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The Lay Scandal
BY The Editors
June 15-21, 2008 Issue |
Posted 6/10/08 at 10:09 AM
According to
conventional wisdom, the biggest sexual-abuse scandal of our time is clergy
abuse. Those who have studied it will add, “And it wasn’t just the relatively
small percentage of abusers that was the problem. It was the bishops who did
nothing to stop it.”
As Pope
Benedict XVI pointed out when he visited the United States in April, that
conventional wisdom speaks truth.
But
there’s a much deeper and wider scandal that this conventional wisdom misses
entirely.
Said
Benedict on April 16: “What does it mean to speak of child protection when
pornography and violence can be viewed in so many homes through media widely
available today?”
The deepest, widest sexual scandal
in the Church has nothing to do with priests. It’s the scandal of laypeople who
themselves indulge in the sexual excesses so prevalent in our day, or who train
their children to, whether by example, timidity or a blind eye.
The Holy Father elaborated on this
scandal in his address to bishops.
“Children deserve to grow up with a
healthy understanding of sexuality and its proper place in human
relationships,” he said. “They should be spared the degrading manifestations
and the crude manipulation of sexuality so prevalent today.”
There was a time when, in too many
Catholic families, sex was a taboo topic. The silence gave it an aura of
mystery and allowed misconceptions to grow.
Today the problem is very different.
If children are watching prime-time television (including the commercials) they
routinely see sexuality presented as if it were merely a form of entertainment,
or a way to gain power over others, or at any rate something to be treated casually.
If they are watching prime-time
crime shows, they are seeing something far darker. Fringe activities that
polite society never dwelled on before are now the plot-drivers on shows like
“CSI” and “Law & Order.”
Kids can’t sift through all of this potent
sexual content (indeed, many adults can’t). They end up acting out what they
see, at ever younger ages. It’s a scandal that they are exposed to it at all.
Parents best prepare their children
for the world when they take care to find the balance between the extremes of
making sexuality an unmentionable subject, and unqualified exposure to
contemporary sexual excess.
Next, Pope Benedict said: “They have
a right to be educated in authentic moral values rooted in the dignity of the
human person. This brings us back to our consideration of the centrality of the
family and the need to promote the Gospel of life.”
Children often hear about sexuality
from friends before they hear about it from their parents, and young people
often go astray in large ways and small in sexual matters. But despite all of
that, in the end, they tend to adopt their parents’ sexual morality when they
enter adulthood — if it is ever presented to them.
The availability of pornography on
the Internet makes it more true than ever: The only way you will protect your
children from the immorality in the world is to convince them of the truth and
beauty of the morality of the Church.
And the only way to convince them of
that is to learn about it yourself, and then share what you learn.
Register stories from our archives
report about how easily men fall into pornography addiction, and the toll it
takes. Theology of the Body apostolates we have featured are giving people an
important grounding. These can all be fodder for discussion with children who
are old enough to hear about them.
Next, Pope Benedict said: “We need
to reassess urgently the values underpinning society, so that a sound moral
formation can be offered to young people and adults alike. All have a part to
play in this task — not only parents, religious leaders, teachers and
catechists, but the media and entertainment industries as well. Indeed, every
member of society can contribute to this moral renewal and benefit from it.”
The culture we will send our
children into is centered on media as never before. That means that our
children will have a full palette of choices that run from remarkably beautiful
presentations of goodness and truth to the worst, ugliest lies presented in the
most alluring ways.
Our
role is not just to train our children how to tell the difference, but also to
do all we can to help the former prosper and the latter wane. Children will
learn to imitate their parents’ self-discipline. If as parents we routinely
watch television we know we ought to have qualms with, we should be aware that
our children are watching us, and will do the same. They will also imitate our
movie-renting habits.
That the culture is filled with
glimmering dangerous lures is a given. That Catholics make the problem worse by
investing in them is a scandal.
Cardinal Francis George commented to
a Chicago newspaper that he, too, was struck by the importance of Pope
Benedict’s words about the lay scandal.
“Bishops haven’t felt free to say
that because it looks like we’re letting ourselves off the hook,” he said. “But
he’s free to say it. And he did.”
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