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A group of people kneeling in pews in a church, with some holding their hands together in prayer.
Parishioners at Cathedral Church of Saint Patrick in Harrisburg, Penn., in 2018. AP Photo/Matt Rourke

Why it’s so hard to hold priests accountable for sexual abuse

This article from 2018 was updated on May 9, 2024, to reflect the author’s latest research on how canon law has changed over the years and to include additional recent investigations.

Louisiana State Police are investigating senior officials of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans suspected to have shielded predatory priests for decades.

A search warrant, served in April 2024, seeks to enable the state police to look into the archdiocese’s history of covering up for abusive priests. It will allow the police to access communications between local church leaders and the Vatican and investigate priests for alleged sex trafficking of children.

Over the past few years, several investigations by state attorneys general, including reports from Illinois and Maryland in 2023 and one from New York in 2020, found patterns of child sexual abuse by clergy in Catholic dioceses.

In 2018, a Pennsylvania grand jury report was one of many investigations to find shocking levels of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. It uncovered, in six dioceses, the sexual abuse of over 1,000 children and named 301 priests suspected of abuse. It also found that religious officials had turned a blind eye to the abuse.

In response to the Pennsylvania report, Pope Francis, head of the Roman Catholic Church, wrote a letter addressed to “the People of God,” saying,

“With shame and repentance, we acknowledge as an ecclesial community that we were not where we should have been, that we did not act in a timely manner, realizing the magnitude and the gravity of the damage done to so many lives. We showed no care for the little ones; we abandoned them.”

A man and a young girl seated in the pews with a crucifix in the background.
Parishioners pray ahead of a mass at the Cathedral Church of Saint Patrick in Harrisburg, Philadelphia. AP Photo/Matt Rourke

In fact, the pope has significant power to try to ensure that this does not happen. As a scholar of the Catholic Church, I believe an important but often poorly understood reason for the abandonment of abused children is the Church’s Code of Canon law, which the pope alone can change.

Early church laws on sexual abuse

Canon laws govern the church and lay out its theology. All Catholic religious officials are bound by them.

Canon law has a complex history. It originated in early Christian communities. Christians, building on the Gospels and other sacred texts, developed norms and rules about acceptable practices and behavior, including wrongdoing by clergy. Christian communities usually had rules against religious officials sexually abusing children. They were harsh on sodomy. Punishments could include being smeared with spit and bound in iron chains.

As Christian communities spread throughout the Mediterranean region in the third century A.D., regional meetings were held to discuss rules that could be applied uniformly.

By the fourth century A.D., Christian churches, usually through councils, started issuing authoritative rules accepted by all Christian communities. These came to be called “canons.” The most well-known were those of the Council of Nicaea, convened by Emperor Constantine in A.D. 325.

The enforcement of the canons was put in the hands of church bishops.

As Christianity spread east and west, it struggled with rulers who wanted to control peoples and territories. Diverse rules and norms proliferated. At the same time, over many centuries, various religious leaders and theologians tried to create a uniform system.

It was not until 1917, under Pope Benedict XV, however, that the Church consolidated and revised the many different rules in Western Christendom. This was titled the Code of Canon Law, applicable to all Roman Catholic churches. Only the pope could issue or change canon law. The Orthodox, or “Eastern rite,” churches have a slightly different set of laws.

The Church sometimes turned errant priests over to civil authorities.

That changed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when Church-state battles flared in Europe as secular states rejected the church’s claims to sovereignty. The church made the handling of child sexual abuse by clergy an internal matter.

The 1917 code was revised in 1983 to take into account changes stemming from the Second Vatican Council, an assembly of Roman Catholic bishops meant to settle doctrinal issues, held between 1962 to 1965. Both versions of the code include canons about sexual abuse.

Under Vatican control

kj to Bryan and copy editor: This is the only section where the scholar has made corrections

Here is how canon law changed over the years.

Since 1917, the church dealt with accusations against sexual abuse of children through rules that barred priests from soliciting sex when they were in the confessional. It also barred priests from having sex with a minor under the age of 16. In either case, the priests were subject to punishment, potentially including being laicized.

