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  SNAP to It: Kansas City & Bishop Finn

Mighty Ambivalent Catholic
June 22, 2011

http://themightyambivalentcatholic.blogspot.com/2011/06/snap-to-it-good-thing-group-exists.html

SNAP is pushing for a grand jury investigation in Kansas City, so reports The National Catholic Reporter. Thank goodness. It's about time. Good wishes for whoever filled their gas tanks.

I used to be skeptical about SNAP, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. Used to think the group was crassly anti-Catholic in that they never bothered to broaden their focus to other populations of sexual abuse survivors and the people who victimized them. After all, there are plenty of abusers who are Baptist, and Methodist, and United Church of Christ, and...well, you get the idea.

Not to mention that most priests (including every priest I've ever known personally, as far as I can tell) are not prone to victimizing children. Most priests are decent men; some of them are very holy men, and not in a cardboard cut-out sense, but in a genuinely down-to-earth, caring way.

So then: Why a group that focuses solely on the Catholic church? That's the question I used to ask myself, and a question which many defenders of the church still ask. (I'm thinking of people who argue, rather sadly, "We're no worse than the rest of society..." Not much of a defense there, methinks. Nor much witness to the message of Christ.)

And then I got it. The Catholic church, unlike so many other organizations and employers who have predators within their ranks, is highly centralized in its policies and decision making. There is a company line here. For decades and decades and decades -- with regard to the abuse of minors -- it was a lousy company line, but one that was followed by bishop after bishop in diocese after diocese. Ignore. Cover up. Lie. Lawyer up. Stall.

SNAP is needed. SNAP brings both attention and heat to the cases it highlights. If its rhetoric is occasionally inflammatory, its raison d'etre is clear. The group wants to bring about real change in the church, which includes an end to abuse and cover-ups, and justice for survivors of abuse. Believe it or not, the church owes SNAP a big round of thanks. (I'm guessing, though, that members don't expect to hear any clapping until they get to heaven. The church on earth is too busy calling the lawyers.)

 
 

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