Cover
story Church in Crisis Vatican prelates oppose move to report
priests
By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
Rome
Four senior Catholic leaders, including two Vatican officials and
a cardinal widely viewed as a leading candidate to be the next pope, have
opposed policies that would require bishops to report sexual abuse charges
against priests to the police.
Taken together, the comments suggest that if the U.S. bishops
adopt a strong automatic reporter policy at their June meeting in
Dallas, it could face opposition, not merely in Rome, but from prelates in
other countries.
One American cardinal in Rome described the situation as a legal
and cultural chasm between Anglo-Saxons and the rest of the
Catholic world that will be difficult to bridge when it comes time
for the Vatican to pass judgment on new American policies.
The debate may also reveal an intra-American fracture between
bishops and priests. Some bishops, worried about legal liability and anxious to
be responsive to victims, are frustrated with Vatican red flags on cooperation
with the civil authorities. Priests, alarmed about the possibility of false
charges, may actually welcome Romes caution.
The four Vatican officials who have spoken on the issue are
Archbishop Tarcisio Bertone, the No. 2 figure in the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith; Archbishop Julian Herranz, head of the Pontifical
Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts; Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez
Maradiaga of Tegucigalpa, Honduras; and Jesuit Fr. Gianfranco Ghirlanda, a
consultor to several Vatican agencies and a judge on a Vatican court.
Bertones comments came in a February interview with 30
Giorni, an Italian Catholic magazine directed by former Prime Minister
Giulio Andreotti. Bertone argued that a priest should be able to confide in his
bishop without fear of legal consequences.
In my opinion, the demand that a bishop be obligated to
contact the police in order to denounce a priest who has admitted the offense
of pedophilia is unfounded, Bertone said. Naturally civil society
has the obligation to defend its citizens. But it must also respect the
professional secrecy of priests, as it respects the professional
secrecy of other categories, a respect that cannot be reduced simply to the
inviolable seal of the confessional.
If a priest cannot confide in his bishop for fear of being
denounced, Bertone said, then it would mean that there is no more
liberty of conscience.
Herranzs analysis came in an April 29 address at the
Catholic University in Milan (NCR, May 17). He called the demand for
bishops to report priests an unwarranted simplification.
When ecclesiastical authorities deal with these delicate
problems, they not only must respect the presumption of innocence, they also
have to honor the rapport of trust, and the consequent secrecy of the office,
inherent in relations between a bishop and his priest collaborators,
Herranz said. Not to honor these exigencies would bring damages of great
seriousness for the church.
The strongest language came in a May 16 news conference in Rome
with Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras. Rodriguez, 59, is seen as
a leading Latin American candidate to succeed John Paul II.
Pedophilia is a sickness, and those with this sickness must
leave the priesthood. But we must not move from this to remedies that are
non-Christian.
For me it would be a tragedy to reduce the role of a
pastor to that of a cop. We are totally different, and Id be prepared to
go to jail rather than harm one of my priests. I say this with great
clarity, Rodriguez said.
We must not forget that we are pastors, not agents of the
FBI or CIA.
Finally, Jesuit Fr. Gianfranco Ghirlanda, dean of the canon law
faculty at Romes Gregorian University and a judge for the Apostolic
Signatura, considered the Vaticans supreme court, addressed the issue in
the May 18 issue of La Civiltà Cattolica. The journal is
considered quasi-official since it is reviewed by the Vaticans
Secretariat of State prior to publication.
Certainly it does not seem pastoral behavior when a bishop
or religious superior who has received a complaint informs the legal
authorities of the fact in order to avoid being implicated in a civil process
that the victim could undertake, Ghirlanda wrote.
In the article, Ghirlanda also stressed the bishops
responsibility to protect the good name of priests. A bishop may not require a
priest to submit to psychological testing to determine his propensity for
committing sexual abuse, Ghirlanda wrote. He recommended that if a bishop
decides to reassign a priest who has committed sexual abuse after he has
undergone treatment, the priests new parochial community should not be
informed of his past.
All four men spoke or wrote in Italian.
Taken together, the statements suggest a growing consensus among
non-U.S. church leaders that automatic reporter policies are problematic.
Cardinal James Francis Stafford, an American who heads the
Pontifical Council for the Laity in the Vatican, said that things look
different in light of the recent experience of the U.S. church.
I dont think its a matter of the bishop acting
as policeman, Stafford said of calls for automatic reporter policies in a
May 20 interview with NCR. Its a matter of working
cooperatively with the civil arm of government in ones ministry to serve
the best interests of all the people, of whom the bishop is father and
shepherd.
A bishop is the pastor not only of priests, but of all the
faithful, including the victims. Weve had to learn this over the
years, Stafford said.
Yet Stafford acknowledged that if the U.S. bishops adopt a strong
policy on cooperation with the police, they may face a difficult sales job in
Rome.
I suspect that the chasm that exists between the two
cultural experiences will be difficult to bridge, Stafford said.
One part of that chasm, Stafford said, is a different attitude
toward state authority. While some Latin American church leaders such as
Rodriguez, and even John Paul II himself in Poland, grew up under totalitarian
regimes in which denouncing priests to the police was tantamount to collusion,
Americans look at things differently.
Weve had a centuries-long experience of the police in
the United States that has been basically a positive one, Stafford
said.
Archbishop John Foley, an American who heads the Council for
Social Communications in the Vatican, agreed that differing cultural
perspectives may be part of the mix.
In communist societies, they used charges like this to
discredit priests, so this may be part of the concern, Foley told
NCR May 20.
Still, Paulist Fr. Paul Robichaud, pastor of the American parish
of Santa Susanna in Rome, said he wouldnt chalk up Vatican reservations
entirely to differing cultural perspectives. He told NCR May 20 that he
also sees a legitimate impulse to protect priests from false accusations.
All of us who are pastors are surrounded by broken people
whose emotional and mental health is fragile, Robichaud said. This
crisis has empowered these folks to make false charges that a year-and-a-half
ago would not have been taken seriously.
There is a crisis of morale among priests in the United
States, Robichaud said, and priests expect their bishop or
religious superior to stand with them, not against them.
Thus when he hears the Vatican holding the line against policies
that would obligate bishops to take even potentially unfounded charges to the
police, Robichaud said his reaction is simple.
Bravo for the Vatican, he said.
John L. Allen Jr. is NCR Rome correspondent. His e-mail
address is jallen@natcath.org
National Catholic Reporter, May 31,
2002
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