World
No change on celibacy, says Vatican
Pope Benedict XVI (left) acknowledges the crowd during his weekly general audience at the Vatican January 14, 2009. Photo/REUTERS
Posted Monday, November 9 2009 at 19:03
VATICAN CITY, Monday
The Vatican said today its plan to allow married Anglican priests to convert to Catholicism does not signal any change to its age-old rule of celibacy for the overwhelming majority of Catholic priests.
The Vatican stressed its position in a preface to Pope Benedict’s Apostolic Constitution “Anglicanorum Coetibus” (Groups of Anglicans) regulating the admission of Anglican converts to Catholicism, including married priests and bishops.
“The possibility envisioned by the Apostolic Constitution for some married clergy within the Personal Ordinariates (the structure for ex Anglicans) does not signify any change in the Church’s discipline of clerical celibacy,” it said.
The Vatican announced last month an initiative to make it easier for conservative Anglicans who feel their church has become too liberal to convert to Catholicism. This stirred widespread speculation on what it could eventually mean for the celibacy rule in the Roman Catholic church.
Also speculation
There was also speculation about whether men who had left the Catholic priesthood to marry and later became Anglicans could return to the Catholic priesthood and remain married.
The constitution ruled out this possibility and also said unmarried Anglican priests who convert must remain celibate after their conversion and ordination as Catholic priests.
The constitution says that “as a rule” only celibate men will be admitted to the Roman Catholic priesthood but that the admission of married Anglican priests will be decided on a case by case basis after a petition made to the pope.
Former Anglican bishops, including married ones, will be eligible to lead groups of former Anglicans in the Catholic Church.
The former Anglican bishops will also have to be ordained as Catholic priests.
The Vatican plan comes after years of discontent in some parts of the 77-million-strong worldwide Anglican community over the ordination of women priests and homosexual bishops.
The papal constitution marks perhaps the clearest and boldest step by the Vatican to welcome disaffected Anglicans since King Henry VIII broke with Rome and set himself up as head of the new Church of England in 1534.
The 9-page constitution says the move was necessary to respond to individuals and groups of Anglicans who had “repeatedly and insistently” petitioned the Vatican to be received into the Catholic Church. It outlines the rules for a structure within the Catholic church under which “ordinariates”, comparable with dioceses, will be set up to administer to groups of Anglicans who convert. (Reuters)
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