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Soul
Betrayal
Sexual abuse by spiritual leaders
violates trust, devastates lives, and tears communities apart.
No denomination or tradition is immune.
by Anne A. Simpkinson 
This article has been reproduced with permission from Common Boundary Inc. Copyright
© November/December 1996
Anne A. Simpkinson is editor of Common Boundary magazine. The
Common Boundary Organization is a nonprofit educational organization dedicated to
exploring the sources of meaning in human experience. They examine the relationship
among matters of the heart, matters of the mind, and matters of the soul; psychology,
spirituality, and creativity; and individual growth and social change.
In the early 1980s, Jeanne Miller was a typical
suburban mom. She did community work, served as PTA president, and helped produce plays in
her school district just outside Chicago. She was also a devout Catholic. "My mother
died when I was 14, and I went to boarding school," she recalls. "For a critical
time in my life, the Church -- the nuns -- raised me and was my family."
This sense of family began to disintegrate in 1982 when another mother confided that
one of the parish priests had, during a swim at a nearby lake, tried to strip off her
son's bathing trunks when he was in the water. Thinking the accusation unbelievable,
Miller initially proceeded, she admits, "to disprove what this woman had said."
But instead of being reassured when she called the head of religious education at the
parish, she was told that the church had a file of complaints against the priest. When she
contacted the archdiocese, she was rebuffed by a chancery official, who told her that her
motherly instincts were working overtime. She could not prove her allegations, he said;
nothing was going to be done.
"I can't even describe how devastated, angry, and hurt [I felt]," says
Miller, who ultimately discovered that the priest had provided alcohol and marijuana to
the 13- and 14-year-olds he took with him to a lake house each Tuesday on his day off, let
them drive a boat and his car, lied to parents -- and tried to fondle her own 14-year-old
son. Miller contacted police and filed a lawsuit, mainly to force the church to deal with
the priest's behavior.
"We didn't want him removed. We just said, `Do something, find out what is wrong
here, provide some counseling. Care about us.'" Instead, the church's law firm began
fighting the lawsuit. Miller's legal bills grew steadily until she could no longer afford
to continue the battle. She agreed to a small financial settlement -- $15,000 -- which
didn't begin to cover the $35,000 legal bill.
"We were a Yankee Doodle Dandy family," Miller says. "We believed if you
were good and gave to others, others would give back to you. We never expected the Church
to come down on us like that."
Miller is not alone in the shock, betrayal, anger, and grief she experienced. One of
the first to bring a lawsuit against the Catholic Church and a leading figure in the
abuse-survivor self-help movement, Miller has helped bring awareness to the issue of abuse
by spiritual authorities. The problem, however, is vast. For example:
In July 1994, two lawsuits were filed against Swami Rama, the spiritual leader of the
Himalayan International Institute of Yoga Science and Philosophy in Honesdale,
Pennsylvania. The civil suits followed decades of reports of sexual improprieties,
including a 1990 magazine article that detailed instances of sexual misconduct and several
individuals' efforts to alert Himalayan officials to the abuses.
In October 1994, Yogi Amrit Desai, spiritual director and founder of the Kripalu Center
for Yoga and Health in Lenox, Massachusetts, resigned after admitting to inappropriate
sexual contact with three women. At the time, he told senior Kripalu officials that there
had been no other instances of sexual misdeeds. Eight months later, two more women came
forward, and the then 62-year-old spiritual teacher admitted that he had had sexual
contact with them and one other woman.
In July 1995, Harry Budd Miles, a 65-year-old retired Methodist minister, was sentenced
to five months in jail after pleading guilty to charges of child abuse and perverted
practice involving a Boy Scout in the 1970s. According to court documents, the Maryland
minister had engaged the boy in kissing, fellatio, and masturbation in his church office,
the basement of his home, and his summer house over a five-year period.
In December 1995, what is thought to be the first lawsuit against a Buddhist teacher
was settled through a mediation process. The civil suit, filed initially in November 1994,
against best-selling author and Tibetan lama Sogyal Rinpoche alleged that over a period of
19 years he had induced female students "to have sexual intercourse with him . . . by
preying upon their vulnerability and belief that they could only achieve enlightenment by
serving the sexual and other needs of Sogyal, their enlightened master." In addition
to intentional infliction of emotional distress and breach of fiduciary duty, the
complaint included a count of assault and battery.
In April 1996, 59-year-old Episcopal Bishop Edward C. Chalfant began a one-year
disciplinary leave of absence after admitting to an extramarital affair with an unmarried
woman. According to diocesan spokesperson Mary Lou Lavallee, following that announcement
additional people came forward. Based on information provided by them and upon further
consideration, the diocese's standing committee and the national church's Presiding Bishop
Edmond L. Browning recommended that Chalfant resign, which he did in May, ending his
10-year tenure as Bishop of Maine.
Beginning in the mid-1980s, a rash of news articles detailing accusations and lawsuits
against Catholic priests for molesting youngsters -- generally teenage boys -- unleashed a
flood of revelations concerning sexual misconduct not only by Catholic priests but by
spiritual authorities in virtually every religion. Regularly since then, reports of
years-old as well as current sexual improprieties have surfaced, forcing religious
organizations and churches to create codes of ethics, procedures for handling allegations,
guidelines to deal with victims, and educational programs for clergy and spiritual
teachers.
Hardly a month goes by without news of a priest, rabbi, minister, roshi, or swami being
disciplined for, resigning because of, or charged with sexual misdeeds. Still, data that
could precisely measure the prevalence of sexual abuse by spiritual authorities is
difficult to come by. What research exists focuses solely on Christian denominations and
is either years old or statistically "soft." For example, a nine-year-old survey
of evangelical ministers conducted by the research department of Christianity Today
magazine and published in the 1988 Leadership Journal found that 12 percent of
clergy surveyed admitted to having sexual intercourse with someone other than a spouse; 23
percent stated that they had been "sexually inappropriate" with someone other
than their spouse. A 1991 national survey of mainly Protestant pastors by a group at the
Center for Ethics and Social Policy, Graduate Theological Union, in Berkeley, California
-- described by its researchers as "small and not scientifically controlled" --
uncovered similar findings: About 10 percent of those surveyed had been sexually involved
with a parishioner. Another study published in the winter 1993 Journal of Pastoral Care
found that only 6.1 percent of Southern Baptist pastor respondents admitted to having
sexual contact with a person either currently or formerly affiliated with their church. In
that same survey, however, 70 percent of respondents said they knew of pastors who had had
sexual contact with a congregant.
A.W. Richard Sipe, a former Roman Catholic priest and current Baltimore, Maryland,
psychotherapist, suggests that nearly 50 percent of Catholic priests break their vow of
celibacy by engaging in some form of sexual activity. In his 1995 book, Sex, Priests, and
Power, he estimates that 6 percent of priests have sexual contact with youngsters -- 2
percent with children under 10 years and 4 percent with adolescents. But, he writes,
"sexual abuse of minors is only part of the problem. Four times as many priests
involve themselves sexually with adult women, and twice the number of priests involve
themselves with adult men."
