Statement by His Grace Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo
National Press Club, Washington, DC July 12, 2006
The End of Mandatory Celibacy!
Ladies and Gentlemen…
We are dealing with a very serious matter that has
affected the Catholic Church for many years. In the last 35 years since
the International Catholic Synod of Bishops in 1971, the struggles
surrounding celibacy have worsened. If in 1971, the church listened to the
appeals of the Bishops to offer celibacy as an option to those who would
bind themselves to it for their entire lives, but let those called to be
ordained priests, yet married, to fulfill their calling, then today we
would not be harvesting straw instead of divine graces.
The seriousness of the matter was emphasized once
again when the US Bishops raised the issue as we entered this third
millennium. Once more the authorities in the Vatican waved it off, to the
detriment of the church in USA and around the world.
Married priesthood has existed as early as the
time of Moses, for we read in Leviticus that they were all married, the
family of the High priest Aaron. Some argue that what was demanded in that
priesthood was merely a legal purity. But when God demanded sanctity as a
sign of being intimate with Him, this injunction of sanctity was still
more applicable to priests: “Be holy, because I, your Lord, am holy.”
Sanctity or holiness is the first requirement of any priesthood, married
or celibate.
The Apostles ordained priests and bishops,
regardless of their marital status. St. Paul ordained Timothy and
consecrated him to Bishopric. He ordained the first Bishop of the Island
of Malta, who was a married man. As St. Paul said to Timothy, the one
condition he imposed upon a Bishop was to marry only once.
“A Bishop must be irreproachable, married only
once, temperate, self controlled, decent, hospitable,, able to teach, not
a drunkard, not aggressive, but gentle, not contentious, not a lover of
money.” (Timothy 3:2-3)
Some people will be surprised to hear of what
became of Zacchaeus, the short man whom Jesus called down from a sycamore
tree and then visited his house. He truly was converted with his whole
family, and ended being consecrated Bishop of Caesarea Philippi. (History
of the Church: Venturi).
Jesus and His Apostles
Jesus shared fully with all his apostles, both
married and non-married, all that was required to be an Apostle. He did
not show favoritism to any of them. Even as He gave them responsibilities,
He looked to each one’s capacity, and relied on each of them. The question
of celibacy was not His preoccupation. I think that the demands presented
by St. Paul to a candidate to Bishopric are more than sufficient for the
life of a Bishop. Looking back to priesthood from which rank a Bishop
comes the same demands are applied to the priesthood.
An Open Call
We hereby appeal to those Bishops who have been
sent to the monasteries, condemned forever, never to appear any more to
their faithful. Let them come out of their Catholic prisons and be
reinstated, taking once more their pastoral responsibility among the
married priests. Please let us know where you are, be in contact with us.
To those priests who may feel that by marrying
they have stepped down or fallen short, unleash your burden of
humiliation, isolation, and shame. Come among your fellow “sinners,” so
considered, who were to be branded, and to be forgotten forever as
weaklings. Come in, but never come with lamentations. Your burden has been
loaded off, you come light, released from any weight of sinfulness. Become
a Magdalene, a Paul, a Peter or Augustine, or one of the many others who
never looked back to their struggling past. They all became outstanding
saints, in spite of their former weaknesses.
To our beloved “Mother Church,” we beseech you to
open your arms to these prodigal children who have longed to return home
and have so much to offer. There is no more important healing than the
reconciliation of 150,000 married priests with the Mother Church, and the
healing of a Church in crisis through the renewing of marriage and family.
The Church has nothing to lose by allowing priests the option to marry.
Historically, out of holy marriages have come priests, popes, saints, and
loving servants of God and the Church.
It is out of our love for our Faith and deep
concern for its future that we proclaim this day, the end of mandatory
celibacy, and the option for priests to sanctify the family as it was
intended in the Garden of Eden, even as they fulfill their calling and
ordination.