|
Father Benedict
Groeschel Responds to his Critics
(from Catalyst, May 2003)
Father Benedict Groeschel, C.F.R. is a good friend of
the Catholic League. On March 2, the Dallas Morning News
published an article about him titled, “Priest plays down abuse crisis
while helping clergy keep jobs.” It was written by Brooks Egerton, a
staff writer for the News; he is also the past chairman of the
Texas chapter of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association.
The article was reprinted in the Philadelphia Inquirer on March
23. Another article critical of Father Groeschel was written by Maya
Kremen; it appeared in the Paterson, NJ Herald News on March 4.
Father Groeschel has responded to the articles and we
are reprinting his answers point by point to set the record straight. We
have taken the liberty of splicing his remarks so that the
point-counterpoint context is readily understandable.
Dallas Morning News: In the world according
to Father Benedict Groeschel, the Catholic Church’s sexual abuse
scandal is largely the stuff of fiction. Reporters “doing the work
of Satan” are driven to lie, the New York priest says, because they
hate the church’s moral teachings.
Fr. Benedict: I do stand by my statement that the secular media
have taken the scandal out of proportion, ignored many charges of
abuse of minors and committed by others in professional roles, created
the impression that this is only a problem of Catholic clergy. Writers
as varied as George Weigel, Philip Jenkins, Andrew Greeley, Richard
Neuhaus and Peter Steinfels have all been critical of the media
coverage of these scandals.
DMN: The Franciscan friar’s base is a mansion on Long
Island Sound, where he runs the Archdiocese of New York’s spiritual
development office and Trinity Retreat Center for clergy.
BG: I have not been the director of Trinity Retreat for ten
years. This retreat for priests has never been referred to before as a
mansion. In fact, I don’t even live in the building. I have lived
for years in the garage.
DMN: According to his own written account, he has counseled
hundreds of his brethren and “happily, 85 priests have returned to
the active ministry.”
BG: Egerton mentions that 85 priests have returned to the
active ministry through Trinity Retreat, implying that some of these
priests had difficulties with minors. These were priests on leaves of
absence, not priests who had been accused of any misbehavior at all.
DMN: Father Groeschel… declined interview requests.
BG: I did not decline to be interviewed. I never spoke to Mr.
Egerton because I was not at home when he called.
DMN: Dallas Bishop Charles Grahmann has allowed one of his
priests, removed from parish work after the diocese concluded he had
abused a girl, to help manage the retreat center in recent years. That
priest, the Rev. Richard T. Brown, moved to a hermitage a few months
ago….
BG: Fr. Richard Brown never assisted in the management of
Trinity Retreat. He did typing and recorded reservations for priests
coming on retreat. He lived a most prayerful and ascetical life while
here and he had done so for many years before as many people have
said. He did no pastoral work in the New York Archdiocese, nor did
anyone ever request permission for him to do so.
DMN: Leaders of the neighboring Diocese of Paterson, N.J.,
one of several that sent business to Father Groeschel, blamed three
“unfortunate” reassignments on his advice.
Letter from Marianna Thompson, Director of Communications, Diocese
of Paterson, to the Herald-News: I never used the word
“blame” in my conversations with the Dallas Morning News. The
diocesan focus in this issue is not to cast blame on others….
DMN: “It just burns me to no end,” said Buddy Cotton,
who has accused the Rev. James Hanley of abusing him in the Paterson
Diocese and recently called Bishop Rodimer to complain about Father
Groeschel.
BG: [From a letter to the Herald News 3/3/03] I had
nothing to do with the reappointment of James Hanley to another parish
after he was removed from Mendham as a result of serious accusations
of abuse of minors. In fact, I had never heard of the case. I became
involved when Hanley came on retreat after he was removed a second
time from a new assignment.
DMN: A psychologist who evaluated Father [Morgan] Kuhl for
federal prosecutors recommended that he “be enrolled in a program
specific to sex offenders,” not just in the general psychotherapy
and spiritual counseling he was getting…. U.S. District Judge Anne
Thompson initially sentenced Father Kuhl to a short prison term
followed by house arrest. But she later reduced the penalty, over the
objections of prosecutor Donna Krappa, to five years of probation and
ordered the priest to “adhere to the program requirements at Trinity
Retreat.”
In advocating probation, Father Groeschel
represented himself to the court as a counseling psychologist, Ms.
Krappa said in an interview. New York state officials said he has
never had the license generally required for use of that title. Using
the title without a license is a misdemeanor, state officials said.
BG: I can say Morgan Kuhl never received any treatment from me
and was in fact directly enrolled in a formal treatment program
elsewhere. We provided a supervised residence, which the court agreed
to continue.
As to the issue of my not having a license: a Doctor
of Psychology does not need a license unless he is receiving third
part payments for instance from an insurance company or an agency. I
never intended to receive any pay doing psychological counseling or
spiritual direction, so I never bothered about a license. In fact I
have never been paid a cent for my services that Mr. Egerton refers to
as “business.” It is not uncommon for professors of psychology not
to obtain licenses to practice, because clinical practice is not our
principal vocation.
BG: [To the Herald News] I am at a great disadvantage in
defending myself because of the right of confidentiality of the people
involved. I have worked as a therapist and spiritual director with
clergy for 30 years after obtaining a doctorate in Counseling
Psychology at Columbia University. I have never charged a fee and have
never asked for or received payment. I have seen clergy of various
different denominations and faiths. Like any therapist I have made
mistakes. People forget that therapists and spiritual directors are
neither prosecutors nor defense attorneys. Since I cannot defend
myself, I think that any honest person will admit that what has been
said against me is unfair and based on misinformation. Being a strong
advocate of Church reform does not make you popular—but Jesus did
not suggest that we would be popular if we try to follow Him.
CLOSING COMMENTS BY FATHER GROESCHEL:
Since the accusations came out, I contacted each of
the priests involved and obtained their permission to state publicly
that I neither evaluated nor treated them. They were all treated in
very well-known professional programs and their placements were based
on the joint decisions of well-known psychiatrists, psychologists and
mental health professionals. At the suggestion of Cardinal O’Connor,
we offered the Trinity Retreat as a place of retreat, prayer, penance
and rehabilitation to priests. I often passed on the written
recommendation of other mental health professionals.
WILLIAM DONOHUE OFFERED THESE REMARKS:
Father Benedict Groeschel is a courageous and
brilliant priest who has given his life to the Catholic Church. Only
those who seek to undermine Catholicism would ever lash out at him.
And when they do, the Catholic League will not hesitate to rush to his
defense.
Father Benedict Groeschel, C.F.R.,
is the Director of the Office for Spiritual Development of the New York
Archdiocese and a founding member of the Franciscan Friars of the
Renewal.
|