Looking at the situation from another angle, the United Methodist Church sponsored a
1990 study that examined sexual harassment -- unwanted behavior ranging from suggestive
looks and unsolicited touching to attempted or actual assault and rape -- within its
ranks. Of the clergywomen surveyed, 41.8 percent reported unwanted sexual behavior by a
colleague or pastor; 17 percent of laywomen said that their own pastors had harassed them.
Nevertheless, many researchers and professionals in the field are wary of citing
statistics. According to Roman Paur, executive director of the Interfaith Sexual Trauma
Institute in Collegeville, Minnesota, statistics regarding clergy sexual misconduct are
"fundamentally guesses" because there is no hard research to back up the
numbers. Father Stephen J. Rossetti, vice president and chief operating officer of St.
Luke Institute in Silver Spring, Maryland, for example, says that while he respects his
colleague's work, he is not confident of the source of Sipe's figures. Yet interviews with
clergy, victims, and other professionals offer clinical and anecdotal evidence that
challenge several popular perceptions related to clergy sexual misconduct:
That most sex-abuse cases involving priests are pedophilic. In fact, only about
one-third of priests who sexually abuse children are pedophiles (that is, they molest a
prepubescent child). The rest sexually abuse adolescents, generally boys. The precise
clinical term for their behavior is ephebophilia. Although few would dispute the fact that
sexual violations against youngsters of any age are detestable, the distinction has
important clinical implications related to prognosis and treatment. The term
"pedophile priest" is an unfortunately memorable but often inaccurate
appellation.
That Catholic priests become sexually involved with adolescent boys, whereas all
other religious authorities become involved with adult women. Stephen Rossetti says
he's seen enough cases of Protestant clergy abusing minors and Catholic clergy abusing
women to believe that it happens both ways. He uses the generally accepted estimate of 2
to 7 percent when speaking of Catholic priests who molest minors, and he points out that
this is the same percentage as in the general population.
That fact carries no comfort for survivors such as David Clohessy, a St. Louis political
and public-relations consultant and national director of the Survivors Network of Those
Abused by Priests (SNAP). "It doesn't matter whether just as many priests [abuse] as
plumbers do," he says. "You can't take solace in that."
That clergy misconduct involves only heterosexual men abusing women and children.
According to social worker Melissa Steinmetz of the Holy Cross Counseling Group in South
Bend, Indiana, sex abuse is not a males-only transgression. Because the feminist movement
was largely responsible for awareness of sexual abuse, the original focus was solely on
male perpetrators. But, says Steinmetz, experience has shown that some women, too, are
guilty of abuse, especially of preadolescent and adolescent boys. "Probably there
will always be more male sex offenders," says Steinmetz, but she notes that keeping
the focus exclusively on male perpetrators does a disservice to the adolescent male
victims of female offenders.
Pat Liberty, an American Baptist minister, also reports that she is beginning to see
some grassroots organizations springing up for survivors of abuse by women religious and
to hear about complaints against lesbian clergy. But regarding the latter, she says,
"Gay and lesbian folk are not going to come forward to tell their story. They know
that they are not going to get a fair hearing, because the Church will get lost in the gay
and lesbian stuff rather than dealing with the power abuses and the other things that are
at stake."
Despite the lack of reliable figures and the misconceptions, most professionals agree
that the problem is far-reaching not only in Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish
congregations but in Buddhist sanghas and Hindu ashrams as well. Abuse by spiritual
leaders is nondenominational, and the dynamics between clergy and parishioners, between
gurus and devotees, between spiritual teachers and students, bear striking resemblances to
one another. From profiles of the perpetrators and victims to the impact on the spiritual
communities and their ways of dealing with the situation, clergy sexual malfeasance is an
ecumenical reality, one that has probably been with us as long as civilization and one
that is not about to go away.
Through time immemorial, human beings have sought protection, salvation, and solace
from deities -- from Shiva and Shakti, from Jesus and Jehovah, from Aphrodite and Zeus.
For nearly as long as we have been petitioning and praising the gods, we have identified
in our tribal ranks those who seem particularly attuned to or knowledgeable about guiding
us in our search.
Anson Shupe, a sociology professor at Indiana University/Purdue University, reasons in
his book In the Name of All That's Holy that if the priesthood emerged as a
profession during the transition from a hunting-and-gathering to an agricultural society,
then the ancestor of the priest is the shaman. Because Shupe believes that the shamanic
craft is not without a certain amount of manipulation and sleight-of-hand, he theorizes
that "clergy malfeasance, or something we moderns could recognize as such, is
probably as old as practiced religion itself."
What is new, however, is the media coverage of abuse by spiritual authorities. In the
not-too-distant past, a kind of embargo existed against publicizing what might at the time
have been considered the "sexual shenanigans" of those in positions of
leadership. Some offices carried such respect and weight that the persons occupying them
were granted immunity from the scrutiny of their private lives. Sex scandals were seen as
reflecting poorly on hallowed institutions -- the presidency in the case of John F.
Kennedy's affairs, or the Catholic Church in the case of priests who might have been
caught in flagrante delicto. Incidents were winked away or dealt with quietly.
Recalls Philip Jenkins, professor of history and religious studies at Penn State
University and author of Pedophiles and Priests: "I had a police friend in New
York who would -- pardon the expression -- talk about all the times he had `cut loose a
faggot brother,' by which he meant he had arrested a priest or brother for a homosexual
act and had let him go with a warning." For decades, it was impossible to write about
church scandals due to publishers' fears of losing advertising dollars or of being
boycotted. "Think what that must have done to people in the priesthood and in the
seminaries," says Jenkins. "For a tiny minority who did have tendencies to any
kind of sexual misconduct, it must have given them a sense of invulnerability."
That shield of immunity was shattered in the mid-1980s with the Gilbert Gauthe case.
Gauthe was the pastor of St. John's Parish in Henry, Louisiana. According to journalist
Jason Berry, who broke the story in a local weekly newspaper and who detailed Catholic
priests' abuse of children in articles and a book, Lead Us Not into Temptation,
church officials were aware of Gauthe's sexual propensities as early as 1974. Almost 10
years passed, however, before he was finally relieved of his priestly duties. Soon
thereafter, in October 1984, Gauthe was indicted on charges relating to sexual abuse of
minors and child pornography; a year later, the judge in his case agreed to a plea
bargain. Gauthe pleaded guilty to 33 charges and was sentenced to 20 years without parole.
He also lost a subsequent civil suit, which awarded $1.25 million to a boy who claimed to
have been molested and the boy'sparents.
