Cardinal William Levada, the former prefect of the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), said that he does not anticipate a
downgrading of the Vatican’s doctrinal agency, and expects that the CDF
will continue to handle cases of priests accused of sexual abuse, in a
lengthy interview with the National Catholic Register.
The American prelate, who was appointed as CDF prefect by Pope Benedict XVI, also spoke to the Register about his admiration for the retired Pontiff, and the rigorous approach to sex-abuse cases that Pope Benedict had championed.
Reacting to a question about whether the doctrinal work of the CDF
could be decentralized, with decisions made by national bishops’
conferences, Cardinal Levada demurred. “I don’t think that would be a
useful proposal,” he said. He explained that questions of doctrine
require clear and consistent answers. “There are things that can be
decentralized,” he said, “But ‘independence’ is not the nature of the
relationship. It is solidarity and cohesion.”
The CDF has assumed the responsibility for the prosecution of clerics
in sex-abuse cases.
Although some rumors in Rome have suggested that
the prosecution might be transferred to another Vatican office, Cardinal
Levada was again skeptical.
“The experience that the CDF now has...
would favor the fact that it continues to do this,” he said.
References: