The Catholic Book Club discussion

This topic is about
Prison Journal, Volume 1 The Cardinal Makes His Appeal
Prison Journal - Jan 2025
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4. Presumption of innocence
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My answer to some of these questions:
d) and b) As a precautionary measure, the Australian Church forbade Cardinal Pell the public exercise of ministry and any contact with minors. Pope Francis upheld this decision.
My personal opinion: The practical effect of the precautionary measure was nil. Being in jail and in solitary confinement, Cardinal Pell couldn't exercise his ministry publicly and had no contact, not just with minors, but with anybody. Therefore the import of this measure was just publicity, to make it appear that the Church did something. I think they should have waited until the appeals ended.
d) and b) As a precautionary measure, the Australian Church forbade Cardinal Pell the public exercise of ministry and any contact with minors. Pope Francis upheld this decision.
My personal opinion: The practical effect of the precautionary measure was nil. Being in jail and in solitary confinement, Cardinal Pell couldn't exercise his ministry publicly and had no contact, not just with minors, but with anybody. Therefore the import of this measure was just publicity, to make it appear that the Church did something. I think they should have waited until the appeals ended.
a) From the reading of this book, it follows that the Australian justice system failed. In his trial, George Pell was considered guilty by the jury against the judge's advice. In his first appeal, two of the three judges considered him guilty in spite of all the proofs in his favor. The third judge strongly disagreed. Finally, in the second appeal, he was considered innocent by 7 votes against 0, which proves the failures in the preceding trials.
In general, I would say that this provides another argument against the trial by jury institution .
In general, I would say that this provides another argument against the trial by jury institution .
c) The Holy See's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) initiated its own investigation of the charges against Pell, but the Vatican also said the CDF would await a "definitive judgment" from the Australian courts in the case. The CDF's investigations concluded upon Pell's acquittal by the High Court. So this action cannot be considered a breach of the presumption of innocence.

Jill wrote: "Was he lax in dealing with accused priests in his diocese?"
He was not accused of that. He was accused of direct (historical) sexual abuse, in conditions where several witnesses declared such sexual abuse would be impossible.
I think it's obvious that the Australian public had been prepared by the media to condemn the Catholic Church and any of its members whatever the circumstances.
He was not accused of that. He was accused of direct (historical) sexual abuse, in conditions where several witnesses declared such sexual abuse would be impossible.
I think it's obvious that the Australian public had been prepared by the media to condemn the Catholic Church and any of its members whatever the circumstances.


I think Manuel is right to say "I think it's obvious that the Australian public had been prepared by the media to condemn the Catholic Church and any of its members whatever the circumstances."
Jill wrote: "I knew that wasn't the accusation that landed him in jail, but I wondered if there was something of that sort that stirred up criticism or influenced public opinion."
I haven't heard anything in that direction, and the Wikipedia (which has a long page about Cardinal Pell) does not mention anything either.
I haven't heard anything in that direction, and the Wikipedia (which has a long page about Cardinal Pell) does not mention anything either.


Fonch wrote: "I ask a question: was this not condemnation because Cardinal Pell was a stumbling block against the atheistic secularism that we are currently living in, and therefore it was appropriate to put him..."
What I find most surprising is the fact that the first appeal was rejected 2-1. The failures in the previous conviction by a jury manipulated by the prosecution were evident. The prosecutor himself failed blatantly in public, before everybody, during the appeal, which was shown online. Everybody agreed on that. However, two of the three judges decided to repeal the appeal.
The only explanation is that they acted following an ideology that wanted a scapegoat to pay for all cases of pederastia in the Church, regardless of his being guilty or innocent. Therefore those two judges did not act fairly and in justice. They failed in their calling as judges.
The proof is that the second appeal to the Australian Supreme Court was decided 7-0 in favour of Pell's innocence. But by then, Pell had had to be over one year in jail.
What I find most surprising is the fact that the first appeal was rejected 2-1. The failures in the previous conviction by a jury manipulated by the prosecution were evident. The prosecutor himself failed blatantly in public, before everybody, during the appeal, which was shown online. Everybody agreed on that. However, two of the three judges decided to repeal the appeal.
The only explanation is that they acted following an ideology that wanted a scapegoat to pay for all cases of pederastia in the Church, regardless of his being guilty or innocent. Therefore those two judges did not act fairly and in justice. They failed in their calling as judges.
The proof is that the second appeal to the Australian Supreme Court was decided 7-0 in favour of Pell's innocence. But by then, Pell had had to be over one year in jail.

I just finished the book; I was surprised that it ended before the failure of the appeal. Based on everything we're told, it is shocking that it failed. Thank God he was finally exonerated and freed.
Kristi wrote: "I just finished the book; I was surprised that it ended before the failure of the appeal. Based on everything we're told, it is shocking that it failed. Thank God he was finally exonerated and freed."
The book was too long and it was divided in three volumes for publication. As Cardinal Pell was 60 weeks in jail, each volume deals with 20 weeks, regardless of where the end of each part falls.
The book was too long and it was divided in three volumes for publication. As Cardinal Pell was 60 weeks in jail, each volume deals with 20 weeks, regardless of where the end of each part falls.

Yes, I meant volume 1 -- since it's "The Cardinal Makes His Appeal," I thought it would end w/ the result of the appeal. Thx for explaining about it being divided into equal parts.
Do you think the following entities complied with the presumption of innocence in the case of Cardinal Pell?
a) The Australian justice system
b) Pope Francis
c) The Holy See's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
d) The Australian Church
e) The Australian people and the media
f) The people, everywhere else
g) Yourself
In general: Do you think priests accused of pederastia are subject to condemnation before being proved guilty?