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Home » celibacy
Tag correlati: news, theology, circular letter, recent media, sentences, information, press statement, convention, father mbewe, milingo, married priests, statement
05/07/2009
A Pilgrim in a Pilgrim Church

by Kenneth Briggs

In a searching memoir sure to revive Catholic disputes, Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland recounts the pivotal decision he faced early in life: whether to become a monk or a musician. He chose the monastery, because, as he explains, "as a concert pianist, I would be an 'also ran' not the best."

That didn't stop him from studying piano at prestigious Juilliard or eventually earning a doctorate in music from Columbia University in the course of becoming an illustrious abbot, abbot primate of the entire Benedictine order, and, for 25 years, archbishop of Milwaukee.

Playing against type, therefore, he became a virtuoso public reformer as a monk, while his virtuoso musical talents were exercised mostly in monkish solitude.

As a gifted church leader, he became a beacon of liberal Catholicism for, among other things, his advocacy of a married priesthood, an enhanced role for women in the church, a greater role for the laity, and a shift of power downward from Vatican exclusivity.

After nearly 50 years of testing limits and rethinking theology, his world came crashing down. In 2002, he confessed to having paid hush money to a man with whom he had an affair of "several months" in 1979. He describes it in the book as "romantic infatuation on my part." He promptly resigned as archbishop after the affair became public knowledge.

Some conservative Catholics linked his departure to his theological liberalism, which presumably fostered permissiveness. Many liberals, on the other hand, fretted that Weakland's violations might overshadow his long advocacy of a more democratic church.

Weakland's affinity for monasticism's collaborative style, which resisted autocratic rule, conditioned him to embrace the Second Vatican Council's redefinition of the church in non-hierarchical terms as the "people of God." The new vision proposed "shared authority" between hierarchy and laity.

For decades, as he writes in detail, he carried that banner against the gathering forces of opposition that sought to retain the old top-down chain of command that demanded unquestioned loyalty to Rome.

Whereas the centralizing forces, led most forcefully by Pope John Paul II, insisted on what Weakland calls the "military" structure of total conformity, his view of the church, drawn from Vatican II, is mixed rule, as in the sharing of responsibilities between the federal government and the states in America.

Though he defends his reform agenda, he can be critical of his own leadership. He concedes, for example, that he made egregious mistakes in his handling of child abuse by priests in his archdiocese before the national scandal erupted. He relied on the mistaken rehab-counsel-and-return advice of an earlier time, he says, which wrongly focused on the abuser rather than the victim.

On the world stage, his position as a self-described "free spirit," visible, smart, and outspoken, made him a target of guardians of the status quo. In Rome, he says, he was regularly singled out for reprimand, often on the basis of accusations from U.S. Catholics.

Pope Paul VI had been his ally and father figure, Weakland says, citing one meeting in which the pope responded to Weakland's critics by giving him "100 percent support."

By comparison, his relationship with Pope John Paul II was strained. The pope was "stubborn," Weakland writes, and insistent on total obedience, qualities that clashed with Weakland's impulse toward dialogue, his disdain of authoritarianism, and his respect for differences.

As described by Weakland, the pope's response to Weakland's reports was barely more than a grunt, all the while not looking him in the eye.

He takes issue with John Paul for his treatment of those who disagreed with him and for his strong exercise of papal authority, but admires his spiritual qualities.

The memoir is never less than a fascinating insider's look at church politics. His observations are close-up. He esteems Paul VI's outlook and demeanor, but thinks the Pope's desire to avoid post-Vatican II schism made him an ineffective leader.

Much of Weakland's story deals with the struggle over authority in the church. The curia, the tightly knit bureaucracy (called the world's oldest) that runs the Vatican, fought to regain the control over the church that Vatican II had whittled away. With the support of the succeeding popes, curia cardinals reasserted Vatican control, tightening rules and punishing dissenters. Provinces of the church that were exercising what they believed to be new freedoms were told to desist and obey Rome.

Weakland was in the thick of those struggles, none more visible than in his assignment by the U.S. bishops to create a pastoral letter on the U.S. economy. The document decried growing poverty, endorsed unions, denounced worker exploitation, and urged cooperation among private and public sectors to help cure social ills. Days before it was made public, it was attacked by Michael Novak and former Treasury Secretary William Simon as an assault on the sanctity of free enterprise. William F. Buckley Jr. assailed Weakland as a socialist.

Weakland dwells less on the content of that or other such pastoral letters than on the right of national conferences of bishops to issue them. He had been a strong defender of that right as a natural responsibility of local bishops and a check on Vatican authority. Rome finally ruled that the conferences had no right to teach on their own.

Weakland's stand deepened his reputation as a rogue - a "controversial" figure and "the most liberal" bishop in America, in the eyes of the press. Long before he left Milwaukee in 2002, he recalls, "Rome had written me off."

"If I had a weakness," he writes wryly, "it was that I seemed unable to keep from uttering my opinions even when they were not welcome in high places."

Weakland's memoir is a vivid, insightful panorama of a life that began as the child of a mother on welfare in western Pennsylvania and took him through the most momentous decades of recent church history.

Elected head of St. Vincent Archabbey in 1963 at age 36, he was elevated four years later to abbot primate of the Benedictine order around the world. A decade after that, Paul VI named him archbishop of Milwaukee. Though rightist Catholics in his diocese regularly complained to the Vatican, Weakland sought to make the archdiocese into the more open, interactive model he cherished.

The scandal that brought him low was a moral lapse and a bungled response to it. Weakland's lover was then in his 30s. In the biggest mistake he says he ever made, Weakland succumbed to the man's demand for money to keep the affair quiet. With the assistance of a key archdiocesan finance office, he gave the man $450,000 from church building funds to settle out of court. Weakland asserts that the money was paid back by friends.

The book is Weakland's brief to prevent his enemies from exploiting the scandal to discredit his entire ministry. Denouncing ploys "to make someone's weaknesses, especially sexual, into a demeaning form of public entertainment," he adds, "I do not want my life to be used in such a way." He believes he has already lost his "good name."

His memoir captures a Catholic High Noon. It is not a defense of his sexual affair (which has nothing to do with priest child abuse), but a defense of the theology to which his life has been committed and to the cause of reform.

For starters, he writes, the church could make progress by ridding itself of arrogance, perfection, and omniscience. Otherwise, he says, "I am at peace with my God, with my church, and with myself."

His articulate case will be in the hands of his readers.

 


Kenneth Briggs, formerly religion editor at the New York Times, is adjunct professor of English and religion at Lafayette College and the author of several books on religion, most recently

"The Power of Forgiveness" (Fortress Press).

(philly.com)

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 10:20 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy, married priests
16/06/2009
Many have fallen by the way

 In 2001, the Roman Catholic Church excommunicated Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo of Zambia, after he received marriage blessings from Sun Myung Moon of the Unification Church.

In 2007, Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, a fierce critic of President Robert Mugabe, was forced to step down after he was accused of having an affair and fathering a son with a Ms Rosemary Sibanda.

On July 19, 2008, Pope Benedict XVI, while on tour of Australia made a historic apology for child sex abuse by priests in the country and called for compensation and prosecution of the guilty priests.

In July 2007, the Roman Catholic diocese of Los Angeles agreed to pay a record $660 million to more than 500 victims who were sexually abused by priests dating as far back as 1940s. (in www.eastandard.net)

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 22:38 | Permalink | commenti
categories:milingo, celibacy
16/06/2009
Vatican excommunicates former Catholic priest from Zambia

LUSAKA, Zambia (CNS) -- A former Catholic priest from Zambia who is an advocate of optional celibacy for clergy and the ordination of women has been excommunicated from the Catholic Church.

Bishop George Lungu of Chipata, president of the Zambia Episcopal Conference, announced the excommunication of Father Luciano Anzanga Mbewe June 9.

The bishop said in a statement that the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith took the action because Father Mbewe entered into schism for establishing the Catholic Apostolic National Church of Zambia.

"This decision to excommunicate Rev. Luciano Anzanga Mbewe is motivated by two main facts, the foundation of a schismatic church, Catholic Apostolic National Church of Zambia, and his declaration to have received a so-called Episcopal ordination by clergy linked to the old Catholic Church of Europe," Bishop Lungu said.

The bishop said Father Mbewe is no longer a member of the Catholic Church and any religious ceremonies he leads are being done outside of the church.

"Even if signs and symbols as well as attire being used during the services resemble those of the Catholic Church, the services conducted are not part of the Catholic Church," the bishop said.

Bishop Lungu urged Catholics to continue praying for Father Mbewe even though he is separated from the church.

Father Mbewe, 54, formerly of the Ndola Diocese in Zambia, was forced to resign from the priesthood in 2001 by Bishop Dennis DeJong, now deceased. At the time, Bishop DeJong said Father Mbewe was "having difficulties in being faithful to mandatory celibacy" after the former was discovered to have fathered two children while serving as a priest.

However, Father Mbewe still continued to perform pastoral duties and advocated for what he termed "the restoration of a married priesthood in the church" as well as the ordination of women to the priesthood.

In 2006, Father Mbewe was ordained bishop by excommunicated Zambian Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo. Together they founded a splinter church, known as the Catholic Apostolic National Church of Zambia, which they launched in December 2007 with a call for more Catholic priests to join them. (by Mwansa Pintu )

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 22:30 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy, father mbewe
24/10/2008
Milingo responds to the Vatican Psychiatrist on Celibacy

Press Release

Link: Milingo responds to the Vatican Psychiatrist on Celibacy

Article: Celibacy: Expert Vatican psychiatrist: 'Celibacy is a provocation' to a superficial world

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 22:01 | Permalink | commenti
categories:recent media, circular letter, press statement, celibacy
19/10/2008
The Orthodox Churches and Priestly Celibacy

The Orthodox Churches and Priestly Celibacy

by Damaskinos Papandreou - Orthodox Metropolitan of Switzerland
The Orthodox position on marriage and clerical celibacy has been fixed by the long patristic tradition and practice of the Church as regards the profound theological content of the sacrament of marriage and the eminently personal spirituality of the discipline of celibacy. Marriage according to the Lord and celibacy for the Lord’s sake are two different spiritual paths, it is true, but both are incontestably valid for a true living of the content of the faith.

>> Read the whole article (marriedpriests.org)

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 07:07 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy
17/07/2008
Celibacy’s stain will remain when the party is over

Adele Horin
July 12, 2008
Advertisement

As crowds of fervent young Catholics descend on Sydney, up rises Anthony Jones to remind us of the running sore of clerical sexual abuse and the cover-ups by the church elite.

For all the joy the World Youth Day event will bring to thousands of pilgrims, it cannot disguise the critical situation of the Catholic Church in Australia. The average priest is in his 60s, church attendance has plummeted, ordinary Catholics flout the ban on contraceptives and the legacy of sexual abuse by priests is still raw.

The issue of priestly celibacy cannot be ignored. Celibacy was once the source of a priest’s high standing and special aura. Now it is the rot undermining the church. Celibacy is the common denominator in the twin crises of sex abuse scandals and declining priest numbers.

When the Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, wrote a deceptive letter to Jones, dismissing his allegations of sexual assault against a known serial abuser, Father Terence Goodall, it was on the grounds no one else had complained - and the sex had been consensual. (Jones had a different version, accepted by the church investigator, which the cardinal ignored.)

You might jump to the conclusion from this response that Pell thinks it is all right for priests to have sex as long as it is consensual. He makes no reference in his letter to the priest’s vow of celibacy, the gravity of breaking it and the special trust people place in priests because of it - at least in 1982 when the events occurred.

But of course you would be wrong. The church hierarchy has not moved an inch on celibacy. I am no theologian - I’m a rank outsider - but I read the accounts from all over the world of priests and lay people begging the church to change its ban on married priests, and to slowly open its doors to women.

People want to examine whether the unique celibacy of the all-male priesthood is a factor in its record of sexual misconduct, and whether making celibacy optional would attract more men to the priesthood. The church had maintained pedophilia has nothing to do with celibacy. Celibacy does not make a pedophile, it is true, and marriage does not cure one. One infamous Boston pedophile priest continued to abuse children after he left the priesthood and married.