Since that time, gallons of printer's ink have splashed details of cases across the
pages of newspapers and magazines. According to Marie Fortune, founder and executive
director of the Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence in Seattle,
Washington, the prevalence of sexual misdeeds by those in spiritual authority is due to
the fact that most organized religious groups -- both traditional and nontraditional --
are "fundamentally patriarchal in their history and contemporary in expression and
practice." In her new book, Love Does No Harm, the United Church of Christ
minister says that this paradigm, which is sometimes seen as "normative, even
ordained by God," supports and reinforces a dominance/submission model -- with men
dominant and women submissive. This power imbalance is then combined with a cultural
assumption of male sexual access to women and children. The result: sexual abuse in
epidemic proportions.
Shupe offers a different explanation of the problem: "The sociological reality is
that all religions are hierarchies of social status and power." This power, he says,
is undergirded by the "loyalty and respect of rank-and-file believers who are taught
or encouraged to expect that their leaders possess in large measure some special
discernment or spiritual insight and have benevolent, ethical treatment of believers
always uppermost in their mind." It is this inherent structure of "trusted
hierarchies," Shupe explains, that offers ample opportunities for abuse.
Spiritual authorities -- whether rabbis or roshis, priests or pastoral counselors,
ministers or swamis -- all hold a special position in their spiritual community. Zen
Buddhists, for example, bow to their teacher as a sign of respect. Some Hindu devotees
stand as their guru enters the room and wait until she takes her place at the front of the
room, often on a flower-bedecked dais or elaborate throne-like chair, before settling in
for satsang (a spiritual gathering). Catholics are taught that a priest is
"called" by God to his vocation. One California woman who was abused by a priest
owns a missal, a gift for her First Communion. In it, a section reads: "My child:
Someone has said it is a sign of salvation to have a great love for Priests. Why is this
so? Because the Priest takes the place of our Blessed Lord on earth. . . . Jesus loved you
so much. He wanted to be always near you. He wants to do many things for you. He does them
all through His Priest."
While Catholics are taught that priests are representatives of Jesus on earth, devotees
are often led to believe that their guru is a god, a perfected being, or Realized Self. In
his 1971 book, Guru, Swami Muktananda declares: "The Guru is an actual
embodiment of the Absolute. Truly speaking, he is himself the Supreme Being." The
word "guru," derived from Sanskrit, means "one who brings light out of
darkness." Generally, the term is translated as "teacher." Many religious
traditions -- including Buddhism, Hinduism, Judaism, and Islam -- use the teacher-student
relationship as a vehicle through which to impart spiritual knowledge and experience.
Speaking on an episode of the PBS series Searching for God in America, Islamic
scholar Seyyed Hossein Nasr of George Washington University argued strongly for having a
spiritual teacher. Practices such as meditation, invocation, and concentration require the
guidance of someone who has experience in them, he explained. But Nasr also cautioned
against choosing a teacher too lightly; potential students need to exercise "a sense
of discernment," he said.
Many believe that Americans sorely lack this quality. Our cultural conditioning
encourages a fiercely independent, anti-authority stance, but the shadow of that
self-sufficient lone ranger is a gullible idealist wearing rose-colored blinders. Yvonne
Rand, a Buddhist teacher in the San Francisco Bay area, says that this tendency to
"give ourselves away" is the source of enormous difficulty in the American
Buddhist community -- so much so that the Dalai Lama, the Nobel Prize-winning leader of
the Tibetan people, is said to be "particularly worried" and "deeply
concerned" about the issue. He advises students to get close to the teacher,
"spy" on him or her, watching carefully for at least three years to see if the
person's teachings are congruent with how he or she behaves.
This advice can also apply to seeking a church. While there are numerous variables that
go into finding a good fit, it is often the personality of the pastor or spiritual teacher
that attracts parishioners and disciples. One personality trait to be wary of, experts
warn, is charisma. Writing in his latest book, Feet of Clay: Saints, Sinners, and
Madmen: A Study of Gurus, British psychiatrist Anthony Storr compares the original
Greek meaning of "charisma" -- "gift of grace" -- with sociologist Max
Webber's use of the term as "a special magical quality of personality by virtue of
which the individual possessing it was set apart from ordinary men and women and treated
as if endowed with supernatural or superhuman powers." In the former, the pastor's
power is derived from a spiritual source; in the latter, his power comes solely from the
force of his personality.
Charisma can be evident in the popular pastor whose dynamic sermons and impeccable
people skills fill the pews and church coffers every week as well as in the guru whose
mere presence induces altered states of consciousness. The problem comes, however, in
mistaking a spiritual leader's persona and talents for holiness. This dilemma has been
particularly troublesome in some Buddhist groups and Hindu yoga communities where
religious practices -- meditation, yoga exercises, extended periods of prayer, chanting,
and even silence -- can induce trance-like states of consciousness in which participants
are highly suggestible and thus vulnerable. Furthermore, because of Westerners'
inexperience with the mystical side of religion, they often become overly impressed by
siddhis (psychic powers) and equate them with sainthood.
Biofeedback researcher and pioneer Elmer Green, formerly of the Menninger Foundation,
part of the well-known midwestern psychiatric research and treatment center, has been
involved for decades in investigating the mind's ability to control bodily functions,
emotions, and consciousness. He has conducted many experiments on psychically gifted
individuals, Indian yogis, and a Native American medicine woman. In his estimation,
paranormal abilities have nothing to do with spiritual development. For example, in the
early 1970s Green conducted experiments on Swami Rama of the Himalayan Institute. Green
found that the Indian swami was able to produce, among other things, an atrial flutter at
will (a condition in which the heart rate flutters at four or five times its natural rate
but doesn't pump blood), create a difference in temperature between the left and right
sides of the palm of his hand, go into a sleep brain pattern while staying conscious and
able to report what was being said in the room, and give indications of psychokinetic
abilities. The swami's abilities, however, seem to have been matched by the size of his
ego. In fact, Green recalls Swami Rama saying, "The greatest problem a person can
have is ego. And nobody knows that better than I." Says the professionally active,
78-year-old Green: "There's a Hindu adage: `Go through the garden, but do not eat the
fruit.' Swami Rama enjoyed the fruit."
Some of that forbidden fruit was sex with female devotees. According to a 1987
dissertation, a 1990 Yoga Journal article, and court documents related to two
lawsuits filed against him, Swami Rama apparently chose to sexually exploit a continuous
stream of female followers beginning almost as soon as he arrived in the United States.
Accusations of Swami Rama's sexual liaisons with female followers swirled around his
community for years. In 1974, four Minneapolis yoga students sent a letter to their
teacher, a Swami Rama devotee, accusing the swami of sexual misconduct, falsification of
his background, and financial improprieties. In the summer of 1975, a small group of
disaffected students tried to alert disciples to these issues by setting up a "Truth
Booth" at the entrance to Carleton College, where Swami Rama's organization was
running a summer yoga retreat. In the early 1980s allegations again surfaced, and in 1990
Yoga Journal published an article that detailed instances of sexual abuse by the swami.
