1. Introduction
On 23 May 2021, Pope Francis, by virtue of the Apostolic Constitution
Pascite Gregem Dei (
Francis 2021), promulgated the reformed Book VI of the 1983 Code of Canon Law
1, announced on 1 June of the same year. The new law entered into force on 8 December 2021. Among the significant changes, it should be noted that the catalogue of expiatory penalties has been extended. They are better systematised and ordered in canon 1336. Among the penalties listed in the code, which may be used by a superior, there is a prohibition against wearing ecclesiastical dress. “He must avail himself of this penalty when it is intended directly to make reparation for the crime committed, without the offender’s correction necessarily affecting its cessation, as is the case with censure” (
Bernal 1998, p. 600).
The imposition of a just punishment is only one of the necessary actions to be taken in the face of the drama of sexual abuse in the Church. Such a punishment should contribute to the awareness of the dimension of harm not only to the perpetrator himself, but also to the community, so that the perpetrator, who is still a clergyman, undertakes reparation and penance. Therefore, it is reasonable to ask the question to what extent these objectives can be achieved by imposing on the perpetrator of the crime,
contra sextum cum minore (against the sixth commandment with a minor) an expiatory penalty consisting of the prohibition against wearing ecclesiastical dress. Ecclesiastical dress distinguishes clergy from laymen, but it is also a special sign of the Church’s presence in the world (
Castillon Hoyos and De Santi 2010). What, then, is the penalty of deprivation of ecclesiastical dress for the clergyman himself and for the community of the Church?
In the case of the crimes in question, the Holy See, which has been notified in advance, decides what action is to be taken. The actions required by canon law can be reduced to three main ways of proceeding: presenting directly the most grave cases to the decision of the Supreme Pontiff with regard to dismissal or deposition from the clerical state, a judicial process (in a diocese or tribunal of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith) or an administrative one, recourse to purely disciplinary measures, without initiating a penal process
2. This article deals with the situation when the offender is punished with expiatory punishment or penalties, which may be valid forever or for a definite or indefinite period
3. The research problem concerns the canonical legitimacy of the imposition of the punishment of prohibition against wearing ecclesiastical dress for crimes
contra sextum minore.
The research problem presented may appear to be the subject of an academic dispute, meriting discussion not so much because of the need to punish the guilty party for paedophilia, which nowadays goes unchallenged, but rather the form of this punishment, to make it possible to achieve the goals appropriate to penal canon law. This discussion has been going ongoing for many years (
Arrieta 2012, pp. 57–74;
Renken 2014, pp. 53–75;
Sánchez-Girón Renedo 2014, pp. 567–602;
Schüller 2021, pp. 251–53) and it is possible to draw specific conclusions to place the problem in its proper context. Many of the earlier prescriptions were characterised by a high degree of generality, so their interpretation varied depending on the diocese, country or historical context. The idea that individual bishops and superiors, whose task it was to exercise penal discipline, would better determine when and how to punish in the most appropriate manner came to the fore. Subsequent experience, however, has shown the difficulty that Ordinaries had in applying penal norms, especially when combining the demands of mercy with the principles of justice. Prior to the reform of Book VI, penal norms were specified to provide precise and clear guidance to those who applied them. As a result, the penalty of prohibition of the use of ecclesiastical dress appeared in the canonical order. This punishment, like all others, is intended to protect the community, guarantee the repair of scandal and compensate for the damage caused. The reform also aims to provide those responsible for pastoral care with the necessary means to prevent crime and to intervene in time. Academic discussion on this subject is an indispensable element of introducing and adapting changes in penal canon law in dioceses around the world. This study aims to contribute to such a discussion, so that the penalty of prohibition of the use of ecclesiastical dress existing in the CIC/1983 can be applied in accordance with the principles of justice.
2. Compensation—The Principal Objective of the Expiatory Penalty
Punishment is a juridical reaction of ecclesiastical authority to a transgression of a law that has been recognised as a crime, that is, an act harmful and dangerous for the community of the Church. In 2001, Pope John Paul II published the SST and added appropriate norms to it, in which clerical abuse of minors up to the age of 18 was placed among the most serious crimes against faith and sacraments, the so-called
delicta graviora (more grave delict)
4. The punishment for any crime, and, in this case, we are dealing with an act classified by the legislator as the most serious crime, must be burdensome for the perpetrator. This is demonstrated in the can. 1312 § 2, which states that ecclesiastical punishment is the deprivation of the faithful of some good (
privatio alicuis boni). Is the prohibition of the use of ecclesiastical dress to be regarded as depriving the good of the just punishment expected by the community when it comes to the crime,
contra sextum minore?