But the issue of celibacy is still highly relevant to the troubles afflicting the church. Celibacy so narrowed the pool of people willing to be priests it appears to have led to disproportionate numbers of sexually immature and confused people, and self-denying homosexuals and pedophiles, entering the seminaries.

As well, until recently the aura celibacy conferred on priests allowed them easy access to children and young people, even more so than teachers, scout leaders and coaches. Priests were presumed to be especially disciplined by their code of sexual abstinence. Their word was so credible parents might distrust their children’s accounts of abuse.

The aura of celibacy also facilitated the cover-ups. A church had even more to lose than other institutions caught up in sex abuse scandals. As Garry Wills, the author of Why I Am A Catholic, wrote: "Many parents have kept silent after church authorities begged them ’not to damage the church’ … The aura of celibacy was definitely an advantage to the predator from the outset of his crimes. It then became a further advantage when church authorities provided him protection."

The church’s recent efforts to scapegoat homosexuals, and to introduce measures to screen them out of seminaries, will not solve problems that stem from a policy of mandatory sexual repression. Homosexual pedophilia is not the church’s only problem. Priests also have sex with consenting adults, in an atmosphere of secrecy conducive to psychological damage, blackmail and cynicism. A 1995 book, The Sex Life Of The Clergy, by the Spanish psychologist Pepe Rodriguez, says 60 per cent of Spanish priests were sexually active, more than half with women, 20 per cent with men, 14 per cent with minor males and 12 per cent with minor females. The citadel of celibacy is crumbling, whether the sex is consensual or not, with homosexuals or children.

The National Council of Priests in Australia, representing almost 1700 priests, petitioned the Vatican in 2005 asking it to allow priests to marry. More than 17,000 Mass-going Catholics signed a similar petition to Australian bishops. The pleas were made on the basis that drastic action was needed to restore the number of priests, which has fallen dramatically over 30 years while the Anglican and Protestant churches have not suffered any significant shortage of trainees.

The unworkable policy of celibacy began in the 12th century as a way to stop married priests from passing on property to their children instead of to the church. It has done great damage.

A clerical elite that is anti-sex, anti-birth control, misogynist and homophobic, and will not let priests have partners, is in a crisis of its own making. When the party is over, the rot will still be there. To many inside the church, making celibacy optional has become a matter of urgency.

This story was found at: http://www.smh.com

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 11:50 | Permalink | commenti (2)
categories:celibacy
30/05/2008
Peoria diocese ordains its first married priest

by Michael Miller

RELIGION BEAT 

Doug Grandon will add the role of Catholic priest to his roles of father and husband one week from today.

The 49-year-old Sterling native and father of six will become the first married man to be ordained a priest in the Catholic Diocese of Peoria. Widowers have been ordained, but never someone whose wife is still alive, said Monsignor Paul Showalter, vicar general for the diocese.

Grandon is a former Episcopal priest who converted to Catholicism in 2003 along with his wife, Lynn, and four of their children.

About 100 Episcopal priests, many of them married, have become Catholic priests since a "pastoral provision" was created by Pope John Paul II in 1980, said Grandon, director of catechetics for the diocese.

Grandon said that though he came to the Christian faith as a 14-year-old born-again convert who attended an evangelical-Pentecostal church in Sterling, he’s been on this path to becoming a Roman Catholic priest the whole time, all along asking himself, "What is (the church) supposed to be like and how do I fit in it?"

"I’ve always felt from the time I was a teenager that I was called to be an ordained minister," Grandon said. "So it was natural as an evangelical and an Anglican and now as a Roman Catholic that I would pursue that."

Grandon brings plenty of experience to his new vocation.

He went to Yugoslavia in the late 1970s as a missionary serving underground churches, being ordained as an evangelical minister in 1978. Grandon started the Church on Glen Hill in Peoria in 1988, serving as pastor there until 1995, when he left for studies at St. Louis University.

After studying church history there, Grandon felt led to enter the Anglican tradition. Ordained an Episcopal priest in 1999, he was pastor at Christ Church in Moline for four years before converting to Catholicism. That move came out of a desire to more fully be in communion with the bishop of Rome, he said.

Grandon said the possibility of his becoming a Catholic priest was discussed early on. He went through several examinations, was assigned reading, and waited through the bureaucratic process.

Bishop Daniel Jenky twice asked the priests of the diocese whether they would have any problems with a married priest being among them, Grandon said. Jenky told Grandon there was "universal consensus" that he should proceed.

"The priests (of the Diocese of Peoria) have been more than kind, more than sensitive from the beginning," Grandon said.

The permission from Pope Benedict XVI for Jenky to ordain Grandon

arrived on April 25. He and five other men will be ordained as priests at a 10:30 a.m. Mass on May 24 at St. Mary’s Cathedral, 607 NE Madison.

The best thing about becoming a Catholic priest, said Grandon, will be celebrating the Eucharist and knowing for sure the bread and wine are becoming the body and blood of Christ during the Mass.

His family life will remain the same, he said. Contrary to popular misunderstandings, he won’t have to be celibate.

"We have had comical questions about that from people that have tried to very graciously ask," said Lynn Grandon.

Actually, married priests are common in Eastern parts of the Catholic Church, such as the Maronite and Byzantine rites. He’ll also be able to provide for his family, since diocesan priests don’t have to take a vow of poverty.

His wife, who oversees the diocesan office of Respect Life/Human Dignity, said their children are "very, very happy" about the ordination.

The best change, she said, will be to hear him preach again.

"Honestly, we have had the joy of listening to his extraordinary sermons for 20 years, and we missed those," she said.

Vicar general Showalter said Grandon’s ordination and ministry will "offer an opportunity for us to have this experience in our diocese, see how a priest who is married will function in our parish and diocesan system."

"It’s going to be new, so there is some nervousness or apprehension on the part of some," Showalter said. He added, though, that Grandon already is well-known throughout the diocese as director of catechetics.

There will be no nervousness or apprehension for Lynn Grandon, only joy.

"I’ve watched him all of these years on this journey," Lynn Grandon said. "He has had to sort through all of his theology. I watched his anguish. I feel like he’s come on this arduous journey, and now he’s started on this new season of his life where he’s meant to be. We’re just going to get behind him and do all we can to back him in his ministry."

MICHAEL MILLER covers religion for the Journal Star. Write to him in care of the Journal Star, 1 News Plaza, Peoria, IL 61643, call him at 686-3106, or send e-mail to mmiller@.... Comments may be published.

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 16:06 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, celibacy
29/05/2008
Nashville priest says married men should be allowed to be priests
Priest shortage poses challenge for Catholic Church

By BOB SMIETANA
Staff Writer

When the Rev. Joseph Breen first arrived at St. Edward Catholic Church in 1984, he found a thriving parish. There were 750 families, 300 children in the parochial school, and two assistant priests on the staff to keep things running smoothly.

"Now we have over 1,200 families, 480 children in the school, and one old priest, 73 years old," Breen said, referring to himself.

St. Edward illustrates the problem the Catholic Church in America faces. While the number of Catholics continues to grow, topping 64 million last year, the number of priests continues to dwindle. Since 1985, the number of diocesan priests has dropped from 35,052 to 27,971, and the number of parishes without a priest in residence has tripled. In 2007, 3,238 parishes — or one in six — were without a priest.

For Breen, one solution to this crisis seems clear. The Catholic Church, he says, needs to allow married men to become priests.

He points out that many married men already are leaders in the church as permanent deacons.

"I would hope the bishops would find the courage, the nerve, the leadership skills, to tell the pope, for the good of our church, we have to ordain these married men to become full-time pastors," Breen said. "They would be a tremendous asset to the church."

But Mark Sappenfield, who will be ordained as a priest next week, believes that marriage and the priesthood don’t mix.

A Marine Corps vet who worked as a certified public accountant before going to seminary, Sappenfield says marriage, like the priesthood, is a calling. Balancing the two would be impossible, he believes.

"If you pay attention to your marriage, then you will neglect your flock," he said.
"If you pay attention to your flock, then you’ll neglect your marriage."

3 to join priesthood

Sappenfield, along with Nicholas Allen and Anthony Lopez, will be ordained May 30. They make up the largest class of new priests in more than two decades.

Rick Musscahio, director of communications for the local diocese, says there also are more than 15 other potential Nashville priests in seminary.

Still, the numbers are daunting. Of the 87 Catholic priests in Nashville, only three are under 40.

Twelve local pastors are in their 70s. And the diocese has had to import 23 pastors from overseas to serve.

Sappenfield admits this is a challenging time.

"Things may not change for a while," Sappenfield said. "The Church has been
around for 2,000 years, and there have been a few rough centuries. This may be one of them."

But the privilege of serving God and parishioners, he adds, will outweigh any difficulties. With prayer and God’s grace, Sappenfield hopes to be faithful to his calling. "Being a priest means leading people to Christ," he said.

Burden has grown

Breen believes that young priests are being asked to take on an impossible task.

"There is little or no support for a celibate priesthood," he says. "Thirty, 40, or 50 years ago, it was altogether different."

When Breen was ordained 46 years ago, the world was very different. A Nashville native, Breen says the local Catholic community was a tightknit place. Families were larger, and mothers often stayed home. And, there was always a place at the table for the priest.

Today, parishioners and priests are too busy to build close relationships, Breen says.

"That seems like a small thing, but it’s very important," said Breen.

Also, new priests have few colleagues to help shoulder their burdens. When Breen arrived at St. Edward in South Nashville, he had two assistants to help manage the parish. The three priests also lived together in the parish rectory, building camaraderie that helped make the challenges of the priesthood easier to bear.

Without strong relationships with lay people and other clergy, he believes, priests can be overwhelmed by their work.

"You have to deal with the tragedies in life," he said. "But then you have to be wise enough to surround yourself with strong, healthy relationships. Otherwise you can burn out."

Despite his age, Breen still relishes his work as a priest. Anytime he feels discouraged, he pops over to the elementary school. Being around that many young people keeps him going.

"I hope I have two or three more good years in me," he said. "It has been a struggle all these years, I have been 46 years a priest, but for the most part it has been a wonderful journey."

http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080525/NEWS06/805250412/1023/NEWS01
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 21:52 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy
05/05/2008
The Pope visited U.S! What really Change?

I profoundly think that the bishops, the American clergy and the Catholics should take the opportunity to address to the Pontiff the real crisis the Church is facing right now._ THE PRIEST SHORTAGE AND THE CELIBACY.

The priest shortage because of the rule of priest celibacy which is neither Biblical nor apostolic. One can go back to the middle ages or the beginning of the Church; you will not find anywhere neither God the Creator nor Jesus Christ the Savior nor the Redeemer recommended celibacy for any human being. In fact, marriage is part of our life. Man and woman together is the reality of the creation; it is God will, God purpose. Genesis chapter 2:7 said: “And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living being”. Verse 18: “and the Lord said, it is not good that man should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him.” Verse 21 and the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. The rib which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man. And Adam said; “this is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called woman, because she was taken out of man.” And the Bible continues to say; therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife and they shall become one flesh. So denying some the right to marry or force some one to leave celibate, man or woman is rebuked God work of creation. Is like telling God He made a mistake or He was wrong so that we are entitled to fix His mistake. Many of our scholars, doctors of the law, master’s degree in theology or Holy Scripture have no problem put themselves in conflict with God. Our popes, our cardinals, our bishops and priests often reversed the will of God, turned God down when it come to observe and obey the commandment or God desire.

 LACK OF INTEREST IN HUMAN RULES.

Today the crisis that the Church is facing is not a lack of vocation. No, it is a question of acceptability and a lack of interest of a rule which is not compatible with the normal life of any human being or the purpose for what we were created. They are many men and women, young and old who want to serve in the Catholic Church. Many who want to become priests, nuns, sisters and brothers but they are banned from service because of a human rule and regulation.

                                WHAT IS THE REALITY OF TODAY’S CHURCH?

Of course we have to face the reality of today’s Church. There is a serious declining in the priesthood all over the world. Many of our parishes are without a resident priest. Many Catholics in the countries, in the mountains cannot see a priest. Some of them see a priest every 3 months, some of them could have Holy Communion every six months; and consequently, our pews are empty, we witness our parishioners, our baptized Roman Catholics before our own eyes enters in EXODUS PHASE toward other denominations searching for refuge and comfort.
 

