I vividly remember “the talk” with my mom. You know, “the talk…” My older sister, tired of defending my
unwavering belief in Santa, bullied me into asking the big question, “Is Santa
real?” My mom’s gentle explanation
combined with my fervent desire to believe initially produced the opposite
effect my sister intended. Words are
weak instruments to describe her reaction when I returned from that little chat
triumphantly proclaiming, “I knew it!
Santa is real!” However, I do
remember her reaction did include grabbing my hand and dragging me back to our
mom protesting, “Mom! What did you tell
her?! She still believes!”
My mom had taken me to a mirror and said, “Yes, Santa is real but he is
not a fat, jolly guy in a red suit. He
can look just like the girl in the mirror when she gives a gift at the giving
tree.” I so much wanted to believe in
the entirety of the Santa myth that I filtered out all words except “Santa is real.”
I’m happy to report that we did achieve
mutual clarity within the span of about 15 minutes. I was 8 years old and it was time to live
with a different understanding of the myth. My sister felt for her and my own physical
and mental well-being, it was well past
time but that’s a debate for another day.
I find myself reflecting upon that fervent desire to believe in a myth
after watching the movie “Spotlight.” This
movie chronicles the Boston Globe’s investigative journalism that led to its
January 6, 2002 bombshell story about the Catholic Church knowingly leaving numerous
pedophile priests in active ministry for decades. Though individual sex abuse stories had been
published throughout previous decades, this story altered the conversation
because it demonstrated that a sick, systemic culture involving hierarchy and
laypeople enabled and helped perpetuate widespread abuse. It revealed a culture pretending each abuse
case was simply an individual, isolated, “whoopsie there” incident so as to
perpetuate the myth of a perfect church.
People turned their heads for a myriad of reasons all stemming from
scandal avoidance desires: “priests are good guys”, “just doing my job”, “the church
does such good work in other places”, “my fellow parishioners bully
whistle-blowers”, “Cardinal/bishop so-and-so says it is the best thing for the
church”, etc…
Why did the church hierarchy obsess on avoiding scandal? Because it feared scandal would shake people’s
faith and possibly inspire them to leave the church. Yet, Holy Mother Church’s fervent desire to
avoid scandal became a monumental, self-destructive scandal in itself. Instead of Holy Mother Church, it’s more like
Our Lady of Macbeth - externally presenting the mythical image of perfect
hostess while plotting and scheming to manipulate and neutralize people seen as
interfering with this burning ambition…eventually resulting in the opposite effect
from the ambition.
The church so desperately wanted to perpetuate a scandal-free myth that
it caused huge, unimaginable scandal. The
movie’s ending flashing four multi-columned pages naming over a hundred
Catholic dioceses where major clergy abuse scandals and their even more scandalous cover-ups have
been exposed to-date punctuates the scandal-based damage that arises when an
entire system prioritizes myth perpetuation over truth and people’s lives. With over 100 dioceses, over 100,000 abuse
victims, and about 75% of Catholics leaving the church, it is well past time for
the church to live with a different understanding of the myth. Our mental and physical well-being requires
it.
I believe the exodus occurred because too many still want so
desperately to believe in the myth that they only begrudgingly implement
superficial changes to address the issue and bully those who wish to live with a
more mature understanding of the myth that includes real systemic change. For example, the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops, in anticipation of the movie’s release, prepared dioceses with talking
points aimed at portraying the topic as a thing of the past – as if it’s all
different now. Yet, even the reports
about filming the movie illuminate that it’s not all different now. The New York Yankees declined being filmed
for a scene at Fenway Park because they felt it wasn’t a topic with which the
team should be associated and believed that the Red Sox shouldn’t be
either. Why would a sports organization
that profits from attracting fans, many of whom are children, think it
inappropriate to be associated with a movie about protecting children? Do we smell New York Roman Catholic Cardinal
Dolan’s breath in that statement? The
same old pattern certainly is there.
Yes, some things have changed since the Globe story broke yet much
remains the same. Because thousands of priests
raped children, I had to be finger-printed and watch movies about protecting
children. It is as Mitchell Garabedian
says in the movie, “If it takes a village to raise a child, it takes a village
to abuse them.” Therefore, we must
educate the village. However, one constant
is the existence of lay and ordained staunch defenders of the church who treat
truthful criticism as an attack to which they must wage a counter-assault. This attitude contributed to creating a
penalty-free environment for abusive clergy and irresponsible bishops. Until that fear-induced arrogant rejection of
constructive criticism is replaced by humble sincere truth-seeking, there is no
marked difference in the culture. One
need look no further than the sheep-like unquestioning obedience to Mass
language changes to see that those in the pews largely still operate with a “Father
knows best” deference to men wearing Roman collars.
Unfortunately, the staunch defenders actually have changed in that they
have doubled-down on irrational defense of the church’s indefensible. They have doubled-down on squeezing their
eyes shut and stuffing their ears with earplugs to shut out reality. They want the myth of a perfect church and
will stop at nothing to retain living in their myth. They are happy to chase away anyone who tries
to bring them to a more mature understanding of the myth.
It is impossible for the vast majority of humans to consider the
Catholic Church the penultimate “truth team” when its Canon Law and culture
consider fact-based criticism to be “the enemy.” Thus, it’s no surprise that active Catholics
represent merely 4% of the world population.
(7 billion people, 1.2 billion Catholics, of whom only about 25% are
active.)
If people truly love the church, they must welcome criticism of the organization. Since sports form an informal pillar of the
Catholic faith, I’ll try a sports analogy to describe the detrimental impact of
ignoring institutional shortcomings. It’s
like a basketball team which commits many turnovers declaring this statistic as
anti-them and refusing to work on turnovers.
It’s like the team and fans bullying anyone who mentions the statistic
and asking them to leave the game and never come to another one. It’s like a team with the highest turnover
rate blaming the ball for its stubborn unwillingness to remain with the team.
The turnover metaphor only speaks to the abuse scandal’s collateral
damage - people's mass exodus from the church. The most profound damage
occurred to the 100,000s of people molested by priests. I can only think of a parenting analogy for
this. It’s like a parent entrusting
their children to a known pedophile as babysitter, and then when the child
reports the abuse, recommending the pedophile babysitter to friends and
neighbors. Would you trust such a
parent? No, I wouldn’t either. Not even after they said they were sorry or
enacted a Dallas Charter creating great bureaucracy to guide them since they
demonstrated a collective lack of common sense to do the decent thing. Such a parent would be declared unfit. The same is true for all bishops who shuffled
abusive priests.
Is it time to behave like my unrelenting older sister, grasping hands of staunch
believers in the myth and insisting they adopt a more mature understanding of
the myth? Don’t we owe the survivors at
least this much?