The
RADEN Report
April 1, 2002
Rome
And
Daughters
Ecumenical
News
Additional thoughts on:
"Roman Catholic Church Sexual
Abuse
Scandal making national news"
RADEN
Report 03-26-02.
Interest in this unfolding story is surprisingly
high. It is a painful human tragedy that there is a RCC-homosexual/pedophile
issue. And yes, make no mistake, there is a homosexual issue here. As you
might expect, the secular media is focusing on the pedophile priest issue, but
if you look at the statistics being reported, a very large percentage of
the abuse reported is of teenage and older male youth.
This unholy scandal must be especially
embarrassing to those evangelical leaders who are active in the
ecumenical movement, such as those involved in the ECT Alliance.
These so-called "evangelical" ecumenists have pleaded their case
that we all must join together, cooperating with Roman Catholicism on the
basis of contending against a corrupt and immoral culture.
[Aside... Incredibly, some of the ECT
Alliance participants suggest that we need to join together with
Muslims, as well, for this same purpose. ECT participant
Peter Kreeft says, "Muslims and Christians
preach and practice the same First Commandment... we serve the same divine
Commander." (RCC "theologian" Peter Kreeft
in his book Ecumenical Jihad; Ecumenism and the Culture War,
1996, Ignatius Press. And if that's not incredible enough, this heretical book
is endorsed by both ECT co-founders, Southern
Baptist Charles Colson and RCC
priest Richard Neuhaus.)]
For many Roman Catholics the horrid reality
of such gross immorality among their priests strikes at the heart of their
entire belief system. Roman Catholic priests have projected
themselves as the very representatives of God, separated by ordination and
above the Catholic laity. They have taught faithful Roman Catholics that
they are empowered by God to transform bread and wine into the very
body and blood of Christ. According to RCC dogma, the priests are
the necessary arm of the Roman Church entrusted with the ability to remit sins
and dispense divine grace to faithful Catholics. Obviously, these men are supposed
to be the picture of morality. Instead, a growing number of these priests
are being exposed as utterly immoral.
And not only has a dark cloud of suspicion been
cast upon local priests, but the entire Roman Catholic hierarchical
system is shaken by the revelations that highly placed Roman Catholic leaders
have been actively covering-up and harboring guilty pedophile and homosexual
priests - known predators - and even paying the abused victims to keep quiet!
(A student of history will find that immorality and abuse of trust are
not at all new problems within the Roman hierarchy.)
Can you imagine the contradiction presented in
the minds and hearts of faithful Roman Catholics who have given money to their
church, being assured by their leaders that they were supporting
God's work... only to now discover that their church leaders have been using
this money in efforts to cover-up the sins of the very priests who are
undermining the morality of their children and youth?
Some Catholics react...
Here in Roman Catholic dominated south Louisiana
there seem to be at least two basic reactions from Catholics.
First, there are those who are shocked to find that such things could go on. Secondly,
there are those who are not surprised at all.
Those in the first group have become personally
skilled at a form of self-deception called "denial." These are very loyal
Roman Catholics who for their entire lives have deflected rumors of scandalous
behavior by priests. (In fact, a significant number of these individuals still
do not accept the truth regarding the present scandal.)
Those in the second group are not surprised
by this scandal because over the years they have come to accept the reality of
the moral failures of various Roman priests. Growing up in a
Roman Catholic culture, they have observed that there are homosexual
priests, pedophile priests, and sometimes that there are children in the
community who have been fathered by priests. They have repeatedly seen
the efforts by their bishops to cover-up the immorality of individual
priests, quickly moving an offending priest to another parish or another
diocese. These loyal Catholics have come to see the Roman Catholic
religion as something completely separated from the immorality of
many of its priests, bishops, and other hierarchical leaders.
Some evangelicals react...
There are at least two reactions beginning to take
form among various "evangelicals." (Personally, I use a much
narrower definition of the term "evangelical" than do a lot of
folks... but that's an issue for another day.)
First, there are those who have been ecumenically
inclined, those who have shown by their actions that they accept Roman
Catholicism as a valid form of Christianity. Understandably, most of these
seem to be staying away from the public spotlight, apparently hoping that
this will all pass over and not affect them.
The second group of evangelicals, a much smaller
group, is not at all surprised by this scandal within Roman Catholicism.
What they are surprised about is that this has finally gotten past the
cover-up efforts of powerful RCC leaders and has now made front-page news.
These evangelical believers have known that corruption and immorality is
rampant within the Roman hierarchy. They know from personal experience that
Roman Catholic leaders often wear various "masks" in order
to hide the truth (in plain English that is called deception).
But for the majority of evangelicals, there is a
quiet caution about all of this, because they know that there are similar
problems that can be pointed to among evangelicals. I'll
say more about this in another RADEN Report,
but first...
Back to the real issue, please!
We must be careful here and focus on the fundamental
(do I dare use that word?) issue that divides evangelical belief from
Catholic belief. The issue of eternal significance is the fact that
the biblical Gospel and the Roman Catholic gospel are NOT the same gospel.
The official gospel preached by Roman Catholicism is a system of
merited grace dispensed by the RCC through its sacraments (religious works).
The biblical Gospel is described in Scripture as by faith in Christ's already
finished work, completely the gift of God and not in any way merited by
the works of men. The Word of God is clear,
"For
by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the
gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast." (Ephesians
2:8-9)
The Roman Catholic false gospel of merited grace
is a perversion of the Scriptures which is used by the RCC hierarchy to
keep Catholic people faithful to the Roman Catholic Church as their only
hope for salvation. Listen to what the Roman Catholic Church officially says
about this...
"The Catholic faithful are
required to profess that there is an historical continuity -- rooted
in the apostolic succession -- between the Church founded by Christ and the
Catholic Church... the Church of Christ, despite the divisions which exist
among Christians, continues to exist fully only in the Catholic Church....
"Therefore, there exists a
single Church of Christ, which subsists in the Catholic Church, governed by
the Successor of Peter and by the Bishops in communion with him.
"Above all else, it must be
firmly believed that the Church... is necessary for salvation....
"...it is necessary to keep
these two truths together, namely, the real possibility of salvation in Christ
for all mankind and the necessity of the Church for this salvation.
"The Church is the 'universal
sacrament of salvation'...
"God has willed that the
Church founded by him be the instrument for the salvation of all
humanity.
"Indeed, the Church... must be
primarily committed to announcing the necessity of conversion to Jesus Christ
and of adherence to the Church through Baptism and the other sacraments, in
order to participate fully in communion with God, the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit." (emphasis in
original)
These quotations are not from some ancient
document thought to have little significance today. They are taken from "Dominus
Iesus," an official declaration made by the
Roman Catholic hierarchy on August 6, 2000.