                        DO WE HAVE AN EXIT STRATEGY OR SOLUTION?

 En reality  the problem is serious but nobody wants to face it. Nobody wants to address it. Our bishops and priests preferred to live Scandal after Scandal instead of making their voices heard. We have to do something, we have to take a stand against the big interest and corruption in Vatican, we have to stand for what is right and Biblical, not for the interest of MONEY, but thanks to God there is one who take the lead, there is one who is not afraid to lose everything for what is right and for the teaching of the GOSPEL and the tradition of the APOSTLES. He is not afraid even to jeopardize his own career.

ARCHBISHOP EMMANUEL MILLING OF ZAMBIA IN AFRICA took the right stand by asking Vatican to recognize the marriage of priest, reconciled those who are married with the Church, put them back on duty and put an end to celibacy because there is no provision in the GOSPEL for such interdiction. IT IS UNBIBLICAL AND EVEN HERECTIC.

We too, member of the Catholic Church needs to take action by petition the bishops in our dioceses and remind them of the recommendation of Paul to Timothy concerning the moral religious of a bishop. He said in 1 Timothy 3 v 1: “This is faithful saying: If a man desires the position of a bishop, he desires a good work. A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one wife.” And he said: “One who rules his own house well, having his children in submission with all reverence. For if a man does not know how to rule his own house, how will he takes care of the Church of God.?”

                        THE CHURCH AND THE ORIGIN OF THE CELIBACY.

The celibacy for priests was imposed by man not by GOD or JESUS. All the Apostles were married. Many of the first Popes and bishops were married. In fact, the CONCIL OF CARTHAGE authorized marriage not only for priests but also for all ministers of the altar beginning with the bishops. That was emperor Justinian who decreed in 533 that the bishops must be recruited among the monks because those religious men had no children to inherit the property of the Church which constituted the biggest wealth of Byzantine.

According to www.libchrist.com the idea of the Church celibacy is inconsistent. Before the Middle Ages Catholic priests was married and have wife and children. But with concerns for protecting Church property from inheritance Pope Pelagius 1 made new priests agree offspring could not inherit Church property. Also Pope Gregory then declared all sons of priests illegitimate. The article continues to say that in 1022 Pope Benedict VIII banned marriages for priests and in 1139 Pope Innocent II voided all marriages of priests and all new priests to divorces their wives.

 
It is good and even necessary to remind the Church and the hierarchy where we came from as a Church, the body of Christ. It is also important to remind them that we are all member of one body. Therefore if one part of the body suffers all the members are suffering. No one absolutely no one can claim paternity. The Church was founded by Jesus Christ and the Apostles were the foundation and will remain its foundation until the glorious return of our LORD JESUS CHRIST.   

May God bless you all!

                                                 Your humble servant and brother in Christ
 

Dom Emmanuel Pierre Gelais Jean

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 11:10 | Permalink | commenti (1)
categories:celibacy
22/04/2008
63 % of US Catholics favor married priests

By
Kent Garber
Posted April 18, 2008

During a 1997 interview, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger of Germany, now Pope Benedict XVI, was asked about the declining ranks of the Catholic priesthood. "Mustn't celibacy be dropped," the questioner asked, "for the simple reason that otherwise the church won't get any more priests?" Ratzinger demurred. "I don't think that the argument is really sound," he said, noting that the trend had less to do with strict rules and more to do with family size and priorities. "If today the average number of children is 1.5," he reasoned, "the question of possible priests takes on a very different role from what it was in ages when families were considerably larger." The main obstacle, he argued, was parents "who have very different expectations for their children."

 
A decade later, the challenge of attracting priests continues to bedevil the Roman Catholic Church. The pope's visit this week is clearly meant as a stimulus to his American flock, and, apart from the tarnish of the sex abuse scandal, there is perhaps no more immediate concern among Catholic leaders than that of adequate church leadership. Congregations often abandon traditions and lose direction without guidance from priests; parishes, in some cases, have folded.

According to statistics, the number of U.S. priests began falling in the 1970s, and the decline has since accelerated. In 1975, the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University reports, there were 36,005 diocesan priests in the United States. By 1995, the total had fallen to 32,300; in 2005, the count stood at 28,700. The most recent count, from 2007, puts the number at 27,971. The decline appears to be even more precipitous when one includes "religious" priests, members of religious orders who tend to live within the priestly community. In total, the number of Catholic priests in the United States dropped from nearly 59,000 in 1975 to about 41,500 last year.

The causes of the decline are many. As the pope has said, changing family structures and social values are one problem; fewer children mean fewer potential priests, and parents are less likely to encourage the vocation. At the same time, more young Catholics—and more young people in general—are attending college or immediately entering the work force, thereby bypassing priestly considerations. Behind these trends is a strong cultural pull: American society prizes not only wealth and choice but also, to an increasing degree, mobility (the average American, according to the U.S. Department of Labor, will switch jobs 10 times between the ages of 18 and 38)—a privilege not in keeping with the lifetime commitment required of priests.

And, of course, there is the celibacy problem. In post-sexual revolution America, where, as novelist Tom Wolfe wrote in his 2000 book Hooking Up, "sexual stimuli bombarded the young so incessantly and intensely they were inflamed with a randy itch long before reaching puberty," the practice of celibacy is all but discouraged, if not viewed with suspicion. The sexual abuse scandal that rocked the church in the early part of this decade further sullied the American attitude toward celibacy.

But what to do? Pope Benedict XVI, like his predecessor Pope John Paul II, opposes liberalizing the current rules that forbid marriage and female priests. His followers are split. A 2001 survey by the U.S. Conference on Catholic Bishops found that 56 percent of priests thought celibacy should be a "matter of personal choice." A Gallup Poll conducted in 2005 shortly after the death of John Paul II found that 63 percent of American Catholics support allowing priests to be married; 55 percent said women should be allowed to become priests.

Interestingly, those numbers fall among the more devout: Among weekly Catholic churchgoers, only 48 percent said that priests should be allowed to marry, and only 44 percent want women to become priests. "The church has always taught that priests are men," said Monica Kolf, 24, who attended the mass at Nationals Park on Thursday. "That's how Christ instituted it at the Last Supper. Women have important roles to play in the church as well, and of course they are not in any less of a position or have any less dignity in the church in that sense. Of course, Mary, the mother of God, was a woman. There's no higher human being besides that."

In the past 10 to 20 years, there has been talk of reform; in 2003 more than 150 priests signed a letter to the U.S. Conference on Catholic Bishops, calling for optional celibacy in "an ever-growing appreciation of marriage and its many blessings." But with steady opposition from the Vatican and domestic dissent, none of the proposals has been adopted, and in the vacuum some dioceses have become creative, assigning, for instance, church officials to focus solely on recruitment of new priests. Some parishes now share priests with each other, hire traveling priests, or allow lay people to conduct traditional duties.

One potential source of alleviation, however small, may come from foreign immigrants, who are replenishing the ranks of American Catholics in large numbers. As recently as the late 1990s, nearly 20 percent of priests in the United States were foreign born, and for them the cultural barriers to entering the priesthood might arguably be lower than for Americans. (Worldwide, the total number of priests has grown slightly in recent decades, from about 403,000 in 1990 to about 406,000 in 2005, even as specific regions, such as western Europe, are experiencing crunches like the one in the United States.)

Conservative Catholics have argued that the vocation, if it is to continue to attract qualified candidates, must remain privileged, special, and distinct—in the same way that the selective Marine Corps ("the few, the proud") pitches itself to secular America. The pope, for his part, seems to view the priest issue as a conceptual matter rather than as something requiring practical remedies. As he said in 1997: "The first question...is: Are there true believers? And only then comes the second question: Are priests coming from them?"

in http://www.usnews.com

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 11:00 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy
14/04/2008
The Sting of Celibacy

My Fellow Married Priests and Bishops,

May I share with you the actual sting of celibacy in the Catholic Church. The words of His Eminence cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois, when he spoke recently at the French Episcopal spring conference in Lourdes, should be taken very seriously. The exhausting priestly work is becoming more and more burdensome with less priests forth-coming from the seminary. Today, the seminarists, having known the shame and the humiliation, which priests are undergoing after breaking the vow of celibacy, respecting themselves, they do not want to become the world ridicule as sex-abuse criminals.

 His Eminence Cardinal Andre Ving-Trois says: “We know how difficult their task is. The feeling of being drawn into a vortex where neither the direction nor the purpose are clear- and still do not see the generation of successors on the horizon.” (By Tom Henegan)

 The consequences have been disastrous to the French Church with the consequence that “The French Church has halved the number of its parishes in recent years as the clergy shrank from 42,000 in 1965 to 20, 5000 in 2006. Only 100 or so new priests are ordained every year. “Then comes the effect on sacramental life: “Baptisms, confirmations and Church marriages are all declining.” The conclusion from the French conference in Lourdes was: “The only path open to us is to work together with members of our communities and with priests assembled around their Bishop.”

 The conclusion is wrong. With which priests does the Bishop assemble, when he is not going to give to these priests, new priests to bring assistance to them? They look forward to have new blood in new priests, who are being prevented to be born by the force of imposed celibacy. The pride and stubbornness of the Catholic Church is the cause of the actual suffering of the whole Church. What makes one sad is that one sees in the Catholic authority as an authority which is bewitched and is tied up with the chains which they cannot loosen themselves.

 There is a ready solution. My recent visit to the Philippines. The married priests, who are well settled in their families are all ready to resume their pastoral work. It just needs the Church to be humble enough to say that celibacy has done its work and it has done it badly. The fruits of imposed celibacy are the deprivation of the Catholic Church’s sacramental life. The faithful of the Roman catholic Church are born through the sacraments, and maintain their life with sacraments. The Priest as the agent of the sacraments has become rare. So the faithful today are spiritually malnutrited, or purely die of spiritual die of spiritual hunger.

 A priest on celibacy: “How long are we going to uphold human precepts as we shamelessly break God’s law? I recently learnt that priests are today’s Pharisees that Jesus called “Hypocrites.” I am very ashamed that we are in this mess that has been enriched by the “higher value” celibacy.”

 The solution to the lack of priests in the pastoral field is to recall the obligatory celibacy, and reinstate the married priests. In no time the parishes will once more vibrate and have their full life as before. We have a list of candidates who want to become priests, and we shall soon ordain them. We are ready to advise them to go where they are needed. We have parishes, not many, which fall under our jurisdiction as Married Priests’ Prelature. So the dioceses may not continue to suffer the deprivation of priests. This is the solution to come back to original priesthood, the married priesthood.



God Bless,
Yours Sincerely,

Archbishop E. Milingo

 

 

CheongShim Villa,

176 Songsan-Ri, Seolak-Myun
Gapyung-Gun, Kyunggi Province, South Korea

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 11:08 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy
25/03/2008
How’s your father, Father? Sex not ungodly, priests told

The traditional view of priestly abstinence as a ’ godly calling’ has been challenged by new evidence from Latin commentators of 1000 years ago. Dr Conrad Leyser from The University of Manchester says the vow of celibacy in the Catholic clergy can instead be traced to attempts to safeguard church property and keep tabs on careerist clerics.

According to Dr Leyser, who is based in the Centre for Late Antiquity in the School of Arts, Histories and Cultures, the 1137 rule of celibacy can be traced to a period of upheaval beginning with the trial of Pope Formosus’ corpse in 897.

The Catholic establishment tried Formosus’ dead body for " illegally" leaving his post as Bishop and seeking promotion to the papacy precipitating clashes over attitudes to careerism and trustworthiness of the clergy.

The conflict escalated in the following decade with the election of Pope John X, rumoured to be the lover of Theodora, the most powerful noblewoman in the city of Rome.

He said: "These historical events give a strong case to those arguing for abandoning the vow of celibacy as a way to reverse declining numbers of priests.

"If the Church is to find a way of reversing this decline - then arguing that celibacy is ’god given’ holds no water at all as it is not .

"The Pope himself has recognised that celibacy is a late addition to Catholic tradition.

