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Head of US bishops after Vatican abuse summit: ‘Intensify the Dallas Charter’

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, has promised “unyielding vigilance” following the Vatican summit on the sexual abuse of minors.

Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, is seen June 13, 2018 at the opening of the bishops' annual spring assembly in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

Washington D.C., Feb 24, 2019 / 02:14 pm (CNA).- Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, has promised “unyielding vigilance” and an intensification of the Dallas Charter following the Vatican summit on the sexual abuse of minors.

“We owe survivors an unyielding vigilance that we may never fail them again,” DiNardo said. “How then to bind the wounds? Intensify the Dallas Charter.”

The cardinal, who heads the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston, released a statement Feb. 24, at the conclusion of a four-day Vatican summit that brought together heads of bishops’ conferences from countries around the world to discuss sexual abuse and child protection.

The summit discussed responsibility, transparency, and accountability, with video testimonies from sex abuse victims, working group discussions, a penitential liturgy, and a closing Mass with final remarks from Pope Francis.

“These have been challenging, fruitful days,” DiNardo said in his statement. “The witness of survivors revealed for us, again, the deep wound in the Body of Christ. Listening to their testimonies transforms your heart. I saw that in the faces of my brother bishops.”

During the gathering, Pope Francis called for “concrete and effective measures,” and presenters spoke about “a code of conduct for bishops, the need to establish specific protocols for handling accusations against bishops, user-friendly reporting mechanisms, and the essential role transparency must play in the healing process,” DiNardo said.

These efforts include intensifying the 2002 Charter for the Protection of Young People – known as the Dallas Charter – which currently governs how U.S. dioceses are to handle sexual abuse allegations against priests, he said.

“Achieving these goals will require the active involvement and collaboration of the laity,” the cardinal stressed. He highlighted the need for prayer, expertise, and ideas from the laity, and their efforts to ensure that policies are followed and effective.

“All of the models discussed this week rely upon the good help of God’s people,” he said.

DiNardo said that he and the U.S. bishops were affirmed in the ongoing efforts and will prepare proposals for the upcoming U.S. Bishops’ Conference assembly this June.

“There is an urgency in the voice of the survivors to which we must always respond,” he said, adding, “I am also aware that our next steps can be a solid foundation from which to serve also seminarians, religious women, and all those who might live under the threat of sexual abuse or the abuse of power.”

While the “agony of Good Friday” can cause “a sense of isolation and abandonment,” we can trust in God’s promise of healing, encountering the Risen Christ as we bind the wounds that have been caused, the cardinal said.

He thanked those who have prayed for the success of the Vatican summit in recent days and stressed reliance on Christ, saying, “In Him alone is all hope and healing.”


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6 Comments

  1. 1. So we are to return to an arguably failed Dallas Charter and “intensify” it. Do the same thing over and over again and expect a different result.

    2. “The witness of survivors revealed for us, again, the deep wound in the Body of Christ. Listening to their testimonies transforms your heart. I saw that in the faces of my brother bishops.” Is it possible that it was in fact guilt and panic that their collective visage betrayed?

    3. “…ideas from the laity…”
    The laity have made it perfectly clear that the issue of homosexuality within the ranks of the clergy is the issue, not the unfortunate issue of sex abuse of minors. We lay Catholics have indeed presented our ideas and those ideas have been ignored. The fact that the summit addressed the sex abuse of minors and not the bigger issue of homosexuality within the clergy is proof of that.

  2. “How then to bind the wounds?”
    Purge the seminaries, consecrated religious and Priesthood of homosexuals and all of their enablers, Daniel. Then and only then can effective triage be implemented.

  3. The head and Founder of the Church, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, had his own trying days: 1. Forty (40) days of agony, fasting, and prayers in the Garden of Gethsemane; 2. Being sold for thirty pieces of silver to his murderers by one of his inner circle members; 3. Being denied by his right hand man before some witnesses; 4. His resurrection from the dead being denied by another member of his inner circle members; 5. Some members of his inner circle fled and departed from him upon his arrest, scourging at the pillar, crowning with thorns, carrying his cross, and ultimately, his crucifixion on the cross!

    Are we Christians? Haven’t we heard about these things Sunday in and Sunday out, at Mass? Did we absord the message of the Gospel and the command of the Founder and Head of the Church emphatically stating: “If you want to be my disciples, pick up your cross and follow me!”?

    How come when the gates of hell shows up at the doors of the Church we “Christians, “Catholics” are the first to run, pick up our stones and ready to stone the “sinner”, point our fingers, critisize, condemn, and castigate the Church?

    Where are the fighting instinct in us as Catholics to pray and fast when the evil one shows up his face at the doors of the Church, OUR Church?

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