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Catholic News 2

Vatican City, Mar 4, 2016 / 10:05 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Vatican spokesman Fr. Federico Lombardi cautioned Friday that the recent Oscar-win for “Spotlight” and the lengthy deposition of a top Vatican official on institutional responses to clerical sex abuse could paint a false picture of how the Church has responded to the issue.“The sensationalistic presentation of these two events has meant that, for much of the public, especially if less informed or of short memory – thinking that the Church has done nothing or done very little to respond to these horrible tragedies,” Fr. Lombardi said in a March 4 statement.An objective consideration of the facts, he said, “shows that this is not true.”Fr. Lombardi referred to the media frenzy garnered by the film “Spotlight,” which recently won the Oscar for best picture for its portrayal of a journalistic investigation of the sex abuse crisis in Boston, as well as the Feb. 29-March 3 depositi...

Vatican City, Mar 4, 2016 / 10:05 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Vatican spokesman Fr. Federico Lombardi cautioned Friday that the recent Oscar-win for “Spotlight” and the lengthy deposition of a top Vatican official on institutional responses to clerical sex abuse could paint a false picture of how the Church has responded to the issue.

“The sensationalistic presentation of these two events has meant that, for much of the public, especially if less informed or of short memory – thinking that the Church has done nothing or done very little to respond to these horrible tragedies,” Fr. Lombardi said in a March 4 statement.

An objective consideration of the facts, he said, “shows that this is not true.”

Fr. Lombardi referred to the media frenzy garnered by the film “Spotlight,” which recently won the Oscar for best picture for its portrayal of a journalistic investigation of the sex abuse crisis in Boston, as well as the Feb. 29-March 3 deposition of Cardinal George Pell before Australia’s Royal Commission.

As prefect of the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy and a member of the Council of Cardinals advising Pope Francis on reform of the Roman Curia, Cardinal Pell is the most senior Vatican official to have testified before a legal body on clerical sexual abuse.

In his statement, Fr. Lombardi said the events shouldn’t lead people to think that the Church has remained silent on the issue, and outlined several initiatives and reforms that have taken place since the Boston crisis broke out in 2002.

He said that we ought “to give credit” to Cardinal Pell and the group of 15 abuse survivors who traveled from Australia to Rome for the deposition, both for the cardinal’s “dignified and consistent” testimony, as well as the survivors’ willingness “to establish a constructive dialogue.”

Three of the abuse survivors from Catholic Diocese of Ballarat – David Ridsdale, Andrew Collins and Peter Blenkiron – took time to meet with Fr. Hans Zollner, a member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, while in Rome.

They met with him twice, once Wednesday before meeting with Cardinal Pell, and then Friday morning before returning to Australia.

In a March 4 statement on the encounters, Fr. Zollner said the victims wanted to meet primarily to discuss ideas they have about “healing and the future to protect children from institutional abuse.”

Although they admitted that the problem of abuse is “wider than the Catholic Church,” they are most familiar the problems related to Church structures, and are eager to form partnerships to help address the issue.

Fr. Zollner said the victims spoke at length about models of education for children, parents and teachers so that effective changes can be made to ensure the safeguarding of children.

On his end, Fr. Zollner discussed his work on the commission in the areas of abuse prevention within the Church and outside of it, as well as his role as president of the Center for Child Protection at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University. 

The Ballarat survivors were also able to meet with a number of the students enrolled in of the Diploma-program in Safeguarding of Minors currently being offered at the Gregorian University.

Fr. Zollner ensured that he will take the victims’ proposals to the rest of the commission in order to both learn from their experience, and to “better understand how to prevent sexual abuse by those in service to the Church from happening again in the future.”


Below is CNA’s full English translation of Fr. Lombardi’s statement:


Cardinal Pell's deposition before the Royal Commission in direct transmission from Rome to Australia and the simultaneous administration of an Oscar for Best Film of Spotlight, on the role of the Boston Globe in denouncing the cover of numerous crimes of pedophile priests in Boston (primarily in the 1960s-80s), have been accompanied by a new wave of media attention and public opinion on the dramatic topic of the sexual abuse of minors, in particular on the part of clerics.

The sensationalistic presentation of these two events has meant that, for much of the public, especially if less informed or of short memory – thinking that the Church has done nothing or done very little to respond to these horrible tragedies and that we have to start again. An objective consideration shows that this is not true. The former archbishop of Boston (Cardinal Bernard Law) resigned in 2002 following the events which Spotlight speaks about (and after a famous meeting of American cardinals gathered in Rome by Pope John Paul II in April 2002), and since 2003 (13 years) the archdiocese has been governed by Cardinal Sean O'Malley, universally known for his rigor and wisdom in dealing with issues of sexual abuse, so much so that he was nominated by the Pope as one of his counselors and as President of the Commission he founded for the protection of minors.

The tragic events of sexual abuse in Australia are also the subject of investigations and legal and canonical procedures, (and have been) for many years. When Pope Benedict XVI traveled to Sydney for World Youth Day in 2008 (8 years ago) he met a small group of victims from the same archdiocese governed by Cardinal Pell, given that the story was already a strong topic and the Archbishop (Pell) felt that such a meeting was highly appropriate. 