The CIC/1983 indicates in can. 284 that clerics are to wear “ecclesiastical garb” (
habitus ecclesiasticus), “suitable” (
decentem) for persons of their state, and moreover according to the norms issued by the conference of bishops and according to legitimate local customs
5. Thus, the decisive influence on how this dress looks in each region is the particular legislator. The lack of uniform ecclesiastical dress in the Church should be considered a principle with a long doctrinal tradition, confirmed in the work on the post-conciliar reform of the CIC/1983
6. Can this cause problems in imposing the punishment of banning the use of ecclesiastical dress? This penalty, on the one hand, is established by the universal legislator for the whole Church; on the other, in the various particular Churches, it can mean something completely different. Punishment is inflicted on the offender in a particular Church, and its practical implementation is influenced by the norms issued by the individual Episcopal Conferences. The lack of uniform ecclesiastical dress in the Church does not hinder the attainment of the purposes set forth in can. 1341: the reparation of scandal, the restoration of justice and the correction of the guilty, since the manner of attaining these ends through punishment is determined for each individual perpetrator. As far as general prevention is concerned, understood as the deterrence of others from committing a crime, this effect can be greater and easier to achieve in those particular Churches in which the ecclesiastical dress distinguishes between clergy and laity in a more concrete way. It therefore seems preferable to inflict this punishment in these particular Churches. If, to quote the
Directory For The Ministry And The Life Of The Priests, ecclesiastical dress is an “external sign of an interior reality” and even “safeguard for poverty and chastity”
7, the penal deprivation of dress must also be a sign—for clergy and laity—of transgression of the law, but also of betrayal of duties resulting from belonging to the clerical state.
What does it mean to deprive the ecclesiastical garb to deprive the good that punishes to the perpetrator? In canonical literature, there is a twofold distinction.
Wolfgang F. Rothe (
2001, pp. 23–50) and
Javier Otaduy (
2002, pp. 363–65) point out in their comments that the codex formulation,
decens habitus (suitable garb), indicates the appropriateness and dignity of dress, without yielding to luxury and sophistication. This interpretation focuses on social respect for the clerical state as well as for the clergy themselves. Here, through the dress proper to the cleric, the honorable function which he fulfils in the community, often going beyond purely religious competences is emphasised. In this approach, wearing ecclesiastical garb is associated with prestige, high social position, maybe even social benefits and privileges due to the function performed. An example of the high social position of clergy has traditionally been the United States—a country deeply affected by sexual abuse among clergy. The high position of the clergyman in the USA dates to the colonial period, but the American Revolution, supported by most of the churches, played a special role in this respect. They also made an important contribution to the colonisation of the West, constituting one of the main points of support for the young statehood and contributing to the development of the social structure of settlers on the model of the Eastern states (
Elsbree 2013, p. 146).
According to the above-mentioned comments of recognised canonists, it would be useful to impose the penalty of prohibiting the use of ecclesiastical dress in those particular Churches where the clerical state has retained a high social position. Prohibition against wearing ecclesiastical dress would contribute to reparation (atonement) and redemption of one’s criminal past in accordance with the nature of expiatory punishments.
According to Massimo del Pozzo, the ordained minister should be clearly identifiable, which defines the other faithful as addressees of the sign of ecclesiastical dress (
Del Pozzo 2018, p. 211). Once again, there is talk of ecclesiastical dress as a sign, but this time, it is not so much about the social position of the priest and the prestige resulting from wearing the garb, but about the message that comes from the faithful: the hierarchical priesthood remains at the service of the common priesthood of all the faithful. Deprivation of ecclesiastical garb is therefore a sign indicating the perpetrator of the crime as a destroyer of the social order who has betrayed his ministry. Expiatory penalties are aimed at restoring (repairing) the order violated by the crime, because the damage should be duly compensated, which is achieved through compensation in the form of a penalty imposed. According to John Paul II, clerical garb “gives evidence within the ecclesiastical community of the public witness which each priest is held to give of his own identity and special belonging to God”. It is “useful to the ends of evangelization and leads to reflection on the reality which we represent in the world and the primacy of the spiritual values which we affirm in the existence of man”. Thanks to the sign of the clerical garb, “it becomes easier for others to arrive at the mystery, of which we are bearers, of Him to whom we belong and whom we want to announce with all our being” (
John Paul II 1982).
