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Home » Luglio 2006
26/07/2006
Zambia: Archbishop Milingo Outlines His New Mission

Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo says he has no intention of launching a new sect in Africa funded by Rev. Sun Myung Moon as a rival to Roman Catholicism, and charged that his latest break with the Vatican is the result of "intolerable restrictions" imposed on him over the last five years, as well as a deep "lack of appreciation" for his spiritual gifts as an exorcist.

Now, Milingo says, he wants to help reconcile married priests with the Catholic Church, as well as to promote better understanding between Catholicism and Moon's Family Federation for World Peace and Unification.

Milingo spoke to NCR July 14 in an exclusive interview in a hotel room in Arlington, Va., just outside of Washington.

Earlier in the day, Milingo took part in a press conference announcing the formation of a new group, "Married Priests Now!", which will agitate for the return of roughly 150,000 married priests who have left the church in recent decades.

Milingo, who was made a bishop by Pope Paul VI in 1969 at the age of 39, has long been a thorn in the side of church authorities because of his controversial practice of mass exorcism ceremonies.

In 2001, he broke away from the Catholic Church and wed a follower of Moon, a then-43-year-old Korean acupuncturist named Maria Sung. After a tempestuous few weeks, including a surprise meeting with Pope John Paul II at his summer residence of Castel Gandolfo, Milingo returned to obedience.

He was allowed to resume a limited form of his healing ministry outside Rome.

Two weeks ago, however, Milingo disappeared from Italy and reappeared in the United States at the side of Archbishop George Stallings, leader of his own breakaway group, the African American Catholic Congregation, based in Washington, D.C., as well as followers of Moon.

Milingo rejected fears, frequently voiced in Rome, that if he were ever to fall back under the spell of Moon, the charismatic 76-year-old Zambian prelate might lead a breakaway congregation in Africa offering a married priesthood and drawing on traditional African religious practices, especially healing and the casting out of demons. Such a movement, some Vatican officials worry, could hobble the Catholic Church on the continent where its recent growth has been the most dramatic.

"We have no ambition at all, in any way, to do anything of that kind," Milingo said.

Milingo added that he was "very surprised at how the Catholic Church has spread so much evil against the Rev. Moon," and that he would like to be an "intermediary" between the two religious bodies.

Milingo claimed that Moon's vision for global peace and the family are consistent with recent papal teaching. He said he has been fishing three times with Moon, and was "very, very surprised" at Moon's "simplicity" and his spirit of "living for others."

"I've seen what he has done," Milingo said.

In a 2002 memoir titled Fished from the Mud, Milingo was quoted as hinting that Moon's people may have drugged or brainwashed him, prompting his marriage and eventual break with the church.

In his NCR interview, however, Milingo insisted that he had said no such thing, and that it was church authorities who insisted that he had been brainwashed.

"All my problems come from the lack of appreciation [by the authorities of the Catholic Church] for the spiritual gifts I have," he said.

"It was too much for them to believe that in the modern world, I can simply say 'let this happen,' and it happens," he said.

Milingo offered several examples of his alleged spiritual prowess, including a recent phone call from a woman in Modena, Italy, who complained that 20 days after the birth of her child she could not produce mother's milk. Milingo said he instructed her to draw a glass of water, which he blessed over the phone. He instructed the mother to drink it, and immediately afterwards she began to lactate.

"They can't believe such things are possible," he said, with respect to Vatican officials and bishops who were reluctant to have him in their dioceses.

Milingo told NCR that for the time being, he intends to establish a base of operations in Washington at Stallings' Imani Temple. Eventually, he said, he will return to Zambia and resume his ministry of preaching and healing. Milingo said Sung, whom he insists he has always considered his wife, is with him in Washington and the couple will make a home together there.

He said that he has written to Benedict XVI to inform the pope of his whereabouts and his intentions, but that at present he sees "no reason" for requesting a meeting with the pope, as he did with John Paul.