If priests, when taking a confession, solicited sex, they were viewed as having committed a particularly egregious sin. The confessional is a sacred space and confession a sacred act. What is noteworthy here is that the concern was about the priest sinning, not about abuse being perpetrated on another. In 1922, the pope issued a set of guidelines, formally called an “instruction,” for bishops on how to proceed in cases in which the priest solicited sex in the confessional, and in cases in which the priest committed other sexual crimes, including having sex with a minor.

The instruction was reissued by Pope John XXIII 40 years later, in 1962. The instruction was not officially incorporated into the Code of Canon Law. There is a debate among scholars about whether or not it was widely circulated. Some evidence indicates some bishops in the U.S. were aware of it.

From 1922 onward, investigations of clergy suspected of sexually abusing children were to be cloaked in secrecy. This limited bishops from reporting cases to the police, or even to parishioners. The 1983 Code of Canon Law code gave the Vatican extensive control over the fate of accused clergy.

Other forms of ‘correction’

There was more. A canon about avoiding “scandal” compounded the secrecy issue. It was a sin, and a violation of canon law, to do anything that would cause “scandal” to the faithful by leading them to sin or question their faith.

If a bishop, for example, were to make known that a priest had sexually abused children in his diocese, the bishop, and not just the priest, would be guilty under canon law of causing scandal – because information about the abuse might cause Catholics to question their faith – as indeed, it often has.

Also included was a requirement that bishops provide priests with funds when the priests were removed from ministry, but not dismissed from the clerical state (not “laicized” or “defrocked”).

Thus, what to Catholics and those outside the institution looks like the morally dubious practice of paying child sexual abusers is to the hierarchy a fulfillment of their obligations.

Under the 1917 code, bishops, under certain conditions, could dismiss priests from the clerical state, and without a canonical trial. But it could be done only after it was determined that there was no possibility of reform.

If a priest claimed his abuse was due to pedophilia or other psychological disorders, canon law provided for a more lenient punishment. The priest could be regarded as not being fully responsible for his actions.

Two men in white priestly robes standing side by side.
Pope John Paul II. Paolo Cocco/Reuters

Escaping accountability

The 1983 revision put forward by Pope John Paul II to the entire code made it impossible for bishops to dismiss priests. Authority for doing so became centralized in the Vatican.

At the time, the pope appeared to be responding to a wave of priests abandoning the priesthood. However, the change ended up constraining the bishops. They had to retain the abusive priests unless the latter were found guilty at a canonical trial and the Vatican – officially, the pope – agreed to dismiss them.

At most, bishops could suspend priests’ clerical faculties: that is, priests’ authorization to say mass and administer other sacraments, or present themselves publicly as priests, for a short time. But they could not do so permanently.

The 1983 code also reduced the maximum time within which proceedings could be initiated against priests having sex with a child to five years.

With victims often, understandably, not coming forward for years, that meant many priests escaped internal punishment by the Vatican.

Canonical trials also require the cooperation of the victim as a witness and are another obstacle to holding priests accountable. The code has encouraged the very inaction by bishops that the pope condemns.

There are no provisions in canon law that specify what is to be done if a bishop has failed to act on a case of suspected or actual child sexual abuse.

A woman holding a few photographs stands with two men, with one of them carrying a poster that says, 'Protect Kids Not Molesters.'
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Power lies with the pope

Since 2001, in a further centralizing move, the Vatican has required that bishops send all cases of substantiated allegations of child sexual abuse to its Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is located at the Vatican, and is usually headed by a powerful Cardinal.

Its job is to “promote and safeguard the faith.”

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith may tell the bishop to conduct a canonical trial, may conduct one itself, or accept or reject a request for dismissal and apply conditions. Priests can appeal the verdicts and sentences. The Vatican sometimes overrules bishops who want to dismiss priests.

Although it is entirely within his power to do so, Pope Francis has not altered the Code of Canon Law with regard to child sexual abuse by clergy and how it is handled by bishops.

For the church truly to hold priests and their bishops accountable for child sexual abuse, this is an important step.

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