The Spirit hasn't deserted the church today.

The hierarchy shouldn't fear what we're doing.

I am very confident that the Spirit is with us.

Individuals will speak their minds, which I think is healthy.

We've always had issues up for discussion at Catholic universities.

I say let's respond as best we can to the victims and their families.

The church may hold whatever it holds with regard to clerical celibacy.

Others don't want to listen to viewpoints that members of the church have.

What we're about is a manifestation of the Catholic roots of Boston College.

We are the meeting place, an entity that's trying to connect faith and culture.

As a university, we're not focused on bringing about huge reforms - that's not our role.

The more we can get together and talk about various perspectives, feelings, beliefs, the better.

I think the issue of clergy sexual abuse sparked people to look at their faith in a different way.

This is a crisis, but there is an opportunity to help revitalize and renew the Catholic community.

Some of the speakers we bring on campus may not reflect official church teaching, but that's how it is.

I would be with those who say the hierarchy in the United States has badly mishandled this whole situation.

Clearly there are individuals who don't understand what the church teaches, or they think it's so limiting.

I would say the hierarchy has made terrible errors in judgment and it has to seek forgiveness by its members.

The challenge for the church is how do we have unity about basic beliefs and yet respect individual differences.

No organization, whether it's police or physicians or whatever, wants to have its errors held up to the light of day, but it's wrong, as is coming out so well.

Now where people are - at least the people I talk to - they are focused on issues of trust. Accountability also comes up, to make sure that this doesn't happen again.

You know how the church has been hit so hard by the sexual misconduct by clergy, and what's that's done to Catholics, especially here in Boston but elsewhere as well.

BC is not going to replace the hierarchy, and BC is not going to lead some major reform in the Catholic Church - that's got to come out of the whole Catholic community.

By no means do I anticipate screening those who come on to campus... And I have no difficulty if a bishop across the country or some local pastor may say that's not Catholic teaching - that's fine.

One of the biggest issues that we face is that we have people who have their own particular concerns, whether it's on abortion, birth control, divorce and remarriage, civil rights or social justice.

What I think we can do is help individuals understand the church teaching, but also maybe help the church understand the viewpoint of lay men and women about what they want in regard to priests, or how do they want the hierarchy to deal with them?

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