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Catholic Archbishop Weds Physician; Moon
Presides |
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NEW YORK, May 27, UPI--A controversial Roman Catholic
archbishop married a South Korean physician Sunday in a
ceremony conducted by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, who also
married or renewed the marriage vows of some 50 other couples.
Archbishop Emanuel Milingo, 71, who was retired from
his post in a Vatican department last year, married Maria Ryae
Sung, 43, a South Korean doctor of acupuncture. The couple
plans to live in Africa.
The Rev. Phillip Schanker,
spokesman for the Family Federation for World Peace and
Unification, which Moon formed in 1997, said Milingo planned
to remain within the Catholic church. Catholic church
officials have been quoted as saying Milingo faced
excommunication if he married.
"The blessing ceremony
is of no way to remove beliefs, the Rev. Moon has no desire to
alienate anyone's faith, the archbishop is not leaving his
faith, but he did seek Rev. Moon's guidance in seeking a
wife," Schanker told United Press International. "The focus of
the ceremony was to marry some people for the first time and
renew the vows of others."
He said "Milingo does not
plan to leave the Catholic church and his bride is studying
the elements of the Catholic church."
"Now at 71 years
of age after a lifetime of devotion to the church and to my
priestly vows, the Lord has called me to take a step that will
change my life forever, which will enable me to be a vehicle
of His grace and blessing to Africa and the world, but one
which I expect will alter my relationship with the Roman
Catholic Church as well," Milingo said in a statement issued
Saturday.
"As a celibate priest, matrimony was the
furthest thing from my mind. It is only through the command of
Jesus, and the counsel and support of Rev. and Mrs. Moon, that
I take this unexpected and bold step, one that I have wrestled
with in my heart for some time," he said.
Schanker
said about 600 people attended the Sunday ceremony at the New
York Hilton and many faiths were represented.
The
archbishop, a native of Zambia, has been at odds with the
Roman Catholic church for a couple of decades.
The
former head of the archdiocese of Lusaka, the capital of
Zambia, was recalled to Rome in 1982 after endorsing
faith-healing and exorcism. He met twice with Pope John Paul
II, who in 1983 accepted Milingo's resignation as archbishop
to Lusaka and appointed him as special delegate to the
Pontifical Commission for Pastoral Care for Migration and
Tourism.
Before his retirement, Milingo drew thousands
to healing masses that included exorcisms in Italy and other
countries. He had been made a bishop in 1969 and four years
later discovered what he called his gift of healing the sick
and casting out demons.
The 81-year-old Moon in his
church Web site, http://www.unification.org/
describes the Holy Blessing as a ceremony that includes: the
sprinkling of holy water representing the rebirth or renewal
of the husband and wife together as a blessed couple, a
recitation of vows to consummate the ideal of the creation of
God as an eternal husband and wife to rear their children to
live up to the will of God, and to love the people of the
world as God does.
The blessing ceremony in New York
was the culmination of Moon's 52-day, 52-city tour that called
for international spiritual renewal, Schanker
said.
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UPI is owned by
News World Communications, a media company established by
Moon.
Copyright 2001 by United Press International.
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