Monsignor
Charles Jude Scicluna, auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Malta,
served as the “promoter of justice” of the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith until October 2012.
He was effectively the prosecutor of the tribunal of the former Holy Office, whose job it is to investigate what are known as delicta graviora:
the crimes which the Catholic Church considers as being the most
serious of all and include crimes against the Eucharist and against the
sanctity of the Sacrament of Penance, and crimes against the 6th
Commandment committed by a cleric against a person under the age of
eighteen.
Bishop Scicluna was in fact the man who embodied the
line of zero tolerance of sexual abuse against minors, adopted by
Benedict XVI.
He supported the Pope’s efforts to change canonical
laws and existing laws and above all, the mentality placing special
emphasis on the suffering of abuse victims and promulgating a series of
“emergency” laws.
Speaking to Vatican radio in the days leading
up to Pope Benedict XVIth’s resignation, Mons. Scicluna reflects on the
Pope’s determination to respond adequately to abuse and to safeguard the
innocence of children and young people.
“Pope
Benedict XVIth will certainly be remembered for his extraordinary reply
and response to the very sad phenomenon of sexual abuse of minors by
the clergy.
He was very active during the Pontificate of Blessed John
Paul II, with the Congregation of the Motu Proprio Sacramentorum
Santitatis Tutela, a universal law of the Church which gave very precise
and detailed procedure on how to respond to sexual abuse of minors.
He also revised this law in 2010 making procedures more flexible and assuring an adequate response.
In
his letter to the Church in Ireland in 2010, in his pastoral visits to
the United States, to Malta, to Australia and the United Kingdom he met
and showed great compassion to the victims of abuse. His words will
remain with us as a clear sign of the determination of the Church to
respond adequately to abuse and also to safeguard the innocence of our
children and young people”.