|  | Danneels 
        Latest Symbol of a Culture in Need of Reform
 By Tom Roberts
 National Catholic Reporter
 August 30 2010
 
 http://ncronline.org/blogs/ncr-today/danneels-latest-symbol-culture-need-reform
 
 Some will be surprised at the revelation that Cardinal Godfried Danneels 
        of Belgium urged 
        a victim who was abused by his uncle, a bishop, to remain quiet, accept 
        a private apology and allow the bishop to retire and not “drag his name 
        through the mud.”
 
 Secretly made recordings of meetings among the cardinal, the victim and 
        the perpetrator leave little room for Danneels to explain his way out 
        of his own words. He didn’t call the police, he didn’t immediately seek 
        removal of the bishop, he didn’t act immediately to find out whether there 
        had been other victims.
 
 One press report termed the leaked recordings “ some of the most damaging 
        documents to emerge in the scandal rocking the Roman Catholic Church.” 
        That may be a bit of overstatement. But what the recordings underline 
        is the fact that when church leaders are caught in their own words – in 
        depositions, letters, memos, directives, in the tens of thousands of pages, 
        for instance, archived at bishopaccountability.com – the true nature of 
        the scandal is bared. The deepest part of it, that part which refuses 
        to go away with countless pro-forma apologies and programs, has little 
        to do with sex and much to do with a culture that sees itself above accountability.
 
 That’s why analyzing the scandal requires seeing it as much broader than 
        a referendum on a certain ecclesiology or a particular view of reform 
        or orthodoxy. And that’s why some of the recent thinking 
        and comments by church leaders in different parts of the world becomes 
        important. Whether the questions that are being raised in other countries 
        have any “legs” is itself an open questions. Who knows whether those raising 
        the questions have the stomach for pursuing them beyond their own diocesan 
        borders.
 
 Danneels was generally seen as one of the last of the Vatican II generation 
        who knew that council intimately and supported its reforms. He would be, 
        for lack of a better term, a liberal by many of today’s ecclesiastical 
        measures. But it doesn’t matter. So was Archbishop Rembert Weakland, and 
        his handling of some abuse cases was notoriously callous, and in his own 
        attempt to hide a homosexual liaison he saw fit to lift nearly a half 
        million dollars from archdiocesan coffers without telling anyone.
 
 By contrast, Cardinal Anthony Bevelacqua of Philadelphia was a noted conservative, 
        one of those who could be described as leading the reversal on Vatican 
        II reforms. The Philadelphia Grand Jury report on his role in hiding sexual 
        predators and using the law to avoid accountability is deeply disturbing 
        reading. So are the documents in which Cardinals Bernard Law and Edward 
        Egan are depicted overseeing the handling of abuse cases in their respective 
        dioceses. Both are staunch conservatives and would be considered by many 
        as protectors of a traditionalist approach to ecclesiology and church 
        teaching.
 
 Wherever members of the hierarchy are on the political, theological or 
        ecclesiological spectrums, they meet first as brothers in a unique culture 
        of celibate men who have sworn oaths of allegiance to the papacy and who 
        have repeatedly acted to protect the institution while shunning the plight 
        of thousands of child victims of abusive priests.
 
 “I came to think that the problem was in some way cultural,” wrote Australian 
        Bishop Mark Coleridge of the sex abuse crisis. “But that prompted the 
        further question of how; what was it that allowed this canker to grow 
        in the body of the Catholic church, not just here and there but more broadly?”
  Coleridge does not provide a magic answer in that pastoral letter prepared 
        last spring for Pentecost. However, he raises a number of issues – inadequat 
        seminary training, the church’s “culture of discretion,” seminary training 
        that creates “a kind of institutional immaturity, “a certain church triumphalism,” 
        and the church’s tendence to see things in the light of sin and forgiveness 
        rather than crime and punishment – that deserve far wider discussion and 
        examination.
 He includes in that list “clericalism understood as a hierarchy of power, 
        not service.” It is one of many influences that caused so many in the 
        hierarchy to confront the abuse crisis in ways they now say they regret. 
        Perhaps it ought to be at the top of the list. Danneels is merely the 
        latest sorry example, though a current one, demonstrating that for so 
        long the actions of many of the community’s leaders were drastically out 
        of step with what they were preaching.
 An English translation of parts of the transcripts of the audio recording 
        are here: Belgium 
        cardinal tried to keep abuse victim quiet   
 
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