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adf417
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Agreed!!!Priests absolve; God forgives.
Agreed!!!Priests absolve; God forgives.
It is intended to give the state the power to force Catholic priests to violate the seal of the confessional.It is intended to get at the problem of priests covering up for other priests.
I agree. The Catholic Church complies with laws to report child abuse. Outside the confessional, everyone working for a Catholic school, parish, and/or other program is required to report abuse. These laws apply to priests as well. If a child (outside of confession) tells a priest she/her is being abused, he should immediately report the situation. I think 99.9 percent of priests would do so.I fail to see how this bill will capture more abusers.
He isn’t.The priest cannot tell the penitent to violate the sea
How would a priest telling someone go to the police as part of their penance prevent that priest granting absolution and completing the sacrament as normal?Except what the penitent tells the police is their choice and self-incrimination is exactly what confession IS.Nope. Can’t do that, either. You’re still making self-incrimination part of the sacrament, and that’s not permitted.
How is that any different from some other act of contrition which the priest might suggest ?There is no requirement.Because any other penance wouldn’t include the requirement to incriminate oneself publicly.
Going to confession is entirely voluntary.
Going to the police is entirely voluntary.
how is it ok for a priest to tell me to say 10 Hail Marys as an act of contrition as if my absolution were conditional unless I did so?For the 17th time!!! There is no mandatory penance. It’s entirely voluntary.Absolution isn’t conditional on penance. However, it is required when assigned and agreed to by the penitent. So, yeah – a priest does “mandate” when he sets the penance. Therefore, he cannot mandate – even in penance – that one turns oneself in to the authorities. Ever.
I don’t know why you think I believe a penitent is compelled to do what a priest says they should do.
Is there a priest in the house to best explain to this guy why he’s wrong?‘he’ doesn’t refuse to believe Church law. I accept it completely.If he refuses to believe it when Church law is quoted to him by many people, I somehow doubt that having an internet poster who presents himself as a priest is gonna change his mind.![]()
Absolution from God can be achieved via confession to a priest irrespective of whether a penitent does what the priest advises a (supposedly) contrite pedophile to do.
I did not say the law would work, I merely explained what it says for those that have perhaps not taken the time to read it.You are naive. The most cursory look at the facts shows this would have little/no effect on protecting kids.
And you think I am naïve? The problem is far from “solved.”And the abuse of minors by priests has largely been solved for 17 years. Just yesterday I read about 5 priests in Detroit being indicted. One had to read really deep to learn they were all pre-2002. Same thing with the Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report, all but 3 or 4 cases were pre-2002. Same the lists of priests being released by various diocese.
I wish you were correct, but I reach the opposite conclusion. Reports of abuse of minors typically lag for years, and often are never public. The recent cases, including the high profile cases involving bishops and cardinals, suggest to me that the changes of the last 17 years have been mostly cosmetic. I think we are at the beginning of the resolution of this issue, and not nearing the end.Well, I look at the available evidence. The problem seems to have moved from the abuse of minors to the abuse of young adults, such as seminarians. Again, the Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report was responsible for much of the increased news spotlight, but if one pages through the details, one finds very few occurances since the 2002 policy if zero tolerance was adopted by the US bishops. This is, admittedly, not reported, and certainly downplayed in the report itself. But the details bear it out. Recently the diocese of Texas released lists of credibly accused priests. Again, very few cases post 2002.
I am not claiming it has been solved, I should not have used that term, but I do believe the Church has been quite effective in the last 17 years of dealing with the problem, at least in the US.
Yep. Absolutely unconstitutional.On a purely secular note, this is likely a violation of the First Amendment.
He might be concerned that he’s gonna get caught. He might be concerned for his safety (angry dad of abused daughter, right?). It’s not highly likely, I’ll agree – but possible!It is possible for a believer to turn himself in for a crime he’s committed and also be un-remorseful for it. Seems to me like it would be highly unlikely though, no?
It’s a good question. It’s tempting to be anachronistic and claim “you have the right not to incriminate yourself!”, but that’s a more recent civil ‘right’.It seems to me that if I then don’t confess to breaking the law, I’ve compounded my problem, no?
‘Likely’? Likely?If priests could require submission to authorities in return for absolution, it would likely put a damper on confession.
He’d have an obligation for satisfaction. However, that wouldn’t imply that he’d have to turn himself in and take the guy’s place.What about a hypothetical situation in which the penitent knows that someone else is in prison for a crime he committed? Wouldn’t he have a moral obligation to do what he could to correct this injustice?
I call baloney.
It’s a power grab from the government.
Wait – you think that “you’re going to prison, buddy” is going to convince someone to turn themselves in???The confessor would more likely say something like this: “When you have gone to the police to turn yourself in, you will need someone to talk to. My name is Father NN and I am a priest in parish St A. If you don’t want to talk with me, then there are X number of priests in the diocese who are assigned to be prison chaplains and there are also other parish priests nearby that the prison staff can call. Please ask the prison staff to contact one of us.”