"Celibacy was created as a mechanism to help carve up church wealth between lay people and priests during a period of upheaval.

in http://www.manchester.ac.uk

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 09:30 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy
17/03/2008
The Vatican is Progressively Becoming the Tower of Babel
The reaction of the world to the declaration of the Holy Father attributing the word "Church" only to the Catholic Church was one of shock. Fortunately, the one who came in quickly was Cardinal Kasper to remind the Pope of the teaching of the Vatican Council II on ecumenism. Happily, there are on-going inter-religious meetings which lay the foundations for true brotherhood and sisterhood in religion and create an atmosphere of acceptance of one another as religious denominations. In a word, we are talking of all people made in God’s image and likeness.

One of the writers "on Church" in the second century says: "We have the authority of the Bible and the Apostles for saying that the Church is not founded only at the present time but was from the beginning." (Roman Breviary: ch.13,2-14-5). And St. Paul goes on to say: "The promise of inheriting the world was not made to Abraham and his descendants on account of any law but on account of the righteousness which consists in faith. That is why what fulfils the promise depends on faith, so that it may be a free gift and be available to all Abraham’s descendants, not only to those who belong to the faith of Abraham who is the Father of us all." (Romans 4:13.16-18.22). The Church is enshrined in the veins of Abraham by whatever name it has taken as the children of Abraham went throughout the world settling down for their self-realization.

The Pope should know that the Catholics of today are not all those Christians, whom Pope John Paul II called: "Christians have often denied the Gospel, yielding to a mentality of power." We no longer take for granted that all that comes from Rome is "Causa Finita," the last and definite truth. The resignation of Cardinal Karl Lehmann as the President of the German Episcopal conference was another indication of the boiling-pots in the Catholic Church. He clearly stated that the local churches, that is, the Episcopal Conference has its own local Church responsibility, on which it makes full and definite decisions, after sometimes long deliberations. Then the Vatican, which believes it has all the discernment refuses to put a seal of approval on the local churches’ decisions, and sends them with some suggestions for further study for approval.

Collegiality now means that the Vatican then approves its own work, not that of the local Episcopal Conference. Three conferences faced with problems: Holland, Australia, and South-Africa. Everything is suspended, till Rome will receive the Light.

Cardinal Claudio Hummes, when he was on his way to Rome to take up this new post which he holds as Prefect of the Congregation of the Clergy, declared that celibacy was a mere discipline of the church. He was very clear on celibacy, it is a mere discipline of the Church. As soon as he sat on the chair of Vatican responsibility, he imbibed the curial philosophy of life, and today he dances according to the rhythm of the Curia Romana. He has gone so far as to speak of the married priests as only a 1% of the failing celibate priests. He is contradicted by Father Donald Cozzens in his book: "Freeing celibacy. He has this to say.: "Priests themselves, in growing numbers, refuse to be resigned to the present burden of mandated celibacy and are calling upon their Bishops for a review of celibacy laws -- a review favored by most priests and an overwhelming majority of the laity." Where does Hummes take the 1% of the so-called failing clergy? Moreover the numbers he counts on with 99% success for celibacy are necessarily diminishing due to old age. Even religious congregations struggle to have vocations today.

The Married Priests Taking Over

In one diocese in Italy, a Bishop has put a blind eye to a community which is being served by a married Priest. I believe that many situations are alike in the World. The faithful are aware of the status of their priests, and in silence they accept them as such. This is where some of the Bishops have taken their stand. One allows hypocrisy to exist, provided that the souls are saved. Are they 99% celibate?

We look forward to a number of new emerging communities led by married priests, around which other communities will begin to come together and pray. Such are the new communities are coming up as they did in the early apostolic church. The married priests will slowly serve their communities, with a community leadership, where each family will be satisfied to contribute within its own capacity. There will be no structure imposed from above, since the community has come up, and has taken shape according to the needs in that particular community. Clericalism will disappear. They will be St. Paul’s Communities, which he called churches: "My greetings to Prisca and Aquila, my fellow-workers in Christ Jesus, who risked their own necks to save my life; to them, thanks not only from me, but from all the churches among gentiles; and my greetings to the Church at their house." (Romans 16:3-5).

My fellow married priests, we are on our way, marching as we take over slowly the closed parishes. Let us pray that the Lord will accompany us as He did the Apostles as they stepped on untended lands. We are walking on ruins, where hope became a memory. The words of St. Hilary are ours today: "So this house which is built by God, that is by His teachings, will not collapse. This house will grow and expand into several houses as the divine buildings of the faithful make for the adornment and increase of the blessed community in each one of us." (St. Hilary: Commentary on Ps. 126).

Hope is no more of the past, we are the present hope of the Catholic Church. Please, courageously remove the obstacles in your way. You are a renewed Priest. Wash yourself again and again in the Blood of Christ, who will cleanse you, and put a new gown for your new mission, which you resume in His name. May God be with you and bless you.
Your Brother in all aspects,

Archbishop E. Milingo
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 16:14 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy
12/10/2007
it necessary to CANCEL the planned conference in Rome
Dear Sisters and Brothers,

Married Priests Now!  and Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo find it necessary to CANCEL the planned conference in Rome, Italy scheduled for December 6-8, 2007.

We have not been able to acquire the necessary funds to support this project.

We regret if this cancellation is a disappointment and inconvenience to any of you.

We will continue to work together for the return of married priests to full dignity and honor.

Cordially yours,


+Peter Paul Brennan
Married Priests Now! Catholic Prelature
Vicar General USA
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 06:08 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, celibacy
11/10/2007
CELIBACY: 50,000 MARRIED PRIESTS, BUT NO CHANGE IMMINENT
(source: AGI) - Vatican City, Oct.9 -

F.Giuseppe Serrone suggested a possible solution: "extending the prerogatives granted by the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith in 1980 to the married priests of the US Episcopal Conference, accepted in the full communion of the Catholic church and accepted as married priests at the  presbyteral ministry".


"Celibacy is not a dogma. The lack of vocation may lead the Catholic church to open up to married priests", which are over 50,000 in the world, at least 8,000 in Italy. This is what the new prefect of the Congregation of the Clergy, Brazilian cardinal Claudio Hummes said, fostering the hopes of a possible opening by Pope Ratzinger on this issue, to the point that Giuseppe Serrone,  and Italian spokesman of Monsignor Emanuel Milingo, immediately suggested a possible solution: "extending the prerogatives granted by the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith in 1980 to the married priests of the US Episcopal Conference, accepted in the full communion of the Catholic church and accepted as married priests at the  presbyteral
ministry". But the opening was immediately shut: at an appositely convened meeting, the Pope and ministry leaders reaffirmed "the value of celibacy for priests, following the Catholic tradition", and reasserted "the need for a solid human and Christian formation, both for seminarians and priests".
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 14:16 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, celibacy
16/09/2007
Should priests be allowed marry and raise a family?
But the Emerald Isle in the late 20th century had a rapidly changing society, one that would change even further when the foundations of the Catholic Church were shaken by an onslaught of scandal.

Revelations that two darlings of the people, Bishop Eamon Casey and Fr. Michael Cleary, both had relationships with women and both fathered children furthered damaged the people's faith in the Catholic institution.

This issue of whether priests should adhere to their vows of celibacy was re-ignited last week with the showing of RTE 1's programme, At Home With The Clearys', which showed footage of Fr. Cleary's bizarre home life.

So, should priests adhere to their vows as they're supposed to? Or should they be allowed to marry and raise a family?

Olivia Jenkinson points out that marriage and family life wouldn't take away from a priest's duties to his parishioners.

There are plenty of men out there who have good faith, who could get married and still be a good priest,' she reasons. It's human nature, men are men. Look at the 12 apostles, they were married. Eventually it'll be that women will have to be the priests.'

Eileen O'Leary was upset by RTE's programme about Fr. Michael Cleary. To her, he was a man who wanted everything.'

I was sick looking at that programme,' she told the Carlow People. I think it's awful that he didn't recognise his son, Ross.'

Eighteen-year-old, Thomas Hickey, is of an age where he has only ever seen scandal in the Catholic Church.

The church needs to reform itself to attract the younger people,' he says. if it modernised itself and allowed priests to be married, they'd get a lot more respect.'

The notion of celebacy for Tina Fennelly in the first place isn't natural' and she, too, thinks that marriage could only add to a priest's life.

A priest's job is like any other,' Tina says. A good settled background would only add to it.'

Raymond Mahon is a father himself and he argues that if priests were allowed to marry, the church wouldn't be in the crisis that it's in now about falling numbers of vacations.

If they were allowed to marry, we'd have a lot more priests here in Ireland,' he speculates. The way it is now is that if a priest wants a relationship, then he has to leave the church. That puts a lot of pressure on them.'

Not allowing priests to get married causes more problems than if they were allowed to have sexual relationships, according to Jenny Sheil.

It just creates problems if they don't marry,' Jenny explains. Any trouble in the past, like (sexual) abuse, has stemmed from the current situation where they're not allowed to marry. It's just too old fashioned. A priest should be allowed to have a private life.'

The final word on the subject goes back to Thomas Hickey.

Raising a family is one of the most God-given things in the world to do,' he concludes. I don't see why priests should be denied that.

http://www.carlowpeople.ie/
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 19:11 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, recent media, celibacy
01/09/2007
Retired Sydney bishop ignites bombshell

Retired Sydney Bishop Geoffrey Robinson has challenged compulsory priestly celibacy in a new book.

He argues that compulsory celibacy for priests and religious has contributed to sexual abuse, and must at least be on the table for discussion.

He said: "Some may speak all they wish of the benefits of this celibacy for the church, but others will not stop asking, 'How many abused children is celibacy worth'?"

He added that celibacy could contribute to unhealthy psychology, unhealthy ideas, and an unhealthy environment.

"Within the Catholic Church, there is a constant insistence that on all important matters Catholics must look to the Pope for guidance and direction.

"Those older values have for a thousand years included secrecy, the covering over of problems and the protection of the good name of the Church."

Bishop Robinson was a longtime member and chair of the Church's professional standards committee, established by the Australian bishops to deal with the increasing wave of complaints of sexual abuse. He resigned two years ago, disillusioned by the Church's handling of sexual abuse complaints.


 http://www.cathnews.com/news/708/147.php

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 21:11 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, celibacy
21/07/2007
Ecumenical Peace Pilgrimage to Rome for Married Priests Now!

Married Priests Prelature

The Work of God Among Married Priests

Ecumenical Peace Pilgrimage to Rome for Married Priests Now!

A convocation will take place in Rome for Married Priests on December 6-8, 2007. All married priests and their wives are welcome: Catholic, Orthodox and Anglican. Details to follow soon. Transportation is the cost to participants. Hotel and meals will be provided by Married Priests Now! Save the date. 

Married Men who wish to become priests are also welcome with their wives.

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 17:41 | Permalink | commenti
categories:convention, celibacy
29/06/2007
Are priests human beings? Have they a right to exist?
I would like to point fingers at some nations; which, in accord with the Vatican State, agreed to deny employment to a priest who opted to marry. The argument is that he has misbehaved. Such a one does not deserve any financial support. A married priest in Pakistan, Peru, Guatemala, and in many states with a concordat with the Vatican State has to be left on the street with the consequence that he cannot go anywhere looking for the defense of his human rights. 

Coming back to your nation Italy, as far as the married priests can recall, the punishment and total alienation of a married priest dates back to the times of Mussolini, Croix, Berlusconi, up till now.
I would like to take you further on. When the Vatican State in agreement with any State to condemn married priests as citizens who have misbehaved, does the United Nation have any say on the human rights of married priests? Are priests on the list of human beings in their nations and in the United Nation? But if the Vatican boast of righteousness, how can they close their eyes to the injustices which befall a priest who chooses marry? When one becomes a priest, does the Vatican possess him in aspect of his life, so that the Vatican is immune of any misconduct in treating the priest? The priest cannot call to court the Vatican, but the dioceses are paying for the crimes of married priests, while the Vatican holds on to celibacy. All that the United States Dioceses have to pay for priestly sexual misbehavior should be paid by the Vatican who is holding celibacy attached to priesthood.

Are priests human beings? Have they a right to exist?

