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Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God, Pedophile and rapist priests, Pope Benedict XVI, Priesthood, roman catholic church, Sexual abuse in the Church
Guyana gets new priest after 15 years – August 2010
Source: http://www.catholicnews-tt.net
At thirteen years of age, I fell under the spell of a handsome seminarian. David Johnson (fictitious name), our landlord’s nineteen-year-old son, returned home on a month-long holiday from the Benedictine seminary in Trinidad. He captivated our young group of siblings and friends with Bible stories and spoke to us about treating each other with kindness and being respectful and obedient to our elders. On Sunday mornings, he took us to Mass at our parish church. Following his example, I became a devout Christian and began attending daily morning Mass.
When I blossomed into a fifteen-year-old, my admiration for the seminarian evolved into infatuation. I was in heaven the morning he took me to Church on his bicycle. Seated on the middle bar, his arms encircled me. Before Mass, while I sat in the pew, he knelt down in the pew behind me and whispered: “You have a beautiful neck.”
I was just an innocent teenager to him. He preferred chatting with my mother while she worked at her sewing machine. As the landlord’s son, my father welcomed him into our home.
After David’s ordination to the priesthood – when I then had to address him as Father Johnson – adolescent girls flocked to hear him say Mass. He became a magnet for attracting young people to the Church.
Years later while visiting my father, I could hear the heated discussion between our landlord and Father Johnson coming from their neighboring residence.
“You leaving the priesthood for a married woman?” The words of our landlord exploded with anguish.
Father Johnson left the priesthood; the woman left her husband and children. They got married and left Guyana. My first love left me with feelings of deception and betrayal. What had happened to his love for God and to serving Him? How could he choose a woman my mother’s age, and not me?
In hindsight, I realize that Father Johnson had made the right decision in leaving the priesthood to marry the woman he loved. He chose not to maintain a sexual relationship with her under a cloak of priestly celibacy.
Ordination does not bestow Catholic priests with immunity from desires of the flesh. But a chasm exists between adults engaging in illicit, consensual sexual intercourse and the sexual abuse of young boys and girls. Theirs is not simply a sin of lust; of fornication and adultery. Their sin defiles innocent young souls: a crime punishable by law.
Pope Benedict XVI has decided to step down as pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church at the end of February. As a Cardinal, cover-ups of pedophile and rapist priests occurred under his watch. (See synopsis of the documentary film, Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God, released by HBO on February 4, 2013.)
With many other scandals plaguing the Catholic Church today, will the next pope have the courage and humility to do what is right in the sight of God and expose the criminals in their midst?
Reblogged this on Guyanese Online and commented:
Thanks to Rosaliene for her Blog entry. Go to her Blog for more!
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Surprise surprise !some may find celibacy impossible others acceptable /tolerable…i question it’s imposition /expectations -observance by our youth of today/tomorrow !religion as the opium of church has lost it’s attraction …it needs to rebrand itself to become more acctable/fashionable.. Be more attractive to survive…my apology in advance if I offend the religious and it’s followers/ believers..
To those who believe I can but respect.
To those who do not I must also respect.
I am but human with all its individuality …no sheep of any flock !
My spin entirely
Kamptan
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Kamptan, for those who choose to enter the priesthood, celibacy is not an imposition. It’s a choice.
I agree that there’s a need for re-branding.
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Cyril, thanks for sharing my blog post with your readers.
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Very honorable of you, Rose to admit your own frailty here – I admire your words.
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Thanks, Angela.
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This is a moving commentary, Rosaliene. I guess the jury is still out on this scandal of sexual abuse within the hierarchy of the catholic church…
I believe that now Pope Francis is trying to deal the entrenched narrow mindedness around the issues of sexuality, contraception, womens rights, etc (and so much more)… . Yet from what I understand in the US and Canadian Bishops conference, for example, denial of reality and justice seems to be alive and well, in the old boys club. I am inspired by the some clergy, like Charles Brandt and Pope Francis himself. Archbishop Camara has been a great inspiration to me as well. The list would go on, Romero, etc etc. But like the upcoming Guyana election, I wonder if wisdom will prevail.
I personally know of at least 4 or 5 priests, and a even one bishop, who have been named and shamed as abusers within our local dioceses of British Columbia. Along with lack of inclusiveness, this issue of sexual abuse is one of the reasons that 20 + years ago I backed off from main stream Catholicism and Christianity. For example, at my fathers funeral a few years ago, the priest maid it very clear that only Catholics, and only Catholics in good conscience could receive communion. My wife leaned over and whispered to me “Jesus would weep.” Such hypocrisy! The priest whom you loved so much, was honest and honorable.
Thanks for this post Rosaliene. Peace be with you… Bruce
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Thanks for reading, Bruce. Since writing this post, we now have a new Pope who is attempting to bring about change. He continues to face resistance in many areas.
The cover-up of sexual abuse by Catholic priests still remains unresolved. The hypocrisy persists not only among the clergy but also among the laity. (As a divorcee, I’m not in “good conscience.”)
Peace be with you, too, Bruce, and your loved ones.
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