Pope marries 20 couples, some of whom are co-habiting parents

Pontiff says church must end its obsession with abortion, contraception and homosexuality

A semi-general view the  brides and their grooms as they  stood before Pope Francis (top centre) as he celebrates a mass wedding ceremony inside St. Peter’s Basilica today. Photograph: Alberto Pizzoli/EPA
A semi-general view the brides and their grooms as they stood before Pope Francis (top centre) as he celebrates a mass wedding ceremony inside St. Peter’s Basilica today. Photograph: Alberto Pizzoli/EPA

Pope Francis married 20 couples today, some of whom had already lived together and had children, in the latest sign that the Argentine pontiff wants the Catholic church to be more open and inclusive.

In the first wedding he has performed in his 18-month-old papacy, the Pope took each couple through their vows in turn - including Gabriella and Guido, who already had children and thought such a marriage would be impossible, official broadcasting service Radio Vaticana said.

“The people getting married on Sunday are couples like many others,” the diocese of Rome said in a statement. “Some already live together, some already have children.”

Pope Francis at the wedding of 20 couples in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican today. Photograph: Giampiero Sposito/Reuters
Pope Francis at the wedding of 20 couples in St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican today. Photograph: Giampiero Sposito/Reuters

The ceremony was the first of its kind in the Vatican since Pope John Paul II presided over a wedding in 2000, when he was the leader of the world's 1.3 billion Catholics.

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Pope Francis, who is the first non-European pope in 1,300 years, has expressed tolerance regarding other topics that are traditionally taboo in the Church, asking “who am I to judge?” a gay person “who seeks God and has good will”.

His approach contrasts with that of his predecessor, the German Pope Benedict, who said that threats to the traditional family undermined the future of humanity itself.

Bishops from all over the world are due to come to the Vatican in October for a major meeting on the family, which the Jesuit pope referred to in the homily to today’s Mass as the “bricks” on which society is built.

The bishops are expected to discuss issues such as marriage, divorce and contraception at the synod, from October 5th-19th.

The pope has said the Church must end its obsession with teachings on abortion, contraception and homosexuality, and become more merciful, or risk collapsing “like a house of cards”.

Reuters