Just to give an idea of the attention with which these problems were followed, the only section of the Vatican website dedicated to “Abuse of Minors: The Church's response,” was started around 10 years ago, and contains some 60 documents or speeches.

The courageous commitment popes have dedicated to confronting the crisis manifested in different countries and situations – such as the United States, Ireland, Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands, the Legionaries of Christ – has been neither small nor indifferent. The renewal of procedures and universal canonical norms; guidelines requested and formed on the part of episcopal conferences, not only to response to abuses committed but also to prevent them adequately; apostolic visits to intervene in the most serious situations and the profound reform of the Legionaries of Christ have all been actions intended to respond in-depth and with foresight to a plague that was manifested in surprising and devastating severity, above all in certain regions and certain periods. Benedict XVI's letter to Irish faithful from March 2010 probably remains the most eloquent reference document, well beyond just Ireland, to understand the attitude and the judicial, pastoral and spiritual response of popes to these tragedies of the Church of our time: the recognition of the serious mistakes made and asking forgiveness; priority attention and justice for the victims; conversion and purification; commitment to prevention and renewed human and spiritual formation.

The meetings of Benedict and Francis with groups of victims have accompanied this now long path with the example of listening, of asking for forgiveness, of consolation and of the personal involvement of popes. 

In many countries the results of the commitment for renewal are encouraging; cases of abuse have become very rare and so the majority of cases we are dealing with today and which continue to come to light belong to a relatively distant past, from several decades (ago). In other countries, usually for reasons of cultural situations that are very different and still characterized by silence, there is still a lot to do and there is not lack of resistance and difficulty, but the way forward has become clearer. 

The formation of the Commission for the Protection of Minors announced by Pope Francis in December 2013, composed of members of every continent, indicates the maturity of the Catholic Church’s path. After having established and internally developed a decisive response to the problems of the sexual abuse of minors (on the part of priests or other Church workers), the problem arises systematically of not only how to respond well to the problem in every part of the Church, but also of how to more broadly help the societies in which the Church lives to confront the problems of abuse and violations committed against minors, given that – as everyone should know, even if there is often still a considerable reluctance to admit it – in every part of the world the vast majority of abuse cases don’t come from ecclesial contexts, but outside of them (in Asia one can speak of dozens of millions of abused children, certainly not in Catholic contexts).

Therefore, the Church, wounded and humiliated by the plague of abuse, intends to act not only for her own recovery, but also to make available her strong experience in this field, to enrich her educative and pastoral service to society as a whole, which generally still has a long way to go to realize the seriousness of the problems and to address them. 

In this perspective the events in Rome the past few days can in the end be read in a positive light. We must give credit to Cardinal Pell for a dignified and consistent personal testimony (some 20 hours of dialogue with the Royal Commission!) which shows once more an objective and lucid picture of the mistakes made in many ecclesial environments (in this case Australia) in past decades. And this acquisition is not useless in the perspective of the common “purification of memory.”

We must also give credit to different member of the group of victims who came from Australia for having shown a willingness to establish a constructive dialogue with the same cardinal and with the representative of the Commission for the Protection of Minors Fr. Hans Zollner, SJ, from the Pontifical Gregorian University – with which they deepened the prospects for an effective commitment for abuse prevention.

If therefore the appeals followed by Spotlight and the mobilization of victims and organizations for the deposition of Cardinal Pell contribute to supporting and intensifying the long march in the fight against child abuse in the universal Catholic Church and in the world today (where the dimension of these tragedies is boundless), they are welcome. 
 

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IMAGE: CNS photo/Nancy WiechecBy WASHINGTON(CNS) -- A Pennsylvania grand jury report on clergy sexual abuse of hundreds ofchildren over several decades and an Oscar win for "Spotlight," aboutthe Boston abuse scandal, "brought painful, but important, reminders thatwe must remain vigilant in our efforts to protect children from the scourge ofabuse," said Bishop Edward J. Burns of Juneau, Alaska.Thebishop made the comments in a March 3 statement as chairman of the U.S.Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on the Protection of Children andYoung People."Wemust never lose sight of the fact that every victim/survivor has personallyexperienced profound injury, suffering and betrayal," Bishop Burns said.Hereferred to the reportreleased March 1 by Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane, which says that at least50 priests or religious leaders in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown,Pennsylvania, were involved in the abuse and diocesan leaders systematicallyconcealed the abuse to protect the church'...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Nancy Wiechec

By

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- A Pennsylvania grand jury report on clergy sexual abuse of hundreds of children over several decades and an Oscar win for "Spotlight," about the Boston abuse scandal, "brought painful, but important, reminders that we must remain vigilant in our efforts to protect children from the scourge of abuse," said Bishop Edward J. Burns of Juneau, Alaska.

The bishop made the comments in a March 3 statement as chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on the Protection of Children and Young People.

