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Bono Questions Pope Francis about Catholic Church Sexual Abuse Crisis

By Guest commentary by Kris Schondelmeyer
Presbyterian Outlook
September 14, 2018

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/bono-pope-francis-catholic-church-sexual-abuse-crisis_us_5ba3aba0e4b0375f8f9abc60

Vatican Media / Reuters

U2 musician Bono said he had a hard conversation with Pope Francis about the sexual abuse scandal that has been roiling the Irish singer’s homeland.

Francis was “aghast” about sex abuse in the Roman Catholic Church, Bono told reporters after a private meeting with the pontiff at the Vatican on Wednesday.

“I explained to him how it looks to some people that the abusers are being more protected than the victims,” Bono said, according to Reuters.

The singer said Francis appeared deeply troubled by this.

“You can see the pain in his face, and I felt he was sincere,” Bono said.

“I think he is an extraordinary man for extraordinary times.”

A spokesman for the singer later elaborated that Bono believes Francis is “the leader to put this right and change people’s perceptions that the church is doing more to protect the abusers rather than the victims,” according to The Irish Times.



Bono said the topic of clerical sexual abuse “inevitably” came up, since Francis recently returned from a two-day trip to Ireland. The country, which has for decades been dominated by the Catholic Church, is still deeply scarred by the sex abuse crisis and other reports of horrific abuse suffered by children and women at Catholic institutions. During his August trip, Francis begged Irish Catholics for forgiveness and met with eight Irish survivors of abuse.

But many survivors are still waiting for the church to take concrete actions that would hold bishops accountable for covering up sexual abuse. Francis has yet to respond to allegations that he had a role in covering up the sexual misconduct of a disgraced American ex-cardinal.

Bono was born in Dublin in 1960 to a Catholic father and a Protestant mother, during a time of sectarian conflict in his country. He became disenchanted with organized religion as a teen, but over the years, he has infused his music with a wild, mystical Christian spirituality. During live performances, he’s known for interspersing his lyrics with lines from one of his favorite books of the Bible, the Psalms.

Bono meets Pope John Paul II during a private audience in 1999.

He was at the Vatican this week to sign an agreement between his charity, One, which seeks to support education and eradicate poverty, and the Catholic Church’s Scholas Occurrentes, which is also focused on educational initiatives.

Bono said he was “intrigued” by the work Scholas is doing.

“We haven’t figured out what we’re going to do together, but we sort of have a crush on each other,” he told the Catholic news site Crux.

During the half-hour conversation, Bono said, he and the pope discussed the U.N.’s global sustainable development goals, the “wild beast that is capitalism” and the pope’s 2015 encyclical on the environment, Laudato Si’.

The musician was apparently impressed by Francis’ approach to education. At one point in their conversation, Bono said, he spoke about teaching children how to read and write first and waiting to get to advanced math and art. The pope apparently advised instead to “start with art” and the “creative life” to get better results for children in the end.

“Honestly, he is quite a radical thinker,” Bono said. “I felt quite old-fashioned sitting next to him.”

 

 

 

 

 




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