Excommunicated Zambian Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo, who advocates for
married priests within the Roman Catholic Church, said he has not split
from Rome though many of the priests he ordained no longer see
themselves as part of the church.
“We are not a breakaway church,” said Milingo, who married Maria
Sung, a Korean acupunturist, in 2001.
“Within the Catholic Church
married priests existed for a thousand years.”
Milingo’s most recent statement may be part of an effort to reinstate
his pension, which was revoked after he was excommunicated by the
Vatican in 2006 after he consecrated four married priests as bishops.
In March, Milingo retired from ministry, appointing Archbishop Peter
Paul Brennan of the African Orthodox Church and the Ecumenical Catholic
Diocese of the Americas as his movement’s head.
“He considers himself a Roman Catholic and will remain so all his
life,” said Brennan. “He remains a Roman Catholic archbishop. He offers
Mass daily and prays five rosaries — one is for the Holy Father — and he
prays the Divine Office every day.”
Milingo’s quest to reunite with Rome may be quixotic.
The Catholic Church has cut all ties to him.
Milingo’s movement wants the church to apologize for allegedly
selling married priests’ wives and children as slaves after Pope Gregory
VII made celibacy a requirement in the 11th century.
But the married priests movement in Africa is fractured; many priests
have moved on and no longer see themselves as part of the Catholic
Church.