Finally, in July 1994 two civil lawsuits against Swami Rama, the Himalayan Institute, and
one current and two former institute officials were filed. Testimony given in sworn
depositions taken last year indicates that one of the defendants, Rudolph Ballentine, M.D.
-- a member of the institute's board of directors in the 1970s and institute president
from 1987 to 1993 -- received verbal reports and letters referring to instances of sexual
relations and sexual harassment between the swami and female disciples, including his
personal assistants, for years. In case after case, Ballentine discounted the allegations
on the basis of the swami's denials and Ballentine's own judgments about the character and
motivations of those reporting the abuse.
Since the suit -- which is still pending -- was filed, Swami Rama has left the country
and has not returned. Says one former devotee: "I think he intentionally
misrepresented himself. He played the game very, very carefully." Sadly she
concludes, "Instead of being a real guru, which is the light that dispels darkness,
he was a maya [illusion] maker."
It may be tempting to point a finger at a particular group of perpetrators and say,
"It's all their fault. If we could only round them up, maybe even jail them, we could
eradicate abuse." In reality, this is neither a wise nor a feasible course of action.
The reason abuse has persisted for so long and cuts across denominational lines is because
the dynamics underlying it are universal -- varying only in the degree to which we are
aware of them and in our ability to deal with them.
One of these dynamics is transference. The concept, which originated with Freud, refers
to the process by which we transfer past feelings onto individuals in the present for the
purpose of reliving and resolving painful experiences. Transference does not allow you to
see the person as he or she is; rather, you see that individual through a screen of
projections.
Father Stephen Rossetti explains that authority figures such as clergy are often
figures of transference, and as a Catholic priest he experiences it every day. Simply
walking down the street, "half the people love and a few people hate me, and they
don't even know me," he says. "They don't know Steve Rossetti."
Virginia Wink Hilton, a Costa Mesa, California, psychotherapist, agrees. In her
opinion, a person who idealizes the minister, priest, or spiritual teacher or who has
erotic feelings for him is not really seeing the clergyperson. The feelings are not for
the minister but come out of unconscious material. If a clergyperson doesn't understand
this, Hilton says, "it puts him in enormous jeopardy."
Hilton compares the transference that psychotherapists experience to that which a
minister might encounter in his parish. Transference in a therapy setting is fairly clear
and well-defined, she says: Psychotherapists meet with clients an hour a week, at the same
time, in the same location. Ministers and priests, on the other hand, are "weaving in
and out of the lives of parishioners all the time." The situation becomes complicated
because of the play of both parties' unconscious dynamics and unmet needs roiling below
the surface of their social personas.
For example, people may desperately crave a relationship with someone who is smarter,
kinder, more spiritual, and more compassionate than they feel they are because they
believe that association will quell their anxieties and afford them a measure of security
in a seemingly unpredictable and dangerous world. They want heroes and saints to inspire,
soothe, love them. Says one experienced spiritual seeker: "I've worked with enough
New Age heroes in enough groups to know they aren't heroes; they aren't saints. But people
don't want to see that. People want a hero. They want somebody who is a thousand times
better than they are. They want a Pope."
In this way, disciples and parishioners can transform spiritual authorities into
omniscient experts, the expectations of whom far exceed the leader's knowledge or
experience. The basic function of a religious authority is spiritual direction, assisting
individuals in forging a relationship with the Divine. But often there are pressures for
them to do and be more. Yvonne Rand explains that students of Buddhism might go to their
Zen teacher and ask him about their marriage, how to raise their children, what to do
about their jobs. "Pretty soon the teacher starts to think, `Oh, I really know a lot
about everything.' Pretty soon the student starts projecting all-knowingness on the
teacher, and the relationship gets way out of balance."
This human propensity to desire a savior, an unconditionally loving parent, a hero, or
a saint can devolve into a dark pursuit with painful consequences. For example, if yoga
devotees believe that the guru knows best, they may gradually allow the guru to guide not
only their spiritual process but every aspect of their lives. This unbounded devotion can
feed the guru's sense of power and can fuel a sense of grandiosity or invincibility. The
guru may begin to sound like the Pope delivering opinions ex cathedra. He may also
begin to feel that rules that apply to others don't apply to him. As Anthony Storr writes,
"It is intoxicating to be adored, and it becomes increasingly difficult for the guru
not to concur with the beliefs of his disciples." Furthermore, Storr reasons,
"if a man comes to believe that he has special insights, and that he has been
selected by God to pass on these insights to others, he is likely to conclude that he has
special privileges." Often those privileges are sexual.
Some female parishioners and devotees all too willingly cooperate because they have
turned the priest, minister, or guru into an object of adoration, flirtation, and sexual
desire. One meditation teacher says that women approached him even in the middle of the
night on retreat. Another male ashramite recalls one young woman who later accused her
spiritual teacher of sexual misconduct: "She was a sexy young thing, for sure. I
remember sitting in the room and thinking that. But she wasn't giving me any
attention." Her attention was riveted on the guru.
Despite these sexual come-ons, Peter Rutter, a Jungian-oriented San Francisco
psychiatrist, argues that it is up to the spiritual leader to maintain the proper sexual
boundaries. The task is difficult, admits Rutter, who has written two books on the subject
of boundary violations, but he suggests that the ultimate protection against abuse is the
leader's understanding of the harm he can inflict and his empathy with the woman.
Not all spiritual authorities have that capacity. Sometimes what psychologists call a
personality disorder compels a person to exploit, manipulate, and hurt those in their
spiritual care. While publicly charming, ebullient, devoted, hard-working, and inspiring,
this leader proves himself cunning, slick, seductive, and cruel in private. Involved in
multiple, simultaneous relationships, he can sweet-talk his victims into compliance --
"Our love is special and holy" -- or bully them into submission.
United Church of Christ minister Marie Fortune, in her book Is Nothing Sacred?,
details the havoc and pain wreaked on individual women and the congregation by the sexual
misconduct of one of the church's pastors. Fortune notes that sexual predators go to great
lengths to choose women whose current circumstances might make them vulnerable: for
instance, the death of a parent, a divorce, problems with children, or an illness. The
situation that sends Fortune "over the edge" is one in which a congregant
approaches a minister for help in dealing with childhood sexual abuse. Often that
confidence is seen by the minister as a "green light" to seduce the person. One
clergyman whom Fortune heard about told his victim that the way to heal from childhood
sexual abuse was to re-enact the experiences with him. "I am amazed at the creativity
that perpetrators have," Fortune says, "the manipulation of theology and
scripture and ritual, the moral rationalization they bring to bear: `No, there is nothing
wrong with this because God's love for you is flowing through me, and this is a holy
kiss.'"
Because of the innocence and vulnerability of the victims, perhaps the most heinous
crime perpetrated by sexual predators is the abuse of children. Trust, innocence, and
sense of self all shatter, leaving behind shards of fear, shame, distrust, and
self-loathing.
