ChatterBank1 min ago
Confession, Priests, and Civil Law
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This question resulted from another posted elsewhere.
Priests are required by the church to keep confessions confidential. However, if someone confesses to having committed a criminal offence, and subsequently reveals the priest’s knowledge of that crime to the police, can/would the priest be charged, under civil law, with concealing a crime, obstructing justice, withholding evidence, etc?
Priests are required by the church to keep confessions confidential. However, if someone confesses to having committed a criminal offence, and subsequently reveals the priest’s knowledge of that crime to the police, can/would the priest be charged, under civil law, with concealing a crime, obstructing justice, withholding evidence, etc?
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There are two aspects to the concept—inherited sin and personal sinful behaviour. The first is something we possess, whether we like it or not, while the second is something we practice, and for someone to be spared such a destiny, the Catholic Church requires that sins be confessed to a priest, who they claim has the power to absolve them. However, for most Catholics, the rite of confession, absolution, and penance has become a thing of the past. A recent survey reveals, for example, that more than 60 percent of Catholics no longer go to confession.
Good point, I could never understand why my catholic friend could go to church and confess she'd been scrumping apples and raspberries from our neighbour's garden and be forgiven in church, while I got smacked legs from my mother. I wonder how many wrongs could have been righted had it not been for the confidentiality of the confessional or the priests' inablilty to break the code of silence.
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