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Joe Paterno Scandal: Is Penn State Like The Catholic Church?

First Posted: 11/10/11 06:50 PM ET Updated: 11/10/11 07:05 PM ET

By David Gibson
Religion News Service

(RNS) Penn State coaching legend Joe Paterno is out in the university's burgeoning sex abuse scandal, and comparisons to the Roman Catholic Church's own abuse scandals are in.

"The parallels are too striking to ignore. A suspected predator who exploits his position to take advantage of his young charges. The trusting colleagues who don't want to believe it -- and so don't," author Jonathan Mahler wrote in The New York Times.

"This was the dynamic that pervaded the Catholic clerical culture during its sexual abuse scandals, and it seems to have been no less pervasive at Penn State."

The analogy is popular. But does it hold up to scrutiny? Yes, and no. Here are three ways in which the twin abuse scandals are similar, and three ways they are different.

Similarities

1. Sports is like a religion, with its rituals and incantations, rules and traditions, collective devotion and uniforms. Indeed, anthropologists say that like religion, athletic competition is one of the oldest communal impulses in human history, and today sports and religion mirror each other almost as much as they did in classical Greece.

To wit: a sign held by one Paterno supporter at a rally for the disgraced coach: "Two of my favorite 'J's' in life: Jesus and Joe Pa."

2. Whatever their bona fides as religions, Penn State and the Catholic Church are big, self-protective institutions. The cover-up is always as bad (or worse) as the crime, and Penn State leaders feared scandal -- and probably harm to their own reputations -- so much that they didn't think about the welfare of the children. Same with so many bishops. And Boy Scout leaders. And teachers unions, and so on.

"The sort of instinct to protect the institution is very similar. And of course, in both cases, it backfires horribly. If your idea was to avoid a scandal, you sure failed," Phil Lawler, a Catholic journalist in Boston, told The Associated Press.

That is why the public blamed bishops more than the predatory priests, and why so much anger has focused on Paterno rather than on alleged abuser Jerry Sandusky.

3. It took a grand jury to bring the Penn State abuse to light, just as it did (and continues to do) in the Catholic Church. Look at last month's indictment of Bishop Robert Finn in Kansas City, Mo., for failing to report a priest suspected of child abuse, or the indictment last February of Monsignor William Lynn, a former top official in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia who is charged with covering up for abusive priests.

Institutions are not good at policing themselves. It is unclear how far the problem extends in college sports, and the church.

Differences

1. Penn State has a system of accountability, however imperfect, because like any university, the school is governed by a board of trustees. In this case, the board took relatively swift action (albeit under severe pressure from the public and authorities) in part because if Penn State loses customers, it goes kaput.

The Catholic Church, meanwhile, believes that even the "gates of hell will not prevail" against it, and many church leaders embrace the "mustard seed" view of a smaller but more devout "saving remnant" that would be purified by suffering. In a reprise of the lesson of the Cross, they would "win by losing." Needless to say, that's not how universities, not to mention football teams, tend to see things.

What's more, the pope is answerable to no one -- except God.

2. Sports is not an actual religion. Sports does not have divine sanction, nor can its leaders make use of divine symbols and power to exploit children -- and potentially turn them against the eternal salvation that those leaders say is the point of a religion's existence. That is a higher order of bad. Sports consists of games in the first instance, and the last.

If anything, sports is more like a cult -- closed in on itself, exalting personalities more than a system or institution. Catholicism is actually a very decentralized community, and Catholics can hold their leaders in the same low regard that they have for politicians. That's why you saw Catholics in Boston protesting to have Cardinal Bernard Law fired in 2002, while thousands of Penn State students rallied to let Paterno keep his job.

3. Penn State, and collegiate athletics as a whole, have not done as much as the Catholic Church to establish systematic safeguards for protecting children and educating students and staff about warning signs and best practices.

Of course, the Catholic Church has had a 10-year head start, and many safeguards were put in place after the fact. But sports experts note that there have been periodic sex scandals involving college coaches for years, and that bad behavior by college athletes -- from sexual assault to bar brawls -- is rampant. Yet there has been little focus on changing a culture that enables such behavior because college sports are, well, sacrosanct.

An ESPN investigation found that between 2002 and 2008, some 46 Penn State football players faced 163 criminal charges, and 27 players were convicted of or pleaded guilty to a combined 45 counts.

