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For Priests, Celibacy Is Not the Problem
The New York Times ^ | March 3, 2004 | ANDREW GREELEY

Posted on 03/03/2004 12:54:01 PM PST by presidio9

The logic of the argument is simple: 4 percent of Roman Catholic priests have been sexual abusers. Priests are committed to celibacy. Therefore, the frustrations of the celibate life led to the abuse. Therefore, celibacy should be abolished.

While perhaps not quite so starkly stated, this is the line of thinking that has been used by many to explain the sexual abuse scandals shaking the church. It will also shape the response to two reports issued by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops last week. Leave aside for a moment the fact that 96 percent of priests are not abusers — is this portrayal of widespread frustration an accurate description of American priests?

The picture presented by the two reports — one a statistical study by researchers at John Jay College of the abuse cases and the church's reactions to them, the other a report on the causes and context of the crisis by a review board appointed by the bishops — is horrific and tragic. But as a priest and as someone who has been writing about the evil of sexual abuse by priests for two decades, I must also point to a substantial body of data collected over the last 35 years that presents another story, one which ought to be heard. These surveys of attitudes among priests and parishioners have shown that most don't consider celibacy the problem with the priesthood; the problem is that many priests don't do their job well.

Over the last 30 years, The Los Angeles Times and the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago have each made repeated and comprehensive studies of attitudes among the priesthood and the laity. The polls have consistently shown that a vast majority of priests say that life in the priesthood is better than they expected it would be.

For instance, the most recent Los Angeles Times study, completed in 2002, found that 93 percent of the more than 1,800 priests surveyed said that they would become priests if they had to choose their careers again. Only 2 percent said that they would probably leave the priesthood. In general, priests are more likely to affirm that they are happy in their lives and satisfied with their work than are doctors, lawyers, teachers, professors and even married Protestant clergy. Priests, on average, seem to be about the happiest men in the country. Abusers, it seems clear, aren't being driven to crime by celibacy but by their own demons.

On measures of personality traits by the National Opinion Research Center — including the capacity for intimacy — priests compare favorably with married laymen of similar educational backgrounds. Despite the call by a few priests for abolishing the celibacy rule, there is no evidence that priests are more likely to be frustrated, unhappy misfits than are married laymen. Priests like being priests; they like doing the work that priests do; and they recognize that celibacy is part and parcel of that work. Like all humans, however, we are far less then perfect: we must offer sacrifice for our own sins as well as the sins of our people, as the Epistle to the Hebrews observes.

So where does today's negative picture of priests come from? In part, it's a relic of the anti-Catholic, anti-celibacy sentiment of 19th century nativism. In addition, priests themselves tend to be silent when their vocation is attacked, either by men who have left the priesthood or by the public over the crimes of the abusers. Indeed, their response to the latter is pathetic: my colleagues tend to feel sorry for themselves, to blame the news media, to assert that it is the bishops' problem, and to argue that it is not the most serious crisis facing the church.

Denial, research shows, is a major factor in clerical culture — the dark side of the priesthood. Just as teachers stereotype their students and doctors their patients, priests stereotype their parishioners. In response to an open-ended question in the 2002 Los Angeles Times survey about why the laity was growing disaffected with the church, 13 percent of priests said parishioners were suffering from moral decline, 10 percent cited loss of faith, 7 percent secularism, 5 percent apathy, 5 percent materialism, 4 percent lack of responsibility and 4 percent lack of "personal leadership."

Only 13 percent saw problems arising from failures of the clergy — sexual abuse, decline of confidence in leadership, poor sermons and liturgy, and clerical authoritarianism. Only 19 of the more than 1,800 thought that poor sermons were a problem. The mindset is clear: if the laity have religious problems, the fault is either their own or cultural trends over which priests have no control.

When asked in the survey why congregants leave the church, a quarter of priests (and only 16 percent of the younger clergymen) accepted some personal responsibility — insensitivity, inadequate leadership, poor sermons and liturgy, and the sexual abuse scandal. The rest cited the usual litany of horrors: individualism, secularism, no faith, poor prayer life, no commitment, media bias, hedonism, sex, feminism, family breakdown and apathy. In essence, three-quarters of the priests surveyed washed their hands of responsibility for Catholics who leave the church and excused themselves from an obligation to respond.

