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Does he really think marriage will solve his problems?  Read on:

Sex scandal Miami priest quits Catholic Church

MIAMI (Reuters) – A popular U.S. Roman Catholic priest photographed frolicking 
with a woman on a Florida beach announced on Thursday he had joined the 
Episcopal Church to pursue the priesthood in a faith that allows married clergy.

"I've seen with my own eyes how many brothers of mine serve God as married men 
and with the blessing of having their own families," said Father Alberto Cutie, 
whose removal from his Miami Beach parish prompted public debate about the 
Catholic Church's celibacy requirement for priests.

The charismatic 40-year-old is a well-known religious leader in Miami who 
dispensed relationship advice on Spanish-language television shows, church 
radio programs and newspaper columns.

He was relieved of his duties at St. Francis de Sales parish in Miami Beach 
earlier this month after the entertainment magazine TVnotas published photos of 
him in swim trunks, snuggling and kissing a woman on the sands of a beach in 
Florida.

Cutie later said he had fallen in love with the woman and broken his vow of 
celibacy. He apologized for his behavior, but told the Univision 
Spanish-language television network, "I didn't stop being a man just because I 
put on a cassock. There are trousers under this cassock."

The woman in the photographs, identified in media reports as Ruhama Canellis, 
stood at Cutie's side as he held a news conference at Trinity Cathedral, where 
the couple underwent a ceremony to join the Episcopalians.

The Episcopalian church is part of the Anglican Communion, which traces its 
roots to the Church of England, formed when King Henry VIII split from the 
Roman Catholic Church in order to divorce and remarry.

The Episcopal church ordains men and women as priests, married or single, and 
has seen controversy within its own ranks for ordaining gay priests.

At his news conference, Cutie described his move as "going into a new family" 
and said he would continue to proclaim God's word. "I will always love the 
Catholic Church and all its members who are committed in their faith and have 
enriched my life in so many ways," he said.

Some Catholics expressed sympathy for Cutie and said it was time to end the 
celibacy rule. Others said that, given the recent scandals involving U.S. 
priests sexually abusing young boys, and Irish priests raping, flogging and 
enslaving children in Catholic schools, they were relieved that Cutie had 
merely become involved with an adult woman.



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