Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith must end medieval practices, Pope urged by accused
20 April 2016 | by Sarah Mac DonaldInvestigation of accusations should be reformed and anonymous denunciations ended, high-profile signatories insist
An international group of bishops, nuns,
priests and lay people, who have all been investigated by Congregation
for the Doctrine of Faith, have written to Pope Francis calling for a
reform of the investigation process and specifically an end to anonymous
denunciations.
The 15 who signed the letter include
Bishops Patrick Power and William Morris of Australia, the well-known
American moral theologian, Fr Charles Curran, BBC radio presenter, Fr
Brian Darcy as well as Fr Roy Bourgeois, the Maryknoll priest
excommunicated for his involvement in the ordination of a woman in
2008.
In their letter to the Pope, which was
also sent to the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith,
Cardinal Gerhard Müller, the group warn that as the CDF acts as
"investigator, accuser, judge and jury" the process cannot offer
justice. The process is outdated and follows the "absolutism of
sixteenth and seventeenth century Europe" as a model, the signatories
said.
They suggest a new set of procedures that
would require greater transparency and accountability while imposing a
strict time limit on any investigation and direct personal face-to-face
communication between the accused and the Vatican congregation. One
of the signatories, Australian historian and author Paul Collins, said
that the current process makes no presumption of innocence and those
accused are never told who has accused them nor who is judging them. "They
don't even know who their defence counsel is. They are usually never
given a chance to defend themselves verbally and in person. Letters go
unanswered for months or are 'lost'," he criticised.
The signatories highlight that those
investigated by the CDF find the process completely draining, isolating
and exhausting and this is often linked to CDF imposed exclusion from
ministry. "It seems designed to wear you down
psychologically. It is completely alien to the values of Christ and the
gospels," Paul Collins said.
The letter to the CDF’s Cardinal Müller
was sent in late February 2016 but so far no acknowledgement or response
has been received by the group. In addition to
reforms within the CDF, the group propose an open process conducted by a
committee of experts entirely separate from the CDF. This
committee would be set up by the Secretariat of the World Synod of
Bishops in full consultation with the person being investigated. The
committee would make a final recommendation to the next meeting of the
Synod and to the Pope.
The aim of these proposed reforms is to
avoid some of “the worst aspects” of the present investigation
procedures as experienced by those who have dealt with the CDF over the
last decades. Anonymous denunciations would be
done away with and instead those accusing would be named. Secret
CDF-appointed consulters would no longer remain anonymous but would also
be named and their qualifications could then be scrutinised for biases.
Under these proposals, the CDF would be
required to deal directly and personally with the person being
investigated and there would also be an end to the enforced secrecy
which often contributes to the “crippling isolation” of the accused, who
are often dealt with at third and fourth hand via a network of bishops
and superiors – who might even have been the primary accuser of the
person being investigated in the first place.
The new process would involve the person
under investigation and their counsel from the beginning of the process
in order to circumvent their work being inaccurately or unfairly
interpreted by CDF consulters, or sentences or opinions are taken out of
context.
Direct personal face-to-face
communication could also help to deal with the “sheer rudeness” and lack
of basic politeness and Christian charity on the part of CDF
personnel. Strict time limits would prevent
processes being dragged out “in an attempt to wear down the resistance
of those being investigated”.
The group claim that under the current
process “extremely sick or dying people have been investigated and
forced to respond to often silly accusations”. The
process, the group warns, must prevent the same people acting as
investigators, prosecutors and judges by referring ongoing cases to the
Synod of Bishops, thus removing the decision-making from the CDF. Instead
the wider community of theologians and the faithful people of God would
be involved so that the CDF and its Rome-based advisers wouldn’t be the
“sole arbiters of correct doctrine and belief”.
The fifteen who signed the letter include
Bishops Patrick Power and William Morris of Australia, the well-known
American moral theologian, Fr Charles Curran, BBC radio presenter, Fr
Brian Darcy as well as Fr Roy Bourgeois. William
Morris was bishop of Toowoomba in Australia but was removed from the
role in 2011 by the Vatican over his 2006 pastoral letter to his diocese
in which he called for a discussion of the ordination of married men
and women given the decline in the number of priests in his rural
diocese.
Bishop Patrick Power was appointed in
1986 to the diocese of Canberra and Goulburn. At the age of 70 he
retired as bishop over his challenging of the Vatican’s poor handling of
the sex abuse scandals and inability to listen on the crisis in
priestly vocations. Roy Bourgeois was dismissed
by the Vatican from his Maryknoll order in 2012 for taking part in an
illicit women's ordination ceremony.
Fr Charles Curran was forced out his
position at the Catholic University of America in 1986 after the
Congregation for Doctrine of the Faith found him unfit to teach Catholic
theology over his views on sexual issues. The
five Irish priests: Fr Tony Flannery, Fr Brian Darcy, Fr Owen
O’Sullivan, Fr Iggy O’Donovan and Fr Gerard Moloney have all been
investigated by the Vatican. Fr Flannery was censured by the CDF in 2012
and forced to stand down from public ministry over his views on
priesthood and women’s ordination.
Signatures:
Dr Paul Collins, writer and broadcaster, AustraliaRev Charles Curran, Scurlock University Professor of Human Values at Southern Methodist University, Dallas, USARev Roy Bourgeois, priest and activist, USARev Brian D’Arcy CP, writer and broadcaster, IrelandRev Tony Flannery CSsR, writer and broadcaster, IrelandSister Teresa Forcades, OSB, Benedictine nun and physician, SpainSister Jeannine Gramick, SL, Loretto Sister, Co-Founder, New Ways Ministry, USASister Elizabeth A. Johnson, CSJ, Distinguished Professor of Theology, Fordham University, New York, USAProfessor
Paul Knitter, Emeritus Paul Tillich Professor of Theology, World
Religions and Culture, Union Theological Seminary, New YorkRev Gerard Moloney, CSsR, Editor, IrelandBishop William Morris, Bishop Emeritus of Toowoomba, AustraliaRev Ignatius O’Donovan, OSA, Church Historian, IrelandRev Owen O’Sullivan, OFM Cap, Chaplain and Writer, IrelandBishop Patrick Power, retired Auxiliary Bishop of Canberra- Goulburn, AustraliaRev
Marciano Vidal, CSsR, Former Ordinary Professor, Pontifical University
Comillas, Madrid, Spain, Extraordinary Professor, Alphonsian Academy,
Rome.
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