Irish bishops meet to discuss child abuse report

Irish bishops are to consider the implications of a damning report into decades of child abuse by clergy within the Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin.

The Murphy report, which looked at abuse from 1975 to 2004, criticised the Archdiocese for putting its own reputation before the welfare of children by moving suspect priests to a different parish where they were free to abuse more children, instead of reporting them to the authorities.

The talks today come before the bishops are due to meet Pope Benedict at the Vatican next month over the report. The Pope is also preparing a pastoral letter outlining the Vatican’s response and what measures the Irish Church should take in responding to the findings of the Murphy Commission.

It follows on from a meeting between Irish Church leaders and the Pope in December, following which the Pope was said to be “disturbed and distressed”.

Several bishops implicated in the report have since resigned, including the Bishop of Limerick Donal Murray, whose failure to report one case of abuse while serving as an auxiliary bishop in Dublin in the 1980s was branded “inexcusable”.

The Murphy report followed on from the Ryan report published earlier last year, which condemned more than 50 years of child abuse in industrial schools and orphanages run by Catholic orders in Ireland.

News
Pastor considers legal action after arrest over comments on Islam and transgender ideology
Pastor considers legal action after arrest over comments on Islam and transgender ideology

The Alliance Defending Freedom warns of more such arrests if the government introduces its much-maligned definition of 'anti-Muslim hatred'.

Why do Christians observe Shrove Tuesday?
Why do Christians observe Shrove Tuesday?

17 February 2026 is Shrove Tuesday, the traditional day for eating pancakes before the start of Lent. This is the story …

CoE announces £400,000 to get young people into choirs
CoE announces £400,000 to get young people into choirs

Most CoE choirs currently have no children involved.

Christian social worker who lost job offer over marriage and sexuality beliefs wins appeal
Christian social worker who lost job offer over marriage and sexuality beliefs wins appeal

A Christian social worker whose offer of a job was withdrawn over public comments he made about marriage and sexuality has won his case at appeal.