An Australian priest vocal in his support of women's ordination has
become the first person excommunicated for such beliefs under the papacy
of Pope Francis.
Fr. Greg Reynolds of Melbourne, Australia, told NCR by email
late Monday night his initial reaction was "shock" upon learning of his
separation from the church.
Australian media have reported he is the
first member of the Melbourne archdiocese excommunicated and the first
priest from the area laicized for reasons other than pedophilia.
The news came Sept. 18 through a canon lawyer for the Melbourne
archdiocese, Fr. John Salvano, who invited Reynolds a few weeks earlier
to meet "to discuss 'some canonical issue," Reynolds said.
The former
priest said Salvano presented him the letter of excommunication and
proceeded to read it to him, since Reynolds did not read Latin.
Part of the shock stemmed from uncertainty with who initiated the
excommunication and laicization process.
During the meeting, Salvano
told Reynolds that while Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart previously
considered beginning the laicization process, he had not gone forward
with that plan. Instead, unknown people had contacted the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, which requested Reynolds' file from Hart.
"I have no idea who took the initiative to approach the CDF," Reynolds told NCR.
The Melbourne archdiocese, 14 hours ahead of U.S. Central time zone,
had not responded to requests for comment before this story published.
The letter, a copy of which NCR obtained and translated, accuses Reynolds of heresy (Canon 751) and determined he incurred latae sententiae
excommunication for throwing away the consecrated host or retaining it
"for a sacrilegious purpose" (Canon 1367).
It also referenced Canon 1369
(speaking publicly against church teaching) in its review of the case.
"Pope Francis, Supreme Pontiff having heard the presentation of this
Congregation concerning the grave reason for action ... of [Fr. Greg
Reynolds] of the Archdiocese of Melbourne, all the preceding actions to
be taken having been followed, with a final and unappealable decision
and subject to no recourse, has decreed dismissal from the clerical
state is to be imposed on said priest for the good of the Church," read
the document, signed by Archbishop Gerhard Muller, prefect for the
congregation, and his secretary, Jesuit Archbishop Luis Ladaria.
Excommunication refers to the severest measure of censure for
Catholics and forbids an individual from participation in any
eucharistic celebration or other worship ceremonies; the reception or
celebration of sacraments; and holding any ecclesiastical or governing
role in the church.
The document, dated May 31 -- coincidentally Reynolds' 60th birthday
-- provided no reason for the excommunication. However, a separate
letter sent Friday from Hart to his archdiocesan priests indicated
Reynolds' support of women's ordination was a primary reason.
"The decision by Pope Francis to dismiss Fr Reynolds from the
clerical state and to declare his automatic excommunication has been
made because of his public teaching on the ordination of women contrary
to the teaching of the Church and his public celebration of the
Eucharist when he did not hold faculties to act publicly as a priest,"
Hart wrote.
But Reynolds said he believes the excommunication also resulted from his support of the gay community. He told NCR that
in the last two years, he has attended rallies in Melbourne advocating
same-sex marriage and has officiated at mass weddings of gay couples on
the steps of Parliament -- "all unofficial of course."
"My motivation is trying to encourage reform and clear need for
renewal in the church," he said. "I still love the church and am
committed to it, I'm just trying to bring about in my own little way to
help highlight some of the failing and limitations," he told the Standard newspaper.
Since Francis began his papacy in March, he has twice pointedly stated his alignment with church teaching on women's ordination.
In an impromptu press conference with media July 28 aboard the papal
plane during his return to Rome from World Youth Day in Brazil, Francis said,
"On the ordination of women, the Church has spoken and said no. Pope
John Paul II, in a definitive formulation, said that door is closed."
More recently, in his first one-on-one interview conducted on behalf of
16 Jesuit publications, Francis said the role of women in the church requires further investigation but did not address women's ordination.
Reynolds told NCR that while he knew the pope had reiterated
that the door to women's ordination was closed, he said his hope was
that it didn't mean the door was locked, "or maybe there is a way in
through an open window."
"I am very surprised that this order has come under his watch; it
seems so inconsistent with everything else he has said and done," he
said.
In November 2010, Australian media reported Reynolds had devoted his
homily to three parishes one weekend in September to proclaiming it was
God's will to include women in the priesthood and said denying women the
right equaled "obstructing the work of the Holy Spirit."
"I feel I can no longer sit back and remain silent," he preached, according to the Melbourne newspaper The Age.
Reynolds resigned his position in August 2011 as pastor of two rural
parishes, and Hart subsequently removed his faculties. From there,
Reynolds founded Inclusive Catholics
as a way "to minister to and with Catholic people who share" his
beliefs on women's ordination and homosexuality, according to the
Inclusive Catholics website.
"I see Women's Ordination as a matter of justice and important for
the renewal of the Church. The current teaching is sexist and helping to
reinforce the ongoing oppression of women particularly in the
developing world," he told NCR, acknowledging he had been
inspired by Roy Bourgeois, a former Maryknoll priest also excommunicated
and removed from his order for speaking out in favor of women's
ordination.
The Inclusive Catholics group meets bimonthly, usually at a
Protestant church. At times, women have led various parts of the liturgy
and preached the homily, though Reynolds leads the eucharistic
elements.
Those participating in the ceremonies include gay people,
victims of clergy sex abuse, laicized priests and others disenfranchised
with the formal Catholic church.
"While in no way compromising our Catholic belief in the Eucharist,
including the Real Presence, we do not restrict peoples' reception of
Holy Communion on the grounds of their worthiness or theology," a
statement from Reynolds reads on the site's homepage.
The Melbourne archbishop and others have characterized the group's
liturgies as "illicit" on several occasions.
In August 2012, Reynolds
and the group became the source of controversy when a story in The Age newspaper reported that a dog had received Communion at a recent service.
Days after the story published, Reynolds received a letter from Hart, a copy of which he posted
to the Inclusive Catholics website.
In the letter, dated Aug. 10, 2012,
Hart expressed concern with the interview and his public celebration of
the Eucharist while suspended from active ministry.
"As your statements and actions are inconsistent of your resignation
from active priestly ministry and the consequent suspension of your
faculties to act publicly as a priest, I am forced to warn you that if
this stance continues, I will be forced to take further canonical action
for the good of the Church," Hart wrote.
A subsequent letter from Salvano, dated Sept. 5 of that year,
informed Reynolds that Hart had begun the administrative procedure for
his dismissal from the clerical state.
Reynolds said he intends to continue his ministry with Inclusive
Catholics, saying he has received "a wonderful groundswell of sympathy
and support for us in recent days." He said he has not decided if he
will appeal the excommunication.
"I firmly believe in the Primacy of Conscience and that loyal dissent
is an important part of any healthy organization," Reynolds said.