VATICAN: NO CHANGE IN CELIBACY AFTER ANGLICAN MOVE
(ANSA) - Vatican City, November 9 - The Vatican's decision to make it easier for Anglicans to join the Catholic Church will not change the Holy See's rules on celibacy, the Vatican said Monday.
Unmarried Anglicans will have to abstain from sex just like Catholic priests do, the Vatican said.
The statement came as the Vatican published a detailed guide to the new body for Anglicans who want to convert, called the Apostolic Constitution.
The Constitution allows Anglicans to become Catholics while retaining some of their traditions and practices.
It comes as a response to a demand from some conservative Anglicans, unhappy with progressive developments like women bishops, for an easier and larger-scale way to convert.
The Holy See has previously approached the issue only on a case-by-case basis and only a handful of Anglican priests have become Catholics in recent years.
If married, they have been allowed to stay that way.
The new rules will allow bishops in too but only if they are single.
The new section of the Catholic Church was announced on October 20, taking some top Anglicans aback.
A former archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey, said the Anglican Church should not be treated as a ''junior partner''.
He claimed the Vatican had only given Church of England chief Rowan Williams two weeks' notice of its plan.
Pope Benedict XVI is set to receive Archbishop of Canterbury Williams on November 31.
William was already scheduled to visit Rome for the 100th anniversary of the birth of Catholic ecumenical pioneer Johannes Willebrands.
The Apostolic Constitution lays out formal procedures for unmarried bishops, married and unmarried priests and other members of the Anglican Church to join the Catholic Church.
Several hundred unhappy Anglicans are reported to be mulling a 'return to Rome'.
A conservative Anglican group called Forward With Faith has said many of its members are eager to convert because the Church of England was becoming ''the church of political correctness''.
One of its leaders, Father Geoffrey Kirk, said they objected not only to the ordination of woman but also to ''many attitudes on human sexuality'' including divorce and homosexuality.
On the Vatican side of the question, meanwhile, some observers had speculated that the arrival of more married Anglicans might eventually open a chink in the Holy See's ironclad insistence on celibacy for its own clergy.
But Monday's statement appears to have put paid to that.
The Church of England is regarded as the 'mother' of all the other churches in the worldwide Anglican Communion, which considers itself to be both a product of the Reformation and also Catholic.
With some 77 million members, the Anglican Communion is the third largest Christian communion in the world after the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Churches.
The English church was under papal authority for nearly a thousand years before splitting from Rome in 1534 when King Henry VIII was refused an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon so he could marry Anne Boleyn.


