VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- When the Vatican Congregation for Clergy developed guidelines a decade ago for handling cases of priests who father children, the first objective was to make it easier for those men to leave the priesthood to care for their children and be real dads, said the prefect of the congregation.
Cardinal Beniamino Stella, congregation prefect, said the guidelines were necessary because church law makes it very difficult for a priest under the age of 40 to obtain Vatican approval to leave the priesthood.
An interview with the cardinal, conducted by Andrea Tornielli, editorial director of the Vatican Secretariat for Communication, was released Feb. 27 by L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper. The interim director of the Vatican press office, Alessandro Gisotti, had confirmed to The New York Times that such guidelines exist.
While many reports on the guidelines described them as "secret," Tornielli said a more accurate description is that the guidelines are for "internal use" only.
Cardinal Stella said the guidelines were drafted after Cardinal Claudio Hummes, prefect of the congregation from 2006 to 2010, drew the attention of then-Pope Benedict XVI to how difficult it was for priests under 40 who had fathered children to assume their full responsibilities for the children while remaining Catholics in good standing.
The decision to draft the guidelines "had and has as a principal objective that of safeguarding the good of the children or, in other words, the children's right to have their father present and not just their mother," Cardinal Stella said.
Already when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Pope Francis took a similar approach to priests who had children, the cardinal said.
The church rules insist that the priest provide economic support for the children, he said, but they also recognize that the duties and responsibilities of fatherhood go beyond that to include affection and education, especially in the first years of the child's life.
The guidelines are a "working instrument" used when cases are referred to the congregation or when questions are raised by individual bishops or bishops' conferences, Cardinal Stella said.
They are "technical" notes, which is why they have not been published, the cardinal said. They are not "secret," which is why Vincent Doyle, an Irish psychotherapist and son of a priest, was able to tell The New York Times that he was shown a copy.
When a priest requests release from the priesthood and his file shows that he has children, the release is "practically automatic," the cardinal said, and the process is accelerated so that he may join the child's or children's mother as quickly as possible.
Cardinal Stella estimated that "about 80 percent" of the voluntary requests for dispensation from priestly promises and vows involves "the presence of children, although often conceived after the abandonment of ministry." In other words, the man walked away from the priesthood, fathered children and then sought to regularize his situation with the church.
Sometimes, however, especially if the relationship with the children's mother has ended, a priest will ask to continue in ministry and, "unfortunately," his bishop or religious superior will support that decision, the cardinal said.
Other times, however, the bishop or superior will insist the priest leave to take care of his children; in those cases, Cardinal Stella said, the man can be dismissed against his will.
"Obviously, a child is always a gift of God," no matter the circumstances of his or her conception, he said. A priest who fathers a child has "a series of permanent obligations" toward that child, which are incompatible with the exercise of the priesthood in the Latin rite of the Catholic Church.
Some exceptions are made, he said, but "in reality they are very rare."
Those exceptions could include situations in which another man takes on the role of being the child's father, or when the children are already grown when the priest's parenthood is discovered.
"Every case is examined on its merits," he said.
Cardinal Stella insisted the fact that some Latin-rite priests father children is not a reason to change the general rule requiring celibacy any more than "cases of abandoning the matrimonial home and children" would be a reason to change church teaching that marriage is forever.
I’ve known a couple of guys who
fathered children and continued on
In ministry. As far as I’m concerned they became better priests and men. Working to care for the human, financial and spiritual needs of their children.
They came to know firsthand things that the usual priest could never know.
I am grateful that they weren’t removed from the priesthood. The Church, the people of God, is better for their ministry.
Quite honestly, the best these "couple of guys (priests) who fathered children and continued on in ministry" could manage, IMHO, is the pattern of divorced dads who show up every now and again, but leave all the hard work of child rearing (and support?) to the children's mothers. This is far from enough. If you want priests who "know firsthand" about family life, then it's high time to ordain married men--and married women!
This now? The subject of homosexual lifestyle among those sworn to celibacy still hasn't been addressed. Did the Jesuits and their writers make some kind of a pact? The elephant in the room is aging but its still huge.
Bev, I'm not sure what you're concerned about. Homosexual priests probably aren't fathering children. And if a priest has fathered a child, then he probably hasn't kept his vow of celibacy, right?
Lets go with the numbers: Heterosexual sex and priests fathering children is not the plague that is devastating the Church at this time. Rampant homosexual activity is, even to the point it's being celebrated by those whose ordained purpose is to defend the Faith. It appears many are pretty much denying their activity is sinful and are celebrating it as natural and even a gift from God. Their cancerous networks are choking the Mystical Body of Christ. This article is intended to be a distraction.
Bev Ceccanti---I am perplexed. Why do you think that gay priests are more sexually active than straight priests? Is there some proof of that?
The issue should not be whether a priest is gay or straight. The issue should be did a priest remain celibate. Then the issue should be, did his sexual activity involve minors or consenting adults.
Who within the church is celebrating that gay priests are sexually active?
Judith: The signals are there for all to see. And so is the commentary from good Catholic homosexual men, to whom I am grateful.. I stand by my statement.