This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

The Pope may be retreating from his crackdown on paedophile priests as Vatican bureaucrats do all they can to undermine reform efforts, a senior Australian Catholic official has warned.

The Catholic Church in Australia could end up as a “marginalised rump” unless there is real change to an institutional culture hell-bent on self-protection and self-preservation, the chief executive of the church’s Truth Justice and Healing Council, Francis Sullivan, has said.

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Sullivan, who has led the Australian church’s response to the four-year child sex abuse royal commission, points to recent developments in Rome.

Pope Francis has told bishops around the world to adhere to a zero-tolerance policy for clergy who sexually abuse children but has reportedly reduced sanctions against some offending priests.

“You have to seriously wonder whether this isn’t the Pope backsliding on what has been a strong and determined crackdown on offending priests and the circumstances that allowed abuse to take place,” he said.

Sullivan said another concerning development was the resignation of Irish clerical abuse survivor and advocate Marie Collins from the Vatican’s child protection commission, citing resistance from the Vatican.



“Together these two developments paint a picture of the Vatican establishment, its bureaucrats and courtiers, doing all they can to either undermine the Pope or driving an agenda that is about maintaining the status quo and protecting the institution.”

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It was a very dangerous time for the Catholic church in Australia, Sullivan said in a speech in Sydney on Friday night that was released to media on Sunday.

“If the church in Australia doesn’t see continuous, concerted change from our leaders driven and backed by an active and demanding Catholic community, then our church as a religion will become a marginalised rump, stripped of credibility and relevance, left to preach to an ever ageing congregation with eyes on an ever dimming hereafter.”

A total of 1,880 priests, religious brothers and sisters, and lay people have been identified as alleged perpetrators in abuse claims made to the Australian Catholic church by 4,444 victims.