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Lisbon — Reuters,
May. 11, 2010 - Pope Benedict said on Tuesday
that the greatest threat to Catholicism came from “sin
within the Church“, one if his most forthright comments
so far on a sexual abuse scandal that has created
turmoil in the church. The Church has “a very deep need”
to recognize that it must do penitence for its sins and
“accept purification“, he said.
“Today we see in a truly terrifying way that the
greatest persecution of the Church does not come from
outside enemies but is born of sin within the Church,”
the Pope told reporters on the plane to Portugal,
replying to a question about the scandal.
In recent weeks, a number of Vatican officials have
accused the media, gays or progressives of waging a
smear campaign against the Church. One top Vatican
official even dismissed reports of a cover-up of sexual
abuse of children by priests as “petty gossip“.
The 83-year-old German pontiff, facing the worst crisis
of his five-year-old papacy, said the Church had to seek
forgiveness from victims of sexual abuse but also
recognized that “forgiveness cannot be a substitute for
justice“.
The Pope promised abuse victims he met in Malta last
month the Church would do all it could to investigate
allegations, bring to justice those responsible for
abuse and implement effective measures to protect young
people in the future.
But the scandal shows no sign of abating. On Saturday
Bishop Walter Mixa of Augsburg, who has been accused of
sexually abusing minors, became the first bishop in the
pope’s native Germany to step down over the scandal.
In recent weeks, a Belgian bishop resigned after
admitting he had sexually abused a boy and three Irish
bishops quit over their handling of sexual abuse cases.
In his comments on the plane, the Pope also mentioned
Portugal’s economic crisis. The minority socialist
government is struggling to reduce a huge deficit but
harsh austerity measures will impose greater sacrifices
to avoid a Greek-style debt crisis.
Benedict, who was due to hold a large outdoor Mass on
Tuesday afternoon, repeated his call for greater moral
responsibility in financial decisions and acknowledged
the Church should in the past have spoken out more on
economics.
We must admit that the Catholic faith ... was often too
individualistic. It too often left concrete things to
the world and thought only of individual salvation and
religious affairs without realising that there was a
global responsibility (for economic decisions),” he
said.
The main purpose of the pope’s four-day visit to
Portugal is to visit the shrine at Fatima where the
Madonna is said to have appeared to three shepherd
children six times in 1917.
One of the three messages the Madonna is said to have
given to the child visionaries -- the so-called ‘Third
Secret of Fatima’ -- was what the Vatican has said was a
prediction of the 1981 assassination attempt against the
late Pope John Paul.
Benedict told reporters he believed that interpretation
of the Third Secret, revealed in 2000, could include the
suffering the papacy and the Church would have to endure
as a result of today’s sexual abuse crisis.
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