
Pittsburgh, Pa., Aug 29, 2018 / 03:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Catholics who are demoralized, angered, or scandalized by revelations about sex abuse must feel free to talk to clergy and other Catholics, and other Catholics must reach out to them, a priest of the Diocese of Pittsburgh has said.
“I would invite those who are wavering to be open about their concerns – their anger, their frustration, their questions – so that someone can respond to them,” Father Nicholas Vaskov, executive director of communications for the Pittsburgh diocese, told CNA.
“I would also encourage them to stay close to God in prayer so that he can hear their calls to him and respond with his compassion and love.”
Father Vaskov, who is also administrator St. Mary of Mercy parish in downtown Pittsburgh, reflected on the tendency of some people scandalized by abuse allegations to stop going to Mass. He encouraged Catholic clergy and laity to “be patient with those who are scandalized by the reports.”
“Listen attentively as they share what is on their heart,” he said. “I would also suggest that clergy and laity reach out to those who they know are particularly troubled by what they have learned. Thoughtful conversation can be such an effective way to process what is troubling us.”
On Aug. 14 a Pennsylvania grand jury released its report claiming to have identified more than 1,000 victims of 300 credibly accused priests from 1947 to 2017 across six Pennsylvania dioceses. It presented a portrait of efforts by Church authorities to ignore, obscure, or cover up allegations, either to protect accused priests or to spare the Church scandal.
Approximately two-thirds of the accused priests have died. Due to laws regarding the statute of limitations, nearly every abuse allegation cannot be criminally prosecuted, although two indictments have been filed. One priest named in the report was convicted of sexually assaulting a student in the early 1990s.
Before the report’s release, Bishop David Zubik of Pittsburgh confirmed that some of the priests named in the Pennsylvania grand jury report into sexual abuse remain in active ministry, but stressed that none faced substantiated allegations of child sexual abuse.
Responding to the report, Zubik emphasized that “the Diocese of Pittsburgh today is not the Church that is described in the grand jury report,” and that “it has not been for a long time.” Data from the diocese showed that more than 90 percent of abuse incidents took place before 1990.
The bishop apologized to victims of clergy sex abuse and to “any person or family whose trust, faith and well-being has been devastated by men who were ordained to be the image of Christ.”
The Catholic response is ongoing. The grand jury report could affect the future of Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, a previous Bishop of Pittsburgh. Wuerl is already a center of controversy as critics ask what he knew of allegations of sex abuse and sexual exploitation against his predecessor, Archbishop Theodore McCarrick.
On Aug. 20 National Public Radio and its member stations had sought comment from listeners, asking, “Have you stopped going to Mass as often, left your church or left the Catholic faith entirely because of these revelations or ones that were previously reported?”
Pittsburgh-area couple Andy and Courey Leer were among those who had responded to NPR about their reaction.
“So it goes beyond just the priests and their superiors,” Courey, 31, told NPR. “It leads me to question entire Catholic communities. Who knew what? And not only why didn’t they expose them, but, how long have people been turning the other way?”
Courey attended part of Mass with her two-year-old daughter after the report was released but they didn’t stay.
“I think a part of me was thinking I’m going to go to Mass and I’m going to get an okay to leave and not come back,” she said. “And of course that’s not going to happen. Part of me just wanted someone to say ‘we really messed up, it’s all on us, and you guys use your own moral discretion to decide what’s best because we have no moral authority’.”
According to NPR, she said the priest acknowledged the report and “offered little more than prayers.” She stood up with her daughter and left after the homily.
“And I’m thinking ‘is this our last Mass?’ And it’s hard. I can’t fathom when she’s eight years old saying ‘no we don’t go to church, sorry you can’t receive Communion, even though your mom and dad did, your grandparents did, you don’t get to do that’.”
The Leers told NPR that they will miss the sacraments, community dinners, and the music ministry. They said they want to see Church leaders push for more investigations into sex abuse in dioceses around the country.
“They don’t need to be worried about our spirituality right now,” said Andy, 32. “They need to be worried about dealing with the corruption, and dealing with the priests that are out there that need to answer for what they’ve done, and the people that have potentially covered up and withheld information.”
Andy, 32, was a teenager when decades-old claims against his priest, Father Joseph Pease, surfaced. He thought the “bad apple” had been removed. He later watched the movie “Spotlight,” about sex abuse in the Archdiocese of Boston, but he said the issue “doesn’t really hit until it’s in your backyard.”
The Leers said they don’t know what it will take for them to go back to church.
Father Vaskov cited his experiences with churchgoers who went to Mass in the wake of the latest news. He thought there was an upturn in attendance for the Aug. 15 feast of the Assumption, a holy day of obligation which came a day after the release of the Pennsylvania grand jury report.
He also reflected on what churchgoers told him, such as one woman at Mass last Sunday.
“She said that while it was difficult for her to go, she knew that she couldn’t be anywhere else because it is only in the Eucharist that we can be renewed,” the priest said. “Another conversation with a recent convert to the Catholic faith revealed the depth of his love for Christ and His Church and his desire to stay close to the sacraments when he felt his frustration was getting the better of him.”
Fr. Vaskov said that in response to the abuse scandals, many parishes had organized holy hours, days of Eucharistic adoration, discussion groups, and listening sessions. He said he has had “beautiful moments” praying with people for “strength in their lives and in the lives of those who have been harmed by abuse.”
“I have also had some very fruitful conversations with parishioners, friends and strangers over the past weeks because they were willing to open up about their concerns,” the priest said. “That doesn’t mean that every issue is resolved or every suffering is healed, but it is the beginning of an important discussion that needs to happen.”