Milingo had nothing but affection for the late pope, who, he said, had appealed to Milingo as his elder, with "beautiful words" of reconciliation. Yet he told an at-times harrowing story of his subsequent treatment, beginning with what he called his "violent separation" from Sung after his return to the fold in the summer of 2001.

"The shadow of Maria Sung always hung over me, it was very strong," he said. "It was dangerous for me to even be talking with any woman at all."

"I found myself literally surrounded by spies," he said. He said these "spies" were primarily priests and sisters who claimed to have the authority of the Vatican, including what he called some "enthusiasts of Medjugorje," the site of alleged apparitions of the Virgin Mary in the former Yugoslavia.

At one stage, Milingo alleged, three different groups, whom he declined to identify, planned to "kidnap" him from his residence in Zagarola outside Rome, to use him for their own purposes.

Apparently realizing the extraordinary nature of his account, at one point Milingo exclaimed, "I am not drunk!"

The kidnap plots led him, he said, to "rebel" and to leave Italy for Zambia in December 2004, not to return until early February in 2005. Upon his return, he said, the Vatican agreed to get rid of most of the people around him.

Shortly after the election of Benedict XVI, Milingo said, the new pope received him and said he was glad they had been able to "take away these stumbling blocks that are stifling your work."

Yet, Milingo said, he was still required to travel with a Vatican bodyguard, at his own expense, wherever he went.

Milingo said he decided to make a definitive break now for two reasons.

First, he said, he had lived through five years of "doubts and difficulties," wondering if he had made the right choice. During all that time, he said, he thought of himself as married to Sung.

Second, he said, the resistance to his preaching and healing gradually became more and more intolerable.

"People knew my gift was beyond doubt," he said. "But the dioceses didn't want me. Some bishops jumped so high at the mention of my name, it was as if the church had springs."

This led him to ask God, he said, "Why do you have such a structure that separates itself from humanity?"

In the last two weeks, Milingo said, he gradually planned his escape. He called a private friend and asked her to make his travel arrangements, avoiding local travel agencies and well-known carriers. He said when the morning came, he celebrated Mass, ate lunch, and then when people in the residence were expecting him to nap, he simply walked out into a waiting car.

"We had to leave without arousing too much dust," he explained.

He said he left the key to his room on the altar in the chapel.

Those who have watched the ups and downs of the Milingo story over the years will be hesitant to say that its last chapter has now been written, or that the mercurial Zambian prelate doesn't have other surprises in store.

Catholic Information Service for Africa (Nairobi)

http://allafrica.com/stories/200607250709.html
NEWS
July 24, 2006
Posted to the web July 25, 2006

By John L Allen Jr

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 03:15 | Permalink | commenti
categories:recent media
19/07/2006
A Short Biography of Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo

alcuni fondatori di Married Priests Now a Washington

"I will apply myself for God and my next of kin"

Emmanuel Milingo was born in a poor farm village in Zambia in 1930. He was educated in St. Mary's Presbyterial school in Chipata and attended the Kasina and Kachebere Seminaries. He was ordained in 1958, and served as parish priest in Chipata from 1963 to 1966, when he founded the Zambia Helpers Society. He was the secretary of Mass Media at the Zambia Episcopal Conference from 1966 to 1969, when he founded the first of three orders, the Daughters of the Redeemer. In 1969 Pope Paul VI consecrated him as the Bishop of the archdioceses of Lusaka, the capital of Zambia, as one of Africa's youngest bishops. He served there for 14 years.

In the 1970's Archbishop Milingo became famous as an exorcist and a powerful spiritual healer. In 1983 he recalled to Rome because of controversy over his "non-conventional" healing ministry. In the Vatican he served on the Pontifical Council for Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant Peoples.

In Rome, Pope John Paul II protected the Archbishop’s charism. He appeared on Italian TV and radio shows, and conducted healing masses throughout Europe which attracted thousands upon thousands of people. This did not sit well with some bishops in Rome. The more his ministry grew, the more his freedom to celebrate mass was restricted. "Just because something is good, and for the welfare of the Lord, doesn't mean it won't meet opposition," he has said.

