TRIER, Germany — Bishop Stephan Ackermann of Trier has suspended the proceedings for the sainthood cause of Father Joseph Kentenich, founder of the international Schonstatt movement.

The German Catholic news agency KNA reported Ackermann made the decision in consultation with the Vatican because of allegations of sexual assault and abuse of power by Kentenich. KNA said Ackermann called for further research into Father Kentenich, stating that the diocese would not be involved in it.

The allegations against Kentenich were made during an apostolic visitation in the early 1950s but were not uncovered until a researcher found them in the Vatican archives in 2020. Kentenich’s sainthood cause was opened in 1975 in the Diocese of Trier, Germany, and was in the diocesan phase, which is the first step in a candidate’s cause before it is sent to Rome for further investigation.

The allegations from the Schonstatt Sisters of Mary described a questionable “father cult” and leadership style, as well as inadmissible confessional practices and physical touching. The incidents were said to have occurred mainly in the late 1940s.

Kentenich had to leave Germany in 1951 after investigative proceedings in Rome and was sent to the U.S. An American man alleged that Kentenich had sexually abused him between 1958 and 1962. The allegations have already been investigated in the archdiocese of Milwaukee. The new investigation is to determine whether the earlier investigation meets modern criteria.