Pope cuts penalties for paedophile priests - including one let off with just a lifetime of prayer for abusing five young boys
·
Pope
Francis said to be applying his vision of a 'merciful church' to sex
offenders
·
He
reduced sentence for Rev Mauro Inzoli from defrocking to lifetime of
prayer
·
But
Vatican spokesman said abusive priests are also removed from the ministry
Pope Francis has been slammed by church officials and sex abuse survivors for cutting penalties for paedophile priests.
The Pope is said to be
applying his vision of a 'merciful church' to sex offenders by reducing
punishments to weaker sentences, such as a lifetime of prayer and penance.
It has been revealed by
church officials that Pope Francis overruled advice given to him by the Vatican
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith about two priests - allowing
them to be punished by a lifetime of prayer.
One of the priests was the Reverend Mauro Inzoli, who was found guilty of abusing young boys by the Vatican in 2012 and was ordered to be defrocked.
However, he appealed,
and in 2014 Francis reduced the penalty to a lifetime of prayer,
prohibiting him from celebrating Mass in public or being near children, barring
him from his diocese and ordering five years of psychotherapy.
Rev Inzoli was then
convicted by an Italian criminal court for his sex crimes against five children
as young as 12.
He is now facing a
second church trial after new evidence emerged against him.
His predecessor Pope Benedict XVI defrocked
800 priests during his eight-year papacy
A church official has
said some paedophile priests and their high-ranking friends appealed to Pope
Francis by citing the pope's own words about mercy in their petitions.
They said: 'With all
this emphasis on mercy ... he is creating the environment for such
initiatives.'
Marie Collins, an abuse
survivor and founding member of Francis' sex-abuse advisory commission,
expressed dismay that the congregation's recommended penalties were being
weakened.
She said: 'All who abuse
have made a conscious decision to do so. Even those who are paedophiles,
experts will tell you, are still responsible for their actions. They can resist
their inclinations.'
Many canon lawyers and
church authorities argue that defrocking paedophiles can put society at greater
risk because the church no longer exerts control over them.
They argue that keeping
the men in restricted ministry, away from children, enables superiors to exert
some degree of supervision.
But Ms Collins said the
church must also take into account the message that reduced canonical sentences
sends to both survivors and abusers.
Source: Daily Mail UK
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