abuse was evolving. During the 80s, she said, many states tightened their laws on the sexual abuse of minors, including the adoption of mandatory reporter laws.
Smith said that the church’s response to sexual abuse also began to evolve in the 1980s, driven by two factors: Publicity generated by the Gilbert Gauthe case in Louisiana, involving an ex-priest who pled guilty in 1985 to sexually abusing 11 minor boys, the first case of clerical sexual abuse to receive wide national attention; and internal discussions within the U.S. conference of bishops related to the abuse issue.
Despite that evolution, the John Jay research indicates, the response from church officials at local levels was far from uniform. For example, Smith observed, 40 percent of known incidents of sexual abuse by priests were first reported in the period from 1988 to 1998, with 9 out of 10 American dioceses receiving at least one report during that period. While church officials carried out an investigation in 75 percent of these cases, Smith said, family members of the victims were notified of the results of those investigations in less than a third of the cases on record.
Smith told the bishops that researchers are beginning a study of the clinical dimension of the crisis, looking at how treatment centers responded and what has been learned. Among other things, she said, they’re interested in knowing whether “risk factors” for sexual abuse can be identified with an eye towards developing a “screening instrument” can be developed to help flag potential abusers.
During floor discussion, several bishops pushed the John Jay team to take a hard look at what therapists and mental health professionals were saying during the peak period of the crisis, especially on the question of whether priests who had abused someone could be safely returned to ministry.
Bishop John Ricard of Pensacola-Tallahassee, for example, said that when he served as an auxiliary bishop in Baltimore during the 1980s and early 1990s, he often sought advice from mental health professionals about what to do with priests who had abused.
“Very often, we were told that this can be treated by conventional psychotherapy,” Ricard said. “I think this was a prevailing belief on the part of the mental health profession. The bishops followed that advice, with obvious consequences,” he said.
Another bishop asked the John Jay team to study the letters sent to bishops from treatment centers, saying that he recalled a front-page story from the Hartford Courant in 2002 citing a letter from a Hartford-based treatment center called the Institute of Living, implying that a priest who later became a "famous abuser" could return to ministry.
Archbishop Elden Curtiss of Omaha, Nebraska, echoed the point, saying he had recently watched a national television program which charged the bishops “with not doing anything, and that the bishops were really criminal in not responding.”
In that context, Curtiss suggested, it’s especially important to consider “the advice we got.”
Terry said that the John Jay team is considering not only the advice offered by mental health counselors and therapy centers, but also what attorneys were telling bishops to do, and “whether that was productive or non-productive.”
Curtiss also expressed concern for how the results of the research will be presented to the public, in light of what he described as misleading impressions about the church’s response to the crisis. He specifically cited a belief that the bishops are “shifting the blame to homosexual priests.”
“That would be wrong, and we shouldn’t be doing that,” Curtiss said. “It would be unfair to homosexuals.”
Finally, Cardinal Francis George of Chicago, president of the bishops’ conference, asked the John Jay team to include data on abusers who have been permanently removed from ministry but who remain in the priesthood. Many of those priests, he said, have requested further conversations with bishops with an eye towards a scheduled reconsideration of the bishops’ Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, first adopted in 2002.
George later said that while there’s no question of returning those priests to ministry, and that the priests themselves understand that reality, there is a need to discuss what their role in the church might be.
I donwloaded the file
I donwloaded the file from the DA in Philly afer I read an article in the NCR, only to find it was more than 400 pages long. After I read it through, I gave it to an aquaintance who is a MSW and Phd. who worked with abusive priests at one time. I asked him if they got counseling before being allowed back into ministry. He said they did, IF THAT. The primary motivation, according to him, was to protect the investment in their training.
I found in the file I gave him no information that would suggest that bad advice from therapists in treatment centers was responsible-rather, their warnings were NOT HEEDED.
The church could use its own version of a truth commission. N'est pas?
I know for a fact that the
I know for a fact that the prevailing belief among sexuality experts (I was an AASECT member at the time) was that there was no effective therapy for pedophilia and no way that offenders could be safely returned to an environment with children. If there were a few places dedicated to rehabing priests informed by the Christian belief in reformation and restoration, they were a minority unto themselves in their faith in a cure. It would be a fruitful area for research to contrast what these folk were saying with what the recognized experts in the field were saying at the time. My guess, and this is just a guess, is that the bishops distrusted the secular suspect community of experts whose teachings defied church doctrine and opted instead for a homegrown faith based familiar organization that had no idea what it was doing.
COL55 is to be commended by
COL55 is to be commended by solving 2 of our worst problems in one suggestion. Three cheers!
One predator in our diocese
One predator in our diocese was known to have sexual experiences with young boys while he was in the seminary!!!!! They ordained him anyway.
I agree with colkoch: why weren't they prosecuted for their CRIMES!!! That's what the bishops need to look at. Not a single bishop in the US reported the abuse to the authorities before the 1980s - NOT ONE - yet they all knew it was a criminal act for non-priests. They sent priests to therapy instead of to the police!! Why? Let's analyze that.
I can tell you a risk factor for pedophilia - narcissistic personality. I asked a local psychologist who interviews all the seminary candidates here "Why does our diocese keep ordaining narcissists?" And he said that he has to work with the men they send him and can't turn them down unless they are already pathological.
