We begin this week with stories of trust betrayed, of the abuse of relationships between pastoral counselors and those who came to them willingly seeking guidance and comfort. In our Cover Story, we hear personal tales of the sexual relationship that can develop between some clergymen and some women in their congregations. This is a complex world in which the male pastor is often found guilty of abusing his power and the woman is usually, but not always, the innocent victim. Our correspondent, Mary Alice Williams, begins her report with one woman's story of her relationship with her counselor.
BARBARA COLARELLI: And so I started going for therapy like oncea week. I really didn't believe in therapy, but with a priest, youknow, how could you go wrong?MARY ALICE WILLIAMS: Barbara Colarelli was to learn just howwrong. When she was most vulnerable, after her oldest daughter ran awayfrom home, she turned to the one authority to whom she's given lifelongobedience and devotion, the Catholic Church, in the person of aBenedictine monk named Joseph Chang.
Ms. COLARELLI:When the session was over, I stood up to leave, and he stood up to hug me like he always did. He kissed me on the cheek. He was caring, like a brother, that's what I thought. And he kissed me on the other cheek,and then his tongue went in my mouth. And my life has never been the same since.WILLIAMS: It was the beginning of an abusive sexual and spiritual bond Barbara could neither break nor reveal.
Ms. COLARELLI: The pain was, you know, not having control of my own life, going back like a puppet.
WILLIAMS (To Ms. Colarelli): You were protecting him?
Ms. COLARELLI: I was going to save his soul.
WILLIAMS: Laura McAlpine was her therapist.
LAURA MCALPINE (Therapist): She would do what often battered women do, which is they would ignore the contacts of the abuse and just keep trying to get this person to be good to them, to be loving to them again, to be in the role that they were supposed to be.WILLIAMS: When Barbara learned that she was not the only woman that Chang was involved with, she reported him to his superior, who she said mocked her and told her to get herself together.
Ms. COLARELLI:It was more excruciating than what Chang did, because now it had a bigger representation. Now this just wasn't a man, now this was the Church turning their back on me.
MARK LAASER (Consultant): What these people are seeking is arelationship with a person who will hopefully help them be closer to God. That's why it's so powerful, and a sexual relationship between a pastor and a parishioner, you know -- the damage that happens is spiritual damage.WILLIAMS: Mark Laaser, ordained in the United Church of Christ, knows just how damaging. He was an abuser.
Mr. LAASER:I was a sexual addict and involved in pornography and other kinds of things, and gradually that addiction crept into my counseling practice. I became sexual with a number of the women that I was working with.
WILLIAMS: Laaser is a recovering sex addict who's devoted his life to consulting sexual offenders.Mr. LAASER:I knew that I was committing sin in my own theological definition, but I had justified it. I had gone through really sophisticated, complicated rationalizations that the relationships that I was having were loving, were mutual.
WILLIAMS: As Laaser learned in recovering, cases like this --the betrayal of a sacred trust -- happen, experts say, more than we realize, and they are never consensual.
Mr. LAASER:They may appear to be consenting, they may appear to do behaviors that seem consenting, but we believe that emotionally and even spiritually, they're not consenting. They don't have the power really to consent mutually in these kinds of situations.
Barbara Blaine was one of them. She founded the support group SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.
ELIZABETH GRIFFIN (Counselor): Often times you will see the situation that the victim has been the one to actually pursue and, in my opinion, seduce the minister.
MICHAEL DYSON (Husband of Marcia Dyson): There's no question that I've been sent my share of notes, sent my share of letters, sent my share of pictures and so on.
Mr. DYSON:You know, in the black church, there is sensuality, that is the literal embodiment of God, and you're preaching, and you're sweating, and people are singing and people are clapping. That's an erotic communion.
WILLIAMS: Most states prohibit sexual relations between therapists and clients, but exempt religious leaders for fear of violating separation of church and state. So because of the Church's reluctance to deal with these issues, debate over how to handle the offenders still rages.
WILLIAMS: Barbara Colarelli's healing process has been tough. She's been hospitalized, developed eating disorders, and left the faith she loved. She settled a lawsuit against Chang and the Church. Chang, who admitted having sex with Colarelli but accepted no blame for the relationship, is still a monk.