Is homosexuality an exclusion criterion for candidates for the priesthood?? The archdiocese of Paderborn does not see it that way. It is much more important that celibacy is observed. A sensation? Not at all, says one who should know.

Interviewer: How groundbreaking then is the Paderborn advance?

Hartmut Niehues (rector of the seminary in Munster and president of the German Regents' Conference): What now goes through the media and what is reported from Paderborn, is nothing new at all and certainly nothing sensational! One problem is that unfortunately some media do not succeed in presenting things in a differentiated way. The striking headlines, which then go through the country, unfortunately shorten to the point of misunderstanding.

Christina Cherry

Vatican wants to crack down more effectively on clergy sex abuse worldwide. In a circular published Monday, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith calls on all national bishops' conferences to develop their own guidelines for dealing with abuse cases by May 2012.

Within a year, all 112 bishops' conferences worldwide must develop "guidelines for dealing with cases of sexual abuse of minors by clergy". In doing so, the Vatican wants to set binding basic standards and at the same time encourage local churches to clarify their specific situations. Once again, the Church wants to make clear how urgent it is to take effective and preventive action so that scandals of the kind that have deeply shaken the Church in recent years do not occur again.

Christina Cherry
Eight years in prison

Symbolic image prison © Jan Woitas

A former Protestant church employee and scout supervisor from Staufen, Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald district, has been sentenced to eight years in prison for sexually abusing four children in more than a hundred cases.

In its verdict on Wednesday, the Freiburg Regional Court also ordered the 42-year-old defendant to be placed in preventive detention. In addition, at the request of two joint plaintiffs, he was ordered to pay damages for pain and suffering in the amount of 10.000 euros respectively 8.000 euros. The Baden regional church was shocked by the abuse.

Christina Cherry
The reformer

50 years ago, on the 30th. June 1963, Paul VI. crowned pope. At the end of his 15-year reign, the Catholic Church had a different face.

The world was changing furiously and the Church was in the midst of the greatest council in its history when the choice fell on him. Milan Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini had not pressed for the chair of Peter. "Here I am, crucified with Christ," he is reported to have said at the conclusion of the conclave.

The last time a pope had the tiara placed on his head, the symbol of the papal claim to power over the globe. Later it carried Paul VI. never again, and no pontiff has since put it on again. Within the Church, the most difficult legacy that a Pope of the 20th century could possibly have was waiting for the reserved man. Century had to take over.

Christina Cherry

The crisis summit of the Anglican world community ended on Tuesday night in Dar es Salaam with a sharp ultimatum, but without division. In a resolution passed unanimously shortly before midnight, the liberal U.S. Episcopal Church is asked to prove within seven months that it has permanently turned away from its previous course. Failure to do so will have "consequences" for "full participation" in the Anglican Communion.

The episcopal ordination of an avowed homosexual and blessing rites for same-sex couples in the U.S. and Canada have brought the conservative and liberal wings of the church to the brink of schism. The five-day summit in Tanzania was marked from the beginning by a possible schism. Several leaders of conservative national churches, especially from Africa, repeatedly threatened not to sit at the table with the U.S. church's presiding bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori, in attendance. They also rejected a joint celebration of the Lord's Supper. Tension until the end Until the very end, observers thought it was possible that the conservatives of the "Global South" grouping might back out of a joint final statement and publish a minority vote. This would have meant, in effect, a schism. They have been calling for a "conversion" or "repentance" by the U.S. church for years, but so far this has been half-hearted.Therefore, church leaders such as the Primate of Nigeria, Archbishop Peter Akinola, no longer recognize the liberal leadership of the U.S. church and are striving for a kind of parallel church. In it, according to their ideas, conservative U.S. Anglicans should unite in their own congregations under the care of so-called flying bishops or even bishops of other national churches.The Anglican world communion with its approximately 78 million members is divided into largely autonomous national churches. The Archbishop of Canterbury, as honorary primate, has no legal means to discipline individual member churches.

Christina Cherry
Fire on the earth

Cardinal Walter Brandmuller at his desk © Francesco Pistilli (KNA)

He is considered a conservative historian faithful to the Church – and yet he became known above all because he criticized two popes: Cardinal Walter Brandmuller. This Saturday, the native Franconian will be 90 years old. And once again causes debate.

When Pope Benedict XVI. When the former professor of church history was appointed cardinal, some people first had to ask who this Walter Brandmuller was. It was also somewhat unusual that the chosen one had to be consecrated bishop beforehand. For many years, the native of Ansbach had taught church history in Augsburg and was active in parish pastoral care near Augsburg.

Christina Cherry

Just a few years ago, Rowan Williams was one of the most important representatives of Christian churches worldwide. Ahead of time, he resigned as primate of the Anglicans in 2012 – and presents himself liberated at age 65.

Whoever meets Rowan Williams since he laid down the mitre of the Archbishop of Canterbury seems to find him relieved. Relieved of the burden of the primate's office of a difficult Anglican world communion; relieved of the responsibility for cohesion of the disputants about women bishops and homosexual bishops; relieved of a crosier and heavy golden vestments. A simpler life? "Well, what do you think?", he exuberantly asked the chief reporter of the "Daily Telegraph" during a home story in Cambridge.

Christina Cherry

The first fertility fair will be held in Berlin this weekend. In addition to the criticism from politics and the medical profession, Bishop Gebhard Furst also warns against this type of "consumer fair" in an interview.

CBA: Bishop Furst, what bothers you about the first "childbearing days"??

Bishop Gebhard Furst (Bishop of Rottenburg-Stuttgart and Chairman of the Sub-Commission on Bioethics of the German Bishops' Conference): I have nothing against it if couples who want to have children can inform themselves about possibilities of support and advice. But a commercial format like the "Kinderwunsch-Tage" is not the appropriate serious framework. This is also indicated by the fact that the Federal Association of Reproductive Medicine Centers and the Professional Association of Gynecologists do not take part in it. A large number of foreign providers present themselves here, advertising reproductive medicine techniques that are ethically unacceptable and prohibited in Germany. They obviously want to earn from anonymous sperm donation, egg donation or surrogacy.

Christina Cherry

Bishop Rudolf Voderholzer at synodal assembly © Harald Oppitz (KNA)

Regensburg Bishop Rudolf Voderholzer sharply criticized the planned changes in the reform debate of the Catholic Church as an authoritarian go-it-alone of the presidium. He gave vent to his displeasure with a letter.

The announced regional conferences in the fall are neither a synodal forum nor a synodal assembly according to the statutes of the Synodal Way, Voderholzer criticized in a letter to the presidium on Friday.

Also the management structure is not clarified. Nor is the newly scheduled topic of "church experiences with the Corona pandemic" covered by the statutes, he said. This must be taken back, the planned conferences must be canceled, demanded Voderholzer.

Christina Cherry

Clear statement: The new expert on the handling of abuse cases by executives of the Archdiocese of Cologne, Bjorn Gercke, is basically in favor of publishing the study of his predecessors.

"Personally, I have no problem at all if my expert opinion is placed next to the Westpfahl expert opinion next year," Cologne criminal lawyer Bjorn Gercke tells the "Zeit" supplement "Christ Welt" (Thursday). "Then everyone can get a picture. If this should be possible in any form under the law of expression, I would welcome this in the sense of transparency."

Christina Cherry