Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on remarks
made by Father Benedict Groeschel in the National Catholic Register regarding
the sexual abuse of minors:
A quarter century ago, Father Groeschel and seven other
priests broke away from a religious community to found the Franciscan Friars of
Renewal. His service to the Church over the past half-century has been nothing
less than heroic. His ministry to the least among us is especially noteworthy.
Father Groeschel holds a Ph.D. in psychology from Columbia University, and has put his training to
work by counseling some of the most mentally and socially challenged people in
our society. In addition, for the past four decades he has been screening men
for the priesthood, weeding out those who should not be ordained. His record is
impressive.
In a recent interview, he hypothesized how a young person
(14, 16 or 18, as he put it) could conceivably take advantage of a priest who
was having a nervous breakdown. He also referred to Jerry Sandusky, the
disgraced Penn State football coach, as “this poor
guy.” For these remarks, and related comments, he is now being labeled as a
defender of child abuse.
The accusation is scurrilous. In the same interview,
Groeschel emphatically said that priests who are sexual abusers “have to
leave.” His reference to Sandusky
was exactly the way a priest-psychologist might be expected to speak: “poor
guy” conveys sympathy for his maladies—it is not a defense of his behavior!
Indeed, Groeschel asked, “Why didn’t anyone say anything?”
Groeschel is nearly 80 years old. A few years back, he was almost killed in an auto accident that left him disabled; it has definitely taken a toll on him. I have known him for two decades, and recently spent an afternoon with him. I’ve read his books, listened to his tapes—on sexual abuse—and have come to know a great priest. To condemn him for one part of one interview is wholly unjust