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Texas
Faith: Did United Nations Report on Catholic Church Go Too
Far?
By Rudolph Bush Dallas Morning News February
12, 2014
http://dallasmorningviewsblog.dallasnews.com/2014/02/texas-faith-did-united-nations-report-on-catholic-church-go-too-far.html/
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Chairperson Norwegian
Kirsten Sandberg, Vatican's UN Ambassador Monsignor Silvano
Tomasi and Former Vatican Chief Prosecutor of Clerical Sexual
Abuse Charles Scicluna wait for the start of questioning over
clerical sexual abuse of children.
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The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child
issued a stinging report Wednesday that first
and foremost called on the Roman Catholic Church to remove all
child abusers from its ranks and to open its archives to the
committee for independent review of crimes and concealment.
The report went beyond that though to criticize the
Church for its stance on abortion, homosexuality and
contraception among other things.
The Vatican responded that certain elements of the
report were “an attempt to interfere with Catholic Church
teaching on the dignity of human person and in the exercise of
religious freedom. ”
The Catholic Association issued a statement calling the
report “a stunning and misguided attackon the Vatican. The
responsible committee appears to have overlooked the last decade,
in which the Church has taken serious measures to protect
children.”
In simple terms, should the committee have limited its
comment to the issue of child sexual abuse or was it right to
raise broader questions about the church’s teachings on social
issues? In a broader sense, what is illuminated by this conflict
between a secular institution and a religious one? How should a
person of faith respond when someone or something questions their
sacred teachings?
WILLIAM LAWRENCE, Dean and Professor of
American Church History, Perkins School of Theology, Southern
Methodist University
The assurance in the Constitution that no laws can
“prohibit the free exercise” of religion should not be confused
with a religious organization’s immunity from criticism. And when
the criticism comes from an international body with no capacity
to institute penalties or inflict punishment on the religious
body, the critique should not be confused with a threat. But it
still deserves to be taken seriously.
In this situation, a Committee of the United Nations
leveled complaints regarding several matters in the Roman
Catholic Church. These matters range from the church’s response
to cases in which children were sexually abused by priests, to
church policies on women’s health care, to church positions on
sexual orientation.
Can a secular, intergovernmental organization criticize
a religious, non-governmental organization? Of course it can! Is
there a possibility that the critique could stretch beyond the
boundaries of challenging policies and intrude into territories
that involve exclusively religious matters? Of course there is!
Plenty of people, including some Roman Catholics and many other
Christians, have found Catholic discipline to be deficient on
matters of sexual health, sexual equality, and sexual
orientation.
Church authorities have the right to assert their own
doctrines. People are free to affirm the teachings of the church
or to walk away from them.
But the point at which a religious body cannot simply
dismiss criticisms as interference is the point at which the
victims are the voiceless who have to rely on advocates to help
their cries be heard. There have been times when religious bodies
chose to do little or nothing about a moral crisis within their
walls. Those situations were acknowledged and addressed only when
individuals and institutions outside of these religious bodies
persisted in producing evidence and pleading for justice. Only
when the critiques continued unabated did the religious
organizations see the right and right the wrongs.
The current question is not whether the UN Committee on
the Rights of the Child is correct in every particular. The real
question is whether a church can remain aloof from its critics.
Clearly it cannot. That does not mean the church is guilty as
charged. But it does mean that the church would be wise to
respond to the charges.
JIM DENISON, President, Denison Forum
on Truth and Culture
Is the U.N. report an appropriate call for Catholics to
align their policies on abortion, homosexuality and contraception
with contemporary thinking? Or is it a “shocking display of
ignorance and high-handedness,” as one Catholic defender
described it?
Where you get on this train is likely where you’ll get
off.
If you believe that truth is relative and ethics are
subjective, you probably agree with American philosopher Richard
Rorty that truth is what works for the community. You will
therefore want the Catholic Church to adjust its convictions to
the conventional wisdom of the day.
However, to deny absolute truth is to make an absolute
truth claim. If you believe that ethics should be based on
objective truth, you may well be alarmed by the U.N.’s attack on
long-held Catholic policies. And you may wonder where such
aggression is going. If the Church refuses to bow to the
committee, will it face economic or political sanctions in the
future? Could similar action be taken against any faith group?
