Report
has it that over twenty women who say they are in
love with Roman Catholic priests have written to Pope Francis urging him
to
make celibacy optional. The women, who all live in Italy, described the
“devastating suffering” caused by the church’s ban on priests having s*x
and marrying. “We love these men and they love us,” they said in their
letter published on the authoritative website Vatican Insider.
“With humility, we place at your feet our suffering so that
something can change, not just for us but for the good of the whole Church,”
they added in the message, signed with their first names and an initial of
their last names, but with several phone numbers.
Priestly celibacy in the Roman Catholic Church, while not an
unchangeable dogma, is a tradition going back more than 1,000 years.
In recent decades the Vatican has come under pressure to
make celibacy optional and allow priests to marry, with supporters saying that
this would help ease the acute shortage of priests in many areas.
The women asked the pope to “bless our love,” adding that
few people could understand the “devastating suffering lived by a woman who has
a strong love for a priest”.
The Church teaches that a priest should dedicate himself
totally to his vocation, essentially taking the Church as his spouse, in order
to help fulfill its mission.
But the women told the pope that their men would be able to
serve the Church “with greater passion” if they were supported by a woman who
loves them and children.
This was far better for the priests and the Church, they
argued in the letter sent to the Vatican, than “a life of continued
clandestineness, with the frustration of a love that is not complete”.
The women asked to meet the pope to explain the plight
“tearing apart our souls” because the couples were faced with the alternatives
of either the men leaving the priesthood or carrying on the relationships in
secret.
Proponents of optional celibacy in the Church have linked
the sexual abuse of children by priests to its celibacy rule, saying that it
could stem from sexual frustrations. But the Church has rejected this argument,
saying that pedophilia, whether in the Church or outside of it, is carried out
by people with psychological problems.
Priests are allowed to marry in the Anglican and other
Protestant churches as well as in the Orthodox Church.
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