UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter
Thomas Reese | Oct. 25, 2013
The experience of the sexual abuse crisis, hopefully, will “help us become more humble, less arrogant and bossy in our ministry,” Bishop Charles Scicluna told members of the Canon Law Society of America on Oct. 16 at their annual meeting in Sacramento, Calif.
He described sexual abuse as “an egregious betrayal of sacred trust” that “has the power to stint the normal development of people” and “cause depression, post-traumatic disorders, loss of self-esteem and, most tragically, loss of faith.” It “is an expression of the anti-Gospel, a betrayal of the message of compassion and love.”
Scicluna began working as the first promoter of justice (roughly equivalent to chief prosecutor) at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in May 2002, when a “tsunami” of abuse cases hit his office.
As an official of the doctrinal congregation, Scicluna conducted the investigation of Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado, the founder of the Legionaries of Christ. Despite opposition from some curial cardinals but with the backing of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Scicluna pursued the investigation until Maciel was suspended from priestly ministry in 2006. Scicluna also reviewed hundreds of case files of priests who eventually were dismissed from ministry for sexual abuse. He left the congregation in 2012 to become an auxiliary bishop in Malta.
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