I love Dawn. She was out her in Seattle last week and we had lunch and she was her sensible, sweet self. She’s a fascinating character. Raised in a Reformed Jewish household, became a rock and roll journalist, as well as somebody who did an interview with one of my heroes, Stan Freberg, she went on to work in the New York press, cooking up brilliant headlines like for stories like the one about the cop injured by an exploding toilet (HURT IN THE LINE OF DOODY) and her headline for one of Trump’s marriages (THE LADY IS A TRUMP).
Eventually, she became a Catholic and then got her doctorate in theology (I’m not clear what the exact alphabet soup is) and is now teaching for Holy Apostles. Anyway, recently Kathryn Lopez did an interview with her and she, a sexual abuse survivor, spoke about the current crisis in the Church. Here’s a taste:
“I remember the moment I began to change my mind about Catholicism,” she recalls. She was at a meeting of the New York City G. K. Chesterton Society. “Somehow the discussion turned to the scandals, and I made some derisive comment about how Catholics disbelieved the reports of abuse that were then flooding the news media.” Goldstein was especially “irritated” after reading comments that tried to suggest that the scandals were really “a witch hunt orchestrated by reporters who hated the Church.” Her surprise came when the Catholics around her weren’t trying to look away from or explain away what was being revealed.
“They were angry about the abuse,” she says, “angry that such despicable and criminal acts were being perpetrated by their own priests, in their own Church. They didn’t at all want the abuse covered up, as I had assumed. Rather, they wanted it brought into the light so that abusing members of the clergy could be brought to justice and the Church could be purified.”
“It was when I saw ordinary Catholics who were furious about clergy abuse that I started to consider seriously the Catholic Church’s claim to be the true faith,” she remembers. “I entered into full communion with the Church in 2006 and have never looked back.”
But now, in the wake of more demonic filth — first involving former D.C. cardinal archbishop Theodore McCarrick and then the Pennsylvania grand-jury report — why doesn’t she quit? It’s a question some Catholics are getting, and asking themselves.
“I can’t leave the Catholic Church, because I know too much,” Goldstein says. “I know now that Jesus gave the Church the Eucharist. Yes, the Orthodox have it too, but they have it only because they have retained the apostolic succession that properly belongs to the Catholic Church, which is headed by the successor of Peter. I know now that my sins are really and truly forgiven when Jesus absolves me through the ministry of a Catholic priest.”
It’s where she knows she belongs. It’s where she believes God wants her. “Most of all,” she says, “I know that the Catholic Church is where Jesus gives me the ongoing healing for which I long. And it’s ground zero for the tribulation described in sacred Scripture, as can be seen in the unrelenting efforts of the devil to corrupt its bishops, priests, religious, and lay faithful.”
“I am angry about the immorality and corruption, as every good person should be. And I receive Jesus every day in the Eucharist and ask him to undo the immorality and corruption within my own soul, so that I can be part of the Church’s healing and renewal.” Additionally, she says, she’s hurt — even offended — when she hears people threatening to walk away from the Church right now. “Stay here and be part of the solution, for God’s sake!”