Pope Francis says may consider making married men priests

Says the men could potentially work in remote areas faced with a shortage of priests

Pope Francis waves to the crowd from the window of the apostolic palace during the Sunday Angelus prayer, on March 5, 2017 at St Peter's square in Vatican. PHOTO: AFP

BERLIN:

Pope Francis said in an interview published Thursday that the church may consider ordaining married men who could potentially then work in remote areas faced with a shortage of priests.


"We must think about whether viri probati are a possibility," Francis said referring to older, married men who are already involved in church business.


"Then we have to decide what tasks they can take on, for example in remote communities," he added in the interview with German weekly Die Zeit.


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Many in the church believe, given the lack of priests in many places, that a new path to ordination should be opened.


They think that in addition to priests who take a vow of celibacy, older, married men with a long commitment to the church could also be considered.


Pope Francis said in May 2014 that "there are married priests in the Church" citing married Anglican ministers who joined the Catholic Church, Coptic Catholics and the priests of some Eastern churches.


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The church, and notably the current pope's predecessor Benedict XVI, had previously said that celibacy was not a matter of inflexible church dogma unlike, for example, the resurrection of Jesus Christ.


However, Francis said allowing priests in training to choose whether or not to be celibate was "not the solution".

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