David Clohessy of SNAP, himself a survivor of abuse by a priest, describes the abrupt
shift in perception this way: "It's like getting up one morning, walking outside, and
all of a sudden the law of gravity isn't in effect anymore. It is something that is so far
beyond the pale of expectation for a kid. . . . It is just a horrible, horrible
betrayal."
Of course, the degree of damage to individual youngsters varies. For example, the
closer the relationship of the offender to the child, the greater the trauma. The type of
abuse (fondling versus intercourse, for example), its duration, the degree of violence,
and the age of the child also figure prominently in the extent of the pain and damage
inflicted. Young sexual-abuse victims inevitably suffer from what professionals call
posttraumatic stress disorder, symptoms of which, says Judith Lewis Herman in her classic
book Trauma and Recovery, are "both extensive and enduring." These
include an extreme startle response, elevated arousal, sleep disturbances, deep distrust,
sexualized behaviors, depression, withdrawal, eating disorders, drug and alcohol abuse,
and suicidal thoughts and actions. In fact, a survey described in the paper "In the
Name of God: A Profile of Religion-Related Child Abuse" in the Journal of Social
Issues (volume 51, number 2) reported that, of their sample, almost 20 percent of
children abused by religious authorities subsequently considered suicide.
Not only is the pain inflicted on an individual child heartbreaking, but the scope of
the problem is immense because each perpetrator generally has multiple victims. In Slayer
of the Soul, an anthology whose articles focus on issues related to the Catholic
Church and child sexual abuse, Father Stephen Rossetti cites a 1987 study that found that
377 child molesters whose relations with victims were not incestuous had victimized 4,435
girls and 22,981 boys. Pentecostal preacher Tony Leyva, for example, pleaded guilty to
having abused upwards of 100 boys, although law-enforcement officials placed the number
closer to 800.
Although youngsters who have been molested by clergy exhibit the same symptomatology as
those violated by other trusted adults, there is an added dimension if the abuse is
perpetrated by a spiritual authority. Developmentally, children often equate spiritual
authorities with God. For this reason it's easy to see how a child might think sexual
fondling is somehow supernaturally sanctioned. One case cited in the Journal of Social
Issues article involved a priest and his wife who told the boys they abused that the
abuse was part of the youngsters' religious obligation as "good Christians." The
same researchers also noted that the opposite attribution can be made: One young girl who
was sexually abused by both parents was placed with a minister who molested her as well,
saying that the abuse was "God's punishment" for her "badness."
Because church is often thought of as a refuge, and God as someone to turn to in
troubled times, a child who is molested may turn away altogether from spiritual pursuits
even into adulthood. He or she may not attend church, pray, or otherwise participate in
religious rituals. David Clohessy, for instance, says he no longer considers himself a
Catholic. "In fairness, I want to say that I could be in this same spiritual position
even if I never had been abused." Still, he says, "there are times when I am
very envious of those people who have been able to separate out what one man with a Roman
collar did to them as kids from the rest of the institution and the rest of religion. I am
envious of people who still have their faith."
Outrage and anger are understandable, natural, human responses to sexual abuse of
minors by clergy; the force of those feelings is needed to protect children. However, what
often gets lost in the hue and cry resulting from news of such abuse is an understanding
of the central character in the drama: the perpetrator.
Father Rossetti of St. Luke Institute takes a compassionate yet clear-eyed view of
clergy child abusers. The institute, a 32-bed psychiatric hospital in the Maryland suburbs
outside Washington, D.C., provides care primarily for Catholic priests with addictive
disorders and psychological problems such as chronic depression. St. Luke also deals with
sex offenders on a regular basis. While Rossetti does not condone their offenses, he does
see their behavior as reflective of larger societal problems. He uses family-therapy and
systems theories to explain how these offenders might be the "identified
patients" of a dysfunctional societal "family."
"Child molesters don't drop down from Mars," he says. "They come from a
society that produces that pathology. So if we want to get rid of this problem, we have to
heal society."
Specifically what need to be healed, he says, are our flawed attitudes toward human
sexuality and aggression. On the one hand, he explains in Slayer of the Soul, we as
a culture are obsessed by sex; on the other hand, religious traditions, in not-so-subtle
ways, condemn sexuality as unspiritual and even sinful. Pointing to increasing violence,
he states that we know neither how to encourage healthy human aggression nor how to manage
violence. We need to learn to become strong, he says, without being overly controlling or
power-hungry, assertive rather than aggressive. We need to become fully sexual people who
are warm, compassionate, intimate, engaged, and empathic.
As for the molesters, Rossetti is surprised by the intensity of hatred toward them. He
says he has heard people suggest castrating them, tattooing them on the forehead, even
killing them. "You hear this said all the time by rather rational people. There is a
well of hatred toward child molesters that goes beyond the heinousness of the crime."
Furthermore, he notes, attention seems fixated on child abuse in the Catholic Church.
Another skewed public perception is that sociopathic predators are the sole
perpetrators of sexual abuse. As clinicians who deal with sexual boundary violations have
discovered, the profiles of perpetrators fall along a continuum. Many different
personality types can violate boundaries, and ignoring this fact can jeopardize
parishioners and devotees alike.
Psychologist John C. Gonsiorek has described the characteristics
of clergy perpetrators (see box, "Who Abuses?"), as have
Richard Irons, M.D., and Episcopal priest Katherine Roberts, distinguishing among them
differences in age, experience, career development, clinical diagnosis, and prognosis.
Their work in this area is important in terms of humanizing the perpetrators as well as
communicating the message that factors such as stress, training and education,
self-awareness, and peer relationships are significant elements in both the cause and
prevention of clergy sexual misconduct.
Says David Clohessy: "The most notorious priest molester [of children] in history
is James Porter of Massachusetts. He was clearly a predator; he abused anything with a
pulse. But even though his behavior is predatory, I think that if you got inside his head
and heart, you would find the same loneliness and woundedness that is more obvious in
other priests who molest."
One of the most overlooked players in instances of abuse by spiritual authorities is
the community. A good example of how a collective both contributes to and suffers from
abuses by a spiritual authority is the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in Lenox,
Massachusetts, which is struggling to regain the vitality it lost two years ago when its
founder, Yogi Amrit Desai, resigned his post as spiritual director after admitting to
inappropriate sexual contact with several women.
Nestled in the Berkshires amid a host of cultural, arts, and outdoor attractions,
Kripalu's combination of holistic programs and spa-like offerings such as vegetarian fare,
saunas, whirlpools, and a private lakefront beach make it a desirable R-and-R destination
for holistically minded individuals. Its peaceful location belies the major upheaval it
endured, losing two-thirds of its residents, running monthly deficits of hundreds of
thousands of dollars, and reorganizing its management structure.