Archbishop E. Milingo
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 08:16 | Permalink | commenti
categories:information, theology, celibacy
27/06/2007
The "International Symposium on Catholicism Today" was held at Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology
The "International Symposium on Catholicism Today" was held at Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology, International Congress Room, from June 16 to 18, sponsored by the Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology and "Married Priests Now"

Priests from 3 nations ttending the "International Symposium on Catholicism Today" held at Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology, June 16, 2007
Hyung Jin Nim Emphasizing on the Importance of Family Life.
The "International Symposium on Catholicism Today" was held at Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology, International Congress Room, from June 16 to 18, sponsored by the Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology and "Married Priests Now" with 8 priests from the United States and Mexico came to attend this Symposium. Hyung Jin Nim came to the Symposium on the first day and gave a special lecture.
At this International Symposium, held for the very first time in Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology, President Gil-ja Sa, President Chan-gyun Kim, President Gun-sik Song, President Nan-yeong Moon, professors of Sun Moon University and professors and students of Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology, totaling around 80 people attended this Symposium.
The Opening Ceremony started from 9 a.m., June 16, on the first day of the Symposium, and there was a congratulatory address by Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo and President Jin-chun Kim of Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology. Then the Symposium began, firstly, with presentations from 2 fathers and a female Italian journalist, Raffaella Rosa.
Hyung Jin Nim came to the event at 3 p.m. and gave a special lecture. In his speech, he emphasized the importance of a family life while introducing himself as a still learning father and husband. He said, through a relationship between the family, one is trained to understand the other person and that it is the path to perfect our personality of true love and establish a family where God can reside.
After his 1 hour lecture, the priests gave a huge applause thanking Hyung Jin Nim for his magnificent speech. There was time to take a commemorative photo around the Hoesim-ji (pond), which was named by True Father, and also had a time to have a conversation with Hyung Jin Nim. After that, Bishop Ferrabolli Dairo Vicente gave a presentation.
On the 2nd day, June 17, the priests went to Cheon Jeong Gung Museum and attended the morning Hoondokhae centering on True Parents. After having breakfast there they came back to the Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology.
There were presentations from Archbishop Milingo, Bishop Hilario Ceneros and 2 other fathers in the morning. After the presentations from Dr. David A. Carlson and President Jin-chun Kim, an open discussion time was held. In there discussions, the priests were able to once again realize the preciousness of marriage.

In the evening, a mass was held by on Archbishop Milingo and 4 other priests where professors and students of Cheongshim Graduate School of Theology had a chance to attend. They were able to experience God's love transcending the boundaries of religions.

After the morning mass that took place on the 3rd day, a special meeting was held centering on Archbishop Milingo and President Jin-chun Kim, summing up the discussions and opinions that were exchanged in the past 2 days. After that, some priests departed and others visited Cheongpyeong Heaven and Earth Training Center, Cheongshim International Hospital, and Cheongshim Village (Senior Appartment).
link:  http://www.familytimes.net.ph/
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 16:09 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, convention, theology, celibacy
31/05/2007
Archibishop Milingo's Letter: Dear Italian Married Priests

31 May 2007

 

Dear Italian Married Priest,

Happy Easter. I hope that Don Giuseppe shared with you my Lenten Letter, entitled:

Our Lenten Thought.

In this Lenten letter, we are not accusing any body about what has happened to us. We acknowledge our sinfulness, and together with the whole Catholic community, we repented, and renewed our priesthood. We are doing what we are doing, not because we are better than others. We only want to be once more on the road in the Imitation of Christ, but doing our role as Community leaders, chosen by God. Call the priests: Elders, Presbyters, or priests, but with a chosen role and appointment by God, for which they are anointed and consecrated.

We have seriously analyzed and proved that the Catholic Church has been wrong “To Laicize Priests.” A priest cannot be reduced to a lay state, that to a state of a common citizen, who cares only for his own faculties. The common word which makes a short synthesis of his status is that “a priest is a common bread.” It is from this status that he is not only a man of sacrifices, but he himself is a sacrifice for his community. He is to be called upon, to be referred to, to be consulted, and to be all to all. Hence different from Jesus who does not expiate His own sins in the sacrifice He offers Himself, while a priest being a common bread, he shares in this same bread of his own life, because he expiates for his own sins as well.

The Word “Priest”

We are the New Israel. Our breviaries, the Rosary, Roman Missals, all that makes a Catholic life is so connected with priesthood that we cannot avoid the word priesthood and priest. With regard to sacrifice, we date back to Abel. God inspired Abel to show gratitude to God as creator of all that is good, and to bring back to god by offering. Abel did it his way, and it was God’s joy to receive what he offered. Traditionally the one who presides at offerings to god, or to any divinity has a special name, and in some traditions, they devised what to wear during the ceremony. In the case of Aaron the High Priest, the ceremonial gowns were all approved by God.

After Abel then, the Jews, out of all the nations were chosen to properly organize themselves, when it came to worshipping God together. But the offering of Abel was revived by Noah as he came out of the Ark. We read the following: “Then Noah built an altar to Yahweh and choosing from all the clean animals and all the clean birds he presented burnt offerings on the altar.” (Genesis 8:20).

The action of Noah, not only did he thank God, and adore Him as the Creator of all creatures; in gratitude he thanked God on behalf of humanity and all creation. Let us see the joy God receives from our sacrifices. “Yahweh smelt the pleasing smell and said to Himself, ‘Never again will I curse the earth because of human beings, because their heart contrives evil from their infancy. Never again will I strike down every living thing as I have done.’” (Genesis: 8:20~21).

Call Abel whatever you want, give Noah whatever name you want, but they stand in for what the Catholic Church call: “PRIEST.”

This Priesthood in St. Peter’s letter extends to the whole Christian Community. Since everyday, life being problematic, a Christian solves the riddle of life by learning from Jesus whose whole life was a holocaust. He did not offer His life only when He was on the cross, when He said “In manus tuas Domine commendo spiritum meum,” but just as well when He said: “ I came to give them life, and life in abundance.” All His actions were channeled to a sacrifice, not only in one action, but the whole of His life. St. Peter in his first letter says this to us all: “He is the living stone, rejected by human beings but chosen by God and precious to Him; set yourselves close to Him so that you too may be living stones making a spiritual house as a holy priesthood to offer the spiritual sacrifices made acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.” (1 Peter: 2:4~5).

The word “Priest” here means someone, who stands in for others, and for his own needs, as the Bible says, to differentiate us from Jesus, who totally stands in for us, without expiating for His sins, because He has none. St. Peter makes us all, as Christians, imitators of Jesus; we have one thing in common with Jesus: “To offer sacrifices and to expiate for our sins.” All these actions are directed to God. As we offer them to God we are doing priestly actions.

Priesthood Continues With New Israel

It dates back, as I said, with the existence of Abel. Later on the Lord, through Moses said: “The burning offering: He will then slaughter the bull before Yahweh, and the priests descended from Aaron will offer the blood.” (Leviticus 1:1~9).

The Catholic Church cannot do away with priesthood. It means what it is meant to be. It is a community appointment, from the people and for the people.

Strange that priesthood will live on, even in the new and the new Heaven. Here it is: “Yahweh says: ‘Like Israelites bringing offerings in clean vessels to Yahweh’s House. And some of them shall make into priests and Levites, Yahweh says.” (Isaiah 66:20~21).

Priesthood designed and planned as it works in the Catholic Church has to follow the will of God, as Jesus says: “You have not chosen me, I chose you.” Unless you are going to prepare a community of faith, grounded in the love of God and neighbor, you cannot leave the choice of a priest to any Jim and Jack. It is always called the Holy Priesthood, not as it was been presented by the Roman Catholic Church, as taking the holiness from celibacy. To choose Matthias to take place of Judas Iscariot, they had to go into prayer and leave the choice to the Holy Spirit. A presbyter to be taken among the people, without involving God, will be popularly chosen man, but not necessarily approved by God. Neither should this dependence on God take this occasion of the rottenness of the Catholic Church, and hence bring in all sorts of categories of those who have ever dreamt to be priests according to their human concept of priesthood. Those who stick to power today, some of them got what longed to have: Glory, Power, Prestige, and all that their priesthood had given them, and they are happy today. But they were not God’s priests; they came in the church through freemasonry.

The Married Priesthood

Ours is the original priesthood. We are not necessarily to compare ourselves with married priests or other churches. We want to be truly married priests of the Apostolic times. The church was found and built on and by the married priesthood. There is no doubt at all that a structure will be made, just to have a format, where we can be acknowledged as priests deriving their priesthood from the Apostles. We are not half-church, the other half being the celibate priesthood. We are fully priests, planned by God, married as Adam and Eve, bringing forth Holy children, as was Abel, from the renewed and repent family, Adam and Eve.

We, who are now receiving the stones thrown to us, do not want to monopolize the work of redeeming our Mother Church. She cannot see nor feel the sorrow that Jesus feels from the priestly crimes. We have received different punishment, but as long as obligators celibacy lasts in the Catholic Church, the degrading kind of sins will continue.

We shall need new vigor and vision to confront, to live once more the Holy, Apostolic Priesthood, sanctifying matrimonial union, and elevating it to the standard God wanted it to be.

How Do I See Our Church?

First of all, I want to share with you how I have watched the actions of our Mother Catholic church. You may differ from my view-point; praise the Lord, let it be so without condemning me. The rationality of the Catholic Church has won predominance in the governing of the Catholic Church. It is not the Pope who governs the Catholic Church; it is “Curia Romana.” But who is Roman other than the one whose opinion supersedes the groups’ opinion. I may be wrong; I never assisted at the procedure for making decisions.

This disease to over-reasoning and reasoning is taken from the reasoning of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, and so on. Though we attributed to theology which is believed to pave the way to our faith, even our faith is a rationalized faith, which did not accept Joan of Arc, Savarola, and many founders of religious congregations condemned for their mysterious experiences and were sent out if their own congregations to die as nobodies.

The Curia Romana claiming to have the spirit of discernment, we see now through Mass media what the conquistadores did in the name of the church to the people of Latin America. They did the same for the Black People of Africa. Working hand in hand with the Explorers and their governments, they did what was certainly not from the discernment of the Holy Spirit. The Church had a MIND not a HEART.

Will the church recuperate the HEART? Excommunication, interdicts, suspensions, and many other ways, as you say what the ex-sisters have suffered, you and I tend to hide our heads in the sand. They are shameful crimes of our Mother Church. But if we too go alone, we may make as many resolutions as we want, we shall never succeed to renew the church.

First of all we must change our attitudes towards life. It is not only reasoning, which solves human problems. Today the world needs a lot more the act of the heart, than those of the mind. If the mind believes that it can go alone, making precipitous decisions, however logically they may be right, we shall not serve humanity the better.

St. Paul, Colossian 3:16: “with gratitude in your hearts sing psalms and hymns and inspired songs to God.”

St. Ambrose: “Oh Jesus, in the perfection of your beauty fairer than the children of men, wash me clean from my guilt, purify me from my sin (Ps 51:2), so that purified by you, I may be able to come to you, who are yourself most pure, and that I may be found to “dwell in” your Heart “all the days of my life” (Ps 27:4), to behold you, and to be strong to do you will.”

St. Raymond of Penyafor (1175~1275): “Your purity of life, your devotion, deserves and calls for a reward; because you are acceptable and pleasing to God. Your purity of life must be made purer still, by frequent buffetings, until you attain perfect sincerity of heart.”

If faith, acquired through intellectual perception in theology, it has to be moderated by the perception of the heart in which love resides. And love is the only virtue which will remain after faith and hope have done their job on earth. The disappearing of devotions in the Catholic Church, for instance no respect for the Eucharist, and other traditional devotions, have spiritually emptied the souls of those simple devotees, whose God spoke to them as they sat before Jesus Christ in the Eucharist.

Rev. Moon

Just as the old Catholics, the Lutherans, and now strongly the Orthodox feel free to work with me, so are the Moonists, happy to work with me. They see that I have no Catholic pomposity, superiority complex, but guided by prudence and love, I never have offended anyone of them in my behavior. They see in me their own expansion, and that I am a ladder to reach the Catholic Church. It is beyond doubt that Miliongo is Catholic bone, blood, and water, and all that makes him who he is.

