Apostasy of the faith: Wanting to do it My way rather than God's Way...
Francis is not the
only pope facing a divorce dilemma
Copts form the vast majority of Egypt’s eight to ten million
Christians, and while most observers regard the idea of removing their pope as
a long-shot, they say the uprising reflects real discontent over the extent to
which Church authorities try to assert control over the private lives of their
followers.
“People don’t like him very much, because he has a violent temper and
he’s seen as aggressive,” said Mina Thabet, a Coptic researcher on human
rights. “There’s a real problem between the pope and the people.” When it comes
to the substance of the divorce question, Francis and Tawadros are drawing fire
from opposite sides.
The Catholic leader is generally seen as a moderate, with conservatives
alarmed that he might relax his Church’s rules banning communion to anyone who
divorces and remarries outside the Catholic Church. Tawadros is seen as a
hard-liner, staunchly opposed to allowing Copts to dissolve their marriages
under virtually any circumstances.
That stance is controversial in this majority Muslim nation, where the
government recognizes the authority of religious institutions to regulate
matters of personal status such as marriage. There’s no civil marriage in
Egypt, so Christians are obliged to marry through the Coptic Church. Likewise,
they must ask the Church if they want a divorce. And while they can appeal to a
civil court if the Church refuses, those courts generally side with the
religious authorities.
Not so long ago, the Coptic Church had a more relaxed stance.
Under a 1938 Church law, Copts were permitted to divorce for nine
reasons, including insanity, sexual aversion, and abandonment. The list also
included “irreconcilable differences,” an elastic term that made obtaining a
divorce fairly routine.
That changed in 2008 under Tawadros’ predecessor, Pope Shenouda III,
who restricted divorce exclusively to cases of adultery and conversion to Islam
or another Christian denomination.
Some Copts have been protesting ever since.
In 2011, a movement was founded called “Coptic 38” to campaign to go
back to the earlier, more permissive rules. When he took office three years
ago, Tawadros rejected that suggestion out of hand.
Despite the criticism, Tawadros appears to have the backing of other
Coptic leaders.
On June 25, a traditional Church body called a “millet council” in
Alexandria rejected calls for the pope’s removal, calling the selection of the
Coptic leader a “divine choice” that cannot be undone.
Certainly the generally conservative ethos of the Church’s leadership
suggests Tawadros won’t find much resistance for keeping reformers at bay.
On Sunday, for instance, Bishop Rafael, a runner-up in the selection
process for pope three years ago, called homosexuality a result of a “perverted
upbringing or sick desires” in response to the recent US Supreme Court decision
legalizing gay marriage.
Likewise, although other Christian denominations in Egypt won’t take
sides on an internal Coptic dispute, most of their bishops would undoubtedly
back Tawadros since virtually all churches here have the same line on divorce.
Copts are a defiant bunch, however, and there’s no telling how their
dissidents might push back.
In the early 1950s, a group of Coptic youth actually kidnapped the pope
at the time, Joseph II, and took him to a monastery to force him to sign a
letter of abdication over charges of corruption and simony, the selling of
ecclesiastical office. Police rescued the pope and returned him to power, but a
year later he lost the support of his own bishops and stepped down.
There’s little indication any such putsch against Tawadros is in the
cards, yet there are signs his stance is driving a few Copts away. Estimates
provided by Peter Ramses El-Naggar, a lawyer who’s part of the “38” movement,
are that since 2008 some 1,200 Copts have converted to Islam, which permits
divorce, and that 4,000 more have tried to pursue a civil divorce or joined
another Christian denomination.
Aside from the coincidence that another pope is wrestling with the same
problem, Francis may want to take note of the Egyptian debate for another
reason. If he relaxes the Catholic position on divorce and remarriage, it could
create ecumenical tensions with churches such as the Coptic Orthodox currently
struggling to hold the line.
No matter what happens to Tawadros, the turmoil illustrates a hard
truth which, by now, must be clear to his fellow pope in Rome too: When it
comes to divorce and remarriage, somebody’s going to be unhappy no matter what
you do.
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