ROME
National Catholic Reporter
by John L Allen Jr on Feb. 10, 2012 All Things Catholic
I’ve been covering the “Toward Healing and Renewal” symposium this week, a major international summit on the sexual abuse crisis organized by Rome’s Jesuit-run Gregorian University and co-sponsored by several Vatican departments. It brought together roughly 100 bishops and religious superiors from around the world ahead of a May deadline from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for bishops’ conferences to submit their anti-abuse policies for review.
Although much of what’s been said was familiar to people who have been living with the crisis for the last decade, the idea was to share this experience with the rest of the Catholic world, especially places where the sexual abuse crisis has not yet exploded, in the hope that for once, church leaders can defuse the bomb before it goes off.
I’ve been filing stories along the way, and I won’t rehash that material here; links to everything are below. Instead, I’ll lay out the big picture to emerge from the summit, which I would express this way: The Vatican has gotten religion on the sexual abuse crisis.
When the scandals in the United States broke a decade ago, reaction in the Vatican was clearly divided between what one might loosely call the “reformers” and the “deniers.” What seems indisputable in the wake of this week’s event, though it was by no means preordained 10 years ago, is that the reformers now have the upper hand.
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