US Bishops’ National Review Board
calls for lay leadership
Cover of USCCB's Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. |
Amid the sexual abuse crisis the National Review Board (NRB)
of the US Bishops Conference calls for a “lay-led investigation” of bishops,
and the implementation of a whistle blowing policy.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
The recent publication of the Pennsylvania Grand
Jury Report in the US, and the revelation of the allegations against
former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, has prompted the National
Review Board (NRB) to publicly request a lay board to investigate
bishops, and that a "whistle blowing" policy be implemented.
Established in 2002 by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB),
the NRB advises the bishops on the prevention of the sexual abuse of
minors. The USCCB published the statement on
their website on Tuesday.
Body of Christ betrayed
The NRB begins by acknowledging that the incidents of the
actual sexual abuse of minors has decreased significantly since the USCCB
implemented policies and procedures in 2002. Recent revelations regarding the
involvement of “the highest levels of the hierarchy” in covering up this abuse,
however, shows what the NRB calls a “deeper problem”. Establishing other
“committees, policies, or procedures,” the NRB says, is not enough. They call
for a “change in the Church’s culture, specifically among the bishops” because
it is there that a “culture of silence” is instilled that allowed horrific
“abuse to go on virtually unchecked”. Victims of abuse and the entire
Body of Christ have been betrayed, the NRB states, by a “loss of moral
leadership and an abuse of power”.
Episcopal accountability
Episcopal accountability in that “failure”, or through
direct or indirect complicity, requires “an independent review into the
actions” of any bishop “when an allegation comes to light”, the NRB states. The
NRB also says they are in agreement with Cardinal DiNardo, President of the
USCCB, who suggested recently that such an entity be entrusted to the laity.
Since members of the NRB are lay, the NRB suggests that they “would be the
logical group to be involved in this task”.
Whistle blowing policy
In addition to the formation of such an investigative body,
the NRB calls for the immediate establishment of “an anonymous whistleblower
policy” separate from the hierarchy which would report allegations to both
civil and ecclesiastical authorities.
Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People
The NRB also calls for the revision of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People so
that it might reflect the learned experience of and recommendations made by the
NRB which “were not incorporated for a variety of reasons”. They specifically
ask that the ineffective “Statement of Episcopal Commitment” be revised “into a
meaningful, actionable commitment” and that the vagueness of “fraternal
correction” be revised to “outline concrete steps” necessary when actual
allegations of sexual abuse materialize against a bishop or when a bishop fails
to adequately respond when clerics are accused.
Time for the laity to assume leadership
The NRB concludes its statement saying that they “recognize
that the overwhelming majority of our current bishops have, and continue to,
take the sexual abuse of minors seriously”. But the bottom line in their words
is, “every time one bishop fails to act, the entire episcopate is tainted”.
Therefore, the NRB states, “it is time for the laity to assume courageous
leadership to help the Church respond and to heal and for the bishops to listen
carefully to our recommendations”.
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