The New Reformation
By Crispin Sartwell
Priestly abuses that are entailed by the very idea of the Catholic Church, and will continue as long
as it does.
When Martin Luther broke with the Church in the 16th century, he did it for many reasons, but
one above all: he didn't want anything coming between him and God.
He was disgusted by the idea that he could know God - and that God could know him - only
through a bureaucracy. And so he objected especially to every aspect of Catholicism that tended
toward a separation of the worshiper from God. He translated the Bible into German, so that his
parishioners could understand it. He criticized much of the mumbo-jumbo surrounding the
sacraments, and tried to make them simple and meaningful to the people who performed them.
The deepest objection of Luther and the reformers who followed was to "priestcraft": the
notion, which is absolutely fundamental to Catholicism, that one's only access to God comes
through His representatives on earth in the form of Roman Catholic priests. Luther argued for
"the priesthood of all believers," in an attempt to make people see that everyone was revealed
directly to God, and God to everyone.
As we peep ever further into the private lives of priests, the scene gets ever more lurid. In the
latest parting of the curtain - via thousands of personnel records released by the Boston
archdiocese - we find that, for example, the Rev. Robert Meffan allegedly convinced teenaged
aspiring nuns to have sex by claiming to be God's representative on earth, to be the path of their
access to the deity.
But in fact, the recent abuses of power in the Catholic church are less shocking than typical.
Compared to the extent of the corruption and concupiscence displayed by the church in history,
the current transgressions are mild. Much of the incredible wealth of the Church, for example, was
derived from the sale of indulgences: forgiveness in exchange for cash, a kind of pimping for God.
The intrigues, sexual and otherwise, of the Papacy have filled volumes.
Many Catholics think that the problem of abuse can be solved by internal reform of the church.
But the idea that the institutions of the Church could be made transparent and accountable is
incompatible with the basic structure of Catholicism, which is a hierarchy - a pantheon of
intercessors from priests to saints - empowered by God to interpret His will to the world.
The authority of the Catholic Church, on its own account, is mystical, God-given, and total.
Such an institution cannot be made democratic or responsive.
If we know anything, it is that human beings abuse power. Making someone a President is
giving him a license to abuse interns, and if he doesn't, it's because he won't. Power doesn't
corrupt, but corrupt people wield power corruptly. And whereas the civil bureaucracy claims
jurisdiction over your money and your behavior, the religious bureaucracy claims jurisdiction over
your conscience. Thus the abuse to which it gives rise is of the most intimate and destructive
variety: it is a destruction of inner autonomy, an attempt to control or destroy not what one does,
but what one is.
Let me issue a sincere disclaimer: the Catholic Church has done and is doing much good in the
world. But if you authorize a group of people to supervise your conscience and your relation to
God, you are very likely to find you have created a brotherhood of monsters.
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Crispin Sartwell teaches philosophy at the Maryland Institute College of Art.