Czech court halts ratification of Vatican treaty over seal of confession
The constitutional body declared the agreement with the Holy See unlawful, viewing Catholic privileges as a violation of religious equality.
On April 1, 2026, the Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic ruled that certain provisions of the treaty between the state and the Holy See contradict national law. EWTN News reports that the judges’ decision blocked the ratification of the concordat, which had been under preparation for decades.
The court found two aspects of the agreement problematic. The first objection concerned the secrecy of confession, which the treaty proposed to affirm without any exceptions. The judges held that such a provision would be “a clear violation of the neutrality of the state and the principle of equal treatment of different churches.”
The second objection concerned church archives: the document granted Catholic structures the right to withhold documents from the public, exempting them from the general law on archives.
The Czech Bishops’ Conference expressed disagreement with the verdict. Lawyers and legal experts described the ruling as a legal defeat for those who regard religious freedom as an important value in one of Europe’s most secular countries.
Professor of canon law Jiří Rajmund Tretera stressed that the ruling was, in effect, an attack on interfaith peace, since the country’s non-Catholic communities had supported the treaty as a stabilizer of believers’ common rights.
Earlier, the UOJ reported that the UOC-KP had appointed a “bishop” for Czechia.