Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Headline Bistro and the NYT poll on Catholics' views of the Church (updated)

I came across this site, "Headline Bistro," a "service of the Knights of Columbus dedicated to bringing readers the top, daily headlines that Catholics need to know."  One of the (many) pieces currently up describes a recent poll conducted by CBS and The New York Times, regarding the effects of the recent coverage of some bishops' mishandling of clergy-abuse cases on practicing Catholics' relationship with the Church.  The poll (seems to me to) point in a number of different directions on a number of matters.  The story's lede, though, is worth re-printing here:

A new poll conducted by CBS News and The New York Times has found that 77% of Catholics who attend Mass weekly say that “the Vatican’s handling of recent child sex abuse reports” has had no effect on how they “feel about the Catholic Church.” An additional 12% of practicing Catholics say that they have a more positive feeling about the Church as a result of the Vatican’s handling of the scandals. . . .

88% of Catholics-- practicing and non-practicing-- report that the scandal has had no effect on their dealings with priests. 82% say it will not affect their Mass attendance, 79% say it will have no effect on donations, and 87% say that it will have no effect on their children’s involvement in Church activities. . . .

It is interesting (to me) that, at a time when (we're told that) Catholics, as a group, think about contested questions of public policy and morality no differently than do non-Catholics, there is, despite the latest round of coverage -- which has, in my view, at times been unfair and misleading -- a signfiicant gap between the views of Catholics and those of non-Catholics (e.g., "only 17% of practicing Catholics, and 33% of Americans overall, believe that the Vatican is currently engaging in a cover-up").  Interesting . . . but also worrisome.

UPDATE:  The America blog links to a news story which contains this:

There is a distinctly different level of anger from the public directed toward the Catholic Church over the sexual abuse of minors than toward other organizations whose leaders commit similar crimes, noted two psychologists who work in the field. . . .

Plante told Catholic News Service in a phone interview that there's a strain of anger at the institutional church that doesn't directly relate to sexual abuse itself and has no parallel in how the public has reacted to other institutions where abuse has occurred. "There are a lot of people who are very angry at the Catholic Church about all sorts of things, from the Crusades to how Galileo was treated, to the church's positions on sexual ethics, divorce and women priests," Plante said. "It's like a fire hose, all that gets funneled into the clergy abuse thing." . . .

https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/05/headline-bistro.html

Garnett, Rick | Permalink

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