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EmilyAlexandra
Guest
There are countless threads about this, but I don’t think any address my specific question.
Please allow me to explain the seal of the confessional as I understand it, in case I have got this wrong. There are many professional relationships in which the professional person claims that his or her conversations with clients/patients etc are privileged or confidential. E.g., all fields of law and healthcare, accountants, social workers, teachers, journalists. However, none of these professions offer absolute confidentiality. For example, we are told that our medical records are confidential, but as soon as the police or the courts want access to them, all of our most intimate medical history is laid bare in public.
The seal of the confessional, however, is apparently absolute. If you tell a priest that you are a terrorist or a paedophile or if you tell him that you are being abused or threatened, he will not tell anybody at all under any circumstances. A priest will apparently sooner go to prison than he will disclose something said in confession.
So, my question is twofold:
(1) Are there pragmatic reasons for the seal of the confessional? I understand that Catholics are passionate about the seal on religious grounds, but can it be defended on purely pragmatic grounds? One obvious argument in favour of absolute confidentiality is that it enables the client/patient etc to speak with complete openness and honesty. For example, whenever I speak to my doctor, I do so on the basis that anything I say will be recorded and may at some point in the future be disclosed to the police, courts, lawyers, expert witnesses, etc. I am therefore careful not to say anything to my doctor that I would not want to be disclosed in public (or that I would not want to share with my parents, sister, husband, best friend, etc). I can see that it would be difficult to confess to a priest if one had to worry that whatever one says to him may be disclosed.
However, this leads to:
(2) Do Catholics not also appreciate that there are competing priorities and that in some circumstances the interests of the administration of justice, the prevention or detection of crime, national security, protecting vulnerable people, etc take priority over confidentiality? For example, if I confess to a priest that I am having a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old boy and that I am meeting him tomorrow afternoon at the Premier Inn for the purpose of having sex, surely he is under an obligation to set aside my expectation of confidentiality and report me to the police in the interests of justice and to prevent further harm coming to my victim. Or suppose I confess that I have planted bombs at a number of abortion clinics and that they are timed to detonate at noon. Surely he is under an obligation to inform the police and ensure that every clinic in the area is evacuated before noon.
Please allow me to explain the seal of the confessional as I understand it, in case I have got this wrong. There are many professional relationships in which the professional person claims that his or her conversations with clients/patients etc are privileged or confidential. E.g., all fields of law and healthcare, accountants, social workers, teachers, journalists. However, none of these professions offer absolute confidentiality. For example, we are told that our medical records are confidential, but as soon as the police or the courts want access to them, all of our most intimate medical history is laid bare in public.
The seal of the confessional, however, is apparently absolute. If you tell a priest that you are a terrorist or a paedophile or if you tell him that you are being abused or threatened, he will not tell anybody at all under any circumstances. A priest will apparently sooner go to prison than he will disclose something said in confession.
So, my question is twofold:
(1) Are there pragmatic reasons for the seal of the confessional? I understand that Catholics are passionate about the seal on religious grounds, but can it be defended on purely pragmatic grounds? One obvious argument in favour of absolute confidentiality is that it enables the client/patient etc to speak with complete openness and honesty. For example, whenever I speak to my doctor, I do so on the basis that anything I say will be recorded and may at some point in the future be disclosed to the police, courts, lawyers, expert witnesses, etc. I am therefore careful not to say anything to my doctor that I would not want to be disclosed in public (or that I would not want to share with my parents, sister, husband, best friend, etc). I can see that it would be difficult to confess to a priest if one had to worry that whatever one says to him may be disclosed.
However, this leads to:
(2) Do Catholics not also appreciate that there are competing priorities and that in some circumstances the interests of the administration of justice, the prevention or detection of crime, national security, protecting vulnerable people, etc take priority over confidentiality? For example, if I confess to a priest that I am having a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old boy and that I am meeting him tomorrow afternoon at the Premier Inn for the purpose of having sex, surely he is under an obligation to set aside my expectation of confidentiality and report me to the police in the interests of justice and to prevent further harm coming to my victim. Or suppose I confess that I have planted bombs at a number of abortion clinics and that they are timed to detonate at noon. Surely he is under an obligation to inform the police and ensure that every clinic in the area is evacuated before noon.