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A man of faith’s journey through life knowing that he was sexually abused by a Catholic priest

I write this reflection seeking to relinquish the stigma of victimisation, choosing to embark upon the road to freedom and liberation. It is my story of a spiritual journey while trying to make sense and find meaning after naming sexual abuse in my life. The journey has not been easy as I have grappled with the Institutional Church, the abuse and my faith. I would hope that some fellow travelers would draw strength from the telling.

The abuse and its effects

As a young man in training for Catholic priesthood I was sexually abused by a Catholic priest. The world as I knew it came to an end. My spirituality was gift and strength but, my being experienced a travesty. The experience of abuse and living with the aftermath has interfered with my sense of worth and goodness. The indifference of those who should have supported me challenged my trust in humanity. My sense of emotional connection with self, with God and with others has been sorely tested. My personality has been influenced by oppression. An inner conflict challenges my daily existence.

I have continued to work for more than thirty years in what I call my vocation within the Catholic Church despite the abuse by a member of the clergy. Within this there has been an inner accumulation of layer upon layer of unresolved bitterness, resentment and anger at repeated injustices and unjustifiable suffering. The inner suffering has been so intense that it has become crystallised in my body. The traumatic effects of the abuse have been so severe that they have manifested themselves as physical and psychological symptoms.

Questions of faith and the Institutional response

I have questioned how can one discern the presence of God in the atrocity of sexual abuse? I believe that a process of bringing into the light what has been done in the dark can be seen as part of an ongoing process of healing for survivors, for the Church and the wider community. Martin Moran in his book “The Tricky Part” carries the reader to the heart of a paradox: that what we think of as damage may be the very thing that gives rise to transformation, even grace (beauty). For me the God within is real and known. I understand that through and in all of this pain there was, is and will be grace, as my God embraces me.

How has the Church as an institution embraced me? This question has been a cause of great pain. The Catholic Church of Australia provides the Towards Healing process to survivors of abuse by Church personnel. I have been in the Towards Healing process now for fourteen months. In this time and as part of this process I have not met pastorally, face to face with any representative of the Church entity. I continue to search for the pastoral embrace at the institutional level.

My community

I am privileged to belong to a worshipping community that has embraced the efforts of the Royal Commission. Our community held a special prayer gathering at the beginning of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. A candle burns in our Church at all community prayer, acknowledging those who have been abused and those who are supporting them. Our priest has been open and honest in delivering the Jesus message in the story. Our parish newsletter has an article each week reporting developments of the Commission and resources. Only a few people in this community know my story but I experience support here as there is a communal spirit of compassion toward those abused and their families.

The Spiritual Life

“The spiritual life is not a specialized part of daily life. Everything you do in the day, from washing to eating breakfast, having meetings, driving to work, solving problems, making more problems for yourself once you have solved them, watching television or deciding instead to read, going to a restaurant or a movie or going to church, everything you do is your spiritual life. It is only a matter of how consciously you do these ordinary things, how attentive you are to the opportunities they offer for growth, for enjoyment, and how mindfully, how selflessly, how compassionately, you perform them.” — Laurence Freeman

Meaning making and my spiritual life

My God, my spirituality, our Church has been an integral part of my life story. I consider myself fortunate to have travelled a personal spiritual journey where the words, “I love you.” were heard loud and clear. The response to this love has been lived in the Catholic faith. My call to mission has been explored in the lived experience of priesthood, marriage, fatherhood and the learning world of children. Within this mission I locked the story of sexual abuse away. Mission is about opening up, setting free and thus after more than thirty years my body would no longer hold the secret. I needed to dig to the depths of my spirituality and hold on with whatever strength this gave me to open the story of sexual transgression.

What then have been my spiritual supports in making meaning of this story of abuse? Theologian, Ron Rolheiser maintains that Jesus prescribed four essentials in living a healthy spiritual life;

  1. Private prayer and private morality
  2. Social justice
  3. Mellowness of heart and spirit
  4. Community as a constitutive element of true worship

I have taken these essentials and worked with each one to try and sustain my relationship with God and the world. How have I worked at this?

Private prayer and private morality (Daily time with the God within)

  • Meditation
  • Mindfulness
  • Gratitude
  • Spiritual reading
  • Fidelity to the Jesus story
  • Spiritual direction
  • Counselling

Social justice (Being active in the life of others – the weakest members. Where I stand with the poor)

  • Forcing myself to keep contact with others.
  • Setting diary dates for outreach weekly
  • Keeping others in mind
  • Visiting residents at an Acquired Brain Injury Rehabilitation Centre
  • Mindfulness to the moment, within the community of the universe. I am part of the “big bang” what is my responsibility in this creation?

Mellowness of heart and spirit (Loving kindness, good friends, creativity, healthy living, wine drinking)

  • Practising compassion to self (acknowledging all that is happening, it is what it is and not beating up on self)
  • Getting dirty – put my hands into soil, around plants – being creative – physical exertion
  • Acknowledging a thought is only a thought, it is not reality
  • Healthy leisure – play
  • Take time to see creation around me – search for beauty
  • Make some contact with three friends each day – texting, email, phone, card
sexually abused by priest

Community as a constitutive element of true worship (The communal search for the Divine. How we relate to each other is part how we relate to God).

  • Finding a community in which you are enabled to acknowledge the Divine
  • Acknowledging the Divine as an integral part of my life with others – talking about this search with men and women. Being involved in the muck and beauty of community life.
  • Men’s Group – Living Well
  • Engaging with Brother Sun, Sister Moon – touching the magnificence of life forms, being in relationship with the ocean, bush, mountains, flora and fauna. Joining others to celebrate the Divine through nature.

In attending to my spirituality I am aware of these pillars as a guide to health and well-being. It is an endeavour to seek harmony. I continue to seek and ask the question ‘How do I walk the Earth as a person of loving kindness?’ In this question there is hope. I hope that I am able to live well. I am unsure of how the future will play out for me but I believe that the road to recovery will continue to grow and change as I do. I want to eventually come to reject completely the perpetrator’s lie. I want to stand in a place where God can be seen.

Conclusion

In conclusion I borrow the words of James Newton Poling.

With Gods love, I can have the courage to accept my own suffering and the suffering of others in the knowledge that God will sustain me. Everything that I am, without exclusion, is received into the experience of God.

In Jesus I can see a God who can embrace the full ambiguity of good and evil without losing integrity.

Even when evil seems to penetrate everything in my sight, still there is hope in a God who strives for beauty and justice. I do not need a perfect God to rescue me from the mess of this concrete life. Rather I need a God whose power is sufficient to sustain resilient hope for justice in the midst of ambiguity.

The Abuse of Power: A Theological Problem – James Newton Poling

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