Taking the Pope’s thought as a starting point, the deprivation of garb is a sign that in the life of a priest, as a result of a crime, there was no public testimony of priestly identity. In the case of the perpetrator, the goals that John Paul II associated with ecclesiastical dress will no longer be achieved but will serve the punishment by restoring social order. In the case of a cleric who has committed the crime, contra sextum cum minore, and has been punished with a ban on wearing ecclesiastical garb, this penalty serves the purposes of evangelisation no less than the sign of ecclesiastical dress in the case of a cleric wearing such garb.
3. Remedying the Order Infringed by the Offence
In the Apostolic Constitution,
Pascite Gregem Dei reforming canon penal law, Pope Francis pointed out that there is an increasing need in local communities to restore justice and order that have been violated by crime. The canonical order, built on the centuries-old tradition of the Church, is to serve this purpose. In the long and painful process of repairing the order violated by the
delicta graviora in the whole Church, but also by the concrete crime of the individual perpetrator, the warning formulated by Pope emeritus Benedict XVI must be considered: “The crisis, caused by the many cases of clerical abuse, urges us to regard the Church as something almost unacceptable, which we must now take into our own hands and redesign. But a self-made Church cannot constitute hope”
8.
By imposing expiatory punishments, we not only break with the scandalous inactivity and passivity that dominated the thinking of Church superiors for decades, but we return to the sources of Christianity. As Pope Benedict XVI stated elsewhere: “Today we have to learn all over again that love for the sinner and love for the person who has been harmed are correctly balanced if I punish the sinner in the form that is possible and appropriate” (
Benedict XVI and Seewald 2010, p. 26). It is recognised in the doctrine that expiation in canonical penal law enlivens the canonical order, whose supreme law is the
salus animarum (
Bernal 1998, p. 596;
Roca Fernández 2014, p. 423;
Cito 2023, pp. 216–17).
As José Bernal noted, the law does not consider evil in all its dimensions, but only in the perspective of social relations. The punishment is to ensure that the perpetrator is restored to the space of social relations. In other words, if he is thrown out of the dynamics of social coexistence as a result of crime, he is reintegrated into the community as a result of punishment. The author calls it the “social reintegration of the subject” and even speaks of “the right of the accused to punishment”. He has an inalienable dignity that crime can overshadow, but it never tolerates it. The imposition of punishment thus confirms the inalienable dignity of the criminal (
Bernal 1998, pp. 600–1).
The actions taken by John Paul II, Benedict XVI and Francis, especially the latest amendment to Book VI, allow us to put forward the thesis that it is not possible for the “social reintegration of the subject” to happen without conscientious application of penal and disciplinary provisions. As Pope Francis has stated, “In the past, great damage was done by a failure to appreciate the close relationship existing in the Church between the exercise of charity and recourse—where circumstances and justice so require—to disciplinary sanctions. This manner of thinking—as we have learned from experience—risks leading to tolerating immoral conduct, for which mere exhortations or suggestions are insufficient remedies. This situation often brings with it the danger that over time such conduct may become entrenched, making correction more difficult and in many cases creating scandal and confusion among the faithful. For this reason, it becomes necessary for bishops and superiors to inflict penalties. Negligence on the part of a bishop in resorting to the penal system is a sign that he has failed to carry out his duties honestly and faithfully”
9.
Can a ban on the use of ecclesiastical dress contribute to the social reintegration of the offender? According to del Pozzo, the use of ecclesiastical should, as a rule, be a source of unity and communion among clergy, created, among other things, by deep bonds of fraternity, cooperation, and co-responsibility (
Del Pozzo 2018, p. 224). As already mentioned, deprivation of ecclesiastical garb is also a sign of remaining in ecclesiastical punishment, participation in expiation, taking responsibility for one’s actions; it can also be a sign of unity, communion and co-responsibility for the Church striving for healing and renewal. The punished person is not in a state of enmity with the Church. By the punishment imposed, the Church wants to make the faithful aware of the evil of the crime committed and the extent of the harm caused to the community (
De Paolis 2005, pp. 158–59). As Pope Francis reminds us, respect for and observance of penal discipline is the duty of the entire People of God. It should be understood as fulfilling the postulate of love towards the Church, the Christian community and possible victims, as well as towards those who have committed a crime and who at the same time need the mercy and correction of the Church
10.
