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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October
12, 2010
Contact: Sr.
Christine Schenk
216-228-0869
216-513-3647
(cell)
Over 30 Catholic Groups Celebrate Priesthood Sunday
Ask to Restore Tradition of
Married and Celibate Priesthood
CLEVELAND, OH:
In late October, groups of faithful Catholics will join together to
honor their parish priests and advocate for a return to the tradition of a
celibate and married priesthood in the Latin rite of the Roman Catholic
Church. Over thirty celebrations
are scheduled in cities all over the US as well as in Australia, Canada,
Malaysia, and the United Kingdom on or around October 31, Priesthood Sunday or
World Day for Priests. (see http://futurechurch.org/fpm/optcel/priesthoodsunday/celebrations.htm
or contact emily@futurechurch.org
for locations)
ÒWe need to
return to our early Church custom of having both a celibate and a married priesthood,Ó
said Bill Wisniewski, FutureChurch board member. ÒSt. Peter was married. St. Paul was celibate and the early
church flourished perhaps in part because it incorporated both ministerial
charisms. Since celibacy is a gift
from the Holy Spirit, it will not disappear, but is a distortion of the gift to
demand it of priests who are not called to it.Ó
ÒWe are excited by the excellent response since it is the
first time we have ever held this special celebration,Ó said FutureChurch
Special Projects Coordinator Emily Holtel-Hoag. ÒIt tells me how much Catholics appreciate their parish
priests, and how much they are concerned about the future of the priesthood if
the Church doesnÕt change celibacy rules.Ó
ÒParishes in Europe, the United States and the United
Kingdom are closing while thousands of Catholics in the developing world have
virtually no access to Mass and the sacraments because of too few celibate
priests,Ó said Sr. Christine Schenk, FutureChurch Executive Director.
ÒAt least 30 Bishops around the world, have openly called
for discussion of celibacy rules,Ó said Schenk who named three bishops in
Belgium and the head of the German Bishops conference, Archbishop Robert
Zollitsch who recently spoke out in the wake of revelations of widespread clergy sex abuse in Europe.
World Priest Day was started by Worldwide Marriage
Encounter in 2000 as a way to honor and affirm those men who chose to receive
the Sacrament of Holy Orders and faithfully serve the people of God through
ministry and prayer. In 2007, the
day was moved to the last Sunday in October to coincide with the Serra ClubÕs
celebration of Priesthood Sunday.
FutureChurch isnÕt stopping with prayer, it is also taking
action. In the past year over
5,000 electronic and paper postcards have been sent to Cardinal Claudio Hummes,
Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, and to
local bishops asking them to Òbegin discussion at the
highest levels of the Church about the need to return to our earliest tradition
of permitting both a married and a celibate priesthood.Ó
The FutureChurch website has been configured to send
electronic and paper postcards in German, Spanish, French, Italian and
Portuguese as well as English. Scores of people have downloaded free organizing
kits from begin educational programs, prayer and advocacy initiatives in their
locales. An educational web video is also available on youtube.com (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6tB0lWsnhQ).
A 2004 anonymous survey of 14,000 priests in 53 US
dioceses found that sixty seven percent of respondents believed the church
should open discussion about mandatory celibacy. The survey was spearheaded by
FutureChurch in partnership with Call To Action. Many priests spontaneously said it was time to discuss
ordaining women too, beginning with women deacons.
FutureChurch believes the Church will not be whole or just
until we recognize all of the priestly vocations, married and celibate, male
and female that God is pouring upon the Catholic Church.
FutureChurch also advocates for the restoration of women to
the diaconate in the So All Can Be at the Table campaign as an important next step for advancing womenÕs roles in the
Church. For more information on FutureChurchÕs programming regarding womenÕs
leadership in the Church, go to www.futurechurch.org.
To download a free copy of the Optional Celibacy: So All Can Be at the Table Priesthood
Sunday prayer service, go to http://www.futurechurch.org/downloads/optcel.htm.
For locations of celebrations go to http://futurechurch.org/fpm/optcel/priesthoodsunday/celebrations.htm.
FutureChurch, headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, is a
U.S. coalition of 5,000 parish based Catholics striving to educate fellow
Catholics about the seriousness of the priest shortage, the centrality of the
Eucharist (the Mass), and the systemic inequality of women in the Catholic
Church. FutureChurch makes presentations throughout the country, distributes
educational and informational packets and recruits activists who call on
Catholic leadership to discuss opening ordination to all baptized persons who
are called to priestly ministry by God and the people of God.