A Catholic priest's lover in this photo
This is a reprint of an article from guardian.co.uk
The Catholic celibacy conundrum
A
letter written by mistresses of Catholic priests calls for an end to
the discipline of celibacy. But could the church afford it?
o John Hooper
o guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 1 June 2010 12.00 BST
o Article history
o guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 1 June 2010 12.00 BST
o Article history
The open
letter sent to the pope by a group of Italian women who have been or
are in relationships with Roman Catholic priests has cast a new light
on the rule of priestly celibacy in his church at a time when its
abolition was already under discussion as a possible response to the
crisis over clerical sex abuse.
One aim
of the letter was to make the point that the rule against marriage in
the western Catholic church is not a dogma but a discipline.
In
one of its most intriguing passages, the authors claim that “the
reasons which prompted the ecclesiastical hierarchy, in its day, to
insert this discipline into its legal system are well known – economic
convenience and self-interest.”
Those
alleged reasons are, in fact, far from well-known outside church
circles, though they were alluded to last month in the Guardian’s Face
to faith column by the dean of Southwark, Colin Slee: it costs a great
deal less to pay for single priests than for priests with wives and
perhaps children.
In the
case of the Catholic church, moreover, there are additional,
complicating factors. One is its increasingly queasy financial
position. It has been calculated that, in the US, Roman Catholic
dioceses have been ordered to pay out a total of more than $2.6bn in
abuse-related costs. Now, the church faces another wave of claims in
Europe, and especially in the German-speaking world. This is thought
(the church’s finances are supremely opaque) to be one of its main
sources of income, and known to be an area in which large numbers of
Catholics are abandoning their faith in disgust. That too has direct
financial consequences because in those countries membership of a
denomination is a formal matter, registered with the state, which
decides whether a proportion of a worshipper’s taxes go to his or her
church.
Another
factor is more ironic – the likely effect, were the Vatican to lift the
ban on married priests, of its teaching on birth control. It is one
thing for the leadership of the Church of England, say, to have to pay
for a vicar with a wife and perhaps two or three children. It is quite
another when the minister in question has a wife and five or six
children.
Would
married Roman Catholic priests have so many offspring? If they didn’t, I
rather suspect their bishops would be keen to know why not.
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