M
Mtatum1958
Guest
Thanks for the view from your country’s point of view.From the article, this law is only in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), a small “state” with our capital of Canberra.
Thanks for the view from your country’s point of view.From the article, this law is only in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), a small “state” with our capital of Canberra.
Hey just a FYI, have you actually ever looked into the details of these abuse claims? Well let me bring some good news!“New Australian Law Requires Priests to Break Seal of Confession to Report Admissions of Child Abuse”
That is just wrong. Priests are bound not to comply with that law.
In mine they tend to know the person. Smaller town I guessAlex337:![]()
How? In my parish, confessionals are anonymous. Priest and penitent in separate compartments. How does a priest alert authorities about someone he does not know? He could only urge them to seek professional help. Confession is not counseling.Actually there’s a point; what should a priest do out someone admits to being suicidal in confession? Can they alert authorities and medical professionals?
I think you may have missed the part where I said intentions to harm others, or themself, in the future it what should be reported. If people refuse to go too confession because they know a priest will alert authorities to them planning to murder, rape or torture someone in the future then they aren’t exactly penitent.Alex337:![]()
And risk sending more people to hell because more sinners would be afraid to go to confession? No.phil19034:![]()
To save a child. Good man.Alex337:![]()
You realize that the priest risks hell for that, don’t you?I still think any priest who turns an abuser in is making a very fine sacrifice
I’m sorry, this might sound HORRIBLE, but no single child is worth allowing several people to burn in hell.
Let’s look at abortion… which is an automatic excommunication. Before priests were given the ability to to forgive abortions, if a priest found out in the confessional that someone received an automatic excommunication, and sees them still receiving communion there is NOTHING he can do about it unless the person talks about the abortion outside the confessional.
You don’t get it. The elimination of the seal of confession could eventually lead to millions more people burning in Hell who would not have if the seal was in tact.
Justice for one child is NOT worth sending tons souls to Hell.
The Church’s job is to help sinners (including rapists, murders, etc) get to Heaven.
It’s not the Church’s job to help the govt seek temporal punishment for criminals.
BTW - I strongly believe that people who confess major crimes like rape, murder, etc are confessing behind the screen to a priest who doesn’t know them. The chances of a face to face Confession (outside the prison cell) for such crimes is not very good.
If my next confession was that I had murdered, raped or tortured someone I would be immensely inclined to go. I’d want the chance to confess in my own church before handing myself in.Alex337:![]()
As others have mentioned, Confession about receiving God’ s grace and reconciling with God. He is who we are concerned with in Confession and to place barriers on that would be unjust.But I do also think a murderer who was truly repentant would confess even knowing they would be reported.
To give a, alibi silly, hypothetical. Imagine if Canon Law required Catholics to all wear a purple top hat and pink blazer when receiving Communion. There would be people who received Eucharist devoutly. But many would probably stop because wearing a purple top hat and pink blazer is a bit ridiculous. An unnecessary burden was put upon a sacrament as a result many people would miss out on its graces.
Now tying that back to Confession, remeber that it deals with God’s justice. To require reporting would be to place a burden of civil law on the penitent. While you would still see people confessing, it’s be in lesser numbers. Fear of civil law would discourage penitent from the sacrament. And to put civil law above God’s justice would be an injustice. Imagine for example if you knew your next confession was going to land you with 20 years in prison. How eager would you be to go?
As a side question: You mentioned you have almost come to a decision on your religion. May I ask what you’re inclined to?
If you heard someone confess to you that they had abused someone multiple times in the past, how would that NOT make you suspect they would do so in the future?But remember, I think priests should break the seal only to stop future crimes.
I’d speak to them and ask. After all I, like priests and psychiatrists, am not psychic.Alex337:![]()
If you heard someone confess to you that they had abused someone multiple times in the past, how would that NOT make you suspect they would do so in the future?But remember, I think priests should break the seal only to stop future crimes.
Cool. I think the best way for a person to heal and avoid hell is to not murder, rape or torture. Or kill themself for that matter. So if a person tells a priest that they plan to do the following then alerting the authorities and stopping them assists in this.Alex337:![]()
Here’s why it can’t be like a psychiatrist.I think I already explained that I think it should work the same as a psychiatrist. Are you going to answer my question?
When child abuser, rapist, murder, etc comes into that confessional, the priest’s number one job is to help that sinner heal AND AVOID HELL. As harsh as it might sound to people who don’t understand, the priest’s main concern is saving the soul of sinner/criminal, not helping the victim.
There was a video (fictional, but accurate) I saw recently about a priest who heard the confession of the man who killed his father. When the priest realized that the man who was confessing to him was the same driver who killed his father years ago in a hit & run, he was furious… stormed out of the confessional, etc. He starts praying the Our Father slowly and can’t finish it for several tries… then he finally is able to slowly say “and help us to forgive those who trespasses against us.” Finally, he’s able to continue hearing this man’s confession and absolves him. It was a very powerful short film.
