Elind
Philosopher
Wow. Should be called "How to jerk off without sin"
Well said, and persuasive.
I bolded the part I'm wondering about.
Maybe there are feelings of power, if not real power:
-The respect of parishioners.
-Access to people's psyches through formal or informal confession.
-The feeling of being part of a hierarchy and a vast, ancient institution.
-In asceticism, the victory of one's will over one's ordinary desires.
-The feeling, therefore, of cultivating oneself, in whatever bizarre way cultivation might be defined.
-Superiority over the hideous, noisy, pointless secular world.
-Aesthetic pleasures only possible when sheltered from the hustle, bustle, turmoil, pell-mell.
As you can tell, I'd like to be part of some secular, individualist monastery: shelter from the storm. But there ain't no such thing. Maybe sanitariums?
As for access to people’s psyches…it would take someone really, really sick to do this if they were not convinced that the person in question was benefiting from this. Psychopaths exist, but they’re not that common. Also, the church is well aware of the damage that a psychopathic priest could do. Seminaries these days have in-depth psychological screening, and seminarians have always been watched for hitches in their "formation." I doubt that more than a tiny number of psychopaths get through the seminary.


Here's a strange article:
The similar struggles of Mother Teresa and Hillary Clinton
The really hair-raising part isn't the article, but some of the reader comments.