We're our 'own worst enemy': Aust bishop

A prominent Australian archbishop says the Catholic Church has been its own worst enemy when it comes to dealing with allegations of sexual abuse.

The Catholic Church has become its "own worst enemy" for concealing clergy sexual abuse and not listening enough to victims, a leading Australian archbishop says.

Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane was speaking on Sunday as a landmark Vatican conference on abuse was ending.

"We will not go unpunished," Archbishop Coleridge said in the homily of a final Mass ending the four-day conference convened by Pope Francis to confront a worldwide scandal.

The pope, who presided at the Mass in the Vatican's Sala Regia in the Vatican's Apostolic Palace, was due to speak at the end of the Mass.

"In abuse and its concealment, the powerful (of the Church) show themselves not men of heaven but men of earth," he said.

Then, quoting Jesus' commandment to "Love your enemy", Coleridge said:

"But who is the enemy? Certainly not those who have challenged the Church to see abuse and its concealment for what they really are, above all the victims and survivors who have led us to the painful truth by telling their stories with such courage," Coleridge said.

"At times, however, we have seen victims and survivors as the enemy, but we have not loved them, we have not blessed them. In that sense, we have been our own worst enemy," he said.

On Saturday, a nun and a woman journalist addressed the conference to deliver tough criticism of Church, accusing them of hypocrisy and covering up horrendous crimes against children.

After the conference, the Vatican said it would formulate follow-up measures to make sure all bishop return home knowing how to put anti-abuse procedures into place.


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Published 25 February 2019 4:42pm
Source: AAP


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