Young people are turning away from Catholic Church due to scandals – Pope
Pope Francis has reacted to the recent wave of scandals which the Catholic Church is been enmeshed in, with young people as victims.
Pope Francis who addressed young people at a Lutheran church in Tallinn, on the last day of a four-day trip to the three Baltic nations of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, stated that young people are turned off by the Catholic Church because of sex abuse and financial scandals.
This is coming after the Catholic Church in Germany presented a report indicating that 1,670 priests, 4.4 per cent of total Catholic clergy numbers, had abused 3,677 people between 1946 and 2014 in Germany.
DPA
reported that the Catholic Church is facing a worldwide crisis over
allegations that it failed to discipline paedophile priests among its
ranks, and mostt of the victims were underage boys and over 50 per cent
of the victims were under the age of 13, with one in six cases related
to accusations of rape.
It was gathered that in more than 60 per cent of cases, priests went unpunished, and the perpetrators had simply been moved to other parishes when the abuse was discovered, without informing the communities.
Pope Francis who addressed young people at a Lutheran church in Tallinn, on the last day of a four-day trip to the three Baltic nations of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, stated that young people are turned off by the Catholic Church because of sex abuse and financial scandals.
Some of them expressly ask us to leave them alone, because they feel the Church’s presence as bothersome or even irritating.
They are outraged by sexual and economic scandals that do not meet with clear condemnation, by our unpreparedness to really appreciate the lives and sensibilities of the young,’ Francis said during a visit to Estonia.
This is coming after the Catholic Church in Germany presented a report indicating that 1,670 priests, 4.4 per cent of total Catholic clergy numbers, had abused 3,677 people between 1946 and 2014 in Germany.
It was gathered that in more than 60 per cent of cases, priests went unpunished, and the perpetrators had simply been moved to other parishes when the abuse was discovered, without informing the communities.