Tuesday 15 October 2013

Catholic priests may be allowed to marry amid Papal changes

The Vatican has opened the door to the possibility of married priests, a move that would go against centuries-old Church tradition. Archbishop Pietro Parolin, who will be the No. 2 in the Catholic church when be becomes secretary of state next month, declared that priestly vow of celibacy derived from an age-old rule but was not Catholic dogma. “It’s not a dogma of the Church and it can be discussed because it’s an… ecclesiastical tradition,” Archbishop Parolin told El Universal in Venezuela, where he is completing his term as Papal Nuncio. “It is a great challenge for the Pope because he has a mission to unite and all these decisions must be taken in a way that unites the Church, rather than dividing it. “At that point, you can talk and reflect and go deeper into these issues that are not defined by faith and think about some changes, but always in the service of unity and as the will of God. It’s not what I want \ but to be faithful to what God wants for his Church.” Archbishop Parolin’s comments come amid upheaval in the Catholic Church, which has been beset by scandals over sex abuse by priests, following the shock resignation of Benedict XVI and the election of Argentine Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio as Pope Francis. Francis has made waves by calling for a “poor Church for the poor.” He has said he wants to boost the role of women in the Church – although he has noted that Pope John Paul II had ruled out the ordination of women. He has also taken a more tolerant stance on homosexuality, declaring: “Who am I to judge?” Yesterday, Francis reached out to non-believers in an unprecedented letter to Italy’s leading left-wing paper La Repubblica to answer a columnist who declared he did not believe in God. The leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics told Eugenio Scalfari, the newspaper’s co-founder and former editor, that non-believers did not commit a sin as long as they followed their conscience. “The question for people who do not believe in God is to listen to their consciences. Also for those without faith, sin is going against your conscience. Listening to it and obeying it means making up one’s mind about what is good and evil.” The Catholic insistence on the celibacy of priests dates back to the first centuries of the Church. The first Church law mandating celibacy was Canon 33 enacted at the Synod of Elvira, now the Spanish city of Grenada, around 305-306 AD. The discipline was definitively reaffirmed at the Council of Trent in the mid-16th century. The Orthodox Church and some Eastern Catholic churches, however, allow married priests. More recently, married Anglican priests have been allowed to enter into communion with the Catholic Church. In March, 21 British Catholic MPs and peers, led by Rob Flello MP and Lord Alton of Liverpool, wrote to Francis to appeal for the married men to be allowed to become priests. They argued it was an anomaly that married Anglican priests can be ordained as Catholic priests but married Catholic men cannot. Francis, in a 2012 interview before becoming Pope, said, however, that he favoured retaining clerical celibacy. “For the moment, I am in favour of maintaining celibacy, with all its pros and cons, because we have ten centuries of good experiences rather than failures. What happens is that the scandals have an immediate impact. Tradition has weight and validity,” the future Pope said. “Catholic ministers chose celibacy little by little. Up until 1100, some chose it and some did not. After, the East followed the tradition of non-celibacy as personal choice, while the West went the opposite way. “It is a matter of discipline, not of faith. It can change. Personally, it never crossed my mind to marry,” he said.

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