Scripture guides the Christian response: “In your hearts
honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a
defense against anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope
that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect, having a
good conscience, so that, when you are slandered, those who
revile your good behavior in Christ may be put to shame” (1 Peter
3:15-16).
Martin Luther noted, “They gave our Master a crown of
thorns. Why do we hope for a crown of roses?”
GEOFFREY DENNIS, Rabbi, Congregation
Kol Ami, Flower Mound; Faculty member, University of North Texas
Jewish Studies Program
A UN Committee overreach? Implausible, nay, impossible.
So first – while UN Human Rights organizations too often
unjustifiably claim more high ground than their constituent
members really are entitled to For example, on the Human Rights
Council, you have Kazakhstan, Pakistan, and United Arab Emirates
overseeing human rights violations of other nations. It’s hard to
overstate the sheer awfulness of Vatican culpability in the issue
at hand. And the past decade of careful, rear-guard-action,
incremental reform that still protects criminal priests from
proper criminal prosecution is not only a series of half-way,
half-measures to take “serious steps to protect children,” it in
itself is pretty inexcusable. So I leave the Vatican to make its
own defense.
Yet while all the topics in that particular sandbag
(abortion, contraception, even the legal protection of homosexual
teens) are related in some way to children and families, the
committee overstepped its boundaries. Wrong time, wrong place.
The shotgun approach, in fact, disperses the impact on the child
abuse issue, and gives the Church a kind of cover to lump it all
together as sheer “anti-Catholicism.” The Committee threw in
distracters that actually serve to confuse and cloud the central
problem that is supposed to be addressed here.
Beyond the homiletic occasion: Where to draw the line on
the critique of religious doctrines and customs that may have
detrimental physical and social consequences? It’ a tough line to
draw. It’s not just a libertarian issue. If the Catholic
hierarchy were satisfied to enforce their family purity/morality
issues on their own flock, I would feel like I have no dog in
this fight. But the church has historically, in country after
country, sought to turn its policy into state policy. This has
been detrimental to fighting AIDS, reducing maternal and infant
mortality, and economic development, not just among Catholics,
but in whole nations, regardless of the larger religious make up
of these nations. I’m Church-State separator, a “two kingdoms”
doctrinalist, a King Henry-over-Thomas Becket guy.
DARRELL BOCK, Executive Director of
Cultural Engagement, Howard G. Hendricks Center for Christian
Leadership and Cultural Engagement, Senior Research Professor of
New Testament Studies Dallas Theological Seminary
Religious organizations should assess such challenges
for their validity, but secular organizations should be more
careful to appreciate why religious groups may hold the views
they do. The effort to control speech and views among some
secular groups shows the same insensitivity they often said
religious views exercised against them in the past. Sexual abuse
needs to be firmly dealt with, but these other areas involve
moral choices and matters of conscience that are in a different
category. That deserves to be recognized and treated with more
circumspection. The differing standards for what is respectful of
life and flourishing leads to these differences. So engage and
reflect, but recognize that the competing values assessment leads
to distinct conclusions about what is moral.
PHILIP JENKINS, Distinguished Professor
of History, Institute for Studies of Religion, Baylor University
At so many levels, the report in question was a sick
joke.
There is no evidence that Roman Catholic clergy are any
more or less likely to abuse minors than any other group working
with children, whether clergy of any other denomination, or
secular professionals such as schoolteachers. If such evidence
exists, where is it? Point me to ANY comparative studies. I have
looked long and hard, and find none.
The fact we hear so much about the Catholic aspect of
the issue results from the church’s detailed and extensive
record-keeping, and its attractiveness for litigation. The vast
majority of cases that surface in the Catholic context –
certainly in North America – date from the 1960s through the
1980s, not since. The practices that the committee complains of –
shifting culprits and not reporting them to police – were
absolutely standard behavior for all agencies back in that era.
Secular schools did exactly the same thing. It reflected the
advice offered by the best-esteemed professionals dealing with
abuse issues in psychology and therapy.
It would be fascinating to see a UN body of this kind
attack the religious beliefs and practices of any other faith or
denomination, such as Islam or Hinduism. Even to mention the
possibility is to reveal its impossibility. This report is
straightforward religious bigotry.
Finally, it is close to hilarious that such a report
should come from a UN agency, given the pervasive corruption that
has so often been exposed at all levels of that organization and
its bureaucracy.