The turmoil the center encountered clearly did not begin with Amrit Desai's
resignation. With a core of 100 longtime residents -- some having been there for 10 years
or more -- the community had been immersed in an individuation process in which midlife
devotees were struggling to articulate and make conscious their growing discomfort with a
system that on the one hand provided them with spiritual sustenance and a sense of
belonging and purpose and on the other hand paid scant attention to the classic shadow
bugbears of sex, power, and money.
The first Kripalu ashram, established by Amrit Desai in Sumneytown, Pennsylvania, in
the early 1970s, was a small residential community that viewed itself as a religious
order. With a skeletal core staff and affiliated members who worked in the town nearby,
the ashram had an annual budget of less than $100,000. Spiritual practice was the
community's raison d'etre, and members participated in a stringent yoga regimen --
wake-up at 4 a.m., with jogging, yoga, pranayama breathing exercises, and satsang
(teaching session) all before breakfast. Brahmacharya -- a yoga principle akin to
chastity or sexual modesty -- was strongly encouraged. In yoga the life force is seen as
residing in sexual energy and sexual fluids. Yoga practice is aimed at raising that energy
up the spine toward higher spiritual centers. Therefore, sexual activities -- masturbating
or intercourse -- are seen as counterproductive to one's spiritual progress.
By all accounts, Amrit Desai was a gentle yet powerfully inspirational teacher. The
pivotal moment in his own life had come during a morning yoga practice session in 1970
when, as he has described it, he was "flooded with bliss" and began
spontaneously performing --- or being performed by -- yoga exercises with a newfound
flexibility and fluidity. Not only was he drawn into an ecstatic state but those in the
room with him -- his wife and two students -- were also drawn into a deep state of
meditation. Inspired by this experience, Desai began to formulate a new method of
"meditation in motion," which he called Kripalu Yoga in honor of his guru.
In the early years of the Kripalu ashram, it was not uncommon for residents to have
strong shakti (energy) experiences, such as automatic movement and writing,
speaking in tongues, and sharp increases in body temperature. These experiences in part
solidified Desai's guru status among many of his students; some disciples took them to
mean that the guru must be bona fide and therefore infallible. For too many devotees this
reasoning translated as giving over their sense of judgment in major life decisions. One
area that was affected was sexual activity. In a milieu in which "single and
celibate" was the norm, many disciples did not marry or have children.
What community residents did not know was that, as they earnestly practiced brahmacharya,
their guru was violating this yogic principle through sexual contact with female
disciples. In 1986 a devotee made it known that she had had a sexual relationship years
before with him. But when confronted in a community-wide meeting, Desai flatly denied the
accusation. The upshot was that the community -- including her husband and son -- believed
the guru. The woman left the ashram, staying in the area to be near her child. Eight years
later, she was vindicated when another woman came forward and described to community
members how Desai had used her sexually when she was his personal assistant in the 1970s.
What devastated many of Desai's followers far more than the revelations of his
inappropriate sexual relations was the fact that he had hidden them and lied about them
for so long.
"I never would have said Kripalu was a cult," says Jean Matlack, a
Washington, D.C., psychotherapist and a Kripalu Yoga teacher, "but now I understand
that for people who lived there and were young and vulnerable, they were in a kind of
trance. They gave over their lives in a way that is the hallmark of cults."
Another area where residents "woke up" was the financial one. Over the years
the community grew both in numbers and in sophistication. In 1983, it invested $1.25
million to purchase a former Jesuit seminary in Lenox. Situated on several hundred acres,
the ashram grew to 300 residents and became a thriving retreat and holistic health center.
In the late 1980s Kripalu residents, especially the old-timers, began feeling their oats.
Desai was traveling a great deal, and the staff found themselves teaching the courses,
handling administrative duties, putting out advertising -- in other words, running the
center. With the flush of financial success and the sense of real-world achievement, many
felt a need to "graduate" and to reap the monetary rewards of what was now a
multimillion-dollar-a-year enterprise.
From the start, Kripalu was a religious order legally modeled on a Catholic monastery
or convent. "Vowed" members initially received no salary. If someone needed a
pair of jeans or shoes, he or she would have to request them. Later, members began to
receive a stipend of $30 a month, out of which they had to pay for personal items such as
shampoo. Than money was not technically a salary and did not qualify them for Social
Security benefits. On the other hand, Amrit Desai, who at the founding of Kripalu had a
wife and children, received financial compensation from the beginning. At the time of his
resignation, he was being paid $155,000 annually, plus an additional $15,000 to $33,000 a
year in royalties from the sale of his books and tapes. Although the words "financial
exploitation" never crossed the lips of any Kripalu associates, the discrepancy
between the remuneration of residents and the guru was obvious. When the community's cup
began to run over, residents stood in line to share the bounty. "Appropriate"
remuneration based on length of service was instituted. But even top-level stipends were
no more than $3,400 a year. A resident security fund -- a kind of retirement plan that set
aside monies to provide for lifetime residents in their old age. The vesting period was
exceptionally long -- 16 years. But in the meantime, certain amenities -- such as a new
building with living quarters for longtime members and easy access to automobiles -- made
life more comfortable.
One sticking point that remained unresolved, however, was the fact that some managers
had been hired to work at Kripalu and drew salaries that seemed fairly competitive with
professional positions in the outside world, while other vowed members, even though they
may have been working for the community longer, received only the "appropriate"
stipends. Many of the residents -- whether they have left or are staying in some
relationship with Kripalu -- are now involved in a claims process that will work out a
financial settlement between the center and longtime residents.
In an interview conducted in May 1994, Amrit Desai told Yoga Journal senior
writer Ann Cushman that "we are in the process of dismantling the old form, which has
served its purpose. We are now exploring new depths of the guru-disciple
relationship." It's hard to believe that, as he spoke these words, he could have
anticipated the chaos and disillusionment that would be precipitated five short months
later when revelations of his sexual contact with female devotees would come to light.
Kripalu's general counsel, Daniel Bowling, is convinced that Desai's secret misdeeds
did not explode into a conflict, but the conflict was there calling for integration;
whatever was keeping the secret in place and unintegrated had to be exploded. Dinabandhu
(Patton Sarley), past president of Kripalu and now executive director of the Omega
Institute of Holistic Studies, states this same idea slightly differently: "Clearly,
individuation needed to happen for all of us. You can't fool Mother Nature. Either you do
it gracefully, which we attempted to do, or you do it ungracefully -- but you are going to
do it."
Kripalu did it. For months, even while guest programs continued, intense catharsis was
carried on in private behind closed doors, in community meetings, and in special workshops
conducted by outside leaders such as spiritual teacher and author Ram Dass; Arnie Mindell,
known for process-oriented psychology and his conflict-resolution work; and Elizabeth
Stellas-Tippins of the Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence.
According to Daniel Bowling, it is difficult to "put words around the impact,"
referring to the windstorm of emotions -- anger, frustration, disbelief, disenchantment,
grief -- that were unleashed. There were a rash of marriages, births, and many, many
leave-takings.
