The clergy’s task is unfinished in confronting sex abuse

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Tom Roberts | Jul. 21, 2017

The story of Marie Collins, an Irish victim of clergy sex abuse and a witness of unimpeachable integrity, is a dual tale of how far the church has come in acknowledging and handling the scandal and of how wholly and demonstrably incapable the Catholic clerical culture is of dealing with its own sin.

Collins was one of two survivors of clergy sex abuse who were appointed in 2014 to the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, an agency created by Pope Francis. She resigned the commission in March, providing NCR with a long explanatory statement.

Her decision to leave was not lightly taken. She had rejected the logic of some critics early on that any cooperation with church efforts was selling out to an institution that had generally ignored or re-victimized the abused for decades. She had later defended the work of the commission when its only other victim member, Peter Saunders, openly criticized the group for the slow pace of reform.

In March, however, three years after her appointment, she wrote: “I have come to the point where I can no longer be sustained by hope. As a survivor, I have watched events unfold with dismay.”

Among the primary reasons for her despair, she listed “lack of resources, inadequate structures around support staff, slowness of forward movement and cultural resistance.”

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