Kigali, 04 August, 2025 / 10:15 PM
Members of the Symposium of Episcopal Conference of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM) have made some six pastoral proposals in response to the mandate that the multi-year XVI Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, the Synod on Synodality, gave them to “to promote theological and pastoral discernment on the issue of polygamy”.
In a document titled, “Accompaniment of Persons in Polygamous Situations”, which Sr. Esther Lucas Jose Maria presented to delegates of the 20th Plenary Assembly of SECAM in Kigali, Rwanda, Africa’s Catholic Bishops emphasize that they do not deviate from the doctrine of the Church that recognizes only the monogamous marriage.
The pastoral proposals include welcoming persons in polygamous situations into the Church, making them feel part of the Church, taking initiatives that target widows, emphasizing conversion as the primary goal, shifting from the narrow meaning of fecundity as biological parentage to charity, and the family apostolate characterized by catechesis on Church and Sacraments.
In an August 2 interview with Sr. Esther, a day after she presented the fruit of meetings, brainstorming, and reflections that Africa’s select theologians and other professionals in relevant ecclesiastical disciplines compiled, she explained the six proposals and emphasized that “other kind of approaches” can be integrated, and the proposed ones adjusted.
As a starting point, she said, “we have told the Bishops that we have many people who are living in polygamous situation who come to ask for Baptism or other Sacraments, and sometimes we have no answer to them.”
“As theologians we have to think about it, to reflect about it, and to give the pastoral ways and to help these people,” said the Mozambican member of the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul (DC), who has been giving lectures in philosophy and theology for the past 25 years.
The first proposal is “to allow” people in polygamous situations “to come to be with the community,” she said, emphasizing that members of families in these situations must not be denied the opportunity to “hear the word of God.”
“We can't oblige these people to change,” she noted, adding that the emphasis is for the Church “to open doors and accept them to come in.”
If a man has multiple wives, he is not obliged to choose one to stay and send the others away, “no, we say that it's important to give him the possibility to choose by himself what is better in his life in the light of the word of God” they are offered in their participation in liturgical celebration,” Sr. Esther said.
Essentially, she reiterated about a man in a polygamous situation, it’s about “what his conscience is telling him to do; when he understands well the word of God, what decision he can take to himself for his salvation and salvation of his family.”
The second proposal entails helping parents, guardians, and all children in polygamous situations feel they are part of the Catholic community, Sr. Esther told ACI Africa on August 2 at Kigali Convention Centre (KCC), the venue of the 20th SECAM Plenary Assembly.
These persons, she emphasized, need to “participate in the life of the Church ... they should not feel ostracized; they should not feel as if they're outsiders.”
As part of this second proposal, the lecturer at St. Pius X Theological Major Seminary in Mozambique’s capital city, Maputo, said, Church institutions need “to help these people to understand that the Sacrament is not the passport of salvation.”
“The salvation is coming by Jesus Christ; by accepting Him,” she said, emphasizing the need for all Christians to accept the person of Jesus Christ, and have Him at the centre of their lives.
The third proposal focuses on widows, who Sr. Esther said form a significant majority of women in situations of polygamy.
The culture of wife inheritance in many African communities has fostered polygamy, she noted, adding that the Church and her institutions should “accompany people like the widows, that they can continue their life without having the need to submit themselves to the undesirable culture of being given to other men.”
People in situations of polygamy need to be accompanied “to understand the need of conversion,” said the Mozambican theologian, who was among the delegates from Africa at the Synod on Synodality, which the late Pope Francis officially inaugurated in 2021 and later extended to 2024, highlighting the fourth proposal.
The fifth proposal, she said, is about promoting the understanding of fecundity as being wider than just having biological children.
The Church and her various institutions must help people in polygamous unions “to be open to charity, to give and to help other people,” she said, recalling her August 1 presentation to delegates of the 20th Plenary Assembly of SECAM, who included 13 Cardinals, over 100 Archbishops and Bishops, dozens of Catholic Priests, women and men Religious and representatives of SECAM partners.
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Taking seriously family apostolate constitutes the final proposal in the document on polygamy, Sr. Esther said.
It entails catechesis for members of families in polygamous situations, paying attention to “people in the family who can't receive the Sacraments,” she said.
While “the first wife has a possibility to be baptized because she started the relationship as a monogamous union”, she said, the other wives are impeded.
The children of the other wives, she went on to clarify, “can be baptized by going through catechesis.”
Coming from polygamous families, including being a child of “other wives” should not be an impediment to Priestly and Religious Life, the Mozambican DC member said, adding that “we have Bishops and even Cardinals who are products of polygamous families.”
Asked if the six approaches are sufficient in resolving the challenge of polygamy to Christian living, she said, “I think that is just the beginning of our reflection ... we know that the reflection has to be continued ... and we have to open our mind to other kind of approaches.”
“It's not a final work; it is the beginning of our reflection,” she told ACI Africa, adding that any of the six approaches can also be adjusted.
She advocated for openness, saying, “We have to be open to the ways of God because there are many ways that God uses to redeem people ... we must be open to hear from them what is their problem, what pushes them to this kind of life, in order to help them to understand their own life and to see that conversion is possible.”
In his input at the Plenary Assembly, Archbishop Andrew Nkea Fuanya of Cameroon’s Bamenda Catholic Archdiocese clarified that during the deliberations at the Synod on Synodality, “polygamy was not brought up as an African concept to be approved. It was brought up as a challenge to Christian marriage in Africa.”
Referring to Sr. Esther’s presentation on behalf of the theologians from Africa, Archbishop Nkea said that the pastoral approach to polygamy is “one of listening, proximity, and accompaniment.”
People in polygamous situations, he said, are “encouraged to join the Christian community and hear the word of God ... (and) follow their consciences.”
Having an encounter with the person of Jesus Christ, the Cameroonian Archbishop, who participated in the Synod on Synodality said, is “something that solidifies Christian marriage and makes polygamy stand out as being not according to the mind of God from the moment that God created man and woman and made marriage as a divine institution.”
“Polygamy does not promote the dignity of man and woman as willed by God from the moment of their creation,” he emphasized.
Archbishop Nkea reiterated the communication from the SECAM Secretary General, Fr. Rafael Simbine Junior, that the draft of the document Sr. Esther presented had been reviewed by the Vatican Dicastery for the Doctrine of Faith.
In the August 2 interview, Sr. Esther spoke about what else is in the document titled, “Accompaniment of Persons in Polygamous Situations”. She said the document, which is yet to become public, contains some definitions of polygamy, outlines causes of polygamy, and how polygamy negatively impacts women “because their dignity is not taken in consideration.”
“Even when the wife asks the man to take a second wife, something is wrong in the relationship,” she said.
The document also highlights the “interdisciplinary approaches to polygamy, including anthropological, theological, moral and social approaches,” she told ACI Africa, adding that in a section of the document, polyandry is discussed.
“The document says that we continue to reaffirm the doctrine of our Church. We recognize only the monogamous marriage; there is no possibility for other kinds of marriages,” Sr. Esther said.
What the document is saying is that while “knowing that marriage is monogamous in our Church, we can't close the door for those people who live in polygamous situations,” she reiterated.
Following the first session from 4-29 October 2023, Catholic Bishops in Africa were encouraged to foster “the accompaniment of people in polygamous unions coming to faith.”
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