Pontifical secret
The pontifical secret, pontifical secrecy, or papal secrecy is the code of confidentiality that, in accordance with the Latin canon law of the Catholic Church as modified in 1983, applies in matters that require greater than ordinary confidentiality:
Pontifical secrecy is the subject of the instruction Secreta continere of 4 February 1974 issued by the Secretariat of State. The text is published in Acta Apostolicae Sedis, 1974, pages 89–92.
Its applicability in cases of Catholic Church [sexual abuse cases|accusations and trials involving abuse of minors or vulnerable persons] and in cases of possession of child pornography by clerics was removed on 17 December 2019. Its use in such cases had been condemned by German Cardinal Reinhard Marx at the Meeting on the Protection of Minors in the Church held in the Vatican from 21 to 24 February 2019.
Matters covered by pontifical secret
The instruction Secreta continere lists ten classes of matters covered by the pontifical secret:- Preparation of papal documents, if pontifical secrecy is expressly demanded
- Information obtained officially by the Secretariat of State in connection with questions requiring pontifical secrecy
- Notifications sent to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith about teachings and publications and the Congregation's examination of them
- Extrajudicial denunciations of crimes against the faith and morals or against the sacrament of Penance, while safeguarding the right of the person denounced to be informed of the denunciation, if his defence against it makes this necessary. The name of the person making the denunciation may be made known to him only if it is judged necessary to have a face-to-face confrontation between denouncer and denounced.
- Reports by papal legates on matters covered by pontifical secrecy.
- Information obtained officially with regard to the naming of cardinals
- Information obtained officially with regard to the naming of bishops and papal legates and the relative inquiries.
- Information obtained officially with regard to the naming of the chief officers of the Roman Curia.
- All matters concerning cipher systems and enciphered messages.
- Any matter that the Pope, a Cardinal in charge of a department of the Roman Curia, or a papal legate considers to be of such importance that it requires the protection of papal secrecy.
Matters excluded from the pontifical secret
- violence or abuse of authority in forcing sexual acts,
- sexual abuse of minors or vulnerable persons,
- paedophilia involving children under 18 years of age or with incapacitated subjects,
- concealment of those conducts from ecclesiastical or civil inquiries.
On its part, Prof. Giuseppe Dalla Torre, former president of the Vatican City State Tribunal, observed that the lifting of the Pontifical secret was due to the fact that:
According to Archbishop Charles Scicluna, adjunct secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the abolition of pontifical secrecy means that:
Sanctions for violation
While violation of pontifical secrecy, if deliberate, is a grave sin, and while an automatic excommunication may sometimes be imposed for violation of secrecy on particular matters, the general rule is only that, if the violation becomes known outside of Confession, a penalty proportionate to the wrongdoing and the damage caused is to be inflicted.An example of the imposition of automatic excommunication for violation of secrecy was found in the 1962 instruction Crimen sollicitationis, which imposed this penalty on members of a Church tribunal trying a priest accused of making sexual advances to a penitent in connection with the sacrament of Penance, if they violated secrecy about developments in the course of the ecclesiastical trial. A person to whom such advances were made was, on the contrary, subjected to excommunication if that person failed to denounce the priest within at most one month.
Thus the procedures of the Church tribunal were covered by papal secrecy, but the crime of the priest was not: "These matters are confidential only to the procedures within the Church, but do not preclude in any way for these matters to be brought to civil authorities for proper legal adjudication. The Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People of June, 2002, approved by the Vatican, requires that credible allegations of sexual abuse of children be reported to legal authorities."