Still, the community seems to have weathered the storm. A new executive director, with
both corporate management experience and a personal understanding of the spiritual
journey, has been hired; the quality of programs remains high; the claims process is
nearly complete; and a new organizational structure has been created: Whereas the Kripalu
staff once consisted primarily of vowed members and 15 salaried employees, today 160 staff
members are paid, and only 26 remain vowed. The managers are also working hard on a
strategic direction for the center.
According to Daniel Bowling, what Kripalu has accomplished over the past two years
"is not just Hatha Yoga on the yoga mat. We have done it under the most difficult of
circumstances one can imagine, to bring about a healing in this three-way dynamic between
individuals, teacher, and community."
While the problem of abuse by spiritual authorities threatens to overwhelm with its
universality, prevalence, and magnitude of spiritual and emotional devastation, there are
indications that with vigilance, systems interventions, and support for victims,
perpetrators, and their religious communities, the tiger can be tamed.
At the organizational level, codes of ethics are being written clearly stating that
sexual contact by a priest, pastor, guru, or roshi with a member of his or her flock is a
breach of professional boundaries, that responsibility for maintaining appropriate
boundaries lies with the spiritual leader, and that violations of such boundaries are both
unethical and unacceptable. Policies and procedures for handling situations -- ranging
from verbal accusations to formal, written complaints -- are also being put into place.
Experience has shown that without them, the process of investigating allegations gets
muddled in ways that can retraumatize the victim and upset the community. At present, a
variety of institutions, from the Buddhist Peace Fellowship to the General Conference of
the Seventh Day Adventists, have implementedsuch codes, policies, and procedures on sexual
abuse and/or harassment.
But according to American Baptist minister Pat Liberty, "policies and procedures
don't solve the problems"; what does is "shifting basic paradigms about
ministry." One way to accomplish this is through education and training. Courses on
sexuality, ethics, professional boundaries, and transference can help young men and women
get a more realistic view of interpersonal problems and dynamics that go along with the
ministerial territory.
Buddhist teacher Yvonne Rand also thinks that spiritual seekers need to be educated in
how to find a teacher and what to look for if they think they may be getting into trouble.
Asian teachers coming to the United States to lead Buddhist and Hindu spiritual
communities are to some extent culture-bound to patriarchal systems. Rand believes that
the best hope for diminishing sexual abuse in the American Buddhist communities is to
educate students by speaking out, writing articles, and holding workshops on the topic.
In addition to self-help and support groups for victims (see
box, "Where to Find Help"), an often effective avenue for
healing is litigation or mediation. Many people in both the therapy and ministry
professions believe that if victims feel that their wounds are acknowledged and that some
restitution -- for example, payment for therapy sessions -- is made, litigation may be
unnecessary. Marie Fortune maintains that victims generally have reasonable requests: an
apology, acknowledgment from the perpetrator, a letter to the congregation that indicates
what final steps have been taken around the complaint. But when institutions stonewall
victims, many feel that they have no other option than to bring a lawsuit.
Of course, litigation is what brought the issue of clergy sexual misconduct into public
awareness. Lawsuits against the Catholic Church alerted the media to the problem and
resulted in large settlements for victims. Through this economic leverage, victims forced
changes in institutional responses. However, Kripalu's Daniel Bowling doesn't think
healing and spiritual values are upheld by bringing in lawyers to rectify the power
imbalance in this setting. In fact, he says, you can destroy everything in that process.
Kripalu and its longtime residents are using mediation to resolve financial claims against
the center.
Another area that can help guard against abuses is pastoral self-care. According to
Liberty, the issue of workaholism is critical. "Basically, the lines between clergy
personal life and clergy professional life are pretty thin. Historically, the Church is a
place that has rewarded workaholism and called it devotion." She adds that for clergy
and their parishioners to think that the former are on call 24 hours, seven days a week,
is "nonsense."
Ministers need to have a life beyond their professional calling, experts say, a place
to relax and renew themselves. One essential part of that life in order to stave off
temptations to violate sexual boundaries is same-sex friendships. Jungian analyst and
author Adolf Guggenbuhl-Craig is convinced that they are the single best antidote to ego
inflation and self-deception. Friends point out our virtues as well as our ridiculous
sides. Setting oneself up as a guru can preclude simple peer relations, and without solid
friendships one begins to minister in a vacuum. Colleagues and friends keep us connected,
honest, and in touch with reality.
Last, Fortune cautions that people who have come out of destructive family
relationships often seek a haven, a safe and intimate family unit, like a spiritual
community. Unfortunately, these desires might create unrealistic expectations of intimacy
and an enmeshed system that is inappropriate to a faith community. Although people often
refer to their spiritual community as a family, Fortune thinks they should look for a
different metaphor and model. "Which doesn't mean that significant things won't
happen," she says, but it all comes down to a sense of balance. "There are some
things I do with my family and close friends. Other things I do with coworkers. There are
still other things I do with my church. Occasionally there are situations where they
blend, but I don't expect any one of those pieces of my life to meet all my needs."
Still, Liberty is convinced that "we have only seen the tip of the iceberg"
with regard to abusive power by spiritual authorities; hundreds, maybe thousands, of men
and women who have been wounded have not yet come forward to tell their stories. And, she
adds, instances of abuse in which perpetrators are not being held appropriately
accountable are still occurring. Far too many religious institutions are, she says,
turning "a blind eye and a deaf ear to the reality of abuse."
The breadth of the problem and the depth of the suffering seem to require a constant
vigilance from communities, spiritual seekers, and spiritual leaders alike because the
problem is part and parcel of the spiritual search. As Carl Jung cautioned, we need to be
aware that as we grow toward enlightenment, so too does our shadow grow. Thus, simple
remedies consistently applied -- balance in one's life, deep friendships, a dedication to
self-knowledge, integrity, a willingness to stand up and tell the truth, empathy, and a
healthy exercise of inner authority -- all help counteract abusive behavior. For in the
end we are all guardians of the gate. As Yvonne Rand reminds us, the dynamics of abuse are
"in everybody's back yard. In fact, the critical thing to understand is that not only
is it in our back yards, but it is in each one of us."
(For additional material, see box, "Out of the Past.")
Anne A. Simpkinson is editor of Common Boundary.
Copyright © 1996 Common Boundary, Inc. All rights
reserved.
Who Abuses?
Although the work done by John C. Gonsiorek, Ph.D., and Glen O. Gabbard, M.D., in the
area of typing exploitative professionals is based primarily on cases involving
mental-health providers, their profiles are applicable to clergy with some caveats: For
example, clergy roles are also inherently more complex, with boundaries that are less
clear-cut than those of other professions.
While most people think that the sociopathic predator is the most prevalent
perpetrator, Gonsiorek has found that "reasonably well-trained, responsible
individuals" who are undergoing a stressful time are at greatest risk of violating
boundaries. Almost without exception, these professionals have only one victim, are
remorseful, and usually confess to authorities. Their prognosis is generally good.
