Vatican City - Pope Benedict XVI said Saturday that clerical sex abuses were "egregious crimes" that had damaged the standing of the Catholic Church and its clergy, in his first explicit remarks on the subject since becoming pontiff.
He told a group of bishops from Ireland — an overwhelmingly Roman Catholic country where all but one seminary has closed following repeated scandals — it was urgent "to rebuild confidence and trust."
"In the exercice of your pastoral ministry, you have had to respond in recent years to many heart-rending cases of sexual abuse of minors," the pontiff told the bishops. "These are all the more tragic when the abuser is a cleric.
"The wounds caused by such acts run deep," Benedict said.
The pope told the bishops that as they continue to deal with the problem, "it is important to establish the truth of what happened in the past, to take whatever steps are necessary to prevent it from occurring again, to ensure that the principles of justice are fully respected and, above all, to bring healing to the victims and to all those affected by these egregious crimes."
Benedict mentioned only the crisis in Ireland, but his comments were likely to resonate in other nations with similar scandals, such as the United States.
In Ireland, the church's moral standing, Mass attendance and applications for priesthood have plummeted since 1994, when the first major scandal involving a pedophile priest triggered the collapse of the government of then-Prime Minister Albert Reynolds.
The total number of accusations against Catholic clergy in the United States now stands at more than 12,000 since 1950, with costs of nearly $1.5 billion, according to figures from various studies by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.