Bishop: Total re-examination of Catholic faith, culture needed

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter

Mar. 28, 2012
By Joshua J. McElwee

CHICAGO — The roots of the decades-long clergy sex abuse scandal lie not in any set of rules or practices, but are found deep in the culture of the church itself, retired Australian Bishop Geoffrey Robinson said Wednesday in a wide-ranging talk at the historic Newberry Library in downtown Chicago.

The “major fault” of the church in the scandal, Robinson said, is that it “refuses to look at any teaching, law, practice or even attitude of the church itself as in any way contributing” to the crisis.

“In studying abuse, we must be free to follow the argument wherever it leads rather than impose in advance the limitation that our study must not demand change in any teaching or law,” he continued. “We must admit that there might be elements of the ‘Catholic culture’ that have contributed either to the abuse or to the poor response to abuse.'”

Peppering his talk with personal stories of bishops and priests, Robinson spoke of 12 areas of Catholic culture he said deserved “serious consideration” for their role in contributing to the abuse crisis, including our understanding of God as a being who is frequently angry and a hierarchy that is prone to a “culture of obsessive secrecy.”

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