Tis_Bearself
Patron
IDK, seems like every logical argument being presented as to why this is unlikely to happen is just being rejected by the OP. I don’t think it’s ever going to happen outside of somebody’s Hollywood script, sorry.
Really? Interesting, thanks, I’ll have to check it out. People always told me I missed my “calling.”Law and Order: SVU Season 3 Episode 23 Silence…very similar story to what you are talking about I believe.
Already answered:The better questions is: can a priest use information told to him in a confession to start looking into a crime? So if someone confesses that they are stealing from the collection, can the priest “suggest” that an audit be done or that Ms Jones not be allowed to count the collection?
Suppose the head of a religious community hears in confession from his subordinate, who is responsible for the finances of the community, that that subordinate has been embezzling funds. Even in that case the confessor cannot remove him from that assignment, because of the inviolability of the seal.Nothing shared in confession can be used in any way to the detriment of the penitent.
Not sure I’m seeing what the threat would be. I mean, it would have to be something like a person coming to you and saying, “Fr Laylow, if you repeat what Gorgias told you outside the confessional, I’m going to report you for revealing what I told you in the confessional.” See the problem? You could tell me to tell my story to other authorities, and there’d be no breaking of the seal, and therefore, nothing to blackmail with.For example, if the accuser was a fellow priest, he could threaten to accuse the confessional priest of spreading information that was told in the confessional.
How is down under these days?an official confession
You missed a lot of things!People always told me I missed my “calling.”
I know that, but do you have some “insider information” that I’m not privy to?You missed a lot of things!
I suppose it depends on what is confessed. If he hears an old lady say she’s been hitting the sherry too much and topping the bottle up with cold tea her husband won’t notice he may forget. If an old lady confessed, ‘you know my husband has died well I put rat poison in his tea’, is something he may remember.A priest who hears dozens of confessions is not going to remember one in particular.
Ok, I’ll try to spell it out. Fr. Johnson (Head priest of his parish) molested 2 boys in 2012. He feels like he can no longer “control” the boys and thinks they are going to turn him in. Thinking that the boys are more likely to talk to Fr. Smith (the other priest at the parish) instead of going to the authorities, Fr. Johnson sets up an immediate confession with Fr. Smith. Knowing Fr. Smith cannot share any of the details of his confession, Fr. Johnson tells it all.Not sure I’m seeing what the threat would be. I mean, it would have to be something like a person coming to you and saying, “Fr Laylow, if you repeat what Gorgias told you outside the confessional, I’m going to report you for revealing what I told you in the confessional.” See the problem? You could tell me to tell my story to other authorities, and there’d be no breaking of the seal, and therefore, nothing to blackmail with.
Yes, I should have worded at as perceived blackmail.This one is pretty easy…if the boys come to Fr Smith, Fr Smith can still report Fr Johnson because he got the information from the boys not Fr Johnson, regardless of Fr Johnson’s confession. Fr Smith would not be able to use any of the information given to him under confession. So no blackmail.