Eastern Churches - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Sun, 14 May 2023 02:22:27 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Eastern Churches - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Pope Francis: Priestly celibacy only a discipline, could be reviewed https://cathnews.co.nz/2023/03/13/pope-francis-priestly-celibacy-marriage-economy/ Mon, 13 Mar 2023 05:05:34 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=156550

Pope Francis discussed the possibility of revising the Western discipline of priestly celibacy in a wide-ranging interview for his 10th anniversary as pope last week. Francis spoke with Argentine journalist Daniel Hadad. "There is no contradiction for a priest to marry. "Celibacy in the Western Church is a temporary prescription: I do not know if Read more

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Pope Francis discussed the possibility of revising the Western discipline of priestly celibacy in a wide-ranging interview for his 10th anniversary as pope last week.

Francis spoke with Argentine journalist Daniel Hadad.

"There is no contradiction for a priest to marry.

"Celibacy in the Western Church is a temporary prescription: I do not know if it is settled in one way or another, but it is temporary in this sense," Francis said.

"It is not eternal like priestly ordination, which is forever, whether you like it or not. Whether you leave or not is another matter, but it is forever.

"On the other hand, celibacy is a discipline."

When asked if celibacy "could be reviewed," Francis responded: "Yes, yes. In fact, everyone in the Eastern Church is married. Or those who want to. There they make a choice.

"Before ordination, there is the choice to marry or to be celibate."

It isn't likely making celibacy optional would lead more people to join the priesthood, Francis said.

He noted there are already married priests in the Catholic Church in the Eastern rites.

The also said earlier that day he had met with an Eastern Catholic priest who works in the Roman Curia who has a wife and a son.

Back in 2019, Francis's personal view on celibacy was that it is "a gift to the Church".

At that time he said, "I would say that I do not agree with allowing optional celibacy, no."

He also said he thought there was room to consider some exceptions for married clergy in the Latin rite "when there is a pastoral necessity" in remote locations due to a lack of priests, such as in the Pacific islands.

Francis also outlined his views on a number of issues of interest to the 21st century Church.

Homosexuality

Asked about homosexuality, and whether he would give communion to a gay person who complied with church teaching, Francis did not give a direct answer.

Instead he said:

"... if a person is gay but is honest and seeks God, "who am I to judge?"

Parents with gay children should not kick them out, but keep them at home and "accompany them".

Speaking against the criminalisation of homosexuality in certain countries he mentions inclusion.

"The great answer is given by Jesus: Everyone. All. Everyone is inside. When the exquisite ones didn't want to go to the banquet: go there to the crossroads and call everyone, good, bad, old, young: everyone," he said. The Church is made up of sinners.

Divorced and remarried Catholics

Francis has a suggestion for divorced and remarried Catholics. "I advise separated couples to go to their bishop, go and present their situation to him," and see what the bishop advises.

Women at the Vatican

More women working in and around the Vatican are necessary because "machismo is bad. And sometimes celibacy can lead to machismo," Francis says.

The economy

In the pope's opinion, both the social market economy and market capitalism are depersonalising. But a social market economy, as John Paul II defined it, "I think it is the one that is appropriate to the thought of the Church," Francis says.

Source

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Vatican calls ‘summit' of Eastern churches https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/11/01/vatican-calls-summit-eastern-churches/ Thu, 31 Oct 2013 18:01:32 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=51576 The Vatican has called a "summit meeting" for the leaders of the Eastern churches in communion with the Holy See, to take place on November 19-22. Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, the prefect of the Congregation for the Eastern Churches, said the meeting would allow the leaders of the Eastern churches to "speak before the Pope on Read more

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The Vatican has called a "summit meeting" for the leaders of the Eastern churches in communion with the Holy See, to take place on November 19-22.

Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, the prefect of the Congregation for the Eastern Churches, said the meeting would allow the leaders of the Eastern churches to "speak before the Pope on the situation of eastern Christians".

The theme of the meeting will be "The Eastern Catholic Churches fifty years after Vatican Council II".

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Excitement building for papal visit to Lebanon https://cathnews.co.nz/2012/07/27/excitement-building-for-papal-visit-to-lebanon/ Thu, 26 Jul 2012 19:30:31 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=30481

Despite the conflict raging across the border in Syria, which has also raised tensions within Lebanon, excitement is building as Beirut prepares to welcome Pope Benedict in September. The Pope will visit the Lebanese capital from September 14 to 16 to set out his vision for the future of the Eastern Catholic churches of the Read more

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Despite the conflict raging across the border in Syria, which has also raised tensions within Lebanon, excitement is building as Beirut prepares to welcome Pope Benedict in September.

The Pope will visit the Lebanese capital from September 14 to 16 to set out his vision for the future of the Eastern Catholic churches of the Middle East.

His visit, under the slogan "I give you my peace", will come 15 years after an historic visit by Pope John Paul II in 1997.

"The excitement is building, particularly among the young people", Father Marwan Tabet, general co-ordinator of the papal visit to Lebanon, told Vatican Radio.

He said the young people — increasingly tempted to leave their homelands, frustrated by decades of tension, war and sometimes persecution — are waiting to hear what the Pope will have to say to them.

"The Church in Lebanon is very diverse in the sense of its belonging to the Catholic Church," said Father Tabet. "Four of the denominations of the Eastern Churches are based in Lebanon: the Maronites, the Melkites, the Syrian Catholic and the Armenian Catholic and these four denominations form a very important presence on the grassroots, political, social and cultural level."

In August, Christians throughout the Middle East will begin a simultaneous prayer marathon in the lead up to the Pope's arrival. From Bkerke to Baghdad, including Gaza's tiny parish of the Holy Family, the same set of prayers will be recited weekly by Maronites, Melkites, Chaldeans, Syrian Catholics and Armenian Catholics, as well as by members of other denominations.

Meanwhile, the situation in the refugee camps on the border with Syria continues to worsen.

"Thousands of refugees are crossing the border trying to escape from the Syrian hell. Most are women and children. The suffering of these people is enormous. Wherever you go you hear cries of despair, hatred, revenge, many feel abandoned by God," Father Simon Faddoul, president of Caritas Lebanon, told AsiaNews.

Sources:

Vatican Radio

AsiaNews

Image: Holy Family Church

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