Religious conservatives are sometimes skeptical that church
and state should be separated. Here’s one case for keeping the two apart:
the Church, and the faith it promulgates, must be protected from invasion by
secular authorities. This is especially crucial in our times when few spheres
of life are protected from violation by secular authorities. We live in a culture
of statism, when police power operates as if it were the highest social authority.
Given this, the Church must retain the sovereignty and independence to stand
up to government and say, when it becomes necessary, your authority stops here.
The moral urgency of this came home recently to a priest in
Eugene, Oregon. In April, Fr. Tim Mockaitis of St. Paul parish traveled to the
Lane County jail on request. An inmate had requested that a priest hear his
confession and administer the Sacrament of Reconciliation. The priest heard
the confession, gave absolution, and traveled on his way.
Two weeks later, he received a phone call from a reporter
at Eugene’s Register Guard. Unknown to Fr. Mockaitis, the confessional
had been bugged and taped by the Sheriffs’ office. That tape was now in
the possession of the Lane County District Attorney. Fr. Mockaitis immediately
called diocesan authorities and explained what had happened. What followed was
a heroic action by the Bishop, who explained the seriousness of the matter.
Under the Catholic Code of Canon Law, said Bishop Kenneth
Steiner, then serving as Archdiocesan Administrator of Portland, a priest is
bound to keep the confidentiality of anything said in the confessional. The
sacramental seal compels secrecy and thus the Church resolutely defends the
inviolability of the priest/penitent relationship. If a priest does betray the
penitent, for any reason whatsoever, he is automatically excommunicated, the
harshest penalty the church can apply.
In the Eugene case, the seal was broken, not by the priest
or the Church, but by secular authorities. The state had not respected the sphere
in which the Church is absolutely autonomous. This intrusion must be seen for
what it is: violence aimed at the heart of the Church’s self-concept as
reconciler of Man to God through the forgiveness of sins. No earthly authority
can justly prohibit or compromise the fulfillment of the Church’s first
duty, which is to administer the sacraments. The tape, said the Bishop, must
be destroyed to guarantee the future integrity of the confessional.
After a visit from the Bishop and lawyers representing the
Archdiocese of Portland, and popular outcry over the incident, the district
attorney turned the tape over to the district court which has permanently sealed
it, but has so far not destroyed it. The Sheriff’s office pledged to keep
away from the confessional, fully in accord with the Constitution’s protections
for the “free exercise” of religion. Yet we have to wonder how close
we are to the day when such protests will be less successful.
Our times are defined by an ever-encroaching state. It was
only a matter of time before even the confessional was no longer safe from the
ears and eyes of the state. Do we no longer know the limits?
At least in this instance, the Church understands the limits
and that they are inviolable. The right to worship is more than a civil right
granted by legislation or court decree. In some areas–the confessional
among them–the Church’s rights are absolute and independently sovereign.
These rights cannot be justly taken away by any court, legislation, or election.
Sadly, the Church is one of the few institutions in our time
with the moral stature and structural means to counter government attempts at
omniscience. Civil libertarians who understand the danger posed by an overly
invasive civil power should learn to appreciate this fact. The separation of
Church and state may keep sectarian prayers out of public classrooms, but it
also keeps wiretaps out of confessionals.
Rev. Robert A. Sirico is President of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty.