Debra Maria Flint is a Catholic feminist writer and author of Look Back to the Future: Consecrated Women in Britain 597 AD to Date (2021) and No Place for a Woman: The Spiritual and Political Power Abuse of Women Within Catholicism (2024). Flint, an Anglo-Greek bilingual, studied theology and later obtained a diploma in nursing studies, a BSc in social care, and postgraduate qualifications in management and research. She worked for many years in safeguarding. Paul Murphy Sanderson is a former Cistercian monk and priest who survived clerical sexual abuse and, after courageously confronting injustice, chose to leave the Roman Catholic Church. He holds a bachelor of divinity degree from St. Patrick's Pontifical University, Maynooth. No longer bound by institutions, Sanderson now lives with renewed freedom, seeking God in creation, embodying Jesus's message of love, and affirming the profound interconnectedness that offers hope, healing, and meaning to all life on earth.
""Flint details a thorough explanation of the problems that arise when celibacy is exalted in the context of an exclusively male-led, hierarchical organization. . . . Sanderson gives a brave narrative of the sexual abuses that occur in this insular unisex institution; and it is strikingly familiar to anyone who has grown up female in the greater world. This book is a fantastic summary of the reason we all need Christ's teaching of mutuality in this world without the dynamic of status."" --Jill Correnti Striebinger, Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests ""Debra Flint raises a very controversial question when she makes a link between mandatory priestly celibacy and the avalanche of historic and contemporary scandals in the Catholic Church involving clerical child sex abuse."" --Mary McAleese, Former President of Ireland ""Debra Maria Flint demonstrates how [clerical celibacy] has caused immense suffering to both adults and children. Paul Murphy Sanderson, speaking of his harrowing experience of suffering clerical sexual abuse, reveals how the institutional church has emotionally harmed victims of clerical abuse. This work describes how mandatory clerical celibacy has fostered a culture of psychosocial and psychospiritual pathology."" --Brendan A. Mooney, Psychotherapist in Hospice and Palliative Care ""This book shows the need for emotional intelligence and healthy formation training, more thorough screening for psychological issues and firm, decisive intervention from visionary leaders. And clearly, many religions need to address the prehistoric way they involve women and simply must wake up to giving them an equal place and in doing so, creating healthier communities. Clearly, too many people--from popes to parishioners--have looked the other way. Until the institutions built around mandatory celibacy become much more robust and accountable, we will continue to rely, unfairly, on the bravery of people like Paul and the courage of other distressed victims to make their voices heard. --Alfie Joey, Actor, Artist, Presenter