Jesus charged his own disciples to heal the sick, cast out demons and preach the Gospel. (Matthew 10:8, Mark 16:15 KJV). Archbishop Milingo takes this apostolic direction seriously. He says, "With these three we are able to complete our mission and our apostolate...What people experience at our prayer meetings is the presence of God."

Despite his great love for the Roman Catholic Church, the Archbishop’s public call for an end to mandatory celibacy in 2001, punctuated by his very public marriage to a Doctor of Acupuncture from Korea, was rejected as an embarrassment. At the Holy Father’s urging, he set aside his marriage and returned to his healing ministry in Zagarolo, outside of Rome. His disappearance and return, seclusion and subsequent restriction left many questions unanswered. After 5 more long years of constant observation and restrictive supervision, he has again emerged to awaken the conscience of the Church he loves.

About himself, Archbishop Milingo says, "I don't want to be put on a pedestal. I lead a simple life. But when it comes to prayer, I'm actually calling on the name of Jesus. When I pray, I pray with such confidence that I'm sure the Lord is with me."

He is a gifted singer, as well as the author of several books, including The Flower Garden of Jesus the Redeemer, Precautions in the Ministry of Deliverance, Against Satan, The World in Between: Christian Healing and the Struggle for Spiritual Survival. He has had many books written about him, and has produced his own CD.

Archbishop Milingo, now 76, continues to celebrate Mass every day.

is the motto of Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo.
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 09:48 | Permalink | commenti (1)
categories:biography
15/07/2006
Milingo Returns: The Sung Remains the Same

Whispers in the Loggia

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Milingo Returns: The Sung Remains the Same

by Rocco Palmo

 

Appearing at a Washington press conference this morning after a week-long disappearance which puzzled the Vatican and gripped the Italian press, Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo kickstarted his "independent Charismatic ministry" to reconcile married priests to the church, in concert with the breakaway African American Catholic Congregation (AACC).

In a conversation with Whispers, AACC head Archbishop George Stallings confirmed reports already circulating in Rome that Milingo intends to return to Maria Sung, the Korean acupuncturist he married in 2001 at a ceremony of the Rev Sun Myung Moon's Unification church. Milingo repeated earlier today that he has always considered Sung his wife, from whom, according to reports, he "would not be separated until death."

From Washington, Milingo will embark on a six-month speaking tour of the United States organized by the AACC. Below is the full-text of his statement at this morning's event at the National Press Club:

Ladies and Gentlemen…

We are dealing with a very serious matter that has affected the Catholic Church for many years. In the last 35 years since the International Catholic Synod of Bishops in 1971, the struggles surrounding celibacy have worsened. If in 1971, the church listened to the appeals of Bishops to offer celibacy as an option to those who would bind themselves to it for their entire lives, but let those called to be ordained priests, yet married, to fulfill their calling, then today we would not be harvesting straw instead of divine graces.

The seriousness of the matter was emphasized once again when the US Bishops raised the issue as we entered this third millennium. Once more the authorities in the Vatican waved it off, to the detriment of the church in USA and around the world.

Married priesthood has existed as early as the time of Moses, as we read in Leviticus that they were all married, the family of the High priest Aaron. Some argue that what was demanded in that priesthood was merely a legal purity. But when God demanded sanctity as a sign of being intimate with Him, this injunction of sanctity was still more applicable to priests: “Be holy, because I, your Lord, am holy.” Sanctity or holiness is the first requirement of any priesthood, married or celibate.

The Apostles ordained priests and bishops, regardless of their marital status. St. Paul ordained Timothy and consecrated him to Bishopric. He ordained the first Bishop of the Island of Malta, who was a married man. As St. Paul said to Timothy, the one condition he imposed upon a Bishop was to marry only once.

