Women priests, homosexuality, not closed debate in Church, German bishop
says
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[November 19, 2022]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - A leading German
Catholic bishop on Saturday contested the Vatican's view that debates
about women priests and homosexuality were closed, saying they will have
to be confronted in the future.
Bishop Georg Baetzing spoke at a news conference at the end of a week of
talks between Pope Francis and Vatican officials on one side, and all of
Germany's bishops on the other.
They centred on a controversial German progressive movement, known as
the "Synodal Path", that aims to give lay Catholics a say on some
doctrinal matters as well as the appointment of bishops.
The movement has alarmed Catholic conservatives and moderates around the
world, who fear that it could lead to massive splintering similar to
what happened in Anglican and Protestant Churches after they introduced
similar changes in recent decades.
"As far as the ordination of women is concerned, for example, (the
Vatican's) view is very clear, that the question is closed. But the
question exists and it has to elaborated and discussed," said Baetzing,
who is bishop of Limburg and head of the German Bishops Conference.
The Catholic Church teaches that women cannot be priests because Jesus
chose only men as his apostles and that while same-sex attraction is not
sinful, homosexual acts are.
Some Church progressives want the Catholic catechism to be changed so
that it does not condemn homosexual acts in a committed relationship and
to open a process leading to women's ordination.
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Chairman of the German Bishops'
Conference, Bishop of Limburg and President of the Synodal Way Georg
Baetzing holds a news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, February 5,
2022. REUTERS/Timm Reichert/File Photo
"All these questions are on the table (of the German Synodal Path)
and all attempts of cancel them will not have success," Baetzing
said.
"Popes have tried to say the question (of women priests) is closed
but the fact is that the question exists. Many young women say 'a
church that refuses all of this cannot be my church in the long
run,'" he said.
In 2021 the Vatican's doctrinal office ruled that priests cannot
bless same-sex unions.
In September, Flemish Roman Catholic bishops issued a document
allowing the practice.
Asked if he would bar priests in his diocese from blessing same-sex
unions Baetzing said: "I will not deny God's blessing from those in
committed relationships who are seeking it".
In July, the Vatican tried to slam brakes on the German movement,
saying it risked causing a schism in the universal Church.
Baetzing said he did not see such a risk.
"It (schism) is not an option for any bishop or lay person in
Germany. We are Catholics and we will remain Catholics but we want
to be Catholics in a different way," he said.
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Ros Russell)
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