Pope Francis' keenly
awaited document on the Church in the Amazon does not mention
ordaining married men as priests, defying predictions.
In Querida Amazonia' (Beloved Amazon), Francis decides
against relaxing rules on celibacy for Roman Catholic priests,
declining a proposal from bishops that he allow married men to
become priests in Latin America's Amazon region to tackle a
shortage of clergy there, the Vatican said Wednesday.
The highly anticipated document on the Amazon bypasses
another hot-button issue looming over its publication - the
possibility of women deacons - while calling for "outrage" over
the treatment of the region's land and its peoples.
Querida Amazonia, the post-synodal apostolic exhortation,
which marks the pope's final reflections on the synod for the
Amazon last October and which was released Wednesday, outlines
four "great dreams" - social, cultural, ecological, and
ecclesial - in which the pope says he hopes to awaken an
"affection and concern" for the Amazon for the whole world.
The 32-page document, the shortest exhortation Francis has
penned in his seven-year papacy, he says is meant to serve as a
response to the synod's final document, "The Amazon: New Paths
for the Church and for Integral Ecology," noting that he does
not "claim to replace that text or to duplicate it."
Instead, the pope encourages the final document to be read in
full, as he says it is the fruit of those who live in the region
and "experience its suffering" and "love it passionately."
Francis's open-ended language seems to leave open the
possibility that in the future married men who have had a
"fruitful permanent diaconate" could be ordained as priests in
the region, as outlined in the final Synod document - although
he does not address the issue directly, only lamenting that
"every effort should be made" to ensure people in the region,
some of whom only see a priest once or twice a year, have
regular access to the sacraments, especially the Eucharist and
confession.
Last year, Pope Francis called for "bold proposals" to meet
the spiritual needs of Catholics in the Amazon, a vast region
with a scarcity of clerics.
But in Querida Amazonia, Francis pointedly ignored the
boldest one: allowing married priests.
Instead, Francis' highly anticipated document on the Amazon
region focuses mostly on cultural and environmental issues.
Francis spices the 32-page document with plenty of poetry,
but offers few, if any, pragmatic changes for the church.
The lack of an opening for married priests, or women deacons,
is expected to disappoint the Pope's liberal supporters,
particularly in the Americas and Europe.
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