The correct application of the canonical penal procedure seems to be an indispensable element in the restoration of justice and contributes to the process of healing. A cleric who accepts the penalty of not wearing ecclesiastical garb should be aware that the person harmed by him has the right to make such a decision and so does the family of that person and the parish or diocesan community. Truth and justice are a prerequisite for the healing process of the wounded person but also of the community
11.
In recent decades, much effort has been made in the Church to overcome the anti-juridical mentality that has threatened canonical penal law and has made ecclesiastical superiors passive in the face of the gravest crimes of their subjects. It is now much clearer that the canonical sanction, in addition to the function of reparation, seeks above all the good of the faithful, repairing the social order violated by crime (
Sánchez-Girón Renedo 2022, pp. 725–63). It would be a mistake to reduce the repair of the social order to the social reintegration of the criminal who has distanced himself from the community and aspires to fully return to it. The penalty of deprivation of ecclesiastical garb as a sign of unity and co-responsibility for the Church should, in the spirit of communion, express social disapproval of evil, about which John Paul II wrote in a letter to American bishops in the context of canonical sanctions. This and other canonical penalties “give a social expression of disapproval for the evil are fully justified. These help to maintain a clear distinction between good and evil, and contribute to moral behaviour as well as to creating a proper awareness of the gravity of the evil involved” (
John Paul II 1993).
4. Priority to Repair the Damage Caused to the Victim of a Crime
The doctrine has consistently emphasised that expiatory penalties are aimed at restoring the social order violated by the crime, because the damage caused in the ecclesiastical order should be duly compensated, which, as has been shown, is achieved through reparation in the form of a penalty imposed (
Green 2000, pp. 1529–604). The recent reforms in canonical penal law, especially the amendment of Book VI, urge us to look at the harm that needs to be compensated not only as a scandal, a sociological phenomenon, a grave violation of moral principles, a serious crime within the Church, but as an injury to a specific person—having a face, identity, sensitivity, spirituality, rights in the Church, life history, etc. In the past, such an approach was lacking both in ecclesiastical laws, as well as in the application of the law by superiors.
In 2010, in the
Historical Introduction to the norms of the Motu Proprio
Sacramentorum sanctitatis tutela, it was admitted that in the past the Church’s attention was too often focused on the person of the perpetrator in the sense of restoring him to society, ignoring the wronged. It was expected that the bishop would be able to “heal” rather than “punish”. An overly optimistic belief in the benefits of psychological therapies has conditioned many decisions concerning the staff of dioceses and religious institutes, sometimes without due consideration for the possibility of recidivism
12. Recognising the danger of the latter could properly distribute emphasis and care for both the victims and potential victims. The right of the Church to inflict penal sanctions derives from the very structure of the Church and is dictated by the necessity of its supernatural purpose:
salus animarum (
Di Mattia 1990, p. 651). Therefore, it is not only about the
salus animae (salvation of the soul) of the perpetrator himself, but about the
salus animarum (salvation of the souls); that is, about the most deeply understood good of the ecclesial community, with the good of the wronged person coming to the fore.
The mention of too frequent concentration on the perpetrator is also evident in canon 1395 CIC/83 before the amendment. The obligation of ecclesiastical celibacy was declared an object of special protection, contrary to the legislation of 1917
13, in which good morals (
boni mores) were recognised as the object of protection in canon 2359 § 2. A step in the right direction was the norms on
delicta graviora, which returned to the traditional definition of the object of protection, stipulating in Article 6 § of the SST/2010 that these are offences against decency (
delicta contra mores). This does not exclude the special obligation of clergy under the law on ecclesiastical celibacy. Piotr Skonieczny stated that “It is possible, however, that the divergence of the object of protection in the 1983 Code and the 2010
Delicta Graviora Norms stems from the failure to harmonise the Law on the Roman Curia with the Latin Code of 1983. Article 52 of that law expressly provides for
delicta contra mores, as does Article 6 of the SST/2010” (
Skonieczny 2017, p. 138)
14.