In the end, it may be the sensationalism of the sexual abuse of boys by men that has driven coverage of both the Penn State story and the Catholic crisis. And that may reveal as much about American attitudes as it does about the abuse itself.

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By David Gibson Religion News Service (RNS) Penn State coaching legend Joe Paterno is out in the university's burgeoning sex abuse scandal, and comparisons to the Roman Catholic Church's own abuse...
By David Gibson Religion News Service (RNS) Penn State coaching legend Joe Paterno is out in the university's burgeoning sex abuse scandal, and comparisons to the Roman Catholic Church's own abuse...
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08:49 AM on 12/02/2011
How New Hampshire helps the healing process for victims of child sex abuse: http://patch.com/A-pgg9
01:50 PM on 11/17/2011
Anti Catholic bigotry, so pervasive at HP on full display here.
01:53 PM on 11/16/2011
So let's get this straight. It's okay to link what happened at Penn State to the problems with the Catholic Church, yet we can't point the finger at Islam for 9/11.
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Lamar Chapman III
Spirit-Filled Believer! Forensic Litigation!
11:45 AM on 11/16/2011
Greetings America:

What happened to us? We are all going to hell, and rightfully so if we just sit back and rationalize the victimization of our children!!!!! Let's save the institution of football or the government university???? After all 90 million dollars is at stake!!!!! How morally bankrupt can we be? One child at stake is one child too many!!!

OUR CHILDREN? CHILDREN!!! OUR FUTURE!!!!!!!

God take each of us now! We are no better than the Penn State executives silent predators and active coaching predators or the side-line predators a/k/a authors of these "stories" not articles, if we go into our comfort zones, play with words and rationalize whether or not which institution is worse than the other! They are both equally morally bankrupt. Whether or not it will hold up to scrutiny you ask? I'm glad that we are not in the same room!!!! I would show you some scrutiny.......

God has already "scrutinized" this morally offensive conduct. I would give my life for the defense of any child - PERIOD! A predator is a predator and there's no justification, intellectual reasoning, or other "BS" about it!!! Money should not be allowed to make this go away! Prison justice will!

If there ever was a time to speak out, this is it! GOD HELP US!!!!!!!!!!!

LAMAR C. CHAPMAN III
Solo Fides (Only by Faith)
Sacredotal Ordinations - July 11, 1991
Crown of Life Recipient, October 24, 2004
Lincoln Conservative, "Orthodox Republican"

OAK BROOK, ILLINOIS
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NYC123
08:21 AM on 11/16/2011
The Penn State debacle is about people seeing injustices and doing nothing about it! In this example raised the red flag of indignation and we the masses followed.

We the masses see injustice everyday! And like Penn State – we are not willing to do anything about it until our hypocrisy is brought to bear by some power - -that equates to being exposed. Examples: Forty plus years Cuban embargo, 10 years Iraqi blockade, Iraqi and Afghanistan invasions, a handful of Americans only engaged in fighting our wars of adventurism, one percent of the population having all the wealth, and African and Latino Americans high dropout rates from the educations system – coupled with being highly incarcerated; just to mention a few.

The argument is, ”we cannot do everything!” But reality is, we choose to do nothing until exposed – like the Penn State debacle! It is always easier to compared to something or someone else like the Catholic Church -- than personalize the comparison!
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10:52 PM on 11/15/2011
Statistically speaking, children have always been more likely to be abused by sports coaches or teachers than they were their local parish priest. It's the fact that the priest is supposed to be a man of God and held to the highest of standards that makes it sensational
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wbthacker
Can YOU pass the Turing Test?
02:56 PM on 11/15/2011
"Penn State, and collegiate athletics as a whole, have not done as much as the Catholic Church to establish systematic safeguards for protecting children and educating students and staff about warning signs and best practices."

I don't believe that claim -- how do you justify it? Nor do I think it's entirely relevant.

Penn State had a written policy requiring that allegations of child abuse be reported to the police. The Catholic Church has resisted even that -- if they have such a policy now, it was enacted in the past year or so.

So with Penn State the dialog is, "We had policies but some employees violated them, putting us in violation of the law. We fired those employees." With the Catholic Church, it's been, "We knew this priest was abusing children. We didn't report it to the police because we don't feel obliged to. We won't fire the bishop who silenced the initial report, because he was following our policy." Penn State admits they broke the law and shows penitence. The Catholic Church thinks it's ABOVE the law.

