Child abuse crisis to spark Irish Church shake-up

VATICAN CITY, (Reuters) – Pope Benedict expressed  “outrage, betrayal and shame” yesterday at the sexual abuse of  children by priests in Ireland, which Church leaders said would  lead to a shake-up of the Irish Roman Catholic Church. Church sources expected some bishops to resign in the wake  of a government report that said Church leaders in  overwhelmingly Catholic Ireland had covered up widespread abuse  of children by priests for 30 years.

“I think that we are looking at a very significant  reorganisation of the Church in Ireland,” Dublin Archbishop  Diarmuid Martin said after he and other Irish Church leaders  held an emergency meeting with the Pope.

The Vatican said the pope would write to the Irish people  about the crisis and a plan for action — the first time a pope  will devote a document solely to the clergy’s abuse of children.

“The Holy Father shares the outrage, betrayal and shame felt  by so many of the faithful in Ireland, and he is united with  them in prayer at this difficult time in the life of the  Church,” a Vatican statement said.

Ireland has been in a state of shock since the publication  of the Murphy Commission Report two weeks ago.

The paper said the Church had “obsessively” hidden child  abuse in the Dublin archdiocese from 1975 to 2004, and operated  a policy of “don’t ask, don’t tell”. A number of bishops who worked in Dublin during the period  covered by the report are likely to offer to resign, Church  sources said.

The Vatican statement alluded to this, saying the Vatican  would look into “questions concerning the governance of local  Church leaders with ultimate responsibility for the pastoral  care of children”.

It said the report “deeply disturbed and distressed” the  pope, who expressed “his profound regret at the actions of some  members of the clergy who have betrayed their solemn promises to  God, as well as the trust placed in them by the victims and  their families, and by society at large”.