LARRY BETHUNE, Senior Minister,
University Baptist Church, Austin
The U.N. complaint about the Vatican response to child
abuse in the church was weakened by the inclusion of other
culture war issues. The report would have been stronger by
sticking with the issue of child abuse in the church, affirming
steps that have been taken, but pushing for more. The best
direction to broaden the report would have been to include all
institutions – religious and secular – in its demands to be
rigorously strict in preventing child abuse, punishing offenders,
and protecting children.
On the other hand, the New Testament (which was written
in a time when Christians had no legal protection of religious
liberty) urges believers always to be ready to defend their
beliefs. Every applied belief – theistic or nontheistic – has
positive and negative consequences with regard to social
relationships and cultural impact. It belongs to believers to
respond to secular critique with explanation, clarification, and,
where necessary, amelioration of effects. For instance, it is
insufficient for the church to oppose abortion without also
creating the means by which unplanned pregnancies may be
prevented or supported.
It is also insufficient simply to resist critique by
asserting our religious liberty to believe as we wish. Claiming
persecution or hiding behind religious liberty begs the question.
The issue is how these beliefs impact secular society and thus
secular society has a right to raise questions and expect a
dialogue.
Religious liberty cuts both ways. Secular society and
people of different religious belief also have a right to
practice their beliefs with regard to these issues and have a
voice in setting legal and social norms. Therefore, the UN report
goes too far, but the Vatican response not far enough.
AMY MARTIN, Director Emeritus of Earth
Rhythms and Writer/editor Moonlady News Newsletter
Officials from the Catholic Church frequently release
comments criticizing social behavior that is well beyond
religious bounds. Dish it out but can’t take it?
The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child
did not take issue with the Trinity, or Nicean Creed, or belief
in virgin births. It examined only when church policy impacts
outside world in a negative way.
The charge by the United Nations Committee on the Rights
of the Child is that a pattern of actions within the Catholic
Church demeans and even threatens children. With Catholicism on
the rise in Africa, it’s especially important not to repeat the
past on that vast continent.
As any court would, they find relevant other instances
that amplify such a pattern. When homosexuals are considered
lesser persons deserving of fewer human rights than others, when
women are forbidden to control their own fertility but men’s
impotence drugs are fully funded by insurance, there is a deep,
even institutionalized, pattern of diminishment of some humans
over others that is worthy of wide discussion.
CYNTHIA RIGBY, W.C. Brown Professor of
Theology, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary
My initial, gut reaction on this was to say that the UN
should have stuck with addressing child abuse and should have
avoided commenting on social issues such as abortion,
contraception, homosexuality, and gender roles. After all, it is
important that we protect the right of religious institutions to
say, teach, uphold, and defend what they believe.
Until I got to thinking, which led me to delve a little
deeper. I starting thinking through how it is that we can cut to
the core of this heinous human rights violation that went mainly
unchecked for decades, and remains yet to be resolved. In order
to protect our children from the “worst” of abuses, don’t we have
to think more organically about how our “positions” (civil,
religious, and otherwise) affect them, the most vulnerable
members of our global community? How do the “positions” we hold
fail to keep our children safe?
I read through the UN report and found that it actually
does not criticize directly the Vatican’s position on abortion,
contraception, homosexuality, and gender roles. What it does do
is insist the church promote such positions in ways that do not
fund the abuse of children in any way. Any such abuses, the
document rightly insists, are criminal acts that must be
condemned by the global society. The report further points out
that the Vatican signed, alongside 139 other sovereign entities,
the UN’s “Convention on the Rights of the Child” in 1989 (linked
at www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/crc.aspx),
therefore covenanting to take these matters seriously and to be
guided by way of conversation with other signing members of the
global community.
As I study this matter I am increasingly impressed by
how careful the UN was about NOT criticizing religious
convictions as such, but insisting that these religious
convictions not be invoked as a justification for overlooking ANY
form of child abuse, discrimination, or neglect.
Here are four examples, drawn straight from the report.
“The Committee urges the Holy See to review its position
on abortion which places obvious risks on the life and health of
pregnant girls . . .” [Note that the aim here is not to criticize
the church’s position on abortion per se, but to highlight the
real implications of this position for pregnant children,
particularly those who have been raped and/or whose lives are
endangered by pregnancy.]
