Card Ouellet: Motu proprio
establishes effective measures against abuse
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| Cardinal Marc Ouellet, Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops (file photo) |
The Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops explains the new
procedures being taken in the struggle against abuse in the Church. The norms,
desired by Pope Francis, are the fruit of the abuse summit which took place in
the Vatican in February, in which the Presidents of all the episcopal
conferences throughout the world took part.
By Vatican News
The Motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi is
intended as a universal and concrete response to the phenomenon of abuse within
the Church. That was the message of Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the Prefect of the
Congregation for Bishops, speaking with Vatican News. The Cardinal explained
the principle changes brought about by the new document, which is the product
of a full ecclesial collaboration.
“We can consider the Motu proprio Vos
estis lux mundi as one of the fruits of the Meeting for the
Protection of Minors convoked by Pope Francis in the Vatican this past
February”, Cardinal Ouellet said. “This document establishes new and
efficacious procedures to combat the plague of abuse”.
Cardinal Ouellet explained the biggest changes made by the
Motu proprio in the Church’s discipline: “First of all, the obligation for
every diocese” in the Church to establish “public stable, and easily accessible
systems” for reporting abuse”. He also noted the obligation of clerics and
religious to report abuse; the extension of the definition of abuse to include
“harassment or violence through the abuse of authority”; and the inclusion of
cases of abuse of religious women on the part of clerics, or abuse of
seminarians or new clerics by their superiors.
“Finally, but no less important”, the Cardinal said, “is
having codified the procedures that hold Bishops and Religious Superiors
accountable for their actions, not only in cases of abuse committed by them,
but also in cases of their direct omissions to interfere with or evade” civil or
ecclesiastical investigations of abuse.
Cardinal Ouellet insisted, however, that Bishops should
“absolutely not” feel they are under observation or suspicion. “We know that
thanks to God almost all Bishops, like priests and religious, are men who seek
to follow the example of Jesus Christ in the daily life of testifying to His
Gospel”. But, he said, “Where there is a difficulty, we must confront it,
especially if a bishop is involved”.

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