Assessing
Responsibility for the Scandal
Most clerical sex crimes are
homosexual seductions of adolescents and young men.
By Germain Grisez
Most statements about clerical
sexual wrongdoing issued by bishops and on their behalf never use the word
homosexual. Statements sometimes speak of pedophilia and often use the phrase
child sexual abuse. That expression is misleading, however, because most victims
of the crimes are not young children but adolescents or young men. And most of
those adolescents and young men have been seduced, not merely abused.
A priest and licensed psychologist
who has advised the US bishops, Stephen J. Rossetti, published a book, which
repays diligent study: A Tragic Grace: The Catholic Church and Child Sexual
Abuse (Collegeville, Minn.: Liturgical Press, 1996). Rossetti generally talks
about “child sexual abuse.” Sometimes, however, he makes distinctions. For
example, in arguing that the Church should not regard guilty clerics as
incurable, Rossetti says (88):
The statement, “Pedophilia is
incurable,” is misleading. First of all, most perpetrators of child sexual abuse
are not pedophiles. In a Saint Luke Institute sample of 280 priests who had
sexually molested minors, only 20 percent were actually pedophiles. Pedophilia
is a clinical term referring to someone whose sexual orientation is towards a
prepubescent child. It is true that psychotherapy usually cannot change one’s
sexual orientation….
The majority of perpetrators are
involved with postpubescent children. All things being equal, they are more
amenable to treatment. One of their goals is to develop satisfying relationships
with age-appropriate peers.
As Rossetti says, pedophilia is a
clinical term. The sexual disorder it refers to is listed among the paraphilias—that
is, sexual deviations—in the American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th ed. (Washington, DC: American
Psychiatric Association, 1994), 522-32. According to the Manual (527) the
pedophile’s deviant focus “involves sexual activity with a prepubescent child
(generally age 13 years or younger).”
With pedophiles, Rossetti contrasts
ephebophiles: “There are others who are ephebophiles, i.e. sexually attracted to
postpubescent children.” (67) He often speaks of pedophiles and ephebophiles in
the chapter of his book (64-79) where he articulates his professional opinions
about the best ways to assess both candidates for ministry and adults charged
with “child sexual abuse.” The reader is likely to be led to believe that
ephebophilia, like pedophilia, is some sort of arcane mental disorder.
Understanding ephebophilia
However, if one tries to look up ephebophilia in the American Psychiatric
Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, one will not find it. Several
years ago that Association decided that a homosexual orientation is not a
disorder. Officially, homosexual behavior is no longer deviant but a healthy
alternative to heterosexual behavior. Thus ephebophilia, being a kind of
homosexuality, has no place in the Association’s catalog of mental disorders.
As Rossetti says (88), pedophiles
are not amenable to treatment because “psychotherapy usually cannot change one’s
sexual orientation.” But, as he also points out (68): “Many times adults who are
sexually aroused by minors may also be aroused by adults as well.” The vast
majority of clerical sexual molesters have been involved with postpubescent
youths, generally age 14 years and over. Other things being equal, they are,
Rossetti says (88), “more amenable to treatment,” for they can learn to “develop
satisfying relationships with age-appropriate peers.”
In other words, clerics who have
engaged in criminal sexual behavior with adolescent boys and young men can learn
to satisfy themselves with consenting adult males, because that change in their
behavior involves no change in their sexual orientation. Such clerics simply are
homosexuals who have found underage partners attractive and convenient. But
unlike most homosexuals, these clerics have been willing to commit crimes
against adolescents and young men. Expecting their bishops to be tolerant and
protective, they no doubt hoped to get away with those crimes, and for a long
time their bishops did not disappoint them.
The adolescents and young men were
victims of abuse. But in most cases, sexual acts involving such young people are
not only abuse. To be sure, in some cases, the youngster did not understand what
was going on and/or was unable to resist, and in such cases he was simply a
victim of abuse. But in very many cases, as the victims’ own statements usually
make clear, they were troubled by the sexual activity in which they were
involved yet were submissive partners with the cleric, whose dirty secret they
kept because he had lured them into making it their own.
Thus, such young people cooperated
in the sexual activity: they were seduced. Their guilt may well have been venial
and may even have been none at all—only God knows—and their cooperation in no
way mitigates their seducers’ guilt. Indeed, seducing the victims into sexual
sins was far graver than the clerics’ own sexual sinning.
Millstones
In most cases the adolescents and young men had been entrusted to the clerics’
pastoral care. They betrayed that trust and led the adolescents and young men
into sins grave in kind. Some victims say they have lost their faith. In every
case, the betrayal was scandal in the strict sense, of which Jesus spoke:
“Scandals are sure to come; but woe to him by whom they come! It would be better
for him if a millstone were hung round his neck and he were cast into the sea,
than that he should cause one of these little ones to sin.” (Lk 17:1-2)
The bishops and those who speak for
them should acknowledge honestly that most clerical sex crimes that have come to
light have been seductions of adolescents and young men by homosexual priests.
Because Jesus entrusts bishops to oversee the pastoral care of souls, those
bishops who failed to do all that they could and should have done to prevent or
limit a priest’s crimes ought to ponder very carefully the moral and spiritual
nature and gravity of their own omissions and actions. Having done that, those
bishops should reexamine their consciences, repent any sins they previously
overlooked, and begin to do what they can and should do by way of restitution.
Regardless of the nature and degree
of his own guilt, each bishop’s first concern should be to speak the relevant
saving truths of the Gospel and to offer Jesus’ forgiveness not only to the
crimes’ perpetrators but also to the men who were seduced and to all others
whose sins have been occasioned either by those crimes or by the wrong ways in
which they were handled. All the other steps that bishops have taken should be
considered secondary. Public apologies and listening sessions may help dispose
people to listen to the truth about their sins and repent them. Making financial
settlements may be appropriate or unavoidable. Even providing psychological
counseling may be helpful to a few. But doing all those things together falls
infinitely short of making just restitution for complicity in scandal.
In most cases, bishops who
tolerated ongoing criminal behavior are unlikely to be trusted by either the
perpetrators, the victims, or others who suffered the bad consequences of their
wrongdoing and negligence. Such bishops should recognize that a new bishop, not
complicit in the corruption, probably will be far better able to undertake the
necessary restitution. Recognizing at last that their first priority must be the
care of the souls entrusted to them, such bishops will resign. If they fail to
do so, the Pope must remove them, lest he become a party to ongoing pastoral
negligence.
Germain Grisez is Professor of
Christian Ethics at Mount Saint Mary’s College and Seminary in Emmitsburg,
Maryland. The three volumes of his Way of the Lord Jesus (Christian Moral
Principles, Living a Christian Life, and Difficult Moral Questions) are
available from Franciscan Press.