SHARE
COPY LINK

CATHOLIC CHURCH

German bishops go against Vatican to back blessings for gay couples

A large majority of German bishops on Friday supported offering blessing ceremonies to gay and lesbian couples in defiance of the Vatican.

gay marriage
German bishops have voted to bless same-sex unions, although doing so in practice will be left up to individual bishops. Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP

Some 38 bishops voted in favour of the proposal in Frankfurt at Synodal Path, a high-level conference organised by the Catholic Church in Germany. Nine bishops voted against and 12 abstained.

The result was welcomed by the head of the German Bishops’ Conference Georg Baetzing as a “very good” outcome.

The Catholic Church considers that marriage is exclusively the union of a man and woman, and the issue of homosexuality is highly controversial.

Most recently, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), the powerful Vatican office responsible for defending church doctrine, handed down a ruling in 2021 that same-sex unions could not be blessed despite their
“positive elements”.

However, in many countries, including Germany, the blessings are already offered in practice. In 2021 and 2022, German churches participated in nationwide days of action where they held blessings for homosexual couples.

The practice depends to a large degree on the attitude of the local bishop. The implementation of the decision of the Synodal Path conference rests wholly with the bishops.

At 23 million followers, the Catholic Church remains Germany’s biggest religious community. But its pews are increasingly empty on Sundays and it struggles to recruit new priests.

Pope Francis is himself ambivalent over the sensitive subject of homosexuality. The pontiff has stirred controversy with his relatively liberal attitude towards sexual orientation, which is at odds with the beliefs of many conservatives in the Church.

“If a person is gay and seeks the Lord with good will, who am I to judge him?” Francis said soon after he became pope in 2013. Yet the pope sticks firmly to Catholic teaching that marriage is the union between a man and a woman in order to procreate.

The Synodal Path is a two-year project that aims to renew the Church and regain the public’s trust, tackling controversial themes including a damaging child abuse crisis.

READ ALSO: ‘Historic break’: Church-goers now a minority in Germany

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

CRIME

Pope orders probe of German archdiocese over child sex abuse

Pope Francis has ordered an apostolic visitation of the archdiocese of Cologne, which has been rocked by a damning report on child sex abuse, the diocese said Friday.

Pope orders probe of German archdiocese over child sex abuse
Cologne's Archbishop Rainer Maria Woelki addresses a press conference in Cologne to present the results of a report on child sex abuse in Germany's Roman Catholic Church. Photo: Oliver Berg / POOL / AFP

The Pope has appointed two “apostolic visitors” charged with establishing a “comprehensive picture of the complex pastoral situation in the archdiocese”,
it said in a statement.

They will also examine “possible mistakes made” by Cologne’s Archbishop Rainer Maria Woelki.

An apostolic visitation is normally launched when the Pope judges that a diocese is no longer able to resolve its difficulties internally.

Cardinal Anders Arborelius of Stockholm and Bishop Johannes van den Hende of Rotterdam will carry out their investigations over the first two weeks of June.

The probe comes as Woelki faces a wave of criticism, including allegations that he helped cover up abuse by two priests in Duesseldorf, one of whom has since died.

Woelki welcomed the pontiff’s decision however, calling it “good and correct” because it will provide “an outside point of view” of his diocese, the German news agency dpa reported.

READ ALSO: Over 300 victims ‘sexually abused through Germany’s top diocese’ in Cologne 
READ ALSO: Tensions mount in German catholic church over abuse report

The cardinal has faced angry protests this week over plans for him to carry out a confirmation service for 17 young people in the city.

Arch-conservative Woelki refused last year to allow the publication of a study on abuse committed by priests in Germany’s top diocese.

He had justified his decision citing a right to privacy for those accused in the report, carried out by a Munich law firm, and what he called a lack of independence on the part of some researchers.

He then commissioned a second report, published in March, which revealed that 314 minors, mostly boys under the age of 14, were sexually abused between 1975 and 2018 in the diocese, mostly by clergy.

However, the investigation cleared Woelki of breach of duty over the abuse.

Most of the allegations cover the tenure of Woelki’s predecessor, Cardinal Joachim Meisner, who died in 2017.

Canon law expert Thomas Schüller told the Rheinische Post newspaper such a visit was “extremely unusual for a cardinal” and the Vatican must be “very worried that there is something serious and substantial in the allegations”.

“In 99 percent of cases, a visitation is the beginning of the end,” he said.

 

 

SHOW COMMENTS