A leading member of Brazil's Roman Catholic Church has criticised the obligatory celibacy of priests.
In an interview published by the Brazilian newspaper O Globo, Cardinal Paulo Evaristo Arns said that celibacy should be an option rather than a requirement.
He also said that he believed Church policy would not change during the papacy of Pope John Paul II, who last week reiterated that priests should remain celibate.
Cardinal Arns said that celibacy was a rule imposed by the Church, which did not come from the Bible.
He pointed out that the first pope, St Peter, was married.
Why shouldn't those who want to choose marriage do that, he asked?
He said that he himself preferred to be single because it allowed him to dedicate himself completely to the Church, but others, he said, need the companionship of a woman.
Personal opinion
While one of Brazil's senior churchmen, Cardinal Arns is also seen as far more liberal than most of the rest of the Church hierarchy.
Others have hastened to point out that he was expressing a personal opinion, not that of the Brazilian Church.
When asked whether the Church was considering changing its rules, Cardinal Arns said that with Pope John Paul II that would be impossible.
He said the Pope had made his views well known and had even prohibited discussion of the issue.
"We're talking about it now," he said, "because we're free."
In the wake of the scandals in the United States, the Catholic Church in Brazil has also been hit by a number of scandals of priests accused of abusing children.
A debate has started not only about how to deal with paedophile priests but the whole issue of celibacy as well.