Next thing you know, he'll be letting them eat shrimp

be fruitful and multiply

Pope Francis calls Catholic church’s ban on priests having sex “only temporary”.

A thousand-year celibacy strikes me as an awfully long time to avoid temptation, but I’m not Catholic, so I’ll stay out of this one.

The Catholic Church is open to reviewing its thousand-year-old practice of celibacy, Pope Francis has suggested.

He said the ban was only 'temporary' and there was also 'no contradiction' for a priest to marry.

Celibacy was made a requirement by the Catholic Church in the 11th-century for financial reasons, as clergy without children were more likely to leave their wealth to the church. [Is this true? It certainly fits in with my cynical view of the papists — Ed]

The Vatican enforces the rule among priests - but there are growing calls to end the ban.  

It comes after Germany's Catholic Church voted for a resolution requesting that the Pope end the obligation for priests to be celibate.

In an interview with Argentine publication Infobae, Pope Francis, 86, said: 'There is no contradiction for a priest to marry. Celibacy in the western Church is a temporary prescription.

'It is not eternal like priestly ordination, which is for ever whether you like it or not. On the other hand, celibacy is a discipline.'

The Pope also cited the example of the Eastern Church - a branch of Catholicism which allows more leeway - and said: 'Everyone in the Eastern Church is married, or those who want to. Before ordination there is the choice to marry or to be celibate.'

It marks a change from his position in 2019, when he suggested celibacy was a 'gift' to the church and he didn't agree with 'allowing optional celibacy'.

I’m not sure that celibacy was ever a requirement for the priests — ask any altar boy — but the ban on marriage never made sense to this non-Catholic. Except for that money angle, of course.