For children of priests, the
good of the child comes first
Cardianal Beniamino Stella, Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy (Vatican Media) |
In an interview with Vatican News, Cardinal Beniamino
Stella, Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, explains the guidelines the
Dicastery applies in cases of Latin-rite priests who father children.
By ANDREA TORNIELLI
Editorial Director of Vatican News
Editorial Director of Vatican News
The topic of “children of priests” has long been considered
taboo, with the result that often, especially in the past, these children grew
up without a known and acknowledged father. This topic, then, is distinct from
the questions addressed in last week’s Meeting in the Vatican, which focused on
the abuse committed against minors.
Recently, Irish psychotherapist Vincent Doyle, a son of a
priest, was present in Rome. He is the founder of “Coping International”, an
association for the defence of the rights of children fathered by Catholic
priests throughout the world. Doyle wants to waive his anonymity and offer psychological
help to “the many people born from a relationship between a woman and a priest”
in various parts of the world. In recent interviews with diverse media, Doyle
has spoken of a document of the Congregation for the Clergy, regarding the
attitude to be taken in these cases. The existence of these internal documents
— sometimes described, inaccurately, as “secret” — has been known since 2017,
and the general criteria regarding protecting the children of priests was
recently confirmed by Alessandro Gisotti, the Director ad interim of
the Holy See Press Office. Vatican News spoke with Cardinal Beniamino Stella,
the Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, which has the responsibility of
dealing with cases of this sort.
Andrea Tornielli: What are the criteria that
guide the decisions to be made in the case of priests with children?
Cardinal Stella: The Dicastery follows the
longstanding practices from the time when Cardinal Claudio Hummes was prefect —
about ten years — who first brought to the attention of the Holy Father (at the
time, Benedict XVI) the cases of priests under the age of 40 with children,
proposing that they obtain the dispensation [from clerical state] without
waiting for the age of 40, as provided for in the norms [in force] at the time.
Such a decision had, and has, as its principle objective, the safeguarding of
the good of the child, that is, the right of the child to have at his side a
father as well as a mother. Pope Francis, too, who had already expressed
himself in this sense as Cardinal Archbishop of Buenos Aires, during a
conversation with Rabbi Abraham Skorka, published in the book, “On Heaven and
Earth”, spoke categorically: the priority focus on the part of the priest must
be with regard to the children.
Q. What is meant by “priority focus”?
A. Certainly it does not refer only to the
necessary economic support. What must accompany the growth of the child above
all is the affection of the parents, an adequate education, in fact, all that
pertains to an effective and responsible exercise of paternity, especially in
the early years of life.
Q. Can you tell us what the document you
spoke of consists of?
A. It concerns a text entitled “Nota relative
alla prassi della Congregazione per il Clero a proposito dei chierici con prole”
[Notes concerning the practice of the Congregation for the Clergy with regard
to clerics with children], that gathers together and organises the practices in
force for years at the Dicastery. As was already explained, it concerns a
working instrument to be referred to when presented with a situation of this
kind; a “technical” text for the collaborators of the Dicastery, from which
they may take guidance. It was only for this reason that it was not published.
So it happens that Mr Doyle was able to review it two years ago. This text was
routinely presented, with commentary from the Congregation to the Episcopal
Conferences and to individual Bishops who dealt with the question and asked how
to proceed.
Q. Can you explain how the Dicastery which
you head currently deals with these cases?
A. The presence of children in the dossiers
related to priestly dispensations was treated, de facto, as a practically
“automatic” reason for an expedited presentation of the case to the Holy
Father, with the intention of obtaining the concession of the dispensation. It
sought then to enable that the dispensation from the obligations of the
clerical state should be obtained in the shortest time possible — a couple of
months — so that the priest might be able to be close by the side of the mother
in following the child. A situation of this kind is considered “irreversible”
and requires the priest to abandon the clerical state even if he considers
himself fit for ministry. An approximate calculation of the requests for
dispensations shows that about 80 percent of these involve the presence of
children, although often conceived after the ministry has already been
abandoned.
Q. Are these rules applied always and
everywhere? Do they apply even in cases in which the priest with a child does
not want to ask for the dispensation from the ministry?
A. Sometimes it happens that Bishops or
Religious Superiors present the situation of priests who do not intend to ask
for the dispensation, even when there are children, especially when the affective
relationship with their mother has ended. In such cases there are,
unfortunately, Bishops and Superiors who think that, after having provided
economically for the children, or after having transferred the priest, the
cleric could continue to exercise the ministry. The uncertainty in this matter,
then, comes from the resistance of the priests to requesting the dispensation,
from the absence of an affective relationship with the woman; and, at times,
from the desire of some Ordinaries to offer to the penitent and repentant
priest a new ministerial opportunity. When, according to the evaluation of the
responsible Bishop or Superior, the situation demands that the priest should be
made to accept the responsibilities deriving from paternity, but does not want
to request the dispensation, the case is presented to the Congregation for the
dismissal from the clerical state. Obviously, a child is always a gift from
God, no matter how he or she was conceived. The loss of the clerical state is
imposed because parental responsibility creates a series of permanent
obligations that in the legislation of the Latin church does not provide for
the exercise of the priestly ministry.
Q. Is this rule general and always valid, or
is each case dealt with in a different manner?
A. Obviously, each case is examined on its
merits and its own particular circumstances. The exceptions are actually very
rare. For example, in the case of a new-born, the child of a priest, who in a
particular situation enters into a family already consolidated, in which
another parent assumes in his regard the role of the father. Or when it comes
to an older priest, with children who are already “grown-up”, 20-30 years old.
Priests who had in their youth an unfortunate affective occurrence, and who then
provided for the children with economic, moral, and spiritual accompaniment;
and who now exercise their ministry with zeal and commitment, after having
overcome their previous affective fragility. In these situations, the Dicastery
does not oblige the Bishop to invite the priests to request the dispensation.
This, it seems to me, concerns cases in which the Dicastery counsels a more
flexible discernment within the rigorous practice and guidelines of the
Congregation.
Q. How would you respond to those who maintain
that the presence of children of priests is an argument for the introduction of
optional celibacy for priests in the Latin church?
A. The fact that some priests have experienced
relationships and have brought children into the world does not affect the
theme of priestly celibacy, which represents a precious gift for the Latin
church, the ever-present value of which has been expressed by the recent Popes,
from St Paul VI to Pope Francis. Similarly, cases of abandonment of the
matrimonial union and from the children do not take away from the ever-present
value of Christian marriage. What is important is that the priest, in dealing
with the reality of the situation, should be able to understand his
responsibilities with regard to the child: the child’s well-being and care of
the child must be at the centre of attention for the Church, so that the child
does not lack, not only the necessities of life, but especially the educative
role and the affection of a father.
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