This sick:
Two resolutions at two separate General Conventions have affirmed that the sexual abuse of children is unacceptable in The Episcopal Church, some 9 resolutions altogether since 1985. The most pertinent one was in B014, passed in 1985, which directed bishops to establish workshops for clergy on child abuse. At the 68th General Convention, it was passed overwhelmingly. In 2003, at the 74th General Convention of The Episcopal Church, it passed resolution B008 titled "Protect Children and Youth from Abuse."
The abuse of children notwithstanding, VOL learned this week that a former Episcopal priest, one Lynn Bauman, a convicted and defrocked pedophile Episcopal priest, is being allowed to conduct spiritual retreats - two of them in an Episcopal facility with the blessing of Mrs. Katharine Jefferts Schori, TEC's Presiding Bishop.
In an exchange of correspondence with David Clohessy, National Director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), Mrs. Jefferts Schori, through her Pastoral Development Officer Bishop F. Clayton Matthews, said that Baumann could function as a spiritual retreat master with the understanding that "Mr. Baumann's contact (is) to adults only". Baumann is scheduled to lead spiritual retreats at The House of Prayer in the Episcopal Diocese of Minnesota, later this month. This story, broken by VOL, has become the talk of radio and television shows. SNAP leaders have been vigorous in their pursuit of child sex abusers over the years. It was their pursuit of the Rev. John Bennison and his sexual abuse of a minor that brought him down, and subsequently brought down Charles E. Bennison, the Bishop of Pennsylvania who was subsequently inhibited and now faces an ecclesiastical and civil court for his sins.
From VirtueOnline
Pedophiles leading retreats, what will pecusa think of next? ed.
The full story:
Convicted Pedophile Episcopal Priest to Host Spiritual Retreats with Presiding Bishop's Blessing
News Analysis By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
5/14/2008
A convicted and defrocked pedophile Episcopal priest is being allowed to conduct spiritual retreats - two of them in an Episcopal facility with the blessing of Mrs. Katharine Jefferts Schori, TEC's Presiding Bishop.
In an exchange of correspondence with David Clohessy, National Director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), Mrs. Jefferts Schori, through her Pastoral Development Officer Bishop F. Clayton Matthews, said that Mr. Lynn C. Baumann could function as a spiritual retreat master on the understanding that "Mr. Baumann's contact (is) to adults only".
Baumann is scheduled to lead spiritual retreats at The House of Prayer in the Episcopal Diocese of Minnesota, later this month.
"There are big problems with that," Clohessy told VOL. "If I start telling people, from today forward, that I am a sex offender, it does nothing to ameliorate the betrayal of all those people who have already been mislead by my secrecy, nor does it reach out to anyone already molested.
"If I own a toxic waste dump and, under public pressure, post a sign saying 'DANGER STAY OUT', it fails to address the issue of how many children have already been contaminated!"
Clohessy said Bauman molested one youngster and several others at a retreat center ironically titled "The Way of the Wolf Retreat Center" in Fredericksburg, Texas.
"How can Episcopal Church officials keep putting kids at such risk? Time does not erase memories or the gravity of the offenses. There is a dangerous irony here in that he performed these sex acts at the very kinds of places he is allowed to continue functioning."
In 1977, Dallas Bishop James Stanton defrocked Baumann, then an Episcopal priest for sexual abuse by. He avoided a prison term by reaching a plea bargain with Bonham prosecutors who were prepared to try him on a charge of sexually molesting an 8-year-old Dallas boy. Baumann was given 10 years' probation, fined $1,500 and given 240 hours of community service on each of two second-degree felonies. He was charged with indecency with a child, and for inducing sexual performance by a child. He was able to reach the plea bargain with prosecutors because the victim's family did not want to put the boy, now 11, through a jury trial.
Now, 10 years later, he is back in business. "National Episcopal Church officials told me that Baumann has agreed not to have any direct contact with children and that the retreat organizers have promised to inform retreat participants about his past," Clohessy told VOL.
