ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
Thursday, Apr. 01 2010

The outrage gap
By Colleen Carroll Campbell

Easter is only days away, and for Catholics reeling from the clergy scandal
stories that have surfaced in recent weeks, the end of the church's penitential
season cannot come too soon.

It seems only yesterday Catholics were slogging through the long Lent of 2002,
enduring a constant trickle of scandal news and feeling the same shame and
anger. We wondered then, as now: How could this have happened to so many
children? How could so many adults — bishops, no less — have failed to stop it?

There are caveats, of course, and context. Much context has been missing from
reports about Pope Benedict XVI's involvement with decades-old cases of
predatory priests in Munich and Milwaukee.

In the Munich case, all that's known for sure is that then-Cardinal Ratzinger
allowed an accused priest to come to his diocese for psychotherapy — then
considered an appropriate remedy for pedophilia — and the priest was reassigned
to parish work on Ratzinger's watch, although the Vatican says Ratzinger did
not authorize the reassignment. In the Milwaukee case, Ratzinger's Rome office
was informed about the abusive priest two decades after the priest left a
school for the deaf amid abuse allegations. A church trial was pending when the
priest died two years later, according to the judge.

Unfortunately, none of these details erases the suffering of abuse victims. And
many Catholics remain outraged by the familiar pattern of abusers walking free
while their victim count climbs.

Some Catholics blame the media for stoking such outrage and picking on the
church. They note that sexual abuse also occurs in families, public schools and
scout troops. They say anti-Catholic bigots are using the scandal to discredit
the church. They argue that American bishops deserve credit for the
zero-tolerance policy they instituted in 2002.

Valid points all. Still, something is missing.

As a new mother gazing into the innocent eyes of my two babies, marveling at
their wide-open smiles and implicit trust, I feel revolted by the thought that
someone could violate that trust in such unspeakable ways. Looking at them, I
don't much care about caveats or context. I don't want to hear apologies or
complaints about media bias or comparisons to the equally abysmal records of
other institutions. I'm glad there is zero tolerance for pedophiles, but I want
something more.

I want outrage.

I want to know that the righteous anger I feel toward these predators in
cleric's clothing is shared — by the many good priests smeared by the sins of a
few, by the bishops forced to deal with such predators, by the pope who knows
more than anyone the length, breadth and depth of this plague.

Perhaps that's what has been missing all along in the church's response to this
crisis, from the early days when pedophiles were bounced from one parish to
another, to recent years, when church leaders plaintively assured the faithful
that they feel the victims' pain. Empathy, contrition and strict new policies
are good, but they cannot restore confidence until lay Catholics know in their
bones that church leaders share their fury at these sickening crimes and their
perpetrators, that protecting children no longer will take a back seat to
protecting clerics.

Benedict, in many ways, is ideally suited to voice this righteous anger. As
leading Vatican expert John Allen argued in a recent New York Times op-ed,
Ratzinger's experience poring over abuse case files beginning in 2001 led him
to a "conversion" on this issue. It drove him to take several unprecedented
steps as pope, including disciplining prominent clerics who previously had
escaped scrutiny, meeting personally with abuse victims and writing the first
pastoral letter focused on the abuse crisis.

Those steps are a start, and we need more — more disclosure about how abuse
cases were handled, more pointed reprimands of the most negligent bishops and
more vocal acknowledgment of the outrage that victims and lay Catholics rightly
feel. Rather than being intimidated into silence by his late arrival at full
understanding of this crisis, Benedict should shout from the rooftops what
Catholic mothers and fathers need to hear now: What happened to these children
was an abomination. Nothing excuses it. And, so help us God, we will do
everything in our power to make sure it never happens again.

Colleen Carroll Campbell is an author, television and radio host and St.
Louis-based fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Her website is
www.colleen-campbell.com.