this post was submitted on 09 May 2025
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The Catholic Church has issued a warning to its clergy in Washington state: Any priest who complies with a new law requiring the reporting of child abuse confessions to authorities will be excommunicated.

https://www.newsweek.com/catholic-church-excommunicate-priests-following-new-us-state-law-2069039

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[–] Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

To be fair, lawyers get to avoid this (I assume).

Lawyers don't get to avoid this. They need to, in fact they are forced to, otherwise the entire legal system fails. There is no justice without privileged defense. That's literally in the fifth amendment.

The desire for clergy not to be mandated reporters goes in the opposite direction from what you suggest. The slippery slope here doesn't lead to breaking freedom of religion, it leads to a religious organization hiding crimes whenever they want.

Leaving an exception in for the confessional when it comes to mandatory reporting would allow any religious group that had a mandate for secrecy to say, ‘We don’t have to report anything.’”

Confession requires penitance. They must confess and repent to God, but there is no reason why the penitance for Catholic confession can't involve actually fucking answering for your crimes.

[–] Cethin@lemmy.zip 3 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

The desire for clergy not to be mandated reporters goes in the opposite direction from what you suggest. The slippery slope here doesn't lead to breaking freedom of religion, it leads to a religious organization hiding crimes whenever they want.

It is not the opposite direction. It's the same direction in a different system. Their religious system fails if confession isn't only between you and the clergy.

I don't think we want to be in a position where someone confesses that they aided with an illegal abortion, like they're required to by their religion, and is arrested for it. Not all laws are good or just. If mandatory reporting for one crime is made, there's no reason it shouldn't expand to more/all crimes.

Leaving an exception in for the confessional when it comes to mandatory reporting would allow any religious group that had a mandate for secrecy to say, ‘We don’t have to report anything.’”

No, they only don't have to report confessions. They'd still be legally required to report if they discover crimes happening, like other clergy committing crimes. It'd only be things said in the confession box that are safe.

I don't like religion, and I really dislike organized religion, but I also hate giving the state power over people's lives. We bend over backwards to get revenge in our society, to a massive detriment to ourselves. We give up so much just so we can get back at someone else. We need to stop this. Freedom is important. Yes, security is nice too, but how much security does this buy for the amount of freedom it could lose?

[–] Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com -1 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

Not all laws are good or just.

And yet, it's effectively a universal truth that child sexual abuse is the gravest offense imaginable, and a very common result of religious secrecy is covering up child sexual abuse.

Slippery slopes are fallacies for a reason. We can all fucking agree on a law against child sexual abuse being fair and just. When it comes to anything else, we can have that conversation.

No, they only don’t have to report confessions. They’d still be legally required to report if they discover crimes happening, like other clergy committing crimes.

Except for the fact that there's a legal loophole in place for confession. If you subpeona a priest who saw someone commit a crime, all he has to say is "I cannot testify, it is against my religion."

Do you understand the issue? The priest can't ever say "I can't testify because I heard it in confession" because that in and of itself is a breach of the seal of confession.

So he can only say "I cannot testify" and we all have to leave it at that.

[–] Cethin@lemmy.zip 3 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago) (1 children)

Slippery slopes are fallacies for a reason.

Slippery slope is a type of fallacy. It isn't fallacious always.

'in its barest bones, a slippery-slope argument is of the following form:

“If A, which some people want, is done or allowed, then B, which most people don’t want, will inevitably follow. Therefore, let’s not do or allow A.” 

The fallacy occurs when that form is not fleshed out by sufficient reasons to believe that B will inevitably follow from A'

(https://intellectualtakeout.org/2016/03/not-every-slippery-slope-argument-is-a-fallacy/)

Saying that this would create a precident to include other crimes being required to be reported is not fallacious.

If you subpeona a priest who saw someone commit a crime, all he has to say is "I cannot testify, it is against my religion."

That's just blatantly incorrect. They're not required to report on stuff they're told in confessionals and that's all. They're still required to report on crimes they witness, just like everyone else. Do you think lawyers are t required to report crimes they witness?

Do you understand the issue? The priest can't ever say "I can't testify because I heard it in confession" because that in and of itself is a breach of the seal of confession.

So he can only say "I cannot testify" and we all have to leave it at that.

Yes, just as a lawyer would have to do when questioned about a client. Anything they did outside of attorney-client privledge they must speak about, it'd be the same for the clergy. It's not an issue for lawyers, so I don't see an issue for the clergy.

In an ideal world they could hear the confessional and check up on the victim. I'm sure this won't always happen, but it may. If they're required to report it, they'll never be told, so can't act on it.

I don't like religion, and especially organized religion. However, this steps too far into a government that forcing it's way into people's lives that I don't like.

[–] Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Yes, just as a lawyer would have to do when questioned about a client. Anything they did outside of attorney-client privledge they must speak about, it’d be the same for the clergy. It’s not an issue for lawyers, so I don’t see an issue for the clergy.

Is this intentionally bad faith, or just a deep misunderstanding of the legal system?

If a lawyer is a witness to a crime that their client committed, and is involved in proceedings related to that crime, they have to recuse themselves from representing the client. They literally cannot be that person's lawyer anymore. They keep all information already held under attorney client privilege, but any future information is no longer protected.

They also have the bar - a legal association specifically dedicated to ensuring that lawyers all comply with the law. If they break the law in the course of their duties, the association exists to prevent them from ever practicing law again.

It's not perfect, but it's something.

It's not the same for the clergy. A priest can be witness to whatever, and there's no legal obligation to stop being the person's priest or hearing their confessions. But there is a tremendous amount of evidence that clergy associations have been exclusively dedicated to ensuring that clergy never face the law at all.

[–] Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 hours ago

If a lawyer is a witness to a crime that their client committed, and is involved in proceedings related to that crime, they have to recuse themselves from representing the client. They literally cannot be that person's lawyer anymore. They keep all information already held under attorney client privilege, but any future information is no longer protected.

Privledged information is protected, yes. Not other information.

They also have the bar - a legal association...

An association of legal professionals, not a legal association. It is private.

...specifically dedicated to ensuring that lawyers all comply with the law. If they break the law in the course of their duties, the association exists to prevent them from ever practicing law again.

Sure, I'd advocate for something like that, though the clergy does have administration that regulates them also. You can argue they should be more strict, but it does exist.