On the other side of the steel door that seems to separate priests from parishioners, the laity give their clergy, on the average, scores only about half as high as what Protestants give their ministers on preaching, liturgy, sympathetic counseling, respect for women and work with young people. In the 1950's, according to a study by Ben Gaffin Associates, 40 percent of Americans (Protestants and Catholics alike) rated the sermons they heard as "excellent." In 2002, according to the National Opinion Research Study, 36 percent of Protestants still found their sermons excellent, compared to just 18 percent of Catholics.

In addition to the abuse cases, the big problems in the priesthood, then, are not celibacy or sexual frustration, but the constraints on excellence in an envy-ridden, rigid and mediocre clerical culture that does a poor job in serving church members.

If priests really want to improve their image, they should not bother to write letters demanding that celibacy be made optional — which will be dismissed by their bishops and the Vatican — but to make every effort to upgrade their work — especially their sermons.

These are hard times for priests. They are under attack as perverts. More people are making more demands on fewer priests. Yet, in parishes where the pastor is reasonably open and reasonably secure, the lay response is enthusiastic commitment and dedication.

People ask me what kind of a priest I am — meaning Jesuit, Dominican or Franciscan (Jesuit being the answer most want to hear). I usually respond, "Not a very good one, but I try." Now, in the wake of these new reports, we must all try harder.


TOPICS: General Discusssion
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1 posted on 03/03/2004 12:54:01 PM PST by presidio9
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Perhaps if the Catholic Church weren't so worried about sharing its assets with lay women (or the wives of Priests) they wouldn't have the problems they do.

As a recovering Catholic I can tell you most of the problems of the Catholic Church are self inflicted.
2 posted on 03/03/2004 12:57:54 PM PST by forktail
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To: presidio9
Sometimes Greeley can surprise you and really get it right. This time he's mostly got it right.
3 posted on 03/03/2004 3:19:14 PM PST by Maximilian
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I breath a sigh of relief at this news, but what the 4% figure says is that celibacy might not be the problem.

On one hand, if the population of sexually active men in America also contains about 4% offenders, then celibacy probably isn't the problem. If, on the other hand, the population of sexually active men in American contains significantly less than 4% offenders, then again celibacy might be the problem. To take it further, if the second proposition is true, the problem could lie in the character of the particular type of person who becomes a priest, or in some other aspect of priestly life.

Ultimately the 4% number makes the frequency of offenses less alarming on the face, but the problem demands more study to really come to any useful conclusions. It might also be useful to determine what percentage of sexually active non-Catholic clergymen have been accused of preying on youths in this manner.

4 posted on 03/03/2004 3:54:48 PM PST by Slacker2Saint (Just an ordinary ex-slacker revelling in the Transformation.)
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To: forktail
First of all, I am a "Catholic-on-Leave". I am trying to figure out if I want my family (non-Catholic) to make the required commitments to the Catholic church.

I'm also "trying out" different Christian religions/churches. I have several friends involved in the ministry and look forward to seeing what they have to say. I also see a future where I am involved in a church, yet visit others.

I have a feeling that I'm going to head back into the Catholic church and embrace the lifestyle that will be expected of me.

As for the sex thing, we can do all the studies we want to. We can interview anyone we want to. It's not Catholic priests that molest children...it's homo/heterosexual pedophile predators....yep, the same kind that roam our schools' halls, that drive our kids' busses, that go to Boy Scout meetings, that are leaders at the church camps, etc.

Religion has nothing to with that.
5 posted on 03/03/2004 4:25:56 PM PST by baltodog (So, can we assume that a job that an illegal alien won't do must be REALLY bad?....)
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To: baltodog
Just my feeling no data to back it up, but it seems like the Boy Scouts got it right about the homos. Alas there will always be infiltrators.