Although, from the point of view of the art of law-making, such “harmonization” should take place, in this case, the “lack of consistency” on the part of the legislator turned out to be the right action from today’s perspective.
The foregoing considerations should be regarded as an accurate description of the effect, but not as a reason for, giving greater attention to the offender in the past. The answer to the question as to why the victim of a crime is relegated to the background seems fundamental to understanding the meaning of the reform of Book VI, as a result of which, among other things, a ban on the use of ecclesiastical dress was introduced. The real reason for the reform is to be found in the broader phenomenon of clericalism, which is the subject of severe criticism in the teaching of Pope Francis. According to the Holy Father, clericalism is a denial of the understanding of the Church as the people of God, the reason for perversions in the exercise of power within it and behaviour contrary to the message of the Gospel. In the Pope’s opinion, clericalism is one of the most serious causes of the crisis in the Church, related to paedophile scandals among the clergy (
Francis 2015).
It is worth looking at Thomas Schärtl’s criticism of clericalism. The previous understanding of the sacrament of Holy Orders has largely been based on a theology tinged with Jansenism, which is ethical-elitist and mystical in character, negating the “I” of the person receiving ordination in order to be able to act in
Persona Christi. This approach led to cultivating the awareness of priestly elites and their uniqueness. According to the author, the crisis of office in the Church can only be overcome through a theology of spirituality of ministry that takes the incarnation-sacramental dimension of Christianity more seriously. In this way, the ordained person, in his task of representing Christ and leading the community, is an instrument of salvation, whose effectiveness and credibility are intrinsically linked to his actions. Authenticity is not guaranteed to the recipient by self-denial, but by self-reconciliation by self-acceptance, in which one’s own imperfections and limitations are not repressed or embellished but harnessed to the realisation of one’s vocation in life (
Schärtl 2018, pp. 764–66).
Being an instrument of salvation, by vocation and office, is connected with the necessity of a personal approach; that is, placing the other person at the centre. Special obligations—moral and legal—are towards the person who has been harmed. For this to happen, one must first be reconciled with oneself, because—as Schärtl stated—one cannot be an instrument of salvation while falsifying one’s own actions. This is the opposite of all the mechanisms of denial or embellishment that have caused much evil in the Church. It will lead the community to regain credibility lost as a result of scandal.
The awareness of the danger of clericalism, in the drafting of laws and their application by superiors, made it possible to carry out reforms that make it possible to repair the harm inflicted on the victims of crime. Even before the amendment of Book VI, canonists from all over the world noticed inconsistencies in the approach to crimes contra sextum minore, proposing de lege ferendae (from law to be passed).
P. Skonieczny stated that title V in the new
Book VI should be changed. He proposed adding the words,
ac (bonos) mores—along the lines of CIC/17. Thus, the new title V would be, according to Skonieczny, “
De delictis contra speciales obligationes ac (bonos) mores” (
Skonieczny 2017, p. 139). As a result of the amendment, sexual offences against minors have been moved from the chapter, “offences against special obligations” (Cann. 1392–1396) to the chapter, “offences against the human life, dignity and freedom” (Cann. 1397–1398). In this way, the legislator makes it clear that in the foreground is not a priest breaking his obligations, but a victim of crime. It also affects the perception of the source of evil of such an act—it is not the priest’s violation of the obligation of sexual abstinence, but above all the violation of the dignity of the victim.
Derek P. Farrell, Richard Sipe and Diana R. Garland point to the multidimensionality of the crime of sexual abuse of minors by clergy. It consists of several elements related to the biblical image of man, created by God in his image and likeness. These include human dignity, which is not an added quality but linked to the very fact of existence. The same applies to the capacity for a relationship with another man, in which man’s vocation to love, that is, to the fullness of humanity, is realised. In the biblical vision of humanity, special importance is attached to concern for the welfare of children and other people in need of care (biblical “little ones”). The abuse of another human being, and especially the abuse of a child—regardless of whether the perpetrator is a cleric or not—is a denial of this dignity and this vocation and undermines the very foundation of humanity (
Farrell 2009, pp. 39–53;
Sipe 2011, pp. 117–30;
Garland 2013, pp. 66–96).
