Church rejects proposal on sex abuse confession
● The Catholic Church in Australia has formally rejected a landmark inquiry’s recommendation that priests should be ordered to report sexual abuse disclosed during confession.
The five-year inquiry found that tens of thousands of children had suffered abuse in Australian institutions. The Catholic Church had the most cases.
On Friday, church leaders accepted most of the inquiry’s recommendations, but the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference said breaking the seal of confession was “contrary to our faith and inimical to religious liberty”.
It added: “We are committed to the safeguarding of children and vulnerable people while maintaining the seal.”
Church leaders also said such a rule would make perpetrators or victims less likely to disclose abuse during confession.
They said they would, however, explore other proposals — including asking the Vatican to relax rules on celibacy.
The royal commission inquiry, which concluded in December, heard more than 8,000 testimonies about abuse in churches, schools and sports clubs.
Its final report made more than 400 recommendations across government and other institutional sectors.
The government, which called the abuse a “national tragedy”, began a compensation scheme for survivors and said it would give a national apology on October 22.
Religious ministers and teachers were found to be the most common perpetrators. The inquiry heard they included 7% of Australia’s Catholic priests between 1950 and 2010.
The commissioners recommended that Catholic clerics should face criminal charges if they failed to report sexual abuse disclosed to them during confession.
It also said the Catholic Church should consider making celibacy voluntary for priests because while it was “not a direct cause of child sexual abuse”, it had “contributed to the occurrence of child sexual abuse, especially when combined with other risk factors”.
The Catholic Church had already opted in to the compensation scheme, which will give survivors of abuse in institutions payments of up to A$150,000 (about R1.6m) each. — bbc.com