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Canadian bishop tells synod that church must respond to abuse crisis

 

A Canadian bishop whose diocese was rocked by clerical sex abuse crises told the Synod of Bishops that the new evangelization must address the reality of distrust and disappointment the scandal left in its wake.

With the sex abuse crisis, Catholics have experienced “a great disorientation that leads to forms of distrust of teachings and values that are essential for the followers of Christ,” Bishop Brian J. Dunn of Antigonish, Nova Scotia, told the synod Oct. 12.

The Diocese of Antigonish has sold hundreds of properties in an effort to raise the money necessary to cover legal settlement and sexual abuse lawsuit costs from before Bishop Dunn’s appointment. In 2011, the previous bishop, Raymond Lahey, pled guilty and was jailed on charges of importing child pornography. The former bishop was laicized by the Vatican in May.

The Catholic Church cannot ignore the need to find a way to “evangelize those who have been deeply hurt by clergy who have been involved in sexual abuse,” Bishop Dunn told the synod.

One possible way forward, Bishop Dunn said, is to look at the story of the disciples, disillusioned by Jesus’ death, who are met by the risen Christ on the road to Emmaus. Christ walks with them and listens to them, the bishop said.

Dioceses must have real structures in place for listening to victims and coming to appreciate “the depth of hurt, anger and disillusionment associated with this scandal,” he told the synod.

At the same time, the church needs to investigate the causes of the sexual abuse crisis and ensure measures are in place to protect children and vulnerable adults.

“Those who have been hurt consistently call for a change in certain structures in the church, but it is not only ecclesial structures that must change,” he said, there also must be “a profound change of mentality, attitude and heart in our ways of working with laypeople.”

The bishop called for the appointment of pastoral teams of clergy and laypeople to administer parishes, for a formal recognition of “lay ecclesial ministers,” and for a “deliberate and systematic involvement and leadership of women at all levels of church life.”

When church life is marked by “co-responsibility,” Bishop Dunn said, “the Gospel will be heard anew, our faith fill be passed on more effectively, we will be renewed in our faith and our witness will become more authentic.” [More]

SOURCE

Catholic News Service

 
 
 
 

4 Comments

  1. Tholmas Merton says:

    WOW a voice of reason in a sea of lies. And it took a Canadian to do it. Shame on you American bishops and all bishops in general. You have sold your souls to the devil and expect the rest of us to take up the slack. Never in the course of the church have so many lied, so often and with malice aforethought to the catholics in the pew.

  2. GREG SMITH says:

    Amen! Let us pray that Bishop Dunn does not remain a voice in the wilderness!

  3. m.l. Larson says:

    Talk is so cheap, especially when coming from “the successors of the Apostles!” All these years later bishops are still only saying they must respond to the abuse crisis, and now they’re suggesting the church must evangelize those hurt by clergy sex abuse. They have to just stop talking about it and get of their episcopal butts and DO something. Action, not words.

    • Catholic Lady says:

      Talk is only cheap if you do not follow through – most of our Canadian clergy does not only talk the talk but walks the walk.

 
 

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