The Daily Telegraph

Consecrate­d virgins ‘need not be virgins’

Shock as Vatican says exemplary chastity not a prerequisi­te for women who choose the vocation

- By Olivia Rudgard RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

CONSECRATE­D virgins say they are “disappoint­ed” by the Vatican’s new guidance that literal virginity is not necessary.

A document released this month says that a woman does not need to have “kept her body in perfect continence” to become a consecrate­d virgin.

The Vatican document, entitled Ecclesiae Sponsae Imago, says that the “call to give witness to the Church’s virginal, spousal and fruitful love for Christ is not reducible to the symbol of physical integrity”.

It continues: “Thus to have kept her body in perfect continence or to have practised the virtue of chastity in an exemplary way, while of great importance with regard to the discernmen­t, are not essential prerequisi­tes in the absence of which admittance to consecrati­on is not possible.”

Women who wish to be consecrate­d as virgins take part in a ceremony in which they dress in white and pledge themselves to Christ. There are thought to be around 5,000 worldwide. Once they have joined the vocation, they wear wedding rings and cannot marry or engage in sexual relationsh­ips.

The US Associatio­n of Consecrate­d Virgins issued a statement calling the document “deeply disappoint­ing” and said the advice was “shocking”.

“The entire tradition of the Church has firmly upheld that a woman must have received the gift of virginity – that is, both material and formal (physical and spiritual) – in order to receive the consecrati­on of virgins,” it said.

The statement cites an earlier document, entitled “Consecrati­on to a life of virginity”, which says that women becoming consecrate­d virgins must have “never married or lived in public or open violation of chastity”.

There are around 250 consecrate­d virgins in the US and around 200 in the UK. Informatio­n on the British National Office for Vocation’s website also appears to differ from the new guidance, stating that the women must not have “lost virginity through voluntary intercours­e” or been previously married. It adds: “While the numbers of those seeking consecrati­on as widows and widowers appears to be growing, there is not currently a rite in the Western Church for this particular form of consecrati­on.”

The Vatican document says women can leave the vocation for “very serious reasons” if they apply in writing to the relevant bishop. It adds that two years of preparatio­n is needed before consecrati­on and the ceremony does not normally take place before the woman reaches 25.

The document was published as guidance for the internatio­nal church in response to a growing number of women who were expressing interest in the vocation.

Women who choose to become consecrate­d virgins live secular lives in the community and must be self-supporting. Unlike nuns, they do not have special clothing or live secluded from the secular world, though some spend much of their time as recluses.

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