At
least five women have come forward to state that they were victims of
sexual misconduct by Roy Moore, Republican Senate candidate and
Alabama Chief Justice, while they were teenagers and he was an adult.
He was also, according to reports, well-known for trying to pick up
teenage girls at an Alabama mall, from which he was apparently
banned.
“Mary
was a teenager and Joseph was an adult carpenter.” – Jim Zeigler,
Alabama state auditor, in defense of Roy Moore.
This
is the current abuse scandal making its way through the news cycle.
A few weeks ago it was Harvey Weinstein. President Trump has openly
bragged about how he has treated women in the past. President Bill
Clinton was brought up on charges of sexual misconduct. President
Kennedy was a womanizer. Comedian CK Louis was recently accused of
sexual misconduct, as was Kevin Spacey. The list, unfortunately,
goes on and on and on and on and on.
That
list knows no party affiliations or boundaries. It infiltrates faith
communities, crossing denominational and religious lines. It
includes rich and poor alike. It doesn't discriminate by sexual
orientation. And, although much lower in numbers, it also crosses
gender lines where men are the victims of abuse at the hands of
women.
Abuse,
sexual or otherwise, is based on power – who has it and who
doesn't. And the only way we can begin to curb this problem is to
make victims feel safe, to make reporting it normative, to publicly
call out and prosecute abusers, to stop using religion and faith as
behavioral excuses, and to stop making victims feel responsible for
the actions of the abuser.
Our
faith tells us we are not to abuse widows or orphans. Our faith
calls us to care for and protect the most vulnerable of our society.
Our baptismal creed mandates – MANDATES – that we love our
neighbors as ourselves and that we respect the dignity of every human
being.
Abuse
is neither a sign of love or of respect. Preying on vulnerable
people in order to satisfy personal urges, or simply because we can,
is wrong, illegal, and antichrist.
How
much better would we be if our “deeply held religious beliefs”
caused us to work for the safety and care of those in vulnerable
positions rather than driving us to fight for the right to
discriminate and abuse all while hanging the 10 Commandments on a
courtroom wall?
Blessings,
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