When I Call for Help: A Pastoral
Response to Domestic Violence Against Women
Issued by USCCB, November 12, 2002 Copyright ©
2002, United States Catholic Conference, Inc. All rights reserved. "When I Call For Help"
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Tenth Anniversary Edition A Statement of the U.S. Catholic
Bishops
In the beginning, I was young . . . he was handsome. He said I
was beautiful, smart, worthy of love . . . made me feel that way. And so we were
married, walking joyfully together down a church aisle, our union blessed by
God.
Then came the angry words . . . the verbal tearing apart. . . . Now
I was made to feel ugly, unintelligent, unworthy of any love, God's or
man's.
Next came the beatings . . . unrelenting violence . . . unceasing
pain. I shouldn't stay, but this is my husband . . . promised forever. He says I
deserve it . . . maybe I do . . . if I could just be good. I feel so alone . . .
doesn't God hear me when I cry out silently as I lie in bed each
night?
Finally came the release, the realization. It's not me . . . it's
him. . . . I am worthy of love, God's and man's. One spring morning, my heart
was filled with hope and with fear now only of starting over on my own. And so
again I walked . . . down the hallway of our apartment building . . . never
again to be silent . . . never again to live with that kind of violence, to
suffer that kind of pain. —A battered
wife1
As pastors of the Catholic Church in the United States, we state as clearly
and strongly as we can that violence against women, inside or outside the home,
is never justified. Violence in any form"—physical, sexual,
psychological, or verbal"—is sinful; often, it is a crime as well. We have
called for a moral revolution to replace a culture of violence. We acknowledge
that violence has many forms, many causes, and many victims—men as well as
women.2
The Catholic Church teaches that violence against
another person in any form fails to treat that person as someone worthy of love.
Instead, it treats the person as an object to be used. When violence occurs
within a sacramental marriage, the abused spouse may question, "How do these
violent acts relate to my promise to take my spouse for better or for worse?"
The person being assaulted needs to know that acting to end the abuse does not
violate the marriage promises. While violence can be directed towards men, it
tends to harm women and children more.
In 1992 we spoke out against
domestic violence. We called on the Christian community to work vigorously
against it. Since then, many dioceses, parishes, and organizations have made
domestic violence a priority issue. We commend and encourage these efforts.
In this update of our 1992 statement, we again express our desire to
offer the Church's resources to both the women who are abused and the men who
abuse. Both groups need Jesus' strength and healing.3
We focus
here on violence against women, since 85 percent of the victims of reported
cases of non-lethal domestic violence are women.4 Women's greatest
risk of violence comes from intimate partners—a current or former husband or
boyfriend.5
Violence against women in the home has serious
repercussions for children. Over 50 percent of men who abuse their wives also
beat their children.6 Children who grow up in violent homes are more
likely to develop alcohol and drug addictions and to become abusers
themselves.7 The stage is set for a cycle of violence that may
continue from generation to generation.
The Church can help break this
cycle. Many abused women seek help first from the Church because they see it as
a safe place. Even if their abusers isolate them from other social contacts,
they may still allow them to go to church. Recognizing the critical role that
the Church can play, we address this statement to several audiences:
- To women who are victims of violence and who may need the Church's help to
break out of their pain and isolation;
- To pastors, parish personnel, and educators, who are often the first
responders for abused women;
- To men who abuse and may not know how to break out of the cycle of violence;
and
- To society, which has made some strides towards recognizing the extent of
domestic violence against women.
We recognize that violence against
women has many dimensions. This statement is not meant to be all-inclusive, but
rather to be an introduction, along with some practical suggestions of what
dioceses and parishes can do now.
Domestic violence is any kind of behavior that a person uses to control an
intimate partner through fear and intimidation. It includes physical, sexual,
psychological, verbal, and economic abuse. Some examples of domestic abuse
include battering, name-calling and insults, threats to kill or harm one's
partner or children, destruction of property, marital rape, and forced
sterilization or abortion.8
Younger, unmarried women are at
greatest risk for domestic violence. According to a U.S. government survey, 53
percent of victims were abused by a current or former girlfriend or boyfriend.
