Australian priests ‘willing to go to jail’ rather than break confessional seal

Canberra, Australia, Jun 18, 2018 / 12:53 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- As Australian states and territories pass and consider laws requiring priests to break the seal of confession to report cases of child sex abuse, Catholic priests are saying they would go to jail rather than violate the seal.

“The state will be requiring us as Catholic priests to commit as what we regard as the most serious crime and I’m not willing to do that,” said Fr. Michael Whelan, a parish priest at St. Patrick’s Church in Sydney, according to local news.

Fr. Whelan added that he, along with other priests, would be “willing to go to jail” rather than break the seal of confession. When asked if the Church was above the law, Whelan said “absolutely not” and remarked he would only be protecting religious freedom.

“…when the state tries to intervene on our religious freedom, undermine the essence of what it means to be a Catholic, we will resist,” he said.

On June 7, the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly in Canberra passed a law which requires religious organizations to adhere to the requirements of the Reporting Conduct Scheme, which requires religious groups to report any allegations, offences or convictions of child abuse within 30 days. This legislation extends to the seal of confession, making it illegal for priests to fail to report the confession of a child sex abuse crime.

South Australia has adopted a similar law, which will take effect Oct. 1, and New South Wales is considering the measure.

Fr. Whelan believes the rest of the nation will follow the royal commission’s recommendation.

“I expect every jurisdiction in Australia now will follow that recommendation and I expect the church throughout will simply not observe it?” Whelan said.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that “every priest who hears confessions is bound under severe penalties to keep absolute secrecy regarding the sins that his penitents have confessed to him,” due to the “delicacy and greatness of this ministry and the respect due to persons.”

The Code of Canon Law states that “The sacramental seal is inviolable; therefore it is absolutely forbidden for a confessor to betray in any way a penitent in words or in any manner and for any reason.” A priest who intentionally violates the seal incurs an automatic excommunication.

Whelan noted additional concerns with the law, saying the only way to ensure the law was being followed would be to “try and entrap priests.”

Instead, Whelan believes other precautions against child sex abuse should be taken, such as encouraging the perpetrator to confess to the police.

Clergy are not the only critics of the new legislation. Andrew Wall, a member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly, said forcing priests to break the seal of confession oversteps an individual’s “freedom of association, freedom of expression and freedom of religious rights.”


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4 Comments

  1. I had always had rather a high opinion of Australia. Not anymore, I don’t. What vicious and stupid people some of their legislators appear to be.

  2. Australia has been hostile to the Catholic Church for some time before the clergy abuse scandal. And that situation gave perfect cover to what has led up to this latest state repression.

    Pell could not get a fair venue in any part of the country and its ongoing, not-open-to-the-public proceeding is going according to script.

    A former British territory and so none of this is so surprising.

  3. Bravo to these priests who are making this commitment. Its unlikely in the extreme that any pedophile would confess this sort of crime to ANYONE, let alone a priest as their moral compass would have already been extremely distorted. . Unless of course they were already in prison and had a conversion experience, in which case they are already paying for their crime. Have always felt a kinship with the Aussies, being partially of English descent myself. However the recent travesty of the persecution of Cardinal Pell and now the passage of this legislation clearly aimed at Catholic priests is disappointing and disgusting. Clearly anti-catholicism is on the rise there and I find that very sad.

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