Many human beings have played tricks on us, promising financial help, but to no avail. Only Rev. Moon has taken interest in our case and has helped us to move up to where we are. But he does not promise that he will keep on supporting us. The wealth of Rev. Moon is no more in his power. It is his wife and children who are now owners of all that he built up.

Our movement is officially registered, but it was no tax exemption. People are interested in tax exemption in order that one way or another they get back their money. However, it seems that those who are now inviting us to go to their countries will take as well the travel costs and accommodation and food. We hope that does not just remain a dream, but a reality.

Our Prelature

We will deprive you nothing of who you are. None of us will establish a Kingdom out of Married Priest Now! You have already suffered more than enough. We count on your good will and honesty and sincerity. There is none among our Bishops who is power-hungry. Our Kingdom is in our own families, where we display a total freedom and confidence. Nor are we expecting honors and decorations, patting us on our shoulders. We are simply family priests. At our meeting s our wives have all the freedom to say what they feel, and we all pay attention to what they say.

I personally see the Prelature expanding through units. This means the priestly family units which will be formed in different countries. In my concept I see our Prelature enlightening the units and diffusing the wisdom which comes from these units and share them with everyone. The picture I have may not be adequate to demonstrate what I have in mind. Much of what I see is the Holy Spirit coming down on each Apostle and on Mother Mary on Pentecost day, giving each one of them all the graces needed to carry out the mission God had decided upon. The Prelature should be looked at as a communication channel that continuously refreshes the units in order to go into action and activity.

If ours is a mission for the church today, the Holy Spirit is not going to limit Himself to those who are administrators or the councilors of the Prelature. There will be a reciprocal sharing of Spiritual experiences, of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. As St. Paul says to the Ephesians: “And to some, His ‘gift’ was that they should be apostles; to some, prophets; to some, evangelists; to some, pastors and teachers, to knit God’s Holy people together for the work of service to build up the Body of Christ, until all reach unity in faith and knowledge of the Son of God and for the perfect man, fully mature with fullness of Christ himself.” (Eph 4:9~14).

I am certain that all your questions are answered. Do not look at us from a distance. The game we are playing is as well yours.

God Bless.

Yours Sincerely,

Archbishop E. Milingo

 

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 08:20 | Permalink | commenti (1)
categories:circular letter, theology, celibacy
10/05/2007
Origins of Married Priesthood (Archibishop Emmanuel Milingo)
17th April, 2007 

Ours is not a publicity advertisement which we are exposing to the possible buyers of the story of married priests. We are aiming first of all at convincing the priests themselves of their dignity and responsibility before God. We believe that we are in a second stage of our moving towards married priesthood. We first struggled to convince them that no power on earth can undo the priestly character of ordination to priesthood, which, as they were consecrated and anointed, has remarried and will remain indelible. The church itself repeats the words to each priest being ordained; "You are a priest forever, according to the order of Melchizedek." These same words are applied to the priesthood of Jesus. So we priests, being "other christs," as the church herself calls us, we embrace the duty and responsibility of the saving work of Jesus. A privilege, but a serious responsibility at the same time. 

Hence in our celebration of Mass during the married priests' convocations, we spiritually and morally struggled to convince priests that they should have no grudge against those who maltreated them. Among these are those superiors, bishops who invoked from the church a punishment on married priests who gave up a celibate life. Many priests did not suddenly come to the decision to give up celibacy. They took the normal procedures of dispensation, which did not satisfy them. They did not mean to give up their pastoral work as priests. They just come to the conclusion that this was not their life to be single. That is why in some countries more than 50% of married priests still want to come back to their pastoral activity.

In my contacts, I have come across married priests who have still felt being in contact with people. They are counseling, teaching, or back to the parish work as assistants to the celibate priests. That means that they have been forced to accept anything which satisfies their vocation to serve people. Ours is to claim back all that belongs to priesthood. Because there is no sound reason whatever that celibacy takes an upper hand over priesthood. It is a church precept, made great by its punishments, which make an impression when waved off as if one has committed a spiritual suicide. The punishment is not proportionate to the crime. Even those who have been dispensed still have no right to their priestly ministry. To marry, as a late second choice is a priest's right. Since it is a precept, and by asking dispensation, the priest declares publicly that this is not his life. He would have left during his formation years. However he put it to trial, and found out that this celibate life could not stick to him. His conscience should be respected. The mistake is of the church who bonded celibacy with priesthood, and attributed the great works of the church due to celibate priesthood. Throughout church history celibacy was not accepted, but imposed. And now nature itself and human community cannot any longer tolerate it, due to shameful crimes which have their origin "celibacy." One American lady has written a book on celibacy, entitled; "Cursed celibacy in the Catholic Church." These women talk a lot about the priests access to religious women, commonly known as "Nuns or sisters." 

Absolution from suspensions, interdicts 
and excommunications 

On the authority of Jesus, who spoke of the sin against the Holy Spirit as the only one which may not be forgiven. But it was a warning not to undervalue God's gifts, or attribute them to the devil, as they said Jesus sent away the demons from people by the power of Beelzebub. Jesus was the son of God! "I came to do the will of my Father." He said. And of course we all know how He was full of the Holy Spirit as He was being baptized in the river Jordan. 
It was our joy to absolve each and every priest who has been punished in whatever form for having opted to marry rather than to remain celibate. Such married priesthood already exists in other Christian churches, and they incur nothing, as they make their own choice. 
Recently, on 7th April, Holy Saturday, we celebrated mass, which they called the "Alleluia mass." I still stuck to my Catholic Tradition of putting off the ring till mid-night of Saturday. So on this 10:00 A.M. mass, I sung alleluia, while on the other hand, I was mourning Jesus from Good Friday.
However, we started the Mass, till at the offertory the priest reminded me; "What about absolution?" We had said the penitential "Confiteor," and "Lord have mercy." What absolution? I said to myself. Some of these priests have been at our priests' convocations in U.S.A and they remembered this special absolution. So, in order not to disrupt the celebration of mass I said; "My dear brothers and sisters, just as we are now going to offer the Host and Wine, which will soon become the body and blood of Jesus, let us recall the words of Jesus." Before you present your gift on the altar, and you remember that you have a grudge against your brother or sister, go back home, and reconcile with your brother and sister, and after that come back to present your offering on the altar." Then I went on appealing to all present to forgive one another, and particularly married priests who have become a public ridicule in the Catholic Community. So I stretched my hands on all the people and the priests saying." By the authority of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by the power of the Holy Spirit, through the powerful intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, of the Angels and Saints, I absolve you all from all sinful entanglements, interdicts, suspensions and excommunications of whatever sort they might be, in the Blood of Jesus Christ be you all cleansed, in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen."

On Easter Sunday, we came back to St. Paul, Brazil. We had a healing session after mass. We had 1,700 people in attendance. To impose hands, with four priests anointing the sick. That is a sight to observe. Having so many people in one place, the doctors were available in case of an accident. To their surprise there was such calm and peace, nothing happened which needed ambulances, and came up to line up with the sick. So they too were anointed. In the end I had to ask the service people to put a block, when I saw that the lines were coming to an end. So they did bock those who might have come back the second time. This is what happened in Zaire Congo Democratic, some years ago. They went home and collected their brothers, and sisters, and we would never see the end of the healing session. They come in, they come in…. Only late did we know that not all those who presented themselves for the anointing were present throughout the mass. Nothing evil in wanting to get something for our own relatives. It is wishing good for our brothers and sisters.

After The Healing Session!
Usually we should speak less after mass, since people have been patient enough to listen to long homilies. But sometimes the audience itself attracts the speaker to say the bits, which he did not complete in the homily. But this time, it was not only myself to once more address the people, but rather the concelebrants did add more savour to the conclusion of the class. One married priest, a professor in the University of St. Paul made the audience so happy to hear him speak of his wife, hi children and five grand-children. He was so free, and joking as he spoke to the delight of the whole assembly.
Then came one of the married Bishops. He opened his concluding words by saying; "Already we have witnessed miracles. Some married priests, who had lost hope to celebrate mass, have now begun to do so. It is so consoling to see such a response, "We have had three previous meetings with the married priests. Now at St. Paul this was our last tap before coming back to Korea. So on Monday, 9th April, in the afternoon we left for Korea, embarking on a long journey, they say 27 hours in the air. 

The Roots and Origins of Priesthood

There are many reasons why priesthood should suffer such draw-backs. One would ask; "How is it that such a gift of God to mankind should be treated as it is by the beneficiaries?" One would dare say; "What is it that man has not tarnished on earth?" if we were to see one another's sins, we would be the more angry against one another, pointing fingers at one another, saying; "How dare you offend God so much?" The one blamed would say the same thing; "And you, you are not better."
It is said that before receiving an official dispensation from celibacy, one had to write the following:
1. I am a fool, an idiot, the precise word.
2. I am sexually weak. I can't carry the burn of celibacy.
3. then the scandal he would continue to give in the Christian community if he went on with celibacy.
But how many of those in authority are not in the same bag with the condemned. It is easy to see a beam in a friend's eye, without seeing that which is in one's own eye. "Take up your stone," Says Jesus, "and throw it on the adulteress, if you never committed adultery." "One by one," the Bible says, "they left the adulteress alone, throwing away the stones as they left in shame." 
Priesthood has profound roots in marriage. God knew that it was the only way to maintain it, and to keep its luster and splendor. We read from Pope St. Clement I to the Corinthians; "For it is from Jacob that all the priests and Levites who minister at God's altar have since descended. From him, too, according to the flesh, has come the Lord Jesus." (St. Clement I; to Corinthians; No.31-3). Remember, Jesus is the Eternal Priest. He too takes His priesthood from the family of Jacob, which carries on its blood lineage into the family of Juda. To complete His proper human education He had to be born in a family, of two holy parents, Joseph and Mary. Since by God's appointment Jesus was born a priest, the two parents were prepared by God to have all the necessary qualifications to carry out their duty as parents of the Son of God. So Jesus, the Eternal priest deserves what Psalm 132:9 says; "Your priests shall be clothed with holiness, your faithful shall ring out their joy." This generosity of God is not limited to Jesus, the Eternal priest, "To clothe His priests with holiness," this applies to all the priests. 
I am afraid I may be confusing my readers. What I am driving at are two most important points connected with priesthood.

1. Priesthood has its origin in a chosen family. Justifiably so do we call Joseph and Mary, the holy family into which Jesus was born. They too shared the priesthood of Jesus, and so as a family they also shared the Holiness with which Jesus was robed. 
This fact must distinguish us as married priests now by the holiness of our priestly life, and that of our families. The whole family "should be clothed in holiness."
2. Personal Holiness of a Priest
Let us start from Jesus again, as the church teaches us in the Vatican Council Document: Priestly ministry and Life."
We derive our holiness from the anointing and the consecration of Jesus Himself. Here then is what the Vatican Council says: "Christ, whom the Father sanctified, consecrated and sent out into the world; gave Himself for us to redeem us from all iniquity and purify for Himself a people of His own, zealous for good deeds." Thus through His passion He entered into His glory." (Vat. Council II: Ch. 3:12)
What is encouraging, as one reads this particular document for priestly ministry, is the level to which the church raises priesthood. The church, as she applies the mission of Jesus as a continuation through priesthood, repeats that what she says of Jesus. Hence the church continues to say: "Similarly priests, consecrated by the anointing of the Holy Spirit and sent out by Christ, must practice mortification and give themselves entirely to the service of mankind. In this way, enriched by holiness in Christ, they can achieve perfect manhood."
3. "Robed in Holiness";
This language hurts the ears of those who have missed the way, and connected priestly holiness with celibacy. What I am saying is simply truth. A priest is a divine person. I cannot imagine the return of our married priests without renewing and reviving the naked truth of their call to priesthood. We may be as many as we are in the world, priesthood remains ever a unique call to holiness, or privilege for which we cannot sufficiently thank God. 
Let what St Elizabeth Ann Seton (1774-1821) help us to look into ourselves; "What a deep thought that God Himself is the very life of our being. He dwells in the soul of each one of us as in His own element." Just imagine what more we would say as priests, who handle Jesus during the consecration and call Him to come down and dwell with us on earth. Then we share His being as we receive Him in the Eucharist. This is more than just a small matter. 
So continues St Elizabeth Ann Seton: "Oh my God, my blindness has been truly great to have though of you so little through my life, though living wholly in you."
We too like St. Elizabeth Ann Seton reminds us of the presence of God in us, as I too have said earlier on, the church tells us how to live our priesthood. She says: "A priest's personal holiness helps to make his own ministry more fruitful. Although unworthiness in the priest is no obstacle to the flow of sowing grace, it is nevertheless God's way to work wonders of grace. 
Only through those who are more docile and sensitive to the inspiration and guidance of the Holy Spirit. These are the priests who through their union with Christ and their holiness of life are able to say with the Apostle: "I live, yet not I live, but Christ lives in me."
In order to bring to death the historical and institutional lie that celibacy is the "factotum" of priesthood, one has to study deeply the Vatican Council document on priests' perfection and ministry. I would not like to prolong this argument. However there are those invested with ecclesial power and authority, who will not believe what I say. till like Thomas the Apostle, they will not believe till they read directly from the sources of the document. Here we are then to satisfy them: "Each priest is enriched with a particular grace because in his own way he assumes the person of Christ Himself. This enables him to serve his own flock and the whole people of God." (Decree on Priestly ministry and life: Vat. Cou. II)

