Delaware judge: priest-penitent privilege may be unconstitutional [CWN]

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It doesn’t matter what the church says it is. What matters is what happens in reality.
Of course it matters! Your consequentialism notwithstanding, there is a reason and a purpose the confessional is a secret place where the penitent may in absolute confidence bare the state of their souls and receive absolution.
 
True or false? The information was received during confession.

Nothing discussed during confession may be discussed. And there’s no obligation on the penitent to maintain secrecy of the confessional. Only the confessor is so bound.
Perhaps not, but that didn’t stop the Diocese from trying to shut her up and it doesn’t change the fact that the priest was using the confessional seal to conceal ongoing sexual abuse by a parishioner.
 
Perhaps not, but that didn’t stop the Diocese from trying to shut her up and it doesn’t change the fact that the priest was using the confessional seal to conceal ongoing sexual abuse by a parishioner.
That’s not the understanding I had. And we’ve discussed this before.

The issue wasn’t about silencing the girl. The issue was about LA trying to force the priest to become a mandated reporter. The claim is that only the penitent can claim privilege, and if the penitent releases the privilege, the law would force the priest to testify. The issue was about whether or not the release of privilege would bind the priest to reveal the contents of the confession.

There was no effort to prevent the girl from testifying. The effort was to prevent the state from compelling the priest to testify because the girl released the privilege. There is a difference.
 
That’s not the understanding I had. And we’ve discussed this before.

The issue wasn’t about silencing the girl. The issue was about LA trying to force the priest to become a mandated reporter. The claim is that only the penitent can claim privilege, and if the penitent releases the privilege, the law would force the priest to testify. The issue was about whether or not the release of privilege would bind the priest to reveal the contents of the confession.

There was no effort to prevent the girl from testifying. The effort was to prevent the state from compelling the priest to testify because the girl released the privilege. There is a difference.
The diocese sought to block Mayeux’s testimony about the confessions at the trial court level, but Caldwell ruled that the priest-penitent privilege was Mayeux’s to break.”
 
The diocese sought to block Mayeux’s testimony about the confessions at the trial court level, but Caldwell ruled that the priest-penitent privilege was Mayeux’s to break.”
That’s exactly the point. It cannot be dissolved. Ever. Read the dioceses brief. If the penitent has the power to dissolve the seal, it permits the state to try and compel the priest to testify. There has never been a bar on the girls ability to testify. The bar is to prevent the states attempt to dissolve the privilege.
 
What?!?! Surely any religion which specifically has enjoined secrecy for sacramental confession to a priest is included in the statute? If a person were merely getting counseling from a Catholic priest, the priest would be bound by laws applying to counselors, wouldn’t they?
Not by the statute because it specifies sacramental confession.
I think it needs to be rewritten to include pastor-congregant counseling. As is it odes favor Catholicism and Orthodoxy over other religions.
 
Confession is often unavailable at the time the person needs it, as most parishes have a scheduled time, usually Saturday afternoon in my dioceses.

If a person can’t make it then, because of various reasons, he/she could not receive Holy Communion if they’re in a state of mortal sin.

People who do make it to confession, are given absolution and the priest tells them as he tells everyone else, to say an Our Father and one Hail Mary as penance. No spiritual direction or anything beyond scripted confession. Many Catholics see it as a waste of time and don’t bother to go to Confession, as most priests will tell you, the lines aren’t very long if any at all.

As far as General Absolution, this is my opinion, and the Church hasn’t even discussed the practice of General Absolution lately, although they did back in the 1970’s.

If it happens, Praise God !

If not, pray that Confession remains available.

As many places are heading toward parishes without priests, the practice of General Absolution may become a necessity.

Sorry if this upsets you, but its the reality in the Church today.

Jim
It may be reality in your thinking but NOT in the teachings of the Catholic Church. I go to Confession pretty regularly and the priests do give other penances and they all give spiritual direction. General Absolution in the 1970’s was being done illicitly, and the Church forbid it except in cases of real emergency, such as a plane going down or ship sinking etc. If Catholics are not going to Confession and the lines are “short” that is their own choice. The Church has always encouraged frequent Confession, ( once a month) and always will. Maybe we Catholics have “lost” the sense of sin and think we are to perfect to need Confession. Most can wait for the regular Confession time and can’t expect the priest to be at our beck and call instantly. It only “upsets” me when Catholics do not even understand their own faith properly. God Bless, Memaw
 
It may be reality in your thinking but NOT in the teachings of the Catholic Church.
Regular general absolution would go against the discipline of the Church. I would argue it also goes against all common sense. However, it does not violate the* teaching* of the Church. The power to bind and loose can *validly *take other forms than the current confessional, and has over time. I note you correctly use the word "illicitly, " as in, contrary to Church law (as opposed to doctrine).
 