I would encourage you to remain Catholic which is the fullness of Christianity. Other denominations no doubt have good elements but ultimately they all derive their faith from the Catholic Church; it's a historical fact. They have no real authority telling us what we have to believe or how to live; how can we make major decisions impacting our lives perhaps making them harder without the knowledge of authentic teaching? Otherwise, find a denomination that agrees with you or start your own---that sounds unrealistically easy for us humans who are masters at self-deception.
Peace.
6 posted on 03/03/2004 5:08:58 PM PST by Piers-the-Ploughman
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To: baltodog
I certainly understand how you feel toward the CC at this time. But do not let it tear you away. Other churches are no different.There are perverts in all walks of society,just as you pointed out. But theCC has survived 2000 years of problems.Dont throw the baby out with the bath water. I am a convert and believe me theCC is about the only church you will find today that does not condone remarriage over and over. Even the Protestant ministers get remarried. It is just not acceptable. These churches also have these youth groups that in a few years we will see just what has gone on there too.I will pray for you and your family. The CC has 100%of the Truth and there will be bad leaders in all churches,only in the Protestant ones the preachers are the pope. There is no final authority in them and so you have hundreds of sects. I know because I came from that background. The CC was the only church that interpreted the Bible as a whole.I will probably receive a lot of flack on this. Pray,read your Bible, go to Confession and stay faithful.Sometimes when God seems so far away is when He is actually the closest.We go through these trials and tribulations. But the CC offer us so much and is a completion of the OT. God bless you and do not give up.The media hates the CC and loves to run it down. Dont give up. Go to www.ewtn.com and www.presentationministries.com. In these other religions they get mad at each other and a group of them go off and make themselves another church,so they splinter and splinter. This is not and never was Gods will.
7 posted on 03/03/2004 6:15:14 PM PST by catholic
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To: Slacker2Saint
"On one hand, if the population of sexually active men in America also contains about 4% offenders, then celibacy probably isn't the problem."

It's really not that simple.

Even the Jay report admits that around 80 percent of the offenses were homosexual in nature. The real figure is probably closer to 99%.

The largest study yet done of men with SSAD reported that over 70% of them *admitted* to debouching underage boys. There's no way to prove how many of the other 20-something percent were lying, though experience tells me they all were.

That almost certainly means that the percentage of heterosexual priests who molested is much smaller than the percentage of heterosexuals who molest in the general population.

There's really not much point in comparing percentages of molesters among priests with SSAD and men in the general population with SSAD, as the Vatican forbids the ordaining of men with SSAD.

Further, we're dealing only with those who got caught. We have no idea how many were clever enough to keep their indiscretions a hundred miles from the flagpole.

It seems likely, though, given their shared disorder, that the number of men with SSAD who will pork a tender young boy if they think they can get away with it is roughly the same for both priests and the general population--around 100%.
8 posted on 03/03/2004 6:56:40 PM PST by dsc
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To: baltodog; catholic
He's right, you know.

Although the Church is under attack, it's still the most formidable defense against Satan that we have.

Only the Catholic Church has the *fullness* of revelation.

dsc
Another convert
9 posted on 03/03/2004 7:00:24 PM PST by dsc
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To: dsc
That almost certainly means that the percentage of heterosexual priests who molested is much smaller than the percentage of heterosexuals who molest in the general population.

This makes perfect sense and sounds true, yet I don't expect to see the comparison from the general media any time soon. It's time the Catholic Bishops should draw the right conclusions from the John Jay numbers and stop pretending not to notice the 800-tons gorilla in the middle of the room.

10 posted on 03/03/2004 11:34:57 PM PST by heyheyhey
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To: baltodog
God bless you in your "search."

Remember though, it's not a flavor of ice cream you research; it's your eternal destiny. :)

11 posted on 03/03/2004 11:44:40 PM PST by heyheyhey
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To: heyheyhey
"stop pretending not to notice the 800-tons gorilla in the middle of the room."

They *are* the gorilla. No way homosexual behavior would have been encouraged the way it was if there weren't a bunch of rump rangers among the American bishops.
12 posted on 03/04/2004 12:11:46 AM PST by dsc
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To: forktail
As most devout, learned Catholics will tell you, the overwhelming majority of "recovering Catholics" are suffering from self-inflicted ignorance.
13 posted on 03/04/2004 1:14:09 PM PST by A.A. Cunningham
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