The governing body could learn a few things from this guy:
Pope John Paul II has sent an apology by email for a string of injustices, including sexual abuse, committed by Roman Catholic clergy in Oceania.Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1671000/1671540.stmThe 81-year-old pontiff transmitted the message, his first virtual apology, in a recent string of statements of contrition, from a laptop in the Vatican's frescoed Clementine Hall on Wednesday.
Reporting on a Synod meeting held in 1998, the Pope wrote that bishops from the region "apologised unreservedly" to the churches in Oceania for the "shameful injustices done to indigenous peoples"."The Church expresses deep regret and asks forgiveness where her children have been or still are party to these wrongs," the document said.
The report singled out the "stolen generation" of at least 30,000 Aboriginal children forcibly separated from their parents in a church-backed government attempt to educate them and assimilate them into white culture.
Sexual abuse
His message also addressed the issue of sexual abuse: "In certain parts of Oceania, sexual abuse by some clergy... has caused great suffering and spiritual harm to the victims," the document acknowledged.
The Pope gave no details of the cases he was referring to, but internal Vatican reports documenting instances where priests and missionaries had forced nuns to have sex with them - and even to have abortions afterwards - have come to light in recent years.
"Sexual abuse within the Church is a profound contradiction of the teaching and witness of Jesus Christ.
"The synod fathers wished to apologise unreservedly to the victims for the pain and disillusionment caused to them," the pontiff wrote.
Jews and Orthodox
This is just the latest in a series of papal apologies for the sins of the Roman Catholic church.
Last month Pope John Paul II apologised to China for the errors of missionaries in colonial times.
On controversial visits to both the Ukraine and Greece earlier this year, he asked Orthodox Christians' forgiveness for wrongs committed against them by Roman Catholics.
And in a trip to Israel last year, he publicly asked God's forgiveness for the sins of Roman Catholics through the ages, including wrongs inflicted on Jews, women and minorities.
However, the Pope stopped short of travelling to the other side of the world to deliver this message in person.
"I would have wished to visit Oceania once again," he said, "but it was not to be."
Expatbrit