Another attack on the Catholic Church. Don’t they know they are fighting GOD!! God Bless, Memaw
They’ll just claim separation of Church and state, just like they do to justify secular stances on other issues.
 
Even in the early church there was still private confession. From a Catholic Answers article:
Over time, the forms in which the sacrament has been administered have changed. In the early Church, publicly known sins (such as apostasy) were often confessed openly in church, though private confession to a priest was always an option for privately committed sins.
catholic.com/tracts/confession
 
The decision isn’t any kind of attack on the priest-penitent privilege. In a nutshell, the decision says:

The Delaware state courts have never decided if the priest-penitent privilege applies to Jehovah’s Witnesses, which required the judge to discuss how it would apply to them. She discusses three possibilities:
  • if the privilege applies only to churches that use the exact words ‘priest’ and ‘penitent’, then it would be unconstitutional as it would advance some religions over others
  • if the courts had to assess it on a denomination-by-denomination basis, then it would also be unconstitutional because it would require the government to get “excessively entangled” with religion (which it can’t do)
  • if applies to all religions, then it’s constitutional - no problem
In the end, she didn’t have to decide because the case was decided on other grounds, so this case made no ruling on the topic at all and it’s not a pending question.

But based on the amount of time she spent explaining how the wording of the privilege statute could easily apply to most denominations, it’s pretty clear she’d have gone that way (finding it constitutional) if she was forced to choose.

Nothing to see here. No attack on the Church. If anything, I’d say she made solid arguments for upholding the privilege if a similar question is raised again in Delaware down the road.

The headline in the OP’s article is misleading. If you had to ram this idea into a headline (which you shouldn’t because the ruling made no decision on it and it’s basically just non-authoritative comments made in passing), a more accurate headline would be the almost-opposite: “Delaware judge: priest-penitent privilege probably constitutional”
 
Actually at that time, formal private Confession as we know it today, was prohibited by the Church except in the case of last rites.

Jim
Confession means confessing sins openly. The General Absolution is not confessing sins.
I am somewhat confused with this. How is it that General Absolution can be given for non-confessed sins?
 
Citation please?
Not available on line.

It comes from a history seminar given by my spiritual director, who is a Discalced Carmelite Friar, with a PHD from Rome, on Liturgy and the Sacrements

I know this probably doesn’t help you settle it in your mind, but being its no longer the case, don’t let it bother you.

Confession as we know it today, is how it stands and all we have to live by, for now.

Jim
 
Confession means confessing sins openly. The General Absolution is not confessing sins.
I am somewhat confused with this. How is it that General Absolution can be given for non-confessed sins?
Confession means confessing our sins to God, first and foremost.

If you commit a mortal sin which you know is a mortal sin, and are most sorry for offending God, you best confess and repent to Him first, for you don’t know if you’ll ever make it to a priest to confess. You could be killed on the way to confession or some other circumstance keep you from making a formal confession to a priest.

Remember, the Sacrament is called, “Reconciliation,” and this means we are reconciled to the Church, which we have harmed through our sin.

Also, the true definition for sin is, “to miss the mark,” its akin to an archer shooting an arrow toward his target, but misses.

So it is with us, We strive to avoid committing sin, but when we do, we missed the mark of our intended goal.

In this the year of Mercy, we need to understand that God is not a God of retributive justice, but of mercy and restorative justice,

Jim
 
A Delaware superior court judge has questioned the constitutionality of a state law that protects the secrecy of sacramental confession.State law mandates the reporting of suspected …

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The seal of confession has been around a lot longer than Delaware has. I wouldn’t want to be the prosecutor that threw a priest in jail. Delaware should really think this through.
 
Delaware should really think this through.
They already did and the judge implied that, if she had to rule on it (she did not need to and didn’t), she’d probably rule the priest-penitent privilege constitutional.

See post #92 for explanation.
 
You’ll have to back-peddle on that claim:

"The case involves a woman who claims that in 2008, when she was 14, she told her pastor she was sexually abused by a now-deceased church parishioner. The woman, Rebecca Mayeux, has said the Rev. Jeff Bayhi, of Our Lady of the Assumption in Clinton, responded by telling her it was her problem and she should “sweep it under the floor and get rid of it.”

In 2009, Mayeux’s parents sued Bayhi, the Baton Rouge diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, and George Charlet Jr., the man who allegedly abused her. They argued in the lawsuit that the priest neglected his duty under state law to report the alleged abuse to authorities.

The Baton Rouge Diocese has said Bayhi responded appropriately because the information came to him during confession, a sacrament that includes a seal of confidentiality no priest can break."
The priest should have urged her while in the confessional to report the abuse of her and to tell her it isn’t her fault.
 
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