Time ranks SBC rejection of sex-offender database as 'under-reported' story

Time ranks SBC rejection of sex-offender database as 'under-reported' story PDF Print E-mail
By Bob Allen   
Wednesday, 17 December 2008

NEW YORK (ABP) -- Time Magazine ranked the Southern Baptist Convention's refusal to establish a database of clergy sex offenders one of the most under-reported news stories in 2008.

A ranking of under-reported stories in Time's "Top 10 Everything of 2008" special feature placed the story at No. 6, behind a mix-up that accidentally sent U.S. nuclear-warhead fuses to Taiwan, the Congolese civil war, violence in Sri Lanka, and new guidelines for insurance coverage for mental health and regulation of food from animals that are genetically altered.

"Facing calls to curb child sex abuse within its churches, in June the Southern Baptist Convention -- the largest U.S. religious body after the Catholic Church -- urged local hiring committees to conduct federal background checks but rejected a proposal to create a central database of staff and clergy who have been either convicted of or indicted on charges of molesting minors," the magazine noted.

"The SBC decided against such a database in part because its principle of local autonomy means it cannot compel individual churches to report any information. And while the headlines regarding churches and pedophilia remain largely focused on Catholic parishes, the lack of hierarchical structure and systematized record-keeping in most Protestant churches makes it harder not only for church leaders to impose standards, but for interested parties to track allegations of abuse."

Christa Brown, Baptist outreach leader for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, agreed the story was under-reported.

"It's such an extremely important story," she said. "The largest Protestant denomination in the land -- a denomination that claims 16.2 million members -- refused to even attempt to implement the sorts of proactive measures for routing out predators that other major faith groups have."

Brown, a survivor of clergy sex abuse, worked two years to draw attention to the problem of unreported sexual abuse in Southern Baptist churches before seeing denominational leaders recommend against her suggestion of a national database.

Last month Brown and SNAP National Director David Clohessy wrote SBC President Johnny Hunt asking for a meeting about establishing a system to report abusive clergy.

"As president of the Southern Baptist Convention, you now have the opportunity to show genuine leadership on the issue of clergy sex abuse and cover-ups," the letter said. "This may be one of the greatest leadership challenges in the history of Southern Baptists."

The SNAP leaders said Southern Baptists' local-church autonomy makes it all-the-more imperative that congregations have enough information to make responsible decisions about whom they call as ministers.

"The only way people in the pews will find out about clergy child molesters is if victims feel safe in reporting them," they said. "And victims are never going to feel safe if they have to report abuse by going to the church of the accused minister."

"Telling clergy victims to 'go to the church' is like telling them to go to the den of the wolf who savaged them," the letter said. "It is cruel to the victim and unproductive toward the end of protecting others."

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Bob AllenBob Allen This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.

 

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  • 3/6/2009 7:12 AM Suzanne wrote:
    Curt and Helen,

    I found this site & information surfing the net. Please share with your membership.
    Blessings to you both! Suzanne

    P.S. It pertains to all clergy in all denominations; not just celibate priests. In my opinion, a married minister can be just as deviant as a celibate priest: both abuse their power and authority.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Psychological Effects of Abuse
    WHY IT IS NOT AN AFFAIR:

    (This information is applicable to both adult female and male victims of clergy abuse.)

    Most adult clergy abuse victims are also survivors of childhood sexual abuse that in turn predisposed them to vulnerability to sexual exploitation, as adults.

    Any relationship between a cleric and their congregants is identical to that of medical practitioners or psychiatric professionals with their clients. It is against the law, in all states, for lay medical and counseling professionals to enter into sexual relations with clients. It should be likewise with clerics.

    No one is raised from birth to believe that therapists can help us gain eternal life or that doctors are God's representatives on earth. Thus, clerics often enjoy an even more exalted and trusted and valued status even over highly trained and well educated lay professionals.

    A true consenting adult relationship can only occur between more-or-less equally empowered individuals. It is never a relationship between equals when one half of the relationship refers to the other half as Father or Reverend.

    Secret, sexual relations between a cleric and congregant are circumstantially and psychologically akin to incest and therefore as emotionally damaging of adult as child victims. (sources: Rutter, Sex in the Forbidden Zone: Plante, et al, Bless Me Father, for I Have Sinned; Carnes, The Betrayal Bond, Rev. Dr. Marie Fortune, FaithTrust Alliance)

    As with their lay counterparts, clerics have the ultimate responsibility to maintain appropriate boundaries with their congregants and those they counsel . Blaming a victim for a cleric's failure to maintain boundaries, however seductive or provocative the victim, is ethically and morally inexcusable. A cleric always has the overriding obligation to direct such persons to other counsel and not lead them further astray.



    Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests
    www.snapnetwork.org



    http://www.snapnetwork.org/psych_effects/effectsindex.htm
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