NCR Connections: The crisis and the role of the laity

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

December 17, 2018

By Tom Roberts

In the Catholic universe, time doesn’t provide any barriers from the ongoing fallout from the sex abuse scandal. Perhaps time will eventually bring healing, but in this moment the crisis slides from the year gone by to the next, seemingly gaining momentum by the month as bishops finally open the files and provide lists of abusers. It’s only taken 33 years. The moves are not a sign that the episcopacy suddenly became aware of how utterly corrupt its culture had become. They are more a measure of how great the pressure from the outside has become..

Most of it is old stuff, true, but old stuff newly revealed and the scope of the crime and the cover-up overwhelms. Some, like Fr. David Knight of Memphis, in responding to Melinda Henneberger, who’s had enough and has left, say sin has always been a part of the deal, so “hang in there.” But systemic (and increasingly global) cover-up of child rape and molestation by the leadership of the church?

Between those polls, some newly outraged have decided to stay and fight and one of the high-profile Catholics in that endeavor is Timothy Roemer, who served as a Democrat in Congress from Indiana’s 3rd District (1991-2003) and as ambassador to India (2009-2011).

Recently he had a column published in USA Today which he begins by describing the scene in August where, after a homily he heard at St. Thomas à Becket Catholic Church in Reston, Virginia, he shouted, “Justice in the name of Christ. Justice for our children.”

That justice, he believes, demands action of the people in the pews who should “suspend institutional giving” and send funds instead to such groups as Catholic Charities, Catholic Relief Services and other local agencies serving the poor and marginalized.

Laity should also demand that bishops send all records relating to sex abuse to state attorneys general, he said, and be involved in clergy assignments where the safety of children is in question.

“What pushed me to write the piece was my faith in God colliding with the inaction and the negligence of the church,” he told me in a recent phone conversation. “I’ve never seen in my lifetime the amount of percolating anger and frustration from practicing Catholics every Sunday going to church now feeling as though they have been gutted.”

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