“A Bishop must be irreproachable, married only once, temperate, self controlled, decent, hospitable,, able to teach, not a drunkard, not aggressive, but gentle, not contentious, not a lover of money.” (Timothy 3:2-3)

Some people will be surprised to hear of what became of Zacchaeus, the short man whom Jesus called down from a sycamore tree and then visited his house. He truly was converted with his whole family, and ended being consecrated Bishop of Caesarea Philippi. (History of the Church: Venturi).

Jesus shared fully with all his apostles, both married and non-married, all that was required to be an Apostle. He did not show favoritism to any of them. Even as He gave them responsibilities, He looked to each one’s capacity, and relied on each of them. The question of celibacy was not His preoccupation. I think that the demands presented by St. Paul to a candidate to Bishopric are more than sufficient for the life of a Bishop. Looking back to priesthood from which rank a Bishop comes the same demands are applied to the priesthood.

We hereby appeal to those Bishops who have been sent to the monasteries, condemned forever, never to appear any more to their faithful. Let them come out of their Catholic prisons and be reinstated, taking once more their pastoral responsibility among the married priests. Please let us know where you are, be in contact with us.

To those priests who may feel that by marrying they have stepped down or fallen short, unleash your burden of humiliation, exclusivity, and shame. Come among your fellow “sinners,” so considered, who were to be branded, and to be forgotten forever as weaklings. Come in, but never come with lamentations. Your burden has been loaded off, you come light, released from any weight of sinfulness. Become a Magdalene, a Paul, a Peter or Augustine, or one of the many others who never looked back to their struggling past. They all became outstanding saints, in spite of their former weaknesses.

To our beloved “Mother Church,” we beseech you to open your arms to these prodigal children who have longed to return home and have so much to offer. There is no more important healing than the reconciliation of 150,000 married priests with the Mother Church, and the healing of a Church in crisis through the renewing of marriage and family. The Church has nothing to lose by allowing priests the option to marry. Historically, out of holy marriages have come priests, popes, saints, and loving servants of God and the Church.

It is out of our love for our Faith and deep concern for its future that we proclaim this day, the end of mandatory celibacy, and the option for priests to sanctify the family as it was intended in the Garden of Eden, even as they fulfill their calling and ordination.

More details to follow.

..................................

Name: Rocco Palmo

Location: Philadelphia, PA, Vatican

Rocco Palmo writes from America for The Tablet, the international Catholic weekly published in London. He's also popped up as an expert on things Catholic in The New York Times, Associated Press, The San Francisco Chronicle, New York Daily News, Beliefnet, and Religion News Service, among other notable print and broadcast outlets. Born and raised in Philadelphia and still in residence there, Rocco Palmo attended the University of Pennsylvania, from which he earned the Bachelor of Arts in Political Science.

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 15:06 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news
15/07/2006
Archbishop Milingo advocating married priesthood

Milingo is launching a ministry to reconcile married priests

Spero News

Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo is back in the news - now he's claiming to be on a mission to reconcile married Catholic priests with the Church.

After remaining quiet in recent years, Milingo says he plans to embark on an independent charismatic ministry to reconcile married priests with the Catholic Faith. Married priests from Italy, South America and the United States will join the archbishop as he launches a ministry for the renewal of family for the future of the Catholic Faith, according to Milingo - who it was widely thought was in seclusion in Italy.

"The Church has nothing to lose by allowing priests the option to marry. Historically, out of holy marriages have come priests, popes, and loving servants of God and the Church," Milingo says.

Milingo has made waves in the past for his "non-conventional" healing ministry, not to mention his brief, but very public marriage in 2001, as well as his call for an end to mandatory celibacy.

"There is no more important healing than the reconciliation of 150,000 married priests with the 'Mother Church,' and the healing of a Church in crisis through renewing marriage and family," says Milingo.

