Last week I was asked by a 25-year-old co-worker whether I was intending
to see Spotlight, the movie detailing The Boston Globe's investigative
team's month's long Pulitzer-prize winning examination of the clergy
sexual abuse of minors in the Archdiocese of Boston. She wanted to see
the movie's portrayal of the Church but worried whether doing so might
be subsidizing anti-Catholicism.
I was planning to go to see the movie, I told her, both so that I might be able to respond to the various questions I was being asked by those who had already seen it as well as out of a sense of witness and reparation. When she asked me to elaborate about the latter, I said that I thought it would be important for movie-goers to see a priest to convey that the Church isn't in denial about the evils committed and also to give them an opportunity to focus their anger if they should choose.
http://www.thebostonpilot.com/opinion/article.asp?ID=175251
I was planning to go to see the movie, I told her, both so that I might be able to respond to the various questions I was being asked by those who had already seen it as well as out of a sense of witness and reparation. When she asked me to elaborate about the latter, I said that I thought it would be important for movie-goers to see a priest to convey that the Church isn't in denial about the evils committed and also to give them an opportunity to focus their anger if they should choose.
http://www.thebostonpilot.com/opinion/article.asp?ID=175251