There was also an episode of the BCC’s “Father Brown” where a criminal confessed to Father that he was going to kill him. In the show, Father Brown could not tell a soul and didn’t (though in the show he did do what he could to link the criminal to another crime).
In real life, if someone entered the Confessional and told the priest that he was planning on killing a member of the clergy, the priest couldn’t do anything about it. Even if the person told the priest that he was the priest who was going to be killed. The priest would have to go about his day as he normally would, without changing anything or acting on the information he has. Even if that meant he was going to die.
That’s how serious the Seal of Confession is. A priest not only has to be willing to accept prison, but if necessary, death to preserve the seal.
Priests who break the seal of confession are not brave, they are cowards.
God Bless
I don’t think a person is much of a vehicle of grace if they let people be murdered, raped or tortured.Alex337:![]()
If you think that being the vehicle by which the sactifying grace of Almighty God pours out onto the soul of a poor sinner is nothing, then you have a very strange (and non-Catholic) idea of what that is.I’d feel far less comfortable with a priest who does nothing about child abuse.
Why should helping a child be about profiting him?What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?
I assure you a psychiatrist that heard of a case of past abuse would report it, regardless of whether the person said they intended to continue the abuse.I’d speak to them and ask. After all I, like priests and psychiatrists, am not psychic.
From my understanding that would go against the law.Alex337:![]()
I assure you a psychiatrist that heard of a case of past abuse would report it, regardless of whether the person said they intended to continue the abuse.I’d speak to them and ask. After all I, like priests and psychiatrists, am not psychic.
This is ridiculous. Pedophilia has nothing to with celibacy! Most child sexual abuse occurs with heterosexual family members, or people that are acquainted with the victim.Sorry about that, but did catch somebodies attention and your right. Really meant about 1000 years since celibacy was enforced.
The only requirement for absolution is a firm purpose of amendment. The Church has never required that one submit themselves to secular punishment to expiate sin.Unjust, but also unnecessary. Any good priest would know not to give absolution unless the penitent turns themselves in to the authorities.
Codswallop!If they’re not turning themselves in they don’t seem penitent.
It is not.I know when I confessed my priest told me to make amends to my parents to show actual contrition. Seems the same thing.
You don’t get it. The vast majority of the most predatory abusers will never set foot in a confessional. The people who have sinned and go to confession want to change.I still think any priest who turns an abuser in is making a very fine sacrifice.
Which pales in comparison to the “good” that might come from revealing it.A priest who violates the seal of the confessional commits a very grave sin against God and Man.
I wish this were true. We would not have Catholics participating in abortions and birth control! Much less child abuse.Nothing can go against the law of Christ.
There are times when this is appropriate, but not all. There are times when satisfaction is more appropriate outside of secular systems.Satisfaction is just as much a part of penance and I find it very difficult to understand how someone can be simultaneously contrite but not willing to face the music when it comes to grievous crimes against society like that.
If the secular system were holy, then it might be different, but this is not always the case. Reparation is important, but not always according to the world’s model.Murder, rape, grand larceny, massive fraud, and any violence against children I strongly wish required satisfaction as a contingent part of absolution.
No, but the Church has had many millennia of experience dealing with the secular systems of justice, and found them wanting.As far as I know there’s nothing in Divine Law stopping the Church from making this a matter of discipline.
This is not usually necessary. Anonymous reporting is always an option. In the US, licensed therapists use this option.To save a child, possibly multiple children from an abuser. My hat goes off to such a man who would put the safety of a child before their own vocation. I would pray that they find another way to help people.
No.I thought that part of confession normally involved a promise that the penitent would go to the law. That’s what I was taught before confession.
Of course, but this statement is based on an erroneous assumption that not reporting a confession to authorities means “doing nothing”.I’d feel far less comfortable with a priest who does nothing about child abuse.
This is also an erroneous assumption.Priests are only dealing with what has happened in the past and so there’s no reason to make them mandatory reporters.
I’ve been speaking about people intending to sin in the future; how is that penitent?Alex337:![]()
Codswallop!If they’re not turning themselves in they don’t seem penitent.
There are many ways to make reparation for sin.
Now friend, you seem to be getting rather heated. There’s no need to be adversarial. I’ve been speaking for most of this thread about people in the confessional admitting that they plan to sin in the future and that they should be reported. If that never happens then nothing changes, so why freak out?Alex337:![]()
You don’t get it. The vast majority of the most predatory abusers will never set foot in a confessional. The people who have sinned and go to confession want to change.I still think any priest who turns an abuser in is making a very fine sacrifice.