- SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The
Roman Catholic church has suspended confessions in Singapore due to the
spread of the deadly SARS virus, and priests will instead forgive all churchgoers
for their sins, the church said on Wednesday.
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- "The Archbishop of Singapore has issued a directive
to the priests that there will be no individual confessions and that they
are to issue general forgiveness," said a spokeswoman for the Catholic
News, which represents Singapore's Catholic church.
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- SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, has killed
at least 103 people worldwide, including nine in Singapore. The city-state
has the world's fourth-highest number of confirmed cases.
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- Singapore Archbishop Nicholas Chia said a general absolution,
or forgiveness, without one-on-one confessions only can be given in times
of "grave necessity," according to the Bible.
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- "This year in view of the SARS epidemic, I have
obtained permission from Rome for our priests to grant a general absolution
instead of individual confessions and absolution," Chia said in a
letter to Singapore's 152,000 Catholics.
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- Catholics in multicultural Singapore are already banned
from holding or shaking hands in church to prevent the spread of SARS,
and holy communion wafers can only be issued on the palm of the hand. Usually,
Catholics can choose to receive communion on the tongue.
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- Chia said churchgoers must resolve to confess their sins
in due time for the general absolution to work.
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- A council overseeing Singapore's Islamic community has
excused Muslims from Friday prayers if they show SARS symptoms.
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