Pope Francis has requested that Roman Catholic priests be given the right to get married.
The request applies to priests in Brazil, and is on the agenda for an upcoming synod (church council) in the Amazon region.
The controversial move would address the critical shortage of men joining the priesthood – but is likely to drive divisions through the church by enraging conservative factions.
A small number of married Roman Catholic priests already exist, including previously married Anglican vicars who have joined the church.
A request to lift the ban on marriage was made by Brazilian bishop Cardinal Claudio Hummes, who reportedly asked the Pope to consider ‘viri probati’, meaning married of great faith, as priests.
Derry priest Father Paddy O’Kane
suggested that Pope Francis may move to end celibacy earlier this
month, saying there was support amongst the church for the idea.
Fr O’Kane cited Brazilian liberation theologian
Leonardo Boff, who said: “The Brazilian bishops, especially the pope’s
own personal friend Cardinal Claudio Hummes, have expressly requested
Pope Francis to enable married priest in Brazil to return to pastoral
ministry.“I have recently heard that the pope wants to fulfil this request – as an experimental, preliminary phase for the moment confined to Brazil.”
Earlier this year the Pope told
Die Zeit newspaper: ‘We must consider if ‘viri probati’ is a
possibility. Then we must determine what tasks they can perform, for
example, in remote communities.’
Francis and his predecessor Benedict XVI have both stated that celibacy is not a matter of inflexible church dogma unlike, and could be debated.Yahoo News
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