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Tom
Krattenmaker: Churches Confront Sexual Violence
Baxter Bulletin February 3, 2014
http://www.baxterbulletin.com/article/20140203/OPINION/302030026?nclick_check=1
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Tom Krattenmaker
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It’s a scourge as old as the ages, yet sexual violence
against women and children is fresh in the headlines as President
Obama launches an initiative to address sexual assaults on
college campuses, while the military tries to fix its own problem
and newly released documents shed galling light on the Catholic
Church’s pattern of abuse and coverup in the Chicago diocese.As
the priests’ crimes remind us, religious institutions, at their
worst, have often proved complicit and sometimes out-and-out
guilty when it comes to sexual advances against vulnerable
people. As real as that problem is, however, there’s a
counterstory emerging that could redeem religion’s role in this
ugly dynamic:
Faith organizations are beginning to address sexual
abuse with a new energy and earnestness — a welcome step toward
the fulfillment of their enormous potential to do good on this
front.
Silent complicity
Given the morality and virtue idealists associate with
faith, one would expect that congregants would be safe from
abuse. If only that were so. Statistics show that people in
religious communities are just as likely to experience sexual
violence as those who are not — which is to say, very likely.
Nearly one in five women in this country have been raped,
according to a 2010 study by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, more than half by an intimate partner.
Despite churches’ well-known exhortations about sexual
morality, critics can make a legitimate case that some traditions
in church culture actually contribute to the problem. How? By
promoting the idea of male superiority and by pastors shying away
from addressing the disturbing topic from their pulpits or in
their counseling roles.
“Silence is the most important form of complicity,” says
David Leslie, executive director of Ecumenical Ministries of
Oregon, which is one of a growing number of religious
organizations working to end that silence.
Leslie’s Portland-based organization was part of a
coalition of faith groups, including IMA World Health and the
Spiritual Alliance to Stop Intimate Violence (SAIV), that teamed
up for Speak Out Sunday last fall — an effort to mobilize pastors
to preach against sexual violence inside and outside churches.
The Speak Out campaign and groups such as the Survivors Network
of those Abused by Priests are doing brave work to give voice to
those victimized by clergy or other church authorities.
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