“The Committee is seriously concerned about the negative
consequences of the Holy See’s position and practices of denying
adolescents’ access to contraception, as well as to sexual and
reproductive health and information.” [Note that the concern here
is not directly to criticize the church’s position on
contraception, but to advocate for the sexual and reproductive
health of children.]
“The Committee also urges the Holy See to make full use
of its moral authority to condemn all forms of harassment,
discrimination or violence against children based on their sexual
orientation or the sexual orientation of their parents and to
support efforts at international level for the decriminalisation
of homosexuality.” [Note that the concern here is not to counter
the church’s position that homosexuality is a sin, but to condemn
criminal violence directed against children who are homosexual in
orientation and/or children of homosexual parents.]
“The Committee also urges the Holy See to take active
measures to remove from Catholic schools textbooks all gender
stereotyping which may limit the development of the talents and
abilities of boys and girls and undermine their educational and
life opportunities.” [Note that the concern here is not to
condemn the church’s teaching that the roles of men and women
differ, but to call the church to promote the flourishing of all
children, regardless of their sex.]
In my view, the Holy See has too frequently sat back
into its “convictions” and ignored the real and concrete ways its
positions on abortion, contraception, homosexuality, and gender
roles have funded the widespread abuse of children. The UN is
calling the church not necessarily to change their positions, but
to sit up, take responsibility, and address these criminal and
moral abuses associated with these positions. I, along with so
many others in this world, have great hope that the church is
moving in the right direction in these matters under the
leadership of Pope Francis.
I would go on to suggest, however, that if the church
cannot actively and directly address these abuses of children
without changing its “positions” on said social issues, its
positions on these issues must be changed.
Jesus took little stock in religious convictions as
such, pointing out that the purpose of God’s laws – the purpose
of the faith stands we take – is never for their own sake. They
are for the purpose of promoting the “abundant life” Jesus wills
and promises. Responding to those who accused him of breaking his
convictions about the Sabbath to feed and to heal, Jesus stated
the truth very directly: “Humanity is made for the Sabbath, not
Sabbath for humanity.”
If the lives of our children are being harmed by our
religious convictions, these convictions are not of God; they
have become idols of our own making.
MIKE GHOUSE, President, Foundation for
Pluralism and speaker on interfaith matters, Dallas
The call from the United Nations Committee on the Rights
of the Child on the Roman Catholic Church to remove all child
abusers from its ranks and to open its archives to the committee
for independent review of crimes and concealment is within its
charter.
The United Nations’ declaration on religious intolerance
in its Article 1 (3) states, “Freedom to manifest one’s religion
or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are
prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety,
order, health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of
others.”
The United Nations or its committees do not have the
authority to demand accountability or execute any of their
decisions. However, most nations are signatories to its charter
on religious freedom and human rights.
This particular issue has opened up a can of worms, and
may lead us into redefining the boundaries between religion and
civil society beyond a nation’s border.
The clash between the religious rights and civil rights
is nothing new in the United States. We have come a long way in
splitting hair and have been successful in dissecting civil
rights out of religious rights. We are struggling with same sex
marriage, gender equality, contraceptives, abortion and other
issues. The First Amendment may eventually be reduced to just
preventing establishment of, or hindrance in the free exercise of
religion, but may give room to wean civil and criminal issues
into the civil jurisdiction like the death penalty.
However, other nations like Saudi Arabia (beheading),
Pakistan (blasphemy laws), Iran (stoning adulterer to death),
India (anti-conversion laws), Israel (Orthodoxy-settlements),
Uganda (death for homosexuality) may vigorously defend their
right to keep it under a religious wrap. Of course we still have
the death penalty in practice and needs to be done with.
Thanks to Pope Francis, in less than a year, he has been
able to see all the infractions within the Catholic Church and
taken the initiatives to fix them, and it will take a few more
years or longer to stabilize. However, knowing the Pope for the
last eleven months, I believe he is on the side of the victims,
and indeed he is a mercy to mankind and will do the right thing.
Society at large has a responsibility to protect the
unprotected and punish the abuser. Religions do not have a system
to petition with religious authorities to redress fallacious
laws. As a Muslim, I have seeded that change in Fixing Sharia.
A few decades from now, will most of the religious laws
transition into civil laws as societies become increasingly
diverse?
Contact: rbush@dallasnews.com
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