R O M E, May 17 Roman Catholic bishops should
avoid telling congregations their parish priests sexually abused
someone if the bishops believe the priests will not abuse again,
a Vatican official said.
The Rev. Gianfranco Ghirlanda also said in an article to be published
Saturday that church leaders have no legal or moral responsibilities
if such abuse does occur.
The Vatican appeals court judge insisted church leaders must
protect the "good name" of their priests and only a
guilty cleric truly is responsible for his actions.
"From a canon law perspective, the bishop and the superior
are neither morally nor judicially responsible for the acts committed
by one of their clergy," said Ghirlanda, dean of canon law
at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.
The article is in the influential Jesuit magazine Civilta Cattolica,
which often reflects Vatican thinking. The Vatican is struggling
to deal with worldwide allegations of sexual abuse by priests.
Ghirlanda argued that a priest whose past acts of abuse were
revealed to his congregation "would be totally discredited
in front of his parochial community and in fact would be blocked
from any effective pastoral action."
"If the bishop fears the priest could again commit a crime,
then he must not entrust to the priest a parish, but must act
in a different way."
However, Ghirlanda also said priests should not be forced to
take psychological tests to assess the likelihood of their committing
abuse.
"To our thinking, it's not admissible that the incriminated
cleric be forced to undergo a psychological investigation to
determine if his personality is inclined to commit the crimes
in question," the article said.
American church officials are accused of covering up sexual misconduct
by priests, in some cases by moving known abusers from job to
job. The church has paid millions of dollars in damages to victims
and faces numerous lawsuits.
Dozens of priests have been suspended or forced to resign. Many
dioceses also are informing local prosecutors of prior abuse
allegations against priests.
This week, a Baltimore priest was shot, allegedly by a man who
claimed the priest abused him, while another priest accused of
sexual abuse apparently committed suicide in Maryland.
The ongoing U.S. scandal prompted last month's extraordinary
meeting at the Vatican between Pope John Paul II, 12 of the 13
American cardinals and some top American bishops. The clergymen
chose not to set strict rules before a June 13-15 meeting of
American bishops in Dallas.
Rules agreed on by the bishops in June will be passed back to
the Vatican for ratification.
Ghirlanda, in an apparent reference to victims' civil suits against
dioceses, also wrote that the relationship between senior church
officials and their priests is not comparable to that of an employer
and employee.
"The cleric doesn't 'work' for the bishop or for the superior,
but is at the service of God," Ghirlanda wrote.
He also said church leaders confronted with cases of abuse should
attempt to resolve the problem without going to the authorities.
"Only if these methods prove useless, the bishop and the
superior may move ahead with the judicial process," Ghirlanda
said.
He added, "The cleric's right of good name must be protected
by the bishop and superior. Therefore any act that has public
repercussions, undertaken by the bishop or superior in dealing
with one of his clerics is legitimate only if the good of the
community requires it and if the bishop and superior have reached
moral certainty."
Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or
redistributed. http://abcnews.go.com/wire/World/ap20020517_1256.html |