GREENCASTLE, Indiana — Father John Hollowell cried as he sat in the confessional of St. Paul the Apostle Church in Greencastle.

It was the summer of 2018 — a time when the tragedy of clergy sexual abuse surfaced again through government investigations and media reports.

Hollowell cried as he thought of the suffering of abuse victims across several decades.

From these tears came a prayer. Hollowell asked God to let him bear a cross on behalf of the victims of clergy sexual abuse.

About 18 months later, it would seem that prayer was answered. After having several fainting spells and spasms in 2019, Hollowell was diagnosed at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota earlier this month with a brain tumor.

His doctors have given him a promising prognosis. But his treatment will involve brain surgery and the potential for radiation, chemotherapy and therapy to recover from possible effects to his speaking and motor skills.

Looking back on his prayer, Hollowell recalled that it wasn’t just a passing thought.

“It definitely stuck in my mind,” he said. “I remember thinking about it for a while and praying it, making a declaration to the Lord in prayer. I knew when I made the prayer in 2018 that it may very well be answered in a very serious way.”

Soon after learning of his diagnosis, Hollowell went to Twitter to share the news with his more than 20,000 followers, and that he would bear his suffering on behalf of victims of clergy sexual abuse. “I embrace this willingly,” he wrote in a tweet Feb. 13.

Hollowell was soon flooded with more than 1,000 replies to his tweet. He’s also received hundreds of emails from abuse victims around the world thanking him for his witness and, at times, sharing with him how his decision to suffer on their behalf has helped them.

“I didn’t know when I made that prayer that it would be a public thing like this,” Hollowell told The Criterion, newspaper of the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. “I had no idea how it would play out, or what God would do with it.”

“To be able to say that I’m sorry and I wanted to suffer to show that I’m sorry — I hope that helps. And I’ve heard from some victims already that it has helped to hear that.”

In the days following his diagnosis, Hollowell returned to ministering as the pastor of Annunciation Parish in Brazil, Indiana, and St. Paul the Apostle Parish in Greencastle.

The fainting episodes and spasms he has experienced have been the only effects from his brain tumor thus far. Surgery has been scheduled for March 13 at the Mayo Clinic to remove the tumor. He expects to be away from his parishes for about 10 weeks.

The relatively good health he has experienced despite the tumor has been a blessing for him, especially as he has corresponded with so many abuse victims.

“It’s been a grace that I haven’t had debilitating migraines, because I’ve been able to be really present to the people as they’ve reached out to me,” Hollowell said. “I’ve been able to respond to these emails and carry on conversations with people.”

At the same time, Hollowell knows there’s a real difference between what he’s suffering and will suffer — as serious as it might be physically — and the effects that abuse has had on victims for much of their lives.

“There are a lot of people who committed suicide,” he noted. “Everyone else that is alive is going to be affected for the rest of their lives. And I, God willing, will be mostly back to normal in 10 weeks to three months.”

Even though some abuse victims have thanked him for his choice to offer up his suffering on their behalf, Hollowell has no expectation that what he is going through will change their lives.

“I’m not walking in here and saying, ‘Hey, I’m here to help and fix it,'” Hollowell said. “I’m not expecting my actions to move any victim one inch any closer to healing. If it does help them, that’s awesome and thanks be to God.”

Reading through hundreds of emails that often include accounts of clergy sexual abuse has been its own burden for Hollowell.

“It’s mentally and spiritually draining to hear that,” he said. “Anytime you hear a story of abuse, it takes its toll. It’s part of the cross that the Lord has let me carry.”

Norbert Krapf, a victim of clergy sexual abuse, is impressed with Hollowell and his choice to suffer on behalf of him and other abuse victims.

“Victim survivors are always moved when others appreciate their dilemma,” said Krapf, a member of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral Parish in Indianapolis. “This is a heightened awareness of our dilemma. Anytime anyone sympathizes with survivors and wants to help them — that in itself is healing.”

Hollowell offering up his own suffering came as no surprise to Father Jonathan Meyer. His friendship with Hollowell is so close that the pair have spoken by phone with each other daily for at least five years to give support and help each other be faithful in their priestly life and ministry.

“If something affects him, he is going to act,” said Meyer, pastor of All Saints Parish in Dearborn County. “If there is a problem and he can do something, he’s going to act. “His response about the victims is exactly what John does. It’s authentically John.”

Hollowell is “really following in the footsteps of his heroes,” Meyer said. These heroes include St. John of the Cross, St. John Vianney and St. John Paul II, all of whom who suffered much and reflected on the meaning of that suffering.

“It’s what he’s been taught by the saints. When you suffer, you offer it up. And if that means you do it publicly, you do it publicly.”

In addition to being pastor at two parishes, Hollowell also is the Catholic chaplain of DePauw University in Greencastle.

Grace Evans, a DePauw senior, told The Criterion: “I was not surprised in the slightest that Father Hollowell was offering (his suffering) up for victims of sexual abuse. That’s just the type of man that Father Hollowell is. This is what it means to be Catholic. This is the type of love that the church has always proclaimed for the past 2,000 years.”

Hollowell has been encouraged by the support he has received from his parishioners and the students at DePauw since his diagnosis. The priest also has received support from Indianapolis Archbishop Charles C. Thompson, whom he called within hours of receiving his diagnosis.

“Deeply rooted in prayer, faith and hope, Father John has evidenced courage and serenity in learning of his medical condition,” Thompson said. “Expressing his embrace of suffering as solidarity with victims of sexual abuse is a witness to his pastoral character as a pastor of souls. My heart and prayers also go out to his family and parishioners.”

When Hollowell returns to the Mayo Clinic for his March 13 brain surgery, he’ll take with him a list of all the abuse victims who have reached out to him so that he can remain especially close to them in prayer and suffering.

“It’s almost given me a singular focus,” Hollowell said. “I’m walking toward the battlefield of this surgery, radiation and chemo. It’s a great grace from God to have this mission to accomplish as part of this.”

Gallagher is a reporter at The Criterion, newspaper of the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.


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