The Day

Vatican: Stop stalling

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This editorial appeared in the Los Angeles Times. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops had been expected this week to embrace new measures to prevent and punish sexual abuse by members of the clergy, including an unpreceden­ted code of conduct for the bishops themselves. It didn’t happen.

At the last minute, the bishops’ plans were put on hold at the direction of the Vatican. Officials in Rome said they wanted the U.S. bishops to postpone any action until after a meeting of bishops from around the world that Pope Francis has scheduled for February.

This demoralizi­ng delay — which Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, the conference president, called a “bump in the road” — is the latest sign that the pope and his advisors have a blind spot when it comes to the need for decisive action in response to clerical abuse and cover-ups. And it contradict­s what is supposed to be a theme of Francis’ papacy: a recognitio­n that some decisions in the church should be left to local or national clerical leaders.

It was, after all, the American bishops who took the lead in adopting a charter that obliges dioceses in this country to report allegation­s of sexual abuse of a minor to public authoritie­s. That policy has made a difference, but it failed to adequately address wrongdoing by bishops — not only those who engage in misconduct themselves, but those who fail to deal decisively with predatory priests under their authority.

That omission would have been addressed by the proposed code of conduct that was due to be adopted at the bishops’ General Assembly this week in Baltimore. The bishops’ conference was contemplat­ing an additional reform that also has been put on hold: creating a commission of lay people to review complaints against bishops. That proposal appears to have offended Archbishop Christophe Pierre, the pope’s representa­tive to the United States.

On Monday DiNardo told his fellow bishops that “to exempt ourselves from these high standards of accountabi­lity is unacceptab­le and cannot stand.” Those admirable words would have carried more weight if the Vatican had allowed the bishops to follow them with actions.

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