According to the Internet, Baumann leads at two retreat centers in Texas. "There is a dangerous irony here, Baumann molested one boy and accused of sexually abusing at least two other boys while at the retreat center in Texas," said Clohessy. The publicity and promotion materials for Bauman's retreats make no mention that he is an admitted child molester. "
Church officials, including Minnesota Bishop James Jelinek, are simply repapering the situation again with the apparent collusion of the National Episcopal Church. Minnesota Episcopalian officials are letting an admitted, convicted, defrocked child-molesting former Episcopal priest lead retreats at a church facility, the Episcopal House of Prayer in Collegeville, Minnesota, and this is wrong and reckless."
Clohessy said SNAP officials handed out fliers in Dallas recently at St. Thomas Episcopal Church where Mrs. Jefferts Schori attend the church run by the Rev. Stephen Waller an avowed homosexual. Episcopal Church officials did nothing to deter, stop or fix the situation.
"It is outrageous that after Dallas' bishop defrocked him, he's scheduled to lead four retreats in the next few months, at least two at an Episcopal facility in Minnesota. " Baumann molested others, "regularly went skinny-dipping with boys and sometimes slept with them," court documents reveal.
"I want Presiding Bishop Schori to take action. Church authorities should not hire or use convicted child molesters in any leadership capacity. They claim it's time to forgive Bauman. We can forgive him, however, without helping him get close to more vulnerable kids," said Clohessy.
"Why take this risk with children? Convicted child molesters should be able to attend church events, not lead church events." Clohessy said they (church officials) claim that retreat attendees are told about Bauman's crimes, but this was only promised recently, after considerable public pressure. They claim kids don't attend the retreats. But parents attend, and predators often befriend adults to gain access to their children. It is utterly callous and reckless behavior. We want admitted, convicted child molesters banned from retreats."
In another note of irony the Episcopal Church passed two resolutions on child abuse in 2003, 9 altogether since 1985. The most pertinent one was in 1985-B014, which directed bishops to establish workshops for clergy on child abuse. At the 68th General Convention, it was passed overwhelmingly. In 2003, at the 74th General Convention of The Episcopal Church it passed resolution B008 titled "Protect Children and Youth from Abuse." It was overwhelming passed. "The 74th General Convention recommits itself to the vision of A Children's Charter for the Church, and directs each diocese to develop and adopt policies for the protection of children and youth from abuse."
END
4 comments:
Do you have ANY evidence that Bauman has violated ANY terms of his probation?
He has been writing books on Christian Spirituality and leading spiritual retreats (for adults only) for years without incident.
Is there no place for redemption in your version of Christianity?
In orthodox Christianity there is plenty of room for redemption. However, there is also a recognition that redemption doesn't necessarily mean restoration to a teaching position in the church, The fact that this man is given a teaching position in pecusa speaks volumes of the sickness that lies at the heart of pecusa. It isn't an issue concerning redemption; it is an issue concerning someone who has violated the trust of the faith community and has forfeited the moral authority to lead others.
The fact that you don't see any problem with this suggests to me that your doctrine of sin is a bit weak, but I could be wrong.
Tony Seel
How about dropping the use of PECUSA in these discussions. It debases the memory of a once fine church and hangs the millstone of apostacy of TEC around it's neck unfairly and inaccurately.
I agree that TEC is a debasement of PECUSA. I use pecusa for a few reasons. First, PECUSA was worthy of respect, pecusa is not. pecusa is the current embodiment that runs around calling itself TEC, although there are a number of Episcopal Churches worldwide (e.g. the Sudan Episcopal Church). TEC is just one of a host of examples of the arrogance of pecusa.
Secondly, TEC is a fraud. TEC likes to worship in catholic eucharistic vestments and has adopted other catholic liturgical practices but has dumped catholic understandings. The liberal fog that pervades pecusa is an empty mysticism and nothing more.
In the end, TEC is pecusa, a liberal protestant sect that is losing 1,000 members a week but is in such denial that she is incapable of changing directions.
I had a conversation with Bp. Adams a few years ago when he called the present malaise the cross of Christ. I call it the judgement of God.
Tony Seel
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