From Booklist
Cornwell was raised Catholic and began studying for the priesthood at an early age. While in seminary, a priest attempted to seduce him during confession. Although Cornwell subsequently left the church, he occasionally wonders whether his journey masks a search for the lost abusers of one’s childhood. Read as a personal odyssey, his book is quite interesting. Cornwell is less successful proving in any rigorous historical or social-scientific manner his provocative claim that the church’s 1910 decision to lower the age for confession from 14 to 7, and increase its frequency, eventually resulted in the sex-abuse scandal that plagues the church today. That said, he asks important questions about confession’s potential to inflict lasting psychological damage on children with the concept of sin and evil, especially as they concern one’s physical body and natural urges, and the requirement to confess transgressions are introduced at too early an age. Cornwell’s book also underscores the sad fact that some priests used the cover of the confessional for their evil purposes. --Christopher McConnell
Review
Financial Times
A meticulously researched, carefully wrought and quietly furious anathema upon the Catholic Church.”
Guardian, UK
[A] powerful, persuasive, and disturbing book....The Dark Box is a major contribution to the Catholic church’s examination of conscience about the roots and circumstances of sexual abuse.”
Sunday Times, UK
"[An] absorbing history of the confessional...forceful."
Observer, UK
The Dark Box is a powerful, impassioned treatise about the dangers of confession.”
Irish Independent
A powerful and disturbing addition to the literature on the subject, and lays bare the dysfunctional nature of a church which has still come nowhere near to facing its own self-inflicted demons.”
Buffalo News
"This book, perhaps threatening to some, performs a signal service. It is an examination of conscience for the Catholic Church about what it has done and what it has failed to do in the matter of helping Catholics come to terms with forgiveness.”
The Spectator, UK
I have a confession to make. I really enjoyed this book...smartly, smoothly written.”
Commercial Dispatch, Ohio
There may have been those who benefited from confession, and even more who found it a mechanical process, compared to those who found themselves thrown into sexual guilt and confusion because of it. Critics will say this book depicts only the darker side of the dark box, but Cornwell's church would be better off understanding the issues expressed in this thoughtful and heartfelt book.”
Kirkus
A haunting study, both scholarly and personal, that situates the practice of confession as the source of the Catholic Church’s clerical abuse.... Enlisting a legion of voices attesting to their soul murder’ by confessional priests, Cornwell offers another strong indictment of the church.”
John Heilpern, contributing editor, Vanity Fair
With his brilliant The Dark Box, John Cornwell, a most fair-minded hammer and conscience of the Catholic Church, has gone to the terrifying roots of clerical sexual abuse throughout Catholicism's history. He has made the nightmare link between sacramental confession and the abuse of children, while anticipating the future of a church pre-occupied with sex, sin and damnation. I cannot imagine a more timely book than The Dark Box in Pope Francis' brave new inclusive age of love, reconciliation and social conscience.”
Garry Wills, author of Why I Am a Catholic
A maxim often cited from the fifth-century theologian Prosper of Aquitaine is Lex orandi lex credendi -- the way we pray is the way we believe. In accord with this norm, the fact that Catholics have by and large given up going to confession means that they have stopped believing in it. Cornwell tells us why we should.”
Gary Kearns, Maynooth University College, Ireland
An elegant and profound reflection upon what turned out to be a tragic experiment in church discipline.”
David Lodge
"A brilliant book, and an important one. Confession turns out to be the key that explains so much that is discreditable in the history of the Catholic Church, especially over the last 100 years. You show that "Saint" Pius X created a kind of spiritual totalitarian state similar to the secular dictatorships of the same period, complete with a loyalty oath to the leader. The practice of frequent confession and communion which he initiated, instilled in Catholics from an impressionable early age, combined with the moral theology of mortal sin, ensured a cowed obedience, or encouraged an Orwellian double-speak, until, with John XXIII and Vatican II, Catholics suddenly started thinking for themselves and deserted confession in droves. Interesting that it was a sexual issue, contraception, not a doctrinal one, that caused the old
consensus to collapse."
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