"We must never lose sight of the fact that every victim/survivor has personally experienced profound injury, suffering and betrayal," Bishop Burns said.

He referred to the report released March 1 by Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane, which says that at least 50 priests or religious leaders in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania, were involved in the abuse and diocesan leaders systematically concealed the abuse to protect the church's image.

The report identifies priests and other leaders by name and details incidents going back to the 1970s. Kane said that much of the evidence revealed in the report came from secret archives maintained by the diocese that was only available to the bishops who led the diocese over the decades. The report also took law enforcement to task for "perhaps looking the other way."

The report credited Bishop Mark L. Bartchak, the current bishop of Altoona-Johnstown, who was appointed to the diocese in 2011, for reporting abuse allegations to authorities and removing accused priests from ministry.

"It is heart wrenching and shocking to hear of this grand jury report or of any incidents of abuse, and it is even more disturbing when we learn that innocent children were abused by priests within the church," Bishop Burns said in his statement. "Once again, the wounds inflicted through these heinous crimes have caused great pain and further mistrust in the church."

He said that although he could not speak to the specifics in Altoona-Johnstown "and would defer to the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference as to any statewide impact, like everyone, I read the news with great pain."

He noted that the movie "Spotlight," which won the Academy Award for Best Picture, "chronicles the courage of the victims and the journalists" who told abuse victims/survivors' story. The film is about the Boston Globe in 2002 breaking the story on the abuse scandal when it began publishing articles about the sexual abuse of minors by priests and accusations of a systemic cover-up by church officials.

Bishop Burns referred to remarks about the film from the current archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley, and from L'Osservatore Romano. Both the paper and the cardinal said "Spotlight" was an important film for all who have been impacted by the tragedy of abuse.

"These moments are a reminder why the 'Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,' adopted by the U.S. bishops in 2002, exists and must be followed," Bishop Burns said. "This highlights all the more the importance that we never grow complacent. As stated in the charter, we are to cooperate with law enforcement agencies, permanently remove those who have offended, and effectively create a safe environment for our children."

"Only with vigilance can we ensure that children are kept safe and so allow the church to help our people in a process of healing and address the mistrust that rises from these cases," Bishop Burns said.

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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By Carol GlatzVATICANCITY (CNS) -- The Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, published severalcommentaries reflecting on the possibility of allowing laypeople, includingwomen, to preach at Mass.Womenalready guide retreats, lead conferences and preach in some circumstances,wrote French Dominican Sister Catherine Aubin. "Sowhy can't they preach before everyone during a celebration" of Mass? saidthe commentary -- one of a series to appear March 2 in the newspaper's monthlyinsert dedicated to women.Churchliturgical norms say that people who are not ordained -- including nuns -- maynot preach the homily at Mass, although they can preach in other situations.TheCatholic Church's Code of Canon Law teaches that qualified and committed layCatholic men and women are allowed to preach in particular circumstances andcooperate in exercising the ministry of the word. Preaching during Mass,however, is reserved to those who have received the sacrament of orders, thatis, deacons and priests. Sist...

By Carol Glatz

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, published several commentaries reflecting on the possibility of allowing laypeople, including women, to preach at Mass.

Women already guide retreats, lead conferences and preach in some circumstances, wrote French Dominican Sister Catherine Aubin. 

"So why can't they preach before everyone during a celebration" of Mass? said the commentary -- one of a series to appear March 2 in the newspaper's monthly insert dedicated to women.

Church liturgical norms say that people who are not ordained -- including nuns -- may not preach the homily at Mass, although they can preach in other situations.

The Catholic Church's Code of Canon Law teaches that qualified and committed lay Catholic men and women are allowed to preach in particular circumstances and cooperate in exercising the ministry of the word. Preaching during Mass, however, is reserved to those who have received the sacrament of orders, that is, deacons and priests.

Sister Aubin, who is a theologian and professor at Rome's Pontifical Urbanian University, said people who have experienced the joy and love of Christ are unable to "stop themselves from going out to speak it, to announce it, to proclaim it, because it is him, Christ, who makes all men and women -- encountered along his journey -- witnesses, messengers and apostles."

Swedish Dominican Sister Madeleine Fredell wrote in her article that preaching is part of her vocation as a Dominican, and "even though I can (preach) almost anywhere," she regretted "not being able to give the homily during Mass."

"I am convinced that listening to the voice of women at the moment of the homily would enrich our Catholic worship," said the theologian.

Enzo Bianchi, prior of the Bose ecumenical community, wrote in the newspaper's main section that the issue of allowing laypeople, especially women, to deliver the homily "is sensitive, but I believe it is urgent to address it."

"It would be important, without changing traditional doctrine, to offer the possibility to laypeople, men and women, to speak in the liturgical assembly with some clear conditions," he wrote.

Specifically, he said, the lay Catholic must recognize that preaching is a charism and gift meant to be of real service to others and he or she must receive approval, even temporary, from the bishop, he said. Additionally, he said, before the delivery of the homily, at the ambo the priest presiding at Mass could bless the person the bishop has authorized to preach.

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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