Priests should be allowed to get married, says top Vatican official
- Archbishop Charles Scicluna, who leads Malta’s Catholic Church, said the church was losing people because of its strict celibacy rules
- Scicluna said the Catholic Church had allowed priests to marry until the 12th century, and said he would like the Vatican to revert to that position
The Roman Catholic Church should allow priests to get married, one of its top officials has said.
Archbishop Charles Scicluna, who leads Malta’s Catholic Church as well the Vatican body that investigates sex abuse allegations made about priests, said the church was losing people because of its strict celibacy rules.
“If it were up to me, I would revise the rules requiring a priest to be celibate,” Scicluna told Times of Malta newspaper in an interview published on Sunday.
“Why should we lose a young man who would have made a fine priest, just because he wanted to get married?”
“A man may … love a woman. As it stands, he must choose between her and priesthood, and some priests cope with that by secretly engaging in sentimental relationships,” he said.
Since 2018, Scicluna has served as Adjunct Secretary of the Holy See’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. In that role, he is responsible for investigating allegations of clerical sex abuse on minors around the world.