Also, PSU doesn't work with large numbers of children, so it's not too surprising they didn't handle this incident as well as a day care center or an elementary school would. The Catholic Church doesn't have that excuse -- they *encourage* children to participate, so they should have strong, well-enforced policies.
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wbthacker
Can YOU pass the Turing Test?
01:22 PM on 11/15/2011
"Sports does not have divine sanction, nor can its leaders make use of divine symbols and power to exploit children -- and potentially turn them against the eternal salvation that those leaders say is the point of a religion's existence. That is a higher order of bad. "

I don't agree that in this case, this is really a difference between the Sandusky and the Catholic Church. First, I think children are more impressed by the authority of a clergyman than by his teachings. The child may or may not believe what the priest has to say about Hell, but he definitely knows his parents respect the priest and expect him to be obedient.

(The child likewise respects police, teachers, scoutmasters, doctors, etc. Any of these people could leverage their authority to prey on children. But the nature of their jobs doesn't give police officers and doctors the unrestricted access to a child that clergy and scoutmasters have. )

Second, in the Sandusky case sports was incidental; it was just a lure, like offering candy to lure a child into a van. Sandusky's authority over the boys he abused came from his position at tSecond Mile. A priest can manipulate through threat of punishment after death, but Sandusky's manipulation involved the immediate prospect of a worse *life*. The kid would think, "Second Mile is my chance to get out of a bad life. If I don' t shower with Mr. Sandusky I'll lose that chance."
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Willie12345
12:36 PM on 11/14/2011
What's the difference ? The child abusers in the Catholic church are better organized and protected/
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colamonkey
My micro-bio contains this sentence.
10:01 AM on 11/13/2011
'In the end, it may be the sensationa­lism of the sexual abuse of boys by men that has driven coverage of both the Penn State story and the Catholic crisis. And that may reveal as much about American attitudes as it does about the abuse itself.'

Sensationa­lism? How about outrage! This isn't coverage of Linsey Lohan's latest arrest--th­is is coverage of a cover-up of serious crimes.

Maybe you don't give a s*** about child rape and abuse and perhaps you don't think that it's a bad thing, but I do care and I think it's horrible. We live in a culture that thinks it's acceptable to treat children like property. Children suffer the most in this society--t­hey depend upon adults in order to do EVERYTHING­, and because of this they are the most vulnerable­. There are many adults who take advantage of this and many more who look the other way when it happens.
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07:20 PM on 11/12/2011
I believe I saw a flock of lawyers circling over Penn State the other day.
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rocksage7
sustainability rocks
04:23 PM on 11/12/2011
YES.....GAME OVER........to the streets
03:37 PM on 11/12/2011
'whats more the pope is answerable to no one except --God'
Is not Penn State also answerable to God? The evangelical version of God.
Wow sure hope your child wasnt a catholic altar boy,hockey playing, boy scout. Now gotta add penn state grad. What are the odds of getting through all that unscathed?
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Djay0252
American First, Second, and ALWAYS
01:32 PM on 11/12/2011
I think what disturbs me more is the willingness to blame all of Penn State and all of the Catholic Church for the actions of a few individuals.
05:33 PM on 11/12/2011
Well if those "few individuals" were the only problem this would be much easier to resolve.
They are the current examples of Instutions and their administrators who become the protectors and enablers of "the few". Just like families with an abuser in them Joe Paterno or a Church Bishop needed to do the right thing for everybody by making the right moral choice.
HDR
In every dreamhome, a heartache
07:20 PM on 11/13/2011
Also, if one is a shining example then they are allowed to present all, but when they are not.... Well that's another story, isn't it?
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11:17 AM on 11/14/2011
Djay, in both cases there was an institutional flaw that led to the coverup. That's why the entire insitution bears some responsibilty.
01:49 AM on 11/12/2011
Everyone who knew anything about the abuse of children at Penn must be brought down and made an example. If people don't have the humanity in them to protect children then let them fear the consequences. So sad.
08:17 PM on 11/14/2011
you people talk about protecting children but you approve of abortion and stem cell research. Whats wrong with our country and its lack of logic?
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Sally Tallywhacker
Godless, just like everyone else.
01:22 PM on 11/15/2011
...neither of which are children, idiot.