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cbayer

(146,218 posts)
Sun May 20, 2012, 11:50 AM May 2012

Ask the Religion Experts: How do you handle cases of domestic abuse that come to your attention?

More from this good series.

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Religion+Experts+handle+cases+domestic+abuse+that+come+your+attention/6651013/story.html

The Ottawa Citizen May 20, 2012 10:44 AM


Rev. RAY INNEN PARCHELO is a novice Tendai priest and founder of the Red Maple Sangha, the first lay Buddhist community in Eastern Ontario.

Within this neutralizing phrase — domestic abuse — are different forms of cruel and violent actions. These include physical and sexual assaults by partners in dating and marriage relationships, offences against children, including physical, sexual and neglect, and exploitation and physical assaults against at risk and older adults, often in situations of dependency and vulnerability. The list is too long to represent. Thankfully, in my clerical role, as a leader of a spiritual community it is a rarity. As a clinical social worker with decades of experience, these are a regular occurrence in my professional practice. And it is far more often in that professional role where I am aware of a religious dimension to the abuse.

Whether as a priest or health worker or ordinary citizen, I am obliged by law to report any situations where a child is at risk of harm to the appropriate investigative authorities. Sadly we, as a society, have very few mandatory obligations to report where others are involved, such as seniors or those with developmental or severe mental health conditions. This often leaves us in positions of trust and confidence with limited powers to intervene beyond counselling and advice.

Only a few in a clerical position even have authority to impose congregational sanctions against an individual. I recently was aware of such a situation where a husband was banned from his church by the minister because of his behaviour towards his wife and other congregants. I am aware of individuals who are held away from their congregation, ‘on probation’ as it were, with the requirement to address their behaviour before being allowed to participate again. As I wrote here recently, our positions as religious leaders are paradoxical because we must on the one hand model and uphold the highest moral standards, while, on the other, we must remember our commitments to care for the inner lives of those in our congregations, including those who may be perpetrators of abuse. There is not always a single clear issue and we must rely on our faith principles, personal conscience, congregational advice and awareness of the broader social and legal context to find a path through each situation.



More from a Rabbi, Bahai scholar and Muslim at link.

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Ask the Religion Experts: How do you handle cases of domestic abuse that come to your attention? (Original Post) cbayer May 2012 OP
Good - domestic abuse is a horrible affliction stemming from centuries of misogyny Cooley Hurd May 2012 #1
hey it's god's will, let it be nt msongs May 2012 #2
None of the respondents say anything even close to that. cbayer May 2012 #3
You know the truth doesn't matter to some. Leontius May 2012 #4
Neither does reading past the headline, apparently. cbayer May 2012 #5
Neither does searching for anything skepticscott May 2012 #7
How about telling the other side of the story? skepticscott May 2012 #6
 

Cooley Hurd

(26,877 posts)
1. Good - domestic abuse is a horrible affliction stemming from centuries of misogyny
Sun May 20, 2012, 11:54 AM
May 2012

...and most of it stemming from organized religion.

 

skepticscott

(13,029 posts)
7. Neither does searching for anything
Sun May 20, 2012, 01:27 PM
May 2012

beyond what will support your personal agenda and validate your preconceived notions, apparently.

 

skepticscott

(13,029 posts)
6. How about telling the other side of the story?
Sun May 20, 2012, 01:25 PM
May 2012

Like this: http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/1007/biblical_battered_wife_syndrome:_christian_women_and_domestic_violence

There are more blatant examples of excusing abusive male authority among stricter proponents of complementarianism and submission theology. In June 2007, professor of Christian theology at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary Bruce Ware told a Texas church that women often bring abuse on themselves by refusing to submit. And Debi Pearl, half of a husband-and-wife fundamentalist child-training ministry as well as author of the bestselling submission manual, Created to Be His Help Meet, writes that submission is so essential to God’s plan that it must be followed even to the point of allowing abuse. “When God puts you in subjection to a man whom he knows is going to cause you to suffer,” she writes, “it is with the understanding that you are obeying God by enduring the wrongful suffering.”


The Internet is chock-full of similar examples. Perhaps you'd like to discuss the implications of those alongside of the mouthings of one novice Buddhist priest and a few other cherry-picked clerical types.
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