What are the consequences when the penalty inflicted for the offence
contra sextum minore is the prohibition of the use of ecclesiastical dress? This punishment is part of the logic of the absolute priority given to the victim, although at first sight it may seem that it concerns only the perpetrator. It is necessary to recognise this as an indisputable necessity to help the weakest faithful of the Church, especially the wronged, because—as Pope Francis stated, “The heart-wrenching pain of these victims, which cries out to heaven, was long ignored, kept quiet or silenced. But their outcry was more powerful than all the measures meant to silence it or sought even to resolve it by decisions that increased its gravity by falling into complicity”
15.
Therefore, the imposition of a punishment depriving the ecclesiastical garb is fully justified when there is a reasonable presumption that wearing the costume by the perpetrator will become a cause of pain and suffering for the victims, deepen their trauma and cause justified opposition. As already mentioned, ecclesiastical dress has the character of a sign that distinguishes the cleric from the secular environment in which he lives. It emphasises all that is connected with the priestly mission and the special status of the cleric in society. In the pastoral care of children and young people, the relationship with the priest is connected with the feeling that he is “someone apart from” other members of the community, because he represents God on earth and teaches on his behalf what is good and what is bad. Ecclesiastical dress is an external sign of this, and, for minors, whose thinking is often visual, it has a special meaning.
Farrell pointed to the specific effects that sexual abuse by a clergyman caused in the victim, whom the minor most often identified by the ecclesiastical dress. These effects occur additionally, regardless of the concomitant symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. These include a contradiction between the theological message received and the actual experience, difficulties in prayer, disturbance of one’s own spiritual identity, inability to use the sacraments, and a change in the approach to the Church. Traumatisation often takes place due to contact with the institutional Church (
Farrell 2009, pp. 39–53). The prohibition on the use of ecclesiastical dress imposed on the perpetrator may contribute to counteracting traumatisation, because the institutional Church sends a clear signal that the punished priest has betrayed his mission and proved unworthy to wear ecclesiastical garb, which in itself is a positive sign transmitting evangelical content.
5. Postulate to the Conference of Bishops—Noticing the Culture-Forming Dimension of Punishment
In can. 136 § 1 CIC/1917, it is indicated that every cleric is obliged to wear a dignified ecclesiastical garb according to legitimate local customs and the ordinances of the local ordinary. CIC/1983 contains an analogous regulation on the subject in canon 284. The fundamental difference lies in the fact that the body empowered to issue particular norms is now the conference of bishops and not the local Ordinary.
What should guide the conference of bishops when issuing norms regarding ecclesiastical dress? The CIC/1983 maintains the principle that has been in force for centuries, that a uniform dress for the whole Church not be introduced. The cut of the cassock known today in many countries comes from the seventeenth century, but there are differences conditioned by local customs. In many countries, according to the local custom, the ecclesiastical dress is also the so-called short outfit, i.e., dark trousers and a jacket and a dark shirt with a Roman collar (
Krukowski 2005, pp. 107–8).
In addition to factual customs (consuetudo facti)—behaviours commonly accepted in a given community and having the potential to transform into a source of binding norm of conduct—a good legislator should take into account the principles of lawgiving. The incentives for changes in the law are numerous and diverse. It cannot be otherwise, since the reality that is subject to regulation is constantly changing and evolving under the influence of heterogeneous factors. The Conference of Bishops, indicated in canon 284 as the legislator competent for ecclesiastical dress, is to be guided by the principle, Lex sequitur vitam, so that the norms created may be rational. The norms of law are constantly evolving as the lives of the addressees, their aspirations, needs and problems change. This changing reality must be regulated. The punishment of crimes contra sextum minore is no longer a question of punishment in the canonical sense of the word, but of general prevention, having a broad impact on mentality and culture, so that the punishment imposed, as well as the possible precepts that accompany it, change the thinking of the faithful, both clergy and laity.
The problem of sexual abuse among clergy has become one of the main challenges faced by legislators in the Church. The need to change canon law in the face of deepening problems in the United States and Ireland resulted in the issuance of the norm De gravioribus delictis from 2001. Since then, various norms have been issued, at the universal and particular levels, to discipline the clergy and prevent transgressions. A particularly significant event should be considered the amendment of Book VI, as a result of which, among other things, a prohibition against wearing ecclesiastical dress as an expiatory punishment was introduced into the code, which could be imposed in the event of a crime contra sextum minore.