Milingo was consecrated by Pope Paul VI in 1969 at the age of 39 as a bishop of Lusaka, the capital of Zambia, where he became an exorcist in the 1970s. In a press release announcing his new ministry, Milingo says he was called to Rome in 1982 amidst controversy over his "extraordinary healing powers," failing to mention that another reason was his repeated performing of exorcisms without the Church's approval.

Similarily, according to Milingo his ministry to "'preach the Gospel, heal the sick and cast out devils' flourished in Europe, and his popularity grew despite efforts to restrict his ministry" doesn't mention that he was actually in Rome serving on the Pontifical Council for Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant Peoples.

By the turn of the millenium Milingo had become a supporter of Reverend Sun Myung Moon and the Unification Church, and Milingo even allowed Sun Myung Moon to arrange a 2001 marriage to the South Korean acupuncturist Maria Sung.

According to Milingo, that marriage was not recognized by the Church, "and out of respect and love for the Holy Father," he "honored the pontiff's request to return to his healing ministry in Rome." It was widely reported that Milingo had since spent considerable time in esclusion praying for repentance, and was last heard of in Italy in 2004. 

"Archbishop Milingo is not seeking to defy or divide the (Roman Catholic) Church, but is acting out of deep love for the Church and concern for its future," according to George Augustus Stallings, founder of the African American Catholic Congregation (AACC), in the same press release announcing the launching of Milingo's "ministry."

Stallings claims to be an archbishop of the schismatic AACC and also has a bit of a checkered past - marrying his wife, Sayomi, a former Moon aide, at the same Moonie wedding as Milingo. They have two children.

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 12:43 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news
14/07/2006
Married Priest are longing to serve Through the Church

 

It is very clear that the Roman Catholic Church has a great need of priests. The Bishops worldwide have brought their concern repeatedly to the Vatican. In addition priests are needed to bring the Eucharist to those Catholic people who do not have a resident priest. The Eucharist is the essence of Catholicism.

 

Currently on the sideline, there are approximately 150,000 validly ordained priests. But these priests are married. The majority of these priests are ready, and willing to return to the sacred ministry of the altar.

 

It is our mission to find a way to reconcile these married priests with the Church and to reinstate them in the public sacred ministry, working in every way possible with the Church.  

 

It is evident that the “care of souls” demands a new pastoral provision to make this vision a reality.

 

No lesser apostle than St. Paul himself demonstrated his theology of the priesthood and the episcopacy when he wrote to Timothy:

 

“A Bishop must be irreproachable, married only once, temperate, self controlled, decent, hospitable, able to teach, not a drunkard, not aggressive, but gentle, not contentious, not a lover of money.” (Timothy 3:2-3)

 

Married priests are longing to serve God and the people in the Christian community through the church. The new association of married priests called “Married Priests Now!” is calling for those priests who are currently married, and all national and international married priest organizations to unite in an open call to the Roman Catholic Church to reconcile married priests to active service. Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo feels that he is an apostle called to bring married priests back to full service in the church due to the current priest shortage and the need to bring the Eucharist to every Catholic.

 

Archbishop Milingo wants to see a priest in every parish. He feels it is the Will of God to bring priests back as full, vibrant and active ministers of the word and Eucharist.

 

Married Priests Now! seeks to value the ministry of married priests and reconcile them to public sacred ministry. It is not only a benefit to the church but to all of humanity. The role of the married priests in the family is essential. The family is the nucleus of the church and of society. The priest’s ministry to his family gives him the experience and relationship to see the gospel differently and practically.

 

The charisma of married priests is needed now. St. Peter was a married priest and so were the other apostles. It is the right of every human person to freely be accepted and given in marriage. This right must be returned to priests in the Latin Roman Communion. It is not only a matter of justice to the priesthood but a matter of the survival of the Church in the future.

 

For further information about Married Priests Now! please call 202-577-3544.

