Pope dismisses proposal to ordain married men as priests in Amazon
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[February 12, 2020]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis, in
one of the most significant decisions of his papacy, on Wednesday
dismissed a proposal to allow some married men to be ordained in the
Amazon region to ease an acute scarcity of priests.
The recommendation, put forward by Latin American bishops last year, had
alarmed conservatives in the deeply polarised 1.3 billion-member Roman
Catholic Church, who feared it could lead to a change in the
centuries-old commitment to celibacy among priests.
Francis delivered his response in an Apostolic Exhortation, three months
after the proposal passed by 128 votes to 41 at a contentious Vatican
assembly, or synod, of Roman Catholic bishops.
Apostolic Exhortations are used to instruct and encourage the Catholic
faithful but do not define Church doctrine.
Wednesday's 32-page document did not even mention the proposal, which
was for older married deacons who are proven leaders of remote Catholic
communities and have stable families to be ordained as priests.
Conservatives balked, fearing that even a circumscribed change would be
a slippery slope leading to a married priesthood throughout the Church.
They branded a pre-synod working document as heretical.
In what some viewed as a strategically timed appeal to Francis not to
approve the Amazon proposal, a book published last month by Church
conservatives defended the tradition of priestly celibacy.
"From the Depths of Our Hearts" was co-authored by Cardinal Robert Sarah
and Former Pope Benedict, though Francis' predecessor subsequently
disassociated himself from the project.
Vatican officials said the pope completed the document on Dec. 27,
before the book controversy, and handed it in for translations. They
said no changes were made after that.
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Pope Francis kisses a child during the weekly general audience at
the Vatican, February 12, 2020. REUTERS/Remo Casilli
In the Exhortation, the 82-year-old Argentine pope wrote, new ways
must be found to encourage more priests to work in the remote
region, and allow expanded roles for lay people and permanent
deacons, of whom the Amazon needed "many more".
Deacons, like priests, are ordained ministers. They can preach,
teach, baptise and run parishes, but they cannot say Mass. Married
men can become deacons.
Because only priests can say Mass, people in at least 85% of Amazon
villages cannot attend the liturgy every week and some cannot do so
for years.
"This urgent need leads me to urge all bishops, especially those in
Latin America... to be more generous in encouraging those who
display a missionary vocation to opt for the Amazon region," he
wrote.
He used the first three chapters of the document to defend the
rights and legacies of indigenous people and the environment in the
Amazon, which had to be protected because of its vital role in
mitigating global warming.
Conservatives feared that if Francis had taken up the proposal,
other areas with a shortage of priests would follow, even in
developed countries such as Germany, where the issue is being
discussed.
(Reporting By Philip Pullella; editing by John Stonestreet)
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