One-third of all victims were abused by a spouse, while 14 percent said that the
offender was an ex-spouse. Women ages 16 to 24 are nearly three times as
vulnerable to attacks by intimate partners as those in other age groups; abuse
victims between ages 35 and 49 run the highest risk of being
killed.9
While abuse cuts across all ethnic and economic
backgrounds, some women face particular obstacles. Women of color may not view
the criminal justice system as a source of help. Additionally, in some cultures
women feel pressured to keep problems within the home and to keep the family
together at all costs. Some fear that they will lose face in the community if
they leave. Immigrant women often lack familiarity with the language and legal
systems of this country. Their abusers may threaten them with deportation.
Women in rural communities may find themselves with fewer resources. The
isolation imposed by distance and lack of transportation can aggravate their
situation. Isolation can also be a factor for women who do not work outside the
home. They may have less access to financial resources and to information about
domestic violence. Women with disabilities and elderly women are also
particularly vulnerable to violence.
Some who suffer from domestic
violence are also victims of stalking, which includes following a person, making
harassing phone calls, and vandalizing property. Eight percent of women in the
United States have been stalked at some time in their lives, and more than one
million are stalked annually.10 Stalking is a unique crime because
stalkers are obsessed with controlling their victims' actions and feelings. A
victim can experience extreme stress, rage, depression, and an inability to
trust anyone.
Domestic violence is often shrouded in silence. People
outside the family hesitate to interfere, even when they suspect abuse is
occurring. Many times even extended family denies that abuse exists, out of
loyalty to the abuser and in order to protect the image of the family. Some
people still argue—mistakenly—that intervention by outside sources endangers the
sanctity of the home. Yet abuse and assault are no less serious when they occur
within a family. Even when domestic violence is reported, sometimes there are
failures to protect victims adequately or to punish perpetrators.
Domestic violence is learned behavior. Men who batter learn to abuse through
observation, experience, and reinforcement. They believe that they have a right
to use violence; they are also rewarded, that is, their behavior gives them
power and control over their partner.
Abusive men come from all economic
classes, races, religions, and occupations. The batterer may be a "good
provider" and a respected member of his church and community. While there is no
one type, men who abuse share some common characteristics. They tend to be
extremely jealous, possessive, and easily angered. A man may fly into a rage
because his spouse called her mother too often or because she didn't take the
car in for servicing. Many try to isolate their partners by limiting their
contact with family and friends.
Typically, abusive men deny that the
abuse is happening, or they minimize it. They often blame their abusive behavior
on someone or something other than themselves. They tell their partner, "You
made me do this."
Many abusive men hold a view of women as inferior.
Their conversation and language reveal their attitude towards a woman's place in
society. Many believe that men are meant to dominate and control
women.
Alcohol and drugs are often associated with domestic violence, but
they do not cause it. An abusive man who drinks or uses drugs has two distinct
problems: substance abuse and violence. Both must be treated.
Women stay with men who abuse them primarily out of fear. Some fear that they
will lose their children. Many believe that they cannot support themselves, much
less their children.
When the first violent act occurs, the woman is
likely to be incredulous. She believes her abuser when he apologizes and
promises that it will not happen again. When it does—repeatedly—many women
believe that if they just act differently they can stop the abuse. They may be
ashamed to admit that the man they love is terrorizing them. Some cannot admit
or realize that they are battered women. Others have endured trauma and suffer
from battered womaen syndrome.
REMEMBER: Some battered women
run a high risk of being killed when they leave their abuser or seek help from
the legal system. It is important to be honest with women about the risks
involved. If a woman decides to leave, she needs to have a safety plan,
including the names and phone numbers of shelters and programs. Some victims may
choose to stay at this time because it seems safer. Ultimately, abused women
must make their own decisions about staying or leaving.
Religion
can be either a resource or a roadblock for battered women. As a resource, it
encourages women to resist mistreatment. As a roadblock, its misinterpretation
can contribute to the victim's self-blame and suffering and to the abuser's
rationalizations.
Abused women often say, "I can't leave this
relationship. The Bible says it would be wrong." Abusive men often say, "The
Bible says my wife should be submissive to me." They take the biblical text and
distort it to support their right to batter.
