Vatican Says No To Married Eastern Catholic Priests In Poland
POLAND (CWNews.com) - The Austrian Catholic news agency "Kathpress" reported on Friday that the apostolic nuncio to Poland, Archbishop Jozef Kowalczyk, wrote to both of the Ukrainian Catholic bishops in Poland, Ivan Martyniak and Teodor Maykovic asking them to remove legally married Eastern-rite Catholic priests from Poland.
Kathpress said the demand came from Vatican Secretary
of State Cardinal Angelo Sodano. The
move caused considerable commotion both in Poland
and Ukraine. According to canon law for
Churches of the Eastern Rite, the ordination
of married men is allowed. However, the reported
request from the Vatican says that the paragraph
of the canon law governing the issue is valid only in traditionally
Eastern-rite countries, but not in the countries where Eastern-rite Catholics
have
immigrated. If true, the directive would mean
married Eastern-rite Catholic priests would be able to continue
their pastoral work in Ukraine, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, Croatia,
Bosnia-Hercegovina, Bulgaria, Serbia, and
Macedonia, but not in Poland.
The problem arises from the fact that the border
between Poland and Ukraine has changed a
number of times over several centuries, so it
is a question of how to define the traditional regions of Eastern-rite
Catholics. Archbishop Ljubomir Husar of Ukraine said the directive from
the Vatican is "absolutely strange" since
the activities of legally married and ordained Eastern-rite priests have
been questioned before. He also said the directive
is surprising since the Latin-rite in the neighboring Czech
Republic received permission for the ordination of married men when Catholic
Church had to exist underground until the
fall of Communism. After the end of Communism, a special Eastern-rite
diocese was erected so that these married priests
could continue their ministry under the canon law for
the Eastern rite.
http://www.cwnews.com/news/viewrec.cfm?RefNum=7592
5/11/98