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Roseeurekacross
Guest
We do that a bit here too.
No, he cannot. He cannot reveal anything that was said in confession that reveals the identity of the penitent who gave him the informaiton.Actually, if a child tells a Priest in the confessional that he or she is being abused, the priest can do something.
It is. Check canon law – it doesn’t mention a distinction between who sinned and who was victimized. It does, however, mention that a priest who violates this command can be excommunicated.This is not breaking the seal because it’s not the child confessing a sin.
Cool. I’d like to read it!The Archbishop made a statement about it.
I will try to find his speech tomorrow.
Can I see the context for this claim, as well? Thanks!At present the Magisterium is looking into Canon Law and the seal on the Sacrament of Reconcilliation
No. Once he’s heard it first – in the context of the confessional – the seal governs. (If his first encounter is outside the confessional, however, he can report it – and often is required to do so, by the state.)I think the priest can ask, however, that the child tells him about this outside of confession so he can report it.
Right. I’m looking for the call to action that you’re referencing…As soon as it’s done! It’s a response to what can happen with these proposed laws. The church has a few months more to respond…
Anything that supports what you’ve asserted here. (It’s news to me, so I’m interested. I haven’t seen anything that suggests that the Church’s response to the abuse scandal is a proposal to modify the rigor of the seal of the confessional…)Which one? The Archbishop or the Magisterium.
I believe that’s what I said.If it’s mentioned to him first in the confessional, his only recourse is to ask the penitent to follow up on his own, outside the confessional, as well as offer to support him in any way he wishes, in order to see justice served.
No, it’s not; I think you’re misunderstanding what I wrote. I may not have been clear enough, so let me clarify: The confessor can’t ask that the penitent tells him outside the confessional. Rather, he can request that the penitent report it to someone else. The confessor can stand by to support the penitent, but cannot do or say anything himself to betray the seal.Gorgias:![]()
I believe that’s what I said.If it’s mentioned to him first in the confessional, his only recourse is to ask the penitent to follow up on his own, outside the confessional, as well as offer to support him in any way he wishes, in order to see justice served.
That sounds like the sort of anti-Catholic lies that Jack Chick used to push. Do you have a reputable source?I learned the church decided on the age of reason to be 7 or 8 because a particular Pope wanted to be alone with a 7 year old
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