Note to col55: Do you know what happens to pedophiles in prison?
SFischer,MDiv
Another attempt by the
Another attempt by the bishops to "pass the buck" by blaming part of the abuse crisis on the bad advice they got. I was a father in the Sixties. I knew raping children was evil. Did the bishops know that too?
Okay. Let's give them the benefit of the doubt and say they listened to a therapist and thought a pedophile might be cured so they gave him a second chance. Why wasn't he monitored? Why weren't people warned?
Okay. Let's assume they gave him a second chance and he abused again. Would they give him yet another chance? How many chances does he get to fail? In Boston, they gave priests up to 7, 8 and more chances to fail. And fail they did with more victims suffering from the cover-up. How smart do you have to be to know that a person who fails multiple times around children must not - ever - be given another chance around children?
Come on, bishops. It's called accountability. Name the sin and perform the penance.
It's nice to know that
It's nice to know that pedophile priests can dialogue with bishops about a role for themselves in ministry. How simply collegial.
Why weren't they excommunicated for causing scandal to the faithful or for bankrupting dioceses and draining off all their assets.
Apparently excommunication is only reserved for the scandal caused to the faithful by upstart women priests and by parishes who won't voluntarily turn their historical assets over to bishops.
One other thought. Blaming the poor advice given to them by mental health professionals has some merit in retrospect. Mental health professionals are just as susceptible to the human desire for the rehabilitition of their clients as any bishop and the clinical information on just how psycopathic and manipulative pedophiles really are was lacking.
But this all begs a different question. Why weren't these men prosecuted for the CRIMES they committed? That's where the real enabling happened.
colkoch.blogtoolkit.com
While the bishops may try to
While the bishops may try to push for therapists to shoulder part of the blame for putting pedophiles back in parishes, who will they blame for their completely unchristian response to the victims? Bullying them, calling them liars, paying them off, treating them as if they asked to be abused......who do the bishops think is to blame for that???????????
No question about their
No question about their return to ministry?? What about Fr Coughlin in Maine?? The bishop restored him to be a fill in priest for Masses anywhere in the diocese EXCEPT for the parishes where there had been sexual abuse allegations. The bishop backed down when there was an uproar but indeed they WILL return them to ministry if they can.
Interesting revelation in
Interesting revelation in this article:
--- the Bishops did not know what to do with a pedophile.
The obvious answer: keep him away from children. (duh!!!)
What to do with abusers who remain in the priesthood?
--- here's a novel thought: (another duh!!!)
Permanently assign them to a resident prison ministry. There is a severe shortage of priests in prison ministries. This would be a perfect place for abusers. Since as Cardinal George so eloquently put it, they are useless to the general ministry now, placing them in a prison ministry would serve the higher good, and it would keep them away from the children.
Why would there be an
Why would there be an assumption that these people would do well in the prison ministry? The prison ministry deserves the best not the weakest.
Let's get a couple of things straight here and maybe I should ask this as a question. Is it not true that 95% to 99% of the pedophile cases were same sex cases?.
I get glimmers though that this was a problem that was rampant in seminary life from the fifties and seemed to ncrease all through the eighties and into the nineties. I don't want to repeat gossip here and say it is a reliable source so please tell me that I am completely misinformed.
"Interesting revelation in
"Interesting revelation in this article:
--- the Bishops did not know what to do with a pedophile.
The obvious answer: keep him away from children. (duh!!!)"
The bishops were not the only ones, psychology at the time was telling us that these men could be rehabilitated (now generally acknowledged as an impossible outcome). This has been/still is a major problem in some very important areas we hear nothing about, particularly in schools.
That being said, I heartily agree with the 'residential prison ministry' (my favorite suggestion until this has been an old one: penal monasteries).
++++++
nightwalker on Catholic Answers
How about a parish in Rome?
How about a parish in Rome?
You wrote: .. psychology at
You wrote: .. psychology at the time was telling us that these men could be rehabilitated
Not true. At the time I was working in the field. I tell you that no one outside the clerical rehab community thought a cure was possible. But who were these experts denying the possibility of a cure? First they were secular humanists unenlightened by the experience of conversion and redemption. Second they were bad, very bad. They were telling kids it was okay to masturbate. They were pushing contraceptives as responsible sexual behavior. They were upholding gay relationships as dignified and valuable. They were the Church's worst nightmare. And now the church was supposed to go hat in hand and beg them to deal with the sinfulness of their priests. No way. They knew, because anyone who investigated it knew. But they CHOSE to do it their way, the holy way, the godly way and they destroyed hundreds if not thousands of young lives in the process.









The bishops are lying, the
The bishops are lying, the same way they lied to the victims.
Bishops withheld data from therapists.
When therapists did not recommend returning abusers to ministry, bishops reminded the therapists that that is not what they wanted to hear.
Bishops returned abusers to ministry after three, four, five chances.
Why did bishops not know that raping a child or using the sacraments as part of abuse were a crime against God and man?
Narcissists are attracted to the clergy, and the most narcissistic become bishops. They are so self-centered they have no feeling for the pain that their failures have caused. It is still all about them, how they were misled by the mean therapists.
Do you think there is any chance that the John Jay report will detail the failings of bishops? Who is paying the bill?