• Live
    • Audio Only
  • google plus
  • facebook
  • twitter
News > World

Pope: Church Should Admit History of Violence Towards Women

  • Pope Francis said that the Catholic church should admit its history of abuse of women and children.

    Pope Francis said that the Catholic church should admit its history of abuse of women and children. | Photo: Reuters

Published 2 April 2019
Opinion

The Pope said the Catholic Church should admit its history of violence and abuse of women and children and male domination.

Pope Francis said Tuesday the Catholic Church had to acknowledge a history of male domination and sexual abuse of women and children and repair its reputation among young people or risk becoming “a museum.”

RELATED:

Chilean Priest Under House Arrest, Investigation for Sex Abuse

Although, in the report the pope admitted to an array of scandals and the clergy's significant failure to act, he also said the Church “could not agree with everything some feminist groups propose,” a clear reference to the Church’s ban on a female priesthood.

Some women’s groups seek a female priesthood. The Church has ruled this out, arguing Jesus chose only men as his apostles.

The pope is grappling with criticism over the Church’s response to a decades-long clerical sexual abuse crisis that has gravely damaged its standing around the globe and seen it pay out billions of dollars in compensation.

Francis made his comment in a 50-page “Apostolic Exhortation” about a month-long meeting of bishops in October on the role of young people in the 1.3 billion-member Church.

Francis, 82, urged young people not to be disillusioned by the sexual abuse scandal, but to work with the overwhelming majority of priests and other clergies faithful to their vocation.

He said clergy sexual abuse was “a tragedy” and asked young people to help the Church in "this dark moment."

RELATED:

French Cardinal Convicted for Hiding Pedophile Priest's Abuses

"A living Church can look back on history and acknowledge a fair share of male authoritarianism, domination, various forms of enslavement, abuse and sexist violence," the pontiff said.

His document, however, did not address demands by women participants at the Synod saying they should be allowed to vote during such meetings in the future.

Francis acknowledged the Church had to win back many young people who see it as insignificant in their lives or a nuisance.

He said such a view of the Church can "have serious and understandable reasons: sexual and financial scandals; a clergy ill-prepared to engage effectively with the sensitivities of the young."

And while he said the Church should be “attentive to the legitimate claims of those women who seek greater justice and equality” and that young people had complained of a “lack of leading female role models,” he offered no new ideas. Only a handful of women hold positions of authority in the Vatican.

This month the all-female staff of the Vatican newspaper’s monthly magazine on women’s issues resigned, saying a new editor sought to put them "under direct male control."

Recent stories in the magazine include one on sexual abuse of nuns by priests. The editor has denied their accusations.

Comment
0
Comments
Post with no comments.