Part II

Testimonies and actualities
More documentaries are on the way to humiliate the more our mother church. The people are fed up with the Roman Catholic pomposity and superiority complex. It is good to admire the mysterious construction of an Egyptian Pyramid from hearsay, than when we actually see it with naked eyes. One reads about the detailed construction, and the years it took to be built. One must always remember that one is reading what "was; and what is not today. In that context one has a reason to admire the magnitude of a pyramid. 
The Catholic Church has been admirable. I mean the Roman Catholic Church. But its intimidation policy and the multiple ways to punish its own subjects is what is on the way to be revealed. What is forth- coming is not something that is pleasing to us as the subjects of the Roman Catholic Church, the fact remains that time has matured to restore to the church its original luster and beauty. Those engaged in the exposition of the evils which have embedded the Catholic Church are themselves Catholics, working in the same Catholic Church. 
There are three reasons for which they are doing such a disgusting job:
1. One reason is that they cannot stand the hypocrisy that is going on in the Catholic Church.
2. The stubbornness of ecclesial authority not to move forward when the Holy Spirit says so is the cause of the spiritual sterility being experienced now in the Roman Catholic Church.
3. To crown it all they too as children of mother church have felt the pinch of shame which has befallen their mother. In one way or another, it is good that the children themselves contribute to the cleansing of their mother church.

I personally have already been fed up with what is already coming out of the findings. I pray that the new church, renewed and cleansed will soon take a stand in the world, and will once more be the church, the Ideal Mother of humanity. I doubt as to the whether the foreseen unity will be the one conceived by the Roman Catholic Church, which has failed to put the believes together. It has been a historical failure. We count on the Holy Spirit to reconstruct the structure of the forth-coming church. 

What will be our role as members of married priests prelature? 
One must not take what I am saying as a joke. But it will be a fact. From our experience through e-mails' correspondence, we have experienced "oneness in suffering." Someone has rightly called our prelature the overshadowing umbrella on all the united (Branches of Married Priests' Now)."
To have a just idea concretely, one has to imagine the Holy Spirit overshadowing the Apostles, touching each one with the firely tongue overhead. That is why we have slowly to learn from the Holy Spirit as to what He wants of the married priests. I personally am certain that the intentions for which the church was established will have to be lived again. But it will not take too long before God transforms this world, which continuously vacillates. So the renewal of the church will finally sanctify the church to such an extent that the story of sin ceases and is concluded, in the triumph of the whole humanity divinised. 

The Danger Is…
Like spoiled children, we have always been on the receiving side. The forth-coming change demands cooperation from the whole humanity. The danger is that we are inclined to put God in a circle, and watch Him to do the dancing, while we clap hands and enjoy ourselves. This time God will not be the lonely player. We are the sinners, God is tired of seeing evil triumphing, continuously raising its flag of evil, sending its evil stench in the midst of humanity. He will no more do it alone. He demands the cooperation of the whole humanity to willingly decide to be on the side of God. If God goes it alone, the destruction will be more disastrous than that of Sodom and Gomorrah. Some catholic priests are the first to tell people that there is no more hell, because God is merciful and that the Blood of Jesus has covered up everything that would hurt God. These lies come from false priests trained in Catholic Universities to upset the church in a clever way. Now the fruit of their work can no more be hidden.

The Over-All Renewed Humanity through the Family
What has gone wrong with the formation of priests? It is said that "Good will paves the way to hell." Our seminary professors had a lot of good will. Later on some of them left seats as professors, and even left their priestly ministry. They saw their brilliant students, one by one laying aside celibacy, giving it back to the church. This was not encouraging to their professors. Today all over the world great numbers of seminaries have been closed. Some of them have been sold. I have heard of some major seminaries having less than ten students.
Fausto Marinetti, speaking in the name of married priests gives the reasons why the church has lost her priests. He speaks of the ingredients which go into the formation of a priest. He says: "Despite the affirmation of principle, there is a continuous trend to consider sexuality intrinsically dangerous, impure, bad, unsuitable for the minister of the cult. The pleasure is considered work of the devil, the woman one of the most ruinous competitor of God. There is fear of it, to the point of demonizing. We are not free from the dualism and Manichaeism, that sees the body with black glasses." What precautious we aught to take as we deal with a woman. Our celibacy is the mother of pearl, more valuable than the life of a woman who is before me, asking for advice. "Nunguam Soli," never be alone with a woman. This is our priestly formation. It does not take long when a priest begins to question himself on this spiritual discrimination against women. His own findings in the active apostolate contradict his in-bedded prejudices against women. The virtues of a woman as a mother over power him. He meets some noble women, with such decency of manners, which attract him to know more of women. They are not those depicted in the formation series for priesthood.
I am surprised that the feminine movement has not yet produced a documentary against the Catholic Church, which is the first in all aspects to discriminate a woman. It was never like-wise with Jesus. He condescended with joy and satisfaction, when a woman publicly anointed Him with aroma ointments. He stopped on the way up to Golgotha when Veronica wiped His face, full of blood and sweat. He stopped as well to speak intimately to the women on the fourth station of the cross. How He appreciated the accompaniment of women in His preaching tours.
Even in this 21st century the Catholic Church has no woman in her administrative circles in what we call Curia Romana. A woman on the level of secretary of state world be a danger to the personnel in Curia Romana. So the greatest talents hidden in women for the welfare of the universal church have never been used. What would the Catholic Church be if she put in use the feminine touch in administration of her spiritual treasury! It has been a loss for two thousand years.
Let us now hear what Pope Pius XII says of a woman, in this we see a married woman, a wife: "Yes, the wife and the mother is the radiant sun of the family. She is this sun by her generosity and gift of self, by her unfailing readiness, by her watchful and prudent delicacy in all matters which can add joy to the lives of her husband and her children." In her is the joy of the whole family. His Holiness Pope Pius XII has more to say when he sees a woman in marriage. He says: "and if you can say that a marriage augurs well, when both partners seek the happiness of the other rather than their own, this noble feeling and intention is more especially the quality of the wife, although it concerns both husband and wife. It is born of the very pulse of her mother's heart and its wisdom." (Pius XII: To newly married couples: 11th March, 1942). All the prejudices we had during our formation years as priests have to crumble before such profound expressions from the teaching of the Pope in praise of a woman. So we have to ask pardon to women in the Catholic Church as priests who looked down upon women, as says Fausto Marinetti: The woman one of the most ruinous competitor of God." We received prudent advice: "watch out as you deal with a woman."

We Married Priests, Let Us Open Our Eyes
If we have to renew the church, let us do so with our wives. This is the whole humanity on the move. We call it a family. Let our wives be completely themselves. The men have blurred the gifts of God to humanity by their selfishness, pride and arrogance. A woman was less than a companion, with equal rights. We regret and repent. Let us once more be consoled by what Pope Pius XII says: "The wife is the radiant sun of the family by her natural candor, by her simple dignity and by her Christian and decent behaviour, as much by her collectedness of at once reserved and affectionate." (op.cit.)
More than this on a woman will be too much. What a value she is in the family, adorned with human and spiritual gifts, which in many cases she too is not aware of.

Archbishop E. Milingo
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 15:19 | Permalink | commenti
categories:theology, celibacy
27/04/2007
Archibishop Milingo's declarations about report of the Brazilian mission
   The report of the Brazilian mission has valid comments. Two points remained unclear to the reporter, one is that he thinks that we are not clear on what we are aiming at as a movement. Here it is:
  1. We assure the married priests that whatever suspension, interdict, excommunication never touched their priesthood which is eternal. So they are priests forever, and even as married they should resume their pastoral activity, as one community made up of married priests have done in San Cros, Spain.
  2. That optional celibacy should be the rule, not to connect celibacy with priesthood, and woke people believe that celibacy is the cause of holiness in a priest. This is a lie. Moreover celibacy has done a lot of harm to the church. 

Archbishop E. Milingo

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 16:54 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, information, sentences, recent media, celibacy
26/04/2007
Archbishop E. Milingo answers to who think that we have exaggerated the number of married priests
I would like to answer those who think that we have exaggerated the number of married priests by putting it at 150,000. As a matter of fact there are more than 150.000 married priests. We are talking of 1,000 years of forced celibacy. Only in U.S.A there are more than 25,000. Just imagine the rest of the continents, like Brazil with 18,000. In some countries they are not even taken into consideration, since they represent a second class community. 

Thousands others have joined old Catholics, Orthodox, Lutherans, Anglicans and others have become Bishops founding congregations of married priests. These congregations are not known to the Vatican. Moreover, the language of the Vatican is introvert. They give the world their own image, which people today do not accept. They are not interested in married priests. What about those who are priest-pairs of homo-sexuals? These are as well in great numbers. I personally am dealing with a lot of them. I held a long conversation as to how to solve the problem of some of these newly founded priestly congregations in which some choose to remain celibate by name, while they mean to live as priest-homo-sexuals. This is all due to the lack of option for celibacy and married priesthood.

The Vatican is to a great measure ignorant of the great divisions within the Roman Catholic Church caused by celibacy. From myself in the midst of the different categories of priests, who have been over-drunk by celibacy. They have lost their mental balance. The name "Catholic" causes a nausea up to a point of vomiting; "Hypocrisy", they say.

Archbishop E. Milingo
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 10:28 | Permalink | commenti (1)
categories:news, sentences, theology, celibacy
02/04/2007
MARRIED PRIESTS NOW IN BRAZIL: PROCEEDINGS AND DECLARATION
We, married bishops, priests and deacons of Brazil, ministering in various catholic institutions, together as married priests, originally from the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church, members of the Married Priests Movement (MPC), gathered in the First Brazilian Convention of the Movement Married Priests Now, realized in S. Paulo, in the city of Atibaia, form March 23 to 25, 2007, under the spiritual guidance of Emmanuel Milingo, Archbishop Emeritus from Lusaka, Zambia (Africa); with the presence of the clergy of the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church and his patriarch, Dom Luis Fernando Mendez; the clergy of the Catholic Apostolic Missionary Church of Evangelization; the clergy of the Catholic Orthodox Charismatic Church; the Franciscan Congregation of Useless Servants members; the URI (United religions Initiatives) members and the Family Federation for World Peace. 

WE DECLARE THAT:

1. The family is a holy institution created by God; 
2. The family is the way for the human beings to continue their lineage, their descendant and the future of humankind; 
3. The human sainthood is in the priesthood and in the family, not in the compulsory celibacy; 
4. The family is the school of love with distinctive expressions, then it is a human, spiritual, biological and social necessity; 
5. The formation of the family is a divine right endowed to all human beings, including the priests and all members of the diverse religious manifestations of the world; 
6. The Movement Married Priests Now does not aim to oppose the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church, or any other religious denominations, but the defense of the human right to establish consecrated families and the free expression of their religiosity; 
7. The spiritual inspiration endowed by Jesus to archbishop Emmanuel Milingo with the authority of Jesus blood, all married priests are forgiven of all mistakes or spiritual injury, coming from the decision to establish their family and to multiply their descendant lineage on Earth; all married priests are free from all punishments coming from the excommunication of any religious institution; all married priests are authorized to celebrate the Holy Eucharist and minister the Holy Sacraments in their families and their communities, according to the spiritual necessity of the Christian people of Brazil. 
8. The radical defense of the celibacy (the interdiction to realize a family) imposed by the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church to hundreds of thousands of her members, denies the origin, the purpose and the divine nature of the family institution (Genesis 1, 28), is contrary to the biblical affirmation (Titus1:6; Tm 3), and violate one the most vital and sacred human right. However, the time has arrived for the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church to rethink her position and to restore this God's given human right. 

