Church in Australia responds
to the Royal Commission
Response of the Austrlian Church to the Royal Commission. |
The Australian Bishops and religious leaders respond on
Thursday to the Royal Commission report, addressing victims of sexual abuse and
their loved ones, the Catholic community, government and the people of
Australia, saying it is a “significant step”.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
A 57-page response to the Royal Commission into Institutional
Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was released on Thursday by the Australian
Catholic Bishops Conference (ACBC) and Catholic Religious
Australia (CRA), a group representing Australia’s men and women
religious and members of Societies of Apostolic Life. The response, with a
Preamble signed by Bishop Mark Coleridge, ACBC’s President, and Sr Monica
Cavanagh, CRA’s President, responds point by point to recommendations made by
the Royal Commission.
Sincere, unreserved apology
The response begins by thanking both the Royal Commission
for its service and the courageous abuse survivors who came forward. “To them
and their families we offer our sincere and unreserved apology, and we commit
anew to doing whatever we can to heal the wounds of abuse and to make the
Church a truly safe place for all”, the response says.
There is a clarification regarding the “extent of the
authority” which the Catholic Bishops and religious leaders of Australia have
with respect to the wider Catholic reality. Thus, the report states clearly
that the ACBC and the CRA do not “speak for the entire Catholic Church”.
Recommendations of the Royal Commission
Of the 80 recommendations proposed by the Royal Commission,
47 were accepted, 1 was not accepted, 13 were passed on to the Holy See, 1 is
being taken into further consideration, 5 were accepted in principle, 12 are
supported, and 1 is supported in principle. In response to all the accepted or
supported recommendations, the response also states how they are already being
implemented, that Church institutions will comply with any future legislation,
or that standards are in development by Catholic Professional
Standards Ltd.
Recommendations referred to the Holy See
Some of the recommendations made by the Royal Commission are
actually addressed and have been forwarded to the Holy See by the Australian
Bishops. These include: practices in the appointment of bishops; the
possibility of voluntary celibacy for diocesan priests; the amendment of
Canon Law to include canons relating to child sexual abuse; modification of the
pontifical secret in sexual abuse cases; canonical procedure in sexual abuse
cases regarding approach and time limits; establishment of a canonical tribunal
in Australia capable of judging cases against the clergy; publication of
decisions made by the Vatican and canonical tribunals; amending the canons
regarding the destruction of documents connected with canonical criminal cases;
that the ACBC should consult the Holy See on matters pertaining to the
Sacrament of Reconciliation and victims or perpetrators of sexual abuse and
make the response public.
In some cases, the report states that recommendations passed
on to the Holy See have become “normative practice in the Catholic Church in
Australia”. Responding specifically to the recommendation for optional
celibacy for diocesan priests, the ACBC states that the Royal Commission “made
no finding of a causal connection between celibacy and child sexual abuse”, and
suggests that inadequate formation of priests could have been a contributing
factor in the sexual abuse of minors.
Recommendation not accepted
Recommendation 7.4 concerning the exemption of confessors in
reporting abuse, which is a direct violation of the seal of confession, was the
only one that was not accepted on grounds that “it is contrary to our faith and
inimical to religious liberty”.
Nothing will repair the harm done
In conclusion, on behalf of the ACBC and the CRA, Bishop
Coleridge and Sr Monica say that “Our hope and prayer is that all that we have
done, are doing and will do may help to bring healing to those so gravely
harmed”. At the same time, they acknowledge Pope Francis’ words that “no effort
to beg pardon and to seek to repair the harm done will ever be sufficient”.
Embracing the Pope’s words in his Letter to the People of God, they express their commitment
to spare no effort to “create a culture able to prevent such situations from
happening, but also to prevent the possibility of their being covered up and
perpetuated”.
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