As bishops, we condemn the
use of the Bible to support abusive behavior in any form. A correct reading of
Scripture leads people to an understanding of the equal dignity of men and women
and to relationships based on mutuality and love. Beginning with Genesis,
Scripture teaches that women and men are created in God's image. Jesus himself
always respected the human dignity of women. Pope John Paul II reminds us that
"Christ's way of acting, the Gospel of his words and deeds, is a consistent
protest against whatever offends the dignity of women."11
Men
who abuse often use Ephesians 5:22, taken out of context, to justify their
behavior, but the passage (v. 21-33) refers to the mutual submission of husband
and wife out of love for Christ. Husbands should love their wives as they love
their own body, as Christ loves the Church.
Men who batter also cite
Scripture to insist that their victims forgive them (see, for example, Mt
6:9-15). A victim then feels guilty if she cannot do so. Forgiveness, however,
does not mean forgetting the abuse or pretending that it did not happen. Neither
is possible. Forgiveness is not permission to repeat the abuse. Rather,
forgiveness means that the victim decides to let go of the experience and move
on with greater insight and conviction not to tolerate abuse of any kind again.
An abused woman may see her suffering as just punishment for a past deed
for which she feels guilty. She may try to explain suffering by saying that it
is "God's will" or "part of God's plan for my life" or "God's way of teaching me
a lesson." This image of a harsh, cruel God runs contrary to the biblical image
of a kind, merciful, and loving God. Jesus went out of his way to help suffering
women. Think of the woman with the hemorrhage (Mk 5:25-34) or the woman caught
in adultery (Jn 8:1-11). God promises to be present to us in our suffering, even
when it is unjust.
Finally, we emphasize that no person is expected to
stay in an abusive marriage. Some abused women believe that church teaching on
the permanence of marriage requires them to stay in an abusive relationship.
They may hesitate to seek a separation or divorce. They may fear that they
cannot re-marry in the Church. Violence and abuse, not divorce, break up a
marriage. We encourage abused persons who have divorced to investigate the
possibility of seeking an annulment. An annulment, which determines that the
marriage bond is not valid, can frequently open the door to
healing.
Many church ministers want to help abused women but
worry that they are not experts on domestic violence. Clergy may hesitate to
preach about domestic violence because they are unsure what to do if an abused
woman approaches them for help.
We ask them to keep in mind that
intervention by church ministers has three goals, in the following
order:
- Safety for the victim and children;
- Accountability for the abuser; and
- Restoration of the relationship (if possible), or mourning over the loss of
the relationship.
We also encourage church ministers to see themselves
as "first responders" who
- Listen to and believe the victim's story,
- Help her to assess the danger to herself and her children, and
- Refer her to counseling and other specialized services.
Church
ministers should become familiar with and follow the reporting requirements of
their state. Many professionals who deal with vulnerable people are required to
report suspected crimes, which may include domestic abuse.
In dealing
with people who abuse, church ministers need to hold them accountable for their
behavior. They can support the abusive person as he seeks specialized counseling
to change his abusive behavior. Couple counseling is not appropriate and can
endanger the victim's safety.
We offer the following practical suggestions for several
audiences.
- Begin to believe that you are not alone and that help is available for you
and your children.
- Talk in confidence to someone you trust: a relative, friend, parish priest,
deacon, religious sister or brother, or lay minister.
- If you choose to stay in the situation, at least for now, set up a plan of
action to ensure your safety. This includes hiding a car key, personal
documents, and some money in a safe place and locating somewhere to go in an
emergency.
- Find out about resources in your area that offer help to battered women and
their children. The phone book lists numbers to call in your local area. Your
diocesan Catholic Charities office or family life office can help. Catholic
Charities often has qualified counselors on staff and can provide emergency
assistance and other kinds of help.
- The National Domestic Violence Hotline provides crisis intervention and
referrals to local service providers. Call 800-799-SAFE (7233) or 800-787-3224
(TTY). E-mail assistance is available at ndvh@ndvh.org. In some communities,
cell phones programmed to 911 are made available to abused women.
- Admit that the abuse is your problem, not your partner's, and have the manly
courage to seek help. Begin to believe that you can change your behavior if you
choose to do so.
- Be willing to reach out for help. Talk to someone you trust who can help you
evaluate the situation. Contact Catholic Charities or other church or community
agencies for the name of a program for abusers.
- Keep in mind that the Church is available to help you. Part of the mission
Jesus entrusted to us is to offer healing when it is needed. Contact your
parish.
- Find alternative ways to act when you become frustrated or angry. Talk to
other men who have overcome abusive behavior. Find out what they did and how
they did it.
