Quote:
--------------------
Define "address".
--------------------
I doubt that you lack the capacity to understand my post. All I can believe is that you are trying to illustrate something by all of this.
I am trying to illustrate that people make mistakes, which oftentimes get treated as reflecting a whole organization. Is that what you meant?
Quote:
Pretend, if only for a moment, that you are a religious leader of some type. And a child, male or female, comes to you complaining of abuse. What do you do, and why do you do it?
I really need more information to make detailed recommendations. Which religion? Which abuse, by whom? What are the local laws regarding clergy confidentiality?
Recommendations would almost certainly include suggesting/offering to take the child to the proper authorities (police, social services, etc.), where the child can tell them what happened. I might recommend a separation/divorce if the religion allows for it and only one parent is responsible.
Quote:
So far, your argument has seemed to be that priests (and other religious leaders) are somehow legally restrained from reporting crimes to authorites. Do you really believe that to be the case? Can you point any code section, or any piece of legislation, whether it is federal, state or local, that prohibits a religious leader from disclosing any information he (or she) might have about a suspected case child abuse?
My knowledge is strictly from reading mass media and web sites like religioustolerance.org. I'm pretty sure there is a general prohibition about clergy revealing past illegal acts (e.g., bribery) to the authorities, which have recently been amended in many/most areas to make an exception to report child molestation. I don't know that these exceptions are in every location, even in the US. If you have evidence that I am wrong about any of this, I'll gladly listen.
"Come now, and let us reason together"
