Catholic leaders in Australia are so concerned about a cache of abuse data to be released on Monday they have warned believers ahead of the shock awaiting them.
The Archbishop of Brisbane, Mark Coleridge, emailed a video message to churchgoers ahead of impending testimony that will highlight the extent of sex abuse in the Australian Catholic Church.
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He warned the Royal Commission into how different institutions handled child sex exploitation had information that offered a "horrific portrait of appalling abuse", according to ABC.
In the video also sent to parents of children at Catholic schools, he said: "The Royal Commission is about to hold its final hearing into the Catholic Church which will be a very challenging time."
Archbishop Coleridge admitted there would be "grim moments and some shocks" in a message that will be aired in more than 200 churches around Brisbane this weekend.
"We have to shift the culture and that's a far more difficult thing to do," he added.
Coleridge's message comes after one of Australia's most senior Catholics and president of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, Archbishop Denis Hart, wrote a letter to 42 dioceses that will be read across the country this weekend.
He said: "For the victims and survivors, for the Catholic community and for many in the wider Australian community, this hearing may be a difficult and even distressing time...deeply mindful of the hurt and pain caused by abuse, I once again offer my apology on behalf of the Catholic Church."