Make your parish a safe place where abused women and abusive men
can come for help. Here are some specific suggestions:
- Include information about domestic violence and local resources in parish
bulletins and newsletters and on websites.
- Place copies of this brochure and/or other information, including local
telephone numbers for assistance about domestic violence, in the women's
restroom(s).
- Keep an updated list of resources for abused women. This can be a project
for the parish pastoral council, social justice committee, or women's group.
- Find a staff person or volunteer who is willing to receive in-depth training
on domestic violence; ask this person to serve as a resource and to help educate
others about abuse.
- Provide training on domestic violence to all church ministers, including
priests, deacons and lay ministers. When possible, provide opportunities for
them to hear directly from victims of violence.
- Join in the national observance of October as "Domestic Violence Awareness
Month." Dedicate at least one weekend that month to inform parishioners about
domestic abuse. During that month, make available educational and training
programs in order to sensitize men and women, girls and boys to the personal and
social effects of violence in the family. Help them to see how psychological
abuse may escalate over time. Teach them how to communicate without
violence.
Use liturgies to draw attention to violence and abuse. Here
are some specific suggestions:
- In homilies, include a reference to domestic violence when appropriate. Just
a mention of domestic violence lets abused women know that someone cares.
Describe what abuse is so that women begin to recognize and name what is
happening to them. Watch the video When You Preach, Remember Me (see
Resources).
- In parish reconciliation services, identify violence against women as a
sin.
- Include intercessions for victims of abuse, people who abuse people, and
those who work with them.
- If you suspect abuse, ask direct questions. Ask the woman if she is being
hit or hurt at home. Carefully evaluate her response. Some women do not realize
they are being abused, or they lie to protect their spouses. Be careful not to
say anything that will bolster her belief that it is her fault and that she must
change her behavior.
- Have an action plan in place to follow if an abused woman calls on you for
help. This includes knowing how and where to refer her for help. This will be
easier if you have already established contact with local shelters and domestic
violence agencies.
- Include a discussion of domestic violence in marriage preparation sessions.
If violence has already begun in the relationship, it will only escalate after
marriage.
- In baptismal preparation programs, be alert that the arrival of a child and
its attendant stress may increase the risk of domestic violence.
One source of healing we have in our lives as Christians is prayer. Psalm 55
may be an especially apt prayer for women who are dealing with abusive
situations. With all of you we pray these verses:
Listen, God, to my prayer; do not hide from my pleading; hear me
and give answer.
If an enemy had reviled me, that I could bear; If
my foe had viewed me with contempt, from that I could hide. But it was
you, my other self, my comrade and friend, You, whose company I
enjoyed, at whose side I walked in procession in the house of
God.
But I will call upon God, and the Lord will save me. At dusk,
dawn, and noon I will grieve and complain, and my prayer will be
heard. (Ps 55:2-3, 13-15, 17-18)
Center for the Prevention of
Sexual and Domestic Violence: www.cpsdv.org
National Domestic
Violence Hotline: www.ndvh.org
National Coalition Against Domestic
Violence: www.ncadv.org
Family Violence Prevention Fund:
www.endabuse.org
When You Preach, Remember Me,
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, No. 680-8; phone ordering:
800-235-8722
Broken Vows: Religious Perspectives on Domestic
Violence, Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence; phone:
206-634-1903; fax: 206-634-0115; e-mail: cpsdv@cpsdv.org
Wings Like a
Dove: Healing for the Abused Christian Woman, Center for the Prevention of
Sexual and Domestic Violence
Walk in the Light: A Pastoral
Response to Child Sexual Abuse, United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops, No. 5-000; phone ordering: 800-235-8722.; phone ordering:
800-235-8722.
Pope John Paul II, On the Dignity and Vocation of Women
(Mulieris Dignitatem). Available on the Vatican's website at
www.vatican.va.
Pope John Paul II, The Gospel of Life, United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops, No. 244-6; phone ordering:
800-235-8722.
Pope John Paul II on the Genius of Women, United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops, No. 5-113.; phone ordering:
800-235-8722.
Catechism of the Catholic Church, United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops, No. 511-9.; phone ordering:
800-235-8722.
Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis, Domestic Violence
Committee of the Commission on Women, When You Are Called For Help: A Guide
for Clergy on Responding to Domestic Violence Situations. Available from the
Commission on Women, 328 W. Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55102; phone:.
651-291-4495.
Bishop Ricardo Ramirez, CSB, Diocese of Las Cruces,
Speaking the Unspeakable: A Pastoral Letter on Domestic Violence., Bishop
Ricardo Ramirez, CSB. Available from the diocese'san Pastoral Center, 1280 Med
Park Drive, Las Cruces, NM 88005; phone:. 505-523-7577;.
www.dioceseoflascruces.org.
Rev. Marie M. Fortune, Keeping the
Faith: Guidance for Christian Women Facing Abuse (San Francisco:
HarperCollins, 1995).
Rev. Al Miles, Domestic Violence: What Every
Pastor Needs to Know (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress Press,
2000).
Carol J. Adams, Woman-Battering (Minneapolis: Augsburg
Fortress Press, 1994).
The original document When I Call for Help:
A Pastoral Response to Domestic Violence Against Women was developed by the
Committee on Women in Society and in the Church and the Committee on Marriage
and Family of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), approved
for publication by the Administrative Committee in September 1992, and affirmed
by the full body of U.S. Catholic bishops at its November 1992 General Meeting.
This revised tenth anniversary edition was approved by the full body of U.S.
Catholic bishops at its November 2002 General Meeting and has been authorized
for publication by the undersigned.
Msgr. William P. Fay General
Secretary, USCCB
Opening excerpt from Christopher News
Notes. Used with permission.
Scriptural texts are taken from the
New American Bible, copyright © 1970, 1986, 1991 by the Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine, Inc., Washington, D.C. Used with permission. All rights
reserved. No part of the New American Bible may be reproduced by any
means without permission in writing from the copyright holder.
Copyright
© 2002, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, Inc., Washington, D.C. All
rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without
permission in writing from the copyright holder.
When I Call for Help:
A Pastoral Response to Domestic Violence Against Women (Tenth Anniversary
Edition) is available in print editions in English and Spanish and may be
ordered by calling toll-free 800-235-8722. Ask for publication number 5-509
(English), 5-888 (Spanish).
Para ordenar este recurso en español, llame
al 800-235-8722 y presione 4 para hablar con un representante del servicio al
cliente, en español.
1 Excerpted from "When Home is Where the Hurt Is," Christopher
News Notes, no. 326. 2 Confronting a Culture of Violence: A
Catholic Framework for Action. A Pastoral Message of the U.S. Catholic
Bishops (Washington, D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops,
1994). 3 See Pope John Paul II, Encylical letter The Gospel of
Life (Washington, D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1995),
nos. 2, 23, and 99. 4 National Crime Victimization Survey,
1992-1996. www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/ipvfacts.htm. 5
Full Report of the Prevalence, Incidence, and Consequences of Violence Against
Women, Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey (November 2000).
www.ncjrs.org. 6 "Developments in the Law—Legal Responses
to Domestic Violence," Harvard Law Review 106 (1993):7: 1608-9. Cited in
Carol J. Adams, Woman-Battering (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1994), 22.
In 1995 the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (now United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops) addressed one form of child abuse: child sexual
abuse in a home or family setting. See Walk in the Light: A Pastoral Response
to Child Sexual Abuse (Washington, D.C.: United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops, 1995). 7
www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/ipvfacts.htm. 8 In regard to
sexual abuse, see Catechism of the Catholic Church (Washington, D.C.:
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2000), no. 2356; The Gospel of
Life, nos. 3, 23 and 99; and Pope John Paul II's "Letter to Women no. 5, and
"Welcome to Gertrude Mongella, Secretary General of the Fourth World Conference
on Women," no. 7, in Pope John Paul II on The Genius of Women
(Washington, D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1997). In
regard to verbal abuse, see Catechism nos. 2477, 2479, 2482-2487, and
2507-2509. 9 U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, "Intimate Partner
Violence and Age of Victim, 1993-99" (NCJ-187635).
www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/ipva99.htm. 10 "Stalking in
America: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey," Joint report
from the National Institute of Justice and the National Center for Injury
Prevention and Control (April 1998). 11 Pope John Paul II, On
the Dignity and Vocation of Women (Mulieris Dignitatem), no. 15.
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