Participation in Mass on Sundays is “at the heart of the Church’s life”, the Catechism of the Catholic Church states, and “participation … in the Sunday Eucharist is a testimony of belonging and of being faithful to Christ and to his Church.”
By attending Sunday Mass the faithful together “testify to God’s holiness and their hope of salvation. They strengthen one another under the guidance of the Holy Spirit,” according to the Catechism.
Participation in the sacrifice of the Mass is the means by which “we already unite ourselves with the heavenly liturgy and anticipate eternal life” and render worship to God.
The Catechism adds that “the institution of the Lord’s Day helps everyone enjoy adequate rest and leisure to cultivate their familial, cultural, social, and religious lives.”
Father Larry Adams, a priest at St. Ursula’s Church in the Pittsburgh diocese, told NPR that he understands the frustration of his fellow Catholics, but the struggle to confront abuse is why he became a priest.
“To a certain extent. I’m kind of a ‘spotlight’ priest — the movie Spotlight,” he said. “When this broke, (it) was kind of the time when I was discerning what my vocation would be. And in a certain way, what has formed me is the desire to be part of this Church, and be part of the solution.”
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yup, while the ‘white boy club’ kneels before the archbishop of wash…as trump & melania kneel before God.
the only thing the Trumps kneel to is corruption money and greed
It is difficult to believe the polls. But, I am finding most people I know who were previously liberal are now moving over to President Trump because he is defending religious liberty, even if he is highly persecuted for doing so, even by members of the Catholic hierarchy. The persecution he receives makes him authentic rather than engaging in stunts as his accusers claim. He has been a defender of Pro-Life issues, more than any President. He has handled the virus as well as he could given the fact that the scientific data was all wrong that petty liberal Democrats so fiercely cling to as a rational reason to close churches at the same time allowing taverns, liquor stores, etc. to remain open. He has wanted to reopen churches since Easter and signed an executive order to reopen churches as essential. Local Democrat Governors were allowed to keep churches closed and supported by the Supreme Court that the Governors could keep the churches closed with dictatorial directives or with excruciating restrictions not imposed on other activities within the society. He has signed an executive order to support international religious liberty as a US foreign policy which should make happy those Catholics being persecuted for their faith in other nations, China and the Middle East but one example. He has done more for the Roman Catholic faith than any President, although he wife and his son Barron are both Catholic. His wife is the first Catholic First Lady since Jackie Kennedy sixty years ago, and she seems to have had a positive influence on him.
The demonstrator who seem mostly White from affluent backgrounds have turned off the majority of Americans and threaten the property and business of Black neighborhoods, creating an unnecessary class war. This jeopardizes the decades of positive relationships established between the two races by ordinary Americans, pitting people against each other according to race They seem to be supported mostly by extremely liberal Democrat politicians and some clergy.
Beside destroying property, they have threatened and murdered the police, exhausting the resources of America. The demonstrators have failed to practice social distancing further jeopardizing their lives, the lives of their families, friends, and social circles, not to mention spreading the virus to the police and fire departments and hospitals and staff. If the virus spreads, this reckless disregard for life by all of the protestors, even those who thought they represented non-violence, but in fact became instruments of violence, we can hold them all responsible. More people who develop the virus and die from it can be attributed to the reckless disregard for human life demonstrated by these demonstrators. All the while, the Democratic Speaker of the House keeps Congress from meeting due to the pre-text of the virus…hum….
No, I think the “silent majority” will vote for Trump and GOP who want to restore law and order, religious freedom to worship, and sanity back to America. Converts are being made as we speak, and yes within the African American and Latino communities.
Glad to see this statistic. Trump is the least Christian president I’ve ever seen. He has no compassion for anyone and his priority is only himself. He wanted Marla Maples to abort Tiffany and he has been responsible
For paying for at least a dozen abortions – so far.
If Catholics think he is a so called pro life president it is only because he wants the votes as is the reason for every move he makes. He is anti-American since the only American he actually cares about is himself. He has broken every commandment and lives a life full of greed, gluttony, and selfishness.
I wish other Catholics would open their eyes and minds and try to see what an evil man he is.
Glad to see the tide may turn away from him.
“The Pharisee, standing, prayed thus to himself: God, I thank thee that I am not as the rest of men, rapacious, unjust, adulterers, or even as this tax-gatherer.”
“For paying for at least a dozen abortions – so far.” You have no evidence of that. Calumny, detraction…
I don’t understand how any Catholic can support Trump. He is a serial adulterer, he mocks the Pope’s guidance on climate change, he sows division among the faithful, and essentially does not follow any aspect of the Gospels. As a Chaplain who retired from 28 years service with the US military, I suggest that any Catholic who votes for Trump needs to examine their conscience. Also, if you encourage other Catholics to vote for Trump you are leading others down a dangerous path.
Difficult for me to believe you were a Catholic Military Chaplain. Apparently you do not believe in redemption for anyone, even though Trump has proven himself to be a defender of innocent human life in everything he has done. You must be among those who choose to believe Biden is a “faithful Catholic” in spite of all the evidence to the contrary, including everything he says, and his choice of a rabidly pro-abortion woman as his VP. The “climate change” scare is a hoax – read what an avid environmental scientist recently said about this hoax – which is an excuse for population control and the murdering of even more innocent life in the womb. There are none so blind as those who refuse to see.
Anything funded by the Arcus Foundation needs to be taken with a grain of salt.