There are also the perpetrators who are severely neurotic and whose problems are more
long-standing and significant. Work tends to be the sole source for filling their personal
needs, and transgressions by individuals in this group tend to recur every few years or
so. They are self-punitive rather than motivated to change. Prognosis is mixed;
rehabilitation may or may not be feasible.
Other categories include the impulsive, character-disordered perpetrator whose main
problem with impulse control can lead not only to sexual boundary violations but to
criminal activities as well; sex offenders who are clinically diagnosed as pedophiles or
ephebophiles; the medically disabled who have impaired judgment and poor behavior control
(those with bipolar disorder fall into this category); and naive individuals who lack
training and experience.
The above information is based on "Assessment for Rehabilitation of
Exploitative Health Care Professionals and Clergy," by John C. Gonsiorek, Ph.D., in Breach
of Trust (Sage Publications). Another source on types of perpetrators is "The
Unhealed Wounders," by Richard Irons, M.D., and Episcopal minister Katherine Roberts
in Restoring the Soul of a Church, edited by Nancy Myer Hopkins and Mark Laaser
(Liturgical Press).
Return to article text.
Where to Find Help
Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence, 936 North 34th
Street, Suite 200, Seattle, WA 98103; (206) 634-1903. Provides educational materials,
resources, and workshop leaders for individuals, clergy, and communities -- all aimed at
preventing and healing from clergy sexual abuse.
Interfaith Sexual Trauma Institute (ISTI), St. John's Abbey and University,
Collegeville, MN 56321-2000; (612) 363-3931. Through research, education, and
publications, ISTI promotes the prevention of sexual abuse, exploitation, and harassment.
It also facilitates healing for victims, communities of faith, and offenders, as well as
those who care for them.
Survivor Connections, 52 Lyndon Road, Cranston, RI 02905; (401) 941-2548.
Provides support, education, and advocacy for survivors of sexual abuse, their support
system, and professionals. Services include telephone peer support, educational forums and
conferences, a quarterly newsletter, and a confidential database of perpetrators reported
by victims. Also offers referrals to attorneys, psychotherapists, self-help books, and
organizations.
Survivors and Victims Empowered (SAVE), (717) 569-3636. Created to help prevent
neglect and physical, emotional, and sexual abuse of children and to help adult survivors
of childhood trauma. Offers the Survivors and Victims Resource Database, free
Windows-based software containing worldwide resources to help those who work with
survivors of childhood sexual abuse and to prevent sexual abuse.
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), 8025 South Honore, Chicago,
IL 60620; (312) 483-1059. Provides self-help support and resources, and organizes for
political action.
-- Heather Pitzel
Return to article text.
Out of the Past
Sexual misconduct among the clergy may seem to be just one more symptom of today's
declining moral standards, but many aspects of one 19th-century scandal have remarkable
parallels to contemporary cases.
In 1872, Henry Ward Beecher was the world-famous minister of Plymouth Church
(Congregational) in Brooklyn, New York, and widely regarded as our national chaplain.
Married with children, the son and brother of preachers, and a sibling of novelist Harriet
Beecher Stowe (Uncle Tom's Cabin), he was accused of adultery with Elizabeth Tilton
-- a wife and mother in her 30s who was an active member of Beecher's church.
"Lib" Tilton's view of religion was both emotional and sentimental.
Throughout her ordeal, she held fast to the belief that serving God meant serving her
pastor. Tilton's vulnerability was compounded by her troubled marriage to an ill-tempered,
abusive man and by her knowledge that Beecher's marriage was also unhappy. She convinced
herself that their stolen moments of joy were somehow part of the religious experience.
When she eventually confessed her sin, Tilton told her husband, Theodore, that she had
been persuaded by Beecher that their love, along with any expression of it, was right and
good.
Beecher always denied the adultery charge, although he did confess to improper
solicitations. As he told a friend, "I ought to have foreseen. I was the oldest man,
the oldest person, I was the one that had the experience; she was a child."
So strong was Beecher's hold on Lib Tilton that she believed him when he termed her
confession a betrayal. Under these conflicting pressures, Tilton grew increasingly
depressed and suffered a miscarriage of what she called a "love-babe." Rumors
circulated that an abortion had occurred with Beecher's knowledge.
Two separate actions against Beecher eventually were lodged. The first was a Church
hearing, during which both parties denied any wrongdoing. Tilton retracted her admission,
saying publicly that her husband had coerced her into it. Privately, she maintained her
belief in Beecher, who told her that the confession would destroy his ability to serve God
and man.
Beecher's own testimony was self-serving. Speaking of Tilton's "excessive
affection" for him, he claimed that she was seeking separation from her husband and
that she made a false confession to obtain it. He called that confession "a needless
treachery to her friend and pastor" and admitted only that "by blind
heedlessness and friendship" he might have "beguiled her heart."
The Church committee report was a vindication -- some might say a whitewash -- of
Beecher. The committee criticized Tilton for giving vent to her "inordinate
affection." Others blamed her as well, especially when it suited their political
beliefs. Antifeminists, for example, claimed that Tilton's fall was due not so much to the
blandishments of her pastor as to the views of her husband's radical friends, who included
suffragists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
Beecher was blamed only for his generosity and love, which supposedly blinded him to
the machinations of the Tiltons. Outraged, Theodore Tilton then sued Beecher in civil
court for alienation of his wife's affections. Some of the arguments on both sides sound
familiar today: Beecher's chief counsel insisted that no man of God could possibly commit
adultery; he cited Beecher's past life as sufficient proof of his innocence and charged
that a belief in Beecher's guilt would only prove one's own wickedness. Tilton's lawyer
said that the real question was "whether the wealth and influence of Plymouth Church
and the power of a great name shall overcome the force of proof, the lesson of the law,
and the instincts of justice." After six months of press frenzy and national furor, a
nine-to-three verdict in Beecher's favor was handed down in 1875.
The final irony is the indication that Beecher's affair with Lib Tilton was not his
first offense. Rumors of improprieties with young women had begun as early as his first
ministry in Indianapolis. And in 1862, a Brooklyn woman by the name of Lucy Bowen had made
a deathbed confession to her husband of her affair with Henry Ward Beecher. Although her
husband, Henry C. Bowen, did not make the story public -- possibly because of his
numerous, profitable business dealings with Beecher -- several mutual friends knew of it.
Thirteen years later, perhaps unwilling to see Beecher totally exonerated, Henry Bowen
went to the Church Council and accused Beecher of several other adulteries within the
parish. For those efforts, Bowen was expelled from the Church.
Henry Ward Beecher, although his reputation was tarnished, went back to his business of
"serving God and man." Elizabeth Tilton, abandoned by her husband, withdrew from
society and died forgotten in 1897.
-- Lois Bianchi
Lois Bianchi is an associate professor at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public
Communications at Syracuse University and a former television producer.
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