Chilean bishops and Cardinal Francisco Javier Errazuriz Ossa, retired archbishop of Santiago and a member of Pope Francis' Council of Cardinals, attend a meeting with Pope Francis in the cathedral in Santiago, Chile, Jan. 16. The Pope has accepted the resignation of seven Chilean bishops following an investigation into clerical sex abuse and cover-up.
CNS photo/Paul Haring
Pope accepts resignation of two more Chilean bishops in wake of abuse crisis
By Catholic News Service
VATICAN – Pope Francis accepted the resignations of two more Chilean bishops, bringing to seven the number of bishops who have stepped down since June in response to the clerical sexual abuse scandal in their country.
The Vatican announced Sept. 21 the resignations of 60-year-old Bishop Carlos Pellegrin Barrera of San Bartolome de Chillan and 71-year-old Bishop Cristian Contreras Molina of San Felipe. The normal retirement age for a bishop is 75.
Almost every one of the 34 bishops in Chile had offered his resignation to Pope Francis in mid-May after a three-day meeting at the Vatican to discuss the clerical sexual abuse scandal detailed in a 2,300-page report compiled by Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta and his aide, Father Jordi Bertomeu.
Pope Francis accepted the resignations June 11 of three Chilean bishops, including Bishop Juan Barros of Osorno, who had been accused of witnessing and covering up abuse by his mentor, Father Fernando Karadima. The Pope accepted the resignations of two other bishops June 28.
The Pope has named apostolic administrators for all seven dioceses; he has yet to appoint new bishops to the sees. The Vatican announced Sept. 21 that he named Sacred Heart Father Sergio Perez de Arce to be apostolic administrator of San Bartolome and Father Jaime Ortiz de Lazcano, judicial vicar of the Archdiocese of Santiago, as apostolic administrator of San Felipe.
In a commentary published in April on the website of the Sacred Heart Fathers, Father Perez, his order's delegate for handling abuse claims, praised Pope Francis' letter to the Catholics of Chile on the abuse scandal, but said that more needed to be done, including the resignation of several bishops, especially any who were connected to Father Karadima.
"I cannot claim they committed crimes – I do not know – but the damaging impact of Karadima's abuse" would make it difficult to rebuild the church in Chile as long as anyone connected to him remains in office, Father Perez wrote.
The priest also called in his commentary for the resignation of 76-year-old Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati of Santiago; Cardinal Francisco Errazuriz Ossa's resignation from the Pope's international Council of Cardinals of Cardinal; and the reassignment of 65-year-old Archbishop Ivo Scapolo, who has served as nuncio to Chile since 2011.
Father Perez wrote that Archbishop Scapolo "has not been and will not be the person with the sensitivity and skills needed to support a church in crisis like the Chilean one," and, he said, if Pope Francis had not been accurately informed about what was going on in Chile, one can presume that was partly the nuncio's fault.
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