 

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 21:34 | Permalink | commenti (1)
categories:news, information
14/07/2006
International Coalition of Married Catholic Priests

International Coalition of Married Catholic Priests Says 'No' to Mandatory Celibacy and 'Yes' to Marriage and Family

 "Roman Catholic Archbishop Milingo Leads Coalition's Call for the Mother Church to Reconcile and Reinstate Married Priests to Active Service"

WHAT: Press conference to announce the newly formed association MARRIED PRIESTS NOW! an international coalition of married priests, and to render an urgent open call to the Roman Catholic Church to reconcile with married priests.

WHEN: Friday, July 14, 11 a.m.

WHERE: Imani Temple African American Catholic Congregation

609-611 Maryland Avenue, NE

Washington, DC 20002

WHO: Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo, charismatic spiritual healer from Zambia and former Archbishop of Lusaka; Archbishop George Stallings, founder and pastor of the Imani Temple African American Catholic Congregation; Archbishop Patrick E. Trujillo, currently the Spiritual Leader of the Archdiocese of Our Lady of Guadalupe of the Old Catholic Church in America; Archbishop Peter Paul Brennan, the Primate of the Order of Corporate Reunion which promotes Christian Unity through prayer and action; Bishop Edson Luiz Campos da Silva, Patriarchal Vicar of the Worldwide Communion of Catholic Apostolic National Churches in Brazil and the Presiding Bishop of the Brazilian Apostolic Catholic Church; Bishop Joseph J. Gouthro, Presiding Bishop of the American Catholic Church in Nevada; Father Giuseppe Serrone , theologian, freelance writer and married priest from Viterbo, Italy, and director of Associazione Sacerdoti Lavoratori Sposati (the Association of Married Priests); Father Pietro Ceroni a married priest from Bergamo, Italy; Father Dairo Ferrabolli, pastor, teacher, youth worker and conductor of conferences on Family Values in the Northern New Jersey area, and others.

BACKGROUND: Yesterday, Wednesday, July 12, Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo convened a group of married priests from around the world in Washington, DC to form a new association of married priests, to be named MARRIED PRIESTS NOW. The group, which will issue an open call to the Roman Catholic Church to reconcile and reinstate married priest to active service in parishes around the world, grows out of concern for the tens of thousands of priests who have fallen out of favor with the Roman Catholic Church due to their marriages.

"These married priests are a valuable resource to the Church and this new organization seeks to find ways to reconcile the Mother Church with her children who received and accepted God's call to serve," said the 76 year-old Archbishop and leader of MARRIED PRIESTS NOW. "The reconciliation of 150,000 married priests with the Church and the healing of a Church in crisis through renewing marriage and family are of paramount importance," he further stated.

Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo, the charismatic cleric whose "non-conventional" healing ministry, public marriage and call for an end to mandatory celibacy led to controversy with the Vatican, plans to embark on an independent charismatic ministry to reconcile married priests with the Catholic Faith..

Personally ordained by Pope Paul VI in 1969 at the young age of 39, Milingo was recalled to Rome in 1982 amidst controversy over his extraordinary healing powers. His ministry to 'preach the Gospel, heal the sick and cast out devils' (Matt. 10:8, Mark 16:15, Luke 9:2) flourished in Europe, and his popularity grew despite efforts to restrict his ministry. Working from Rome under the protection of Pope John Paul II, his marriage to a South Korean acupuncturist in 2001 drew international media attention. His marriage was not recognized by the Church, and out of respect and love for the Holy Father, he honored the pontiff's request to return to his healing ministry in Rome.

"Archbishop Milingo is not seeking to defy or divide the (Roman Catholic) Church, but is acting out of deep love for the Church and concern for its future," said Archbishop George Augustus Stallings, founder of the African American Catholic Congregation.

Married priests from Italy, South America and the United States will join the archbishop as he launches a ministry for the renewal of family for the future of the Catholic Faith. "The Church has nothing to lose by allowing priests the option to marry. Historically, out of holy marriages have come priests, popes, and loving servants of God and the Church," Milingo says.

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 04:52 | Permalink | commenti (6)
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