Pope Francis published a
Letter to the People of God, in which he called for prayer and penance for the sins of the people of the Church. The Holy Father wrote that “Looking back to the past, no effort to beg pardon and to seek to repair the harm done will ever be sufficient. Looking ahead to the future, no effort must be spared to create a culture able to prevent such situations from happening, but also to prevent the possibility of their being covered up and perpetuated”
16.
In creating a culture capable of opposing evil and changing mentality, signs and symbols play an important role. An example of the latest activities of symbolic significance, widely discussed and criticised, which shows their potential to influence the mentality of recipients, is the decision of the church authorities in the archdiocese of Paderborn, where next to the graves of two cardinals who were diocesan bishops in the past, a plaque was placed informing about their negligence in dealing with cases of abuse. According to the archdiocesan spokeswoman, visitors to the crypts will be able to learn not only about the mistakes made by the hierarchs, but also to obtain information about their merits
17.
As has already been mentioned many times, both wearing ecclesiastical garb and the deprivation of it should be understood in terms of a sign. The conference of bishops which issue norms on ecclesiastical dress in accordance with canon 284 should consider other signs and symbols that promote a culture of solidarity with the victims. Man, as a spiritual-bodily being, in all the manifestations of his activity by a clergyman—in knowledge and love, in discovering and expressing meaning, and in interpersonal contacts—needs the mediation of what is material, what is sensual; he needs the mediation of signs and symbols. This also applies to the relationships, man—God, man—another man, man—community. Therefore, the conference of bishops, as legislator, should establish rules for the use of a graphic sign expressing solidarity with those who have been harmed. For example, it could be used as a pin for a cassock or jacket. Such symbols have repeatedly played a culture-forming role, shaping awareness and expressing an important message. One can mention, for example, the graphic sign of the “Solidarity” movement, which in the 80s, next to the Coca-Cola logo, became one of the most recognisable in the world. If the punishment of deprivation of ecclesiastical garb is to aim at the social reintegration of the perpetrator, he should, also through an external symbol, show solidarity with the victims of harm. Creating the possibility of using such a sign for clerics wearing ecclesiastical dress, as well as other believers, would prevent the stigmatisation of the punished clergyman if he was ordered to wear such a sign as part of the punishment served.
6. Conclusions
As a result of expiatory penalties, the punished offender has the opportunity to compensate for his act. The crime, contra sextum cum minore is considered one of the most serious in the Church, which was confirmed by the universal legislator, counting these acts as delicta graviora. The expiatory penalty prohibition against wearing ecclesiastical dress was introduced into the CIC/1983 as a result of the latest amendment and may be imposed on perpetrators of such crimes as a means of redress. This prohibition deprives the perpetrator of the prestige resulting from wearing ecclesiastical dress and is also a sign of identifying the perpetrator as a destroyer of the social order, who has betrayed his ministry. These are essential elements of the expiation proper to this punishment.
It should be considered prudent for this penalty to be imposed as one of the penalties, together with the more burdensome sanctions, so that the degree of inconvenience imposed on the offender meets the requirement of a just and proportionate punishment. This is required by the restoration of justice in the ecclesial community, the social reintegration of the perpetrator, reparation to the members of the community, with absolute priority given to the person harmed. The prohibition of the use of ecclesiastical dress is part of the above objectives, and, in addition to the perpetrator himself, it can have a positive effect on the victim of crime: help to restore lost peace of mind, in therapy, in forgiveness and reconciliation with the institution of the Church, and, perhaps, even with the perpetrator himself.
In the creation of norms concerning the wearing of ecclesiastical garb, to which conferences of bishops are entitled according to can. 284, it is useful to establish rules for the use of a graphic sign expressing solidarity with those harmed in the form of a pin to a cassock or jacket. The order to wear such a sign, so that the deprivation of ecclesiastical dress would acquire an even deeper expiatory meaning, could be an element of the punishment served. In addition to the expiation of the offender, attention should be paid to the potential of such juridical solutions in a culture-forming and mentally changing sense, so that the whole community feels responsible for the protection of minors in the Church.