To conclude, we urge all religious believers and all Brazilian to support the Movement Married Priests Now in order to empower the Christian faith and to contribute for the establishment of healthy families centered on God, which are the base for the social peace and the roots for the Kingdom of God in Brazil and in the world.

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 10:43 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, statement, circular letter, theology, celibacy
02/04/2007
Speech of Archbishop Milingo in Brazil
Your Excellency Dom Mendes Luis Patriarch,

Dear Bishops and Archbishops, my dear brothers, president and your spouses.

This has been unforgettable week. It is more than I can express in my words and

I have to use only thanks you.

The collaboration between the federation of universal peace and the married priests, I have observed that it works.

There have been on both sides appreciation of each other. I pray that this acceptance of one another grows and undoubtedly more and more understanding of between Catholics and the unification church will be arriver at.

My conclusion and the theme of de married priests does not give me much joy.

I have come to know that there are many more married priests here in Brazil than in U.S.A however, one consoling fact is that 75% of them are ready to resume their priestly ministry.

But the doors of the Catholic Church are still closed to them. So they go on wandering into other denominations, or start their denominations.

I have taken this fact up with the married bishops and priests here in Brazil. We have come to there conclusions:

1. This attitude of the Catholic Church, not to listen to the complaints of the people, which come from the celibacy imposed on the priests, has now gone too far. The presence of Eucharistic ministers, however many they may be, can not replace priests in the Catholic Church.

2. The fruit of ecumenism with other churches, which only yesterday they were considered separated brothers, cannot give satisfaction to a priest who has been trained as a Roman Catholic priest. 

3. It is with regret and sorrow that we are forced to say what we are going to say. The Catholic Church will conclude that we are saying this with bitterness. Not at all.

We have come to this conclusion that if the Catholic Church does not open doors to married priests, them it is not fair that she goes on baptizing people, whom she will care for the salvation of their souls.

This negligence and stubbornness due to an exaggerated attachment to celibacy, is now clearly showing indifferentism of the Catholic Church

A change of attitude towards this question of optional celibacy is no more a question to be answered tomorrow. The baptized Catholics are waiting for the return of their Roman Catholic priests, whom they have been used to call “father” from their baptismal birth.

We look forward to a good response from the Catholic Church.

Arch. E. Milingo
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 10:37 | Permalink | commenti
categories:celibacy
26/03/2007
"Our Lenten thought. God Deserves a Good Name Among His Priests"
The stories of the crimes of priests struggling to maintain celibacy were hidden for many years. We the Church hid them from the faithful for fear of scandals. Those whom we advised to close their mouths can no longer hold their tongues. The pains they underwent, especially as victims of sexual abuse have overcome them. Today our belief that celibacy could keep its luster up to the end of the world has proved to be a myth. We all priests are now categorized as organized hypocrites for two thousand years.

Are we aware of what harm we are doing and have been doing to the name of God? What a privileged status we have been enjoying in the Catholic Church on account of celibacy! The name which has been valued, “celibacy produces saints.” We have enjoyed the earthly glory of celibacy, but the lie is now exposed to the world. We are obliged to lower our heads as we move among the faithful.

Who will stop the media not to humiliate us by continuously washing our dirty linen in public? If we were ourselves to wash it, but we are forced to wash it in prison and by paying enormous sums of money. With all the good will of the Church, or a diocese, it will be hard to pay and finish as long as celibacy is adored as an idol in the Roman Catholic Church. How does a diocese guarantee that the new priests will be angels?

Should we come back to castrating boys in order that they remain in the choir to sing “soprano”? So should it be in order to maintain celibacy with a guaranteed fruit of not touching a woman. But if celibacy will demand this action to guarantee its existence in the Roman Catholic Church, then celibacy will no more be divine. It will be human manipulation.

The suffering of the priests themselves are more than what one can tell. We are certain, we married priests now, that we can make a difference as priests. Our wives are aware of the humiliations they have borne as the Eves who have stolen a golden egg, the celibate priest of God. They have eaten, so they are told, a common bread by themselves. Hence they are labeled selfish women. Together with us they offer themselves as victims for the welfare of the Church. Our thought are their thoughts. We dream the same thing to do all we can to bring back into the harvest, which is truly lacking workers. We have no reason to be proud, since we too are victims of an admired celibacy. How we longed to grow wings as we put on celibacy on our ordination day. The wings only remained as shoots without growing. We are sorry for that.

It is the name of God at stake. The sincerity of the Church by calling us “other Christs,” priests of God, all that comprises our priestly vocation is truly and sincerely noble. To represent Jesus on the altar, to use His words as our own, and to act in the name of Jesus makes us shudder, and go into our skins. It is a fact that none of us deserves by right to be a priest. “You have not chosen me, I have chosen you,” says Jesus. “Do this in memory of me.” Truly and sincerely we say: “I am not worthy that you come under my roof (in my heart),” because knowing, the little we can know of Jesus, none of us can truly be the replica of His personhood.

We, the married priests’ prelature take as our Lenten pledge to offer Masses for the priests who are still under cover of celibacy, continuing to offend God, for fear of losing their position in life. What does a good name serve, or a good job, while it has no heavenly merits. An immoral status satisfies the individual priest, while mystically he is contributing nothing to the mystical body. He is a thorn in the flesh.

Be in contact with us, we shall help you to come out of your miserable situations. We ask you as well to pray for us that we may proceed making proper plans to realize our mission.

God bless you.
Yours Sincerely,
Archbishop E. Milingo.
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 16:45 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, theology, celibacy
26/03/2007
“To be a priest every moment.”
March 16, 2007.

Houston: 23-24 March, 2007.

“To be a priest every moment.”

Your Excellencies, Archbishops, Bishops and Married Priests, 


Greetings in Jesus Christ. I have already I am sending you our Lenten thoughts in which we are looking at ourselves in our past condition, miserable as we were. But now together we share the warmth of each other’s heart. What a joy when that day will come when our missionaries will go visiting the married priests. We anticipate to receive from them as they will return from their missionary tours full of enthusiasm, to tell us the stories of their encounters. Like the seventy-two disciples of sent out two by two by our Lord Jesus Christ, they came back full of enthusiasm. “Rejoice the more,” said Jesus to them, “that your names are written in Heaven (Luke 10:20).

As our missionaries go to the different countries to meet the married priests, there is one very important point to be taken into consideration. The Lord demands from us to throw away at the back of our shoulders whatever we underwent mentally, morally, spiritually and psychologically. The Lord invites us to forget the past. Let us move forward, forging ahead as we enter into the dawn of the new era. We shall overcome obstacles under one condition, as we live by what St. Paul says in Ephesians 4:26-27: “Do not let resentment lead you into sin; the sunset must not find you still angry. Do not give the devil his opportunity.” In clear terms it means: “To forgive those who offended us, by putting us in the condition in which they deprive most of us from continuing our ministry, just as we ask them to forgive us for the scandals which arose from our actions.”

From now on the Lord has something in stock for us: “That we be priests every moment.” So says St. Peter: “Always behave honorably among pagans so that they can see your good works for themselves and, when the day of reckoning comes, give thanks to God for the things which now make them denounce you as criminals. (1 Peter 2:1-17).

We shall never surpass the generosity of the Lord. Our renewed commitment to God, following the footsteps of Jesus will be accompanied by blessings to our people, which have been reserved till the priests are reinstated. The High Priest Zechary reminds us of who we are, and how we ought to behave ourselves as ministers of God: “Let us serve the Lord in holiness and justice and He will deliver us from the hands of our enemies.”

God bless.
Yours Sincerely,
Archbishop E. Milingo.
Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 16:42 | Permalink | commenti
categories:news, theology, celibacy
08/12/2006

Press Statement

 

Married Priests Defend Cardinal Hummes

 

Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo, Roman Catholic Archbishop of the Married Priests Now! Prelature said in a letter today to his bishops: “I would like to share with you my deepest concern with the situation of our Roman Catholic Church. I cannot personally accept the treatment which Cardinal Claudio Hummes has received in the Vatican after declaring clearly that celibacy is not a dogma but a church discipline. But as soon as he arrived in Rome he was questioned and forced to change his attitude to say that celibacy is a long standing law which has contributed a lot to the Catholic Church. We must protect and defend his integrity, and the dignity and status of the Church to tell the truth.”

 

Milingo continued, “This is what I have to say. If the Holy Father has appointed him responsible for the Congregation of the Clergy it is undoubted because he has the gift and the charism to run this congregation. In ecclesiastical language we say that when the Church appoints somebody to take certain great responsibility it means that they have discovered in him a certain worthiness and special divine grace to carry out the job. In simple words we say that we believe he has Gracious Status. That is a divine grace that supports his work and will influence his work. In the case of Cardinal Hummes what came out of his mind and heart immediately after his appointment to be head of the congregation of the clergy was to tackle the problem of celibacy. We believe this was the immediate inspiration of the Holy Spirit who presented the actual problem of the Church.”

 

His letter continued, “We know this about Archbishop Claudio Hummes, who is a simple Franciscan priest whose deep love, faithful service and distinguished church career to the people of God eventually raised him to the level of Archbishop of Sao Paulo, Brazil. He was personally selected and recently appointed by His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI, to serve as the Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy. In that capacity, he is entrusted with the heavy duty and awesome responsibility of advising the Pope and the rest of the Roman Curia on matters related to the life and ministry of the Roman Catholic Clergy. It is ironic that, while his advice and counsel are eagerly sought at the highest levels of decision making, Cardinal Hummes' explosive statement concerning celibacy as "NOT a dogma but a discipline of the Church," was not well received or welcomed. Cardinal Hummes was simply telling the truth. His statement came two weeks after the Pope met with department heads (dicasteries) of the Roman Curia, effectively slamming the door on any possibility of change to the Church's current stance on celibacy.  Cardinal Hummes' prophetic voice immediately provoked the chastisement of the Vatican , leaving him with egg on his face while feebly attempting to re-shuffle his remarks by regurgitating stale  Vatican pronouncements on celibacy, thus minimizing the impact of his original statement. The Vatican 's dissatisfaction with the Cardinal's forthright and self-effacing statement impugned his integrity and damaged his sterling reputation as an uncompromising voice of truth. It is totally apparent that the Vatican has no tolerance or appreciation for independent-minded clerics who bring a Spirit-inspired and pastoral approach to matters affecting the growth, health and well-being of its clergy and parishioners. Persons who go against the grain are swiftly silenced and made ecclesiastical eunuchs for the sake of preserving the status quo. Cardinal Hummes has become a public relations nightmare for the Vatican and, unfortunately for the Congregation of the Clergy that could have benefited greatly under the aegis of Cardinal Hummes, his tenure may now amount to nothing more than an asterisk in the annals of Church History as another muzzled voice crying out in the wilderness to let the Holy Spirit once again renew the face of Catholicism.”

 

“It may be contagious,” Milingo said, “because today, in Belgium a survey of 234 priests revealed that a clear majority or 57% said their work load was too severe.  The priests supported the admission of married men into the priesthood which did not surprise Cardinal Danneels who said, “Everyone knows celibacy is an ecclesiastical rule that could change.””   Archbishop Milingo wondered. “Can we expect now that Cardinal Danneels of Belgium will now be called to Rome and asked to clarify his statement?” 

 

“We know that marriage is a sacrament and it is a higher calling than celibacy,” Milingo continued, “and the church will one day soon re-instate the married priesthood and that is the way Christ intended the priesthood to be lived because he called married priests first.  St. Peter was a married priest. The Holy Spirit is moving the hearts of the cardinals and bishops and they will do what is right for the church.”

Author Nickname: marriedpriests date time 10:45 | Permalink | commenti (5)
categories:news, press statement, celibacy
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