Posted on 04/07/2005 5:00:46 AM PDT by Teófilo
This Observant Catholic says: maybe
Much of the support to the idea of married Catholic priests comes from liberal reformers, who often couch it in their language, that is to say, in concepts foreign to Catholic theology, and also link it to another issue, "women's ordination" so-called. Put the two ideas into the same sentence and you see how both ideas sound so repulsive to Observant Catholics' ears.
This doesn't need to be this way. They idea of ordaining married men to the priesthood can be defended on orthodox, conservative, and traditional grounds. My thesis is that a married priesthood would not be a doctrinal innovation, but simply the restoration of a discipline that was normative for the first 1,000 years of history in the Western, Latin Churchalthough we need to acknowledge that the discipline of priestly celibacy became ascendant in the 5th century, from the time of Pope St. Gregory the Great, who brought a monastic outlook to the papacy of his time, onwards. Five centuries later, another saintly Pope named Gregory (pp.VII), promulgated that celibacy was to be the mandatory disciplinary norm for all the priests of the Latin Church.
Before we attempt an analysis of the arguments set in favor of a married clergy, we need to set forth the following two principles:
The Holy Spirit guides Salvation History. He's also the soul of the Church, the life-giving, animating principle of the Body of Christ. Nothing happens in the history of the Church without a purpose, nor outside of God's will. If the Spirit guided the Western Church to establish a discipline of celibacy for all priestly tiers in the Western Church, and that discipline has lasted 1,400 years, well, we should hold to that fact as the point of departure for any conversation on this issue, and assign it all the weight it rightly deserves.
The second principle flows from what we mean when we say "ordaining married men to the Catholic priesthood." It means just that. The priesthood under this discipline will continue to be restricted to men,in conformity with 2,000 years of Catholic Tradition and, most recently, the binding authoritative teaching of Pope John Paul the Great, given in his 1994 Apostolic Letter, Ordinatio Sacerdotalis:
Wherefore, in order that all doubt may be removed regarding a matter of great importance, a matter which pertains to the Church's divine constitution itself, in virtue of my ministry of confirming the brethren (cf. Lk 22:32) I declare that the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church's faithful.
It also means ordaining married men; it doesn't mean that already ordained men would be allowed to marry and still permitted to minister. Already ordained priests seeking marriage would still have to be dispensed from their vows and laicized.
Many of the so-called reformers would find such strictures intolerable, for they do not fit with the pastoral model they have in mind for the Church and that's the Protestant Parsonage. Most observant Catholics opposed to the idea of ordaining married men to the priesthood also believe that this is the only model available to follow and therefore, they reject itand rightly so. I also reject the Protestant Parsonage as a model for the Catholic one, and I say that with all due respect to all those successful Protestant ministerial couples out there who have made it work, often under dire circumstances in the mission field or while undergoing persecution for the cause of Christ.
I set aside the Protestant model because is not Catholic and I'm only willing to admit Catholic solutions to Catholic problemsin this case, the scarcity of priests in developed countries for which ordaining worthy married men is but one solution. As a Catholic theologian, I must look to the fullness of revelation as handed down solely to the Catholic Church since her beginning, for trustworthy guidance on this very important issue.
Catholic Tradition has preserved such a model of married priests and families, and it is the one we can observe today in the Eastern Churches, both the ones in communion with Rome and the ones that are not. They offer us a perfect model that is both historical, practical, steeped in Holy Tradition and therefore, thoroughly Catholic. The Eastern model is the one the Western Church should adopt if and when the Magisterium decides to restore the discipline of a married clergy to the Latin Church.
I have observed first hand that a married priest can minister to his flock and remain completely open to its needs, in all the demands that the Lord imposes upon him, be it the needs of the flock or the needs of its own family; I have seen holiness and wholesomeness flowing in these priestly families and it is inspiring to behold.
Now, do these couples "have it easy"? Most certainly not. These couples live under a social microscope and the need to send boundaries between service and love to others and service and love to their family lay unimaginable pressures on these servants of God. The fact that they achieve it and persevere every day, as well as their persistence in liturgical and private prayer, fasting, and mortification, demonstrates beyond all doubt God's blessings upon these unions. That this occurs within a traditional Catholic context is encouraging. The fact that in these marriages man, in his fullnessmale and femalebecomes a partner with Christ in the redemption of the world should not scandalize anyone among the Catholic faithful, but rather inspire them to pursue their salvation with due diligence.
Ordaining married men is not a messianic panacea that will heal all the ills of the Church in developed countries, for the vocation deficit ailing the Church today has but little to do with the life of chosen celibacy the priesthood now demands, and everything to do with the kind of culture we live in. Permanent Deaconsthe ranks of men from which the first batch of married priests is likely to comeshould feel any pressure to abandon their initial vocation; being a Permanent Deacon is a perfectly fine vocation and blessed by the Lord.
Enthusiasts of ordaining married men to the priesthood should stand under the cold shower of reality and the reality we live here in the United States is that our materialistic culture is not conducive to Catholic religious vocations of any kind, whether married or celibate. I'm not too optimistic that hordes of married men will rush to become priests if the discipline of married priesthood is ever restored in the Western Church.
If a married priesthood following the Eastern Christian model is to be restored in the Latin Church, pastors (i.e. bishops) should exercise extreme caution as to whom they choose for this restored ministry. For we will no longer be talking about one vocation, but two, the husband's and the wife's and maybe even the children's. I humbly suggest the following guidelines to its restoration and for the testing of the worthiest candidates:
Is now the time to admit married men into the priesthood? This is a matter of spiritual discernment, of being alert to the promptings of the Spirit and judging that whatever is enacted is the will of the Spirit. That's not my role. My role is to point out a need and a possible solution in accordance to the Deposit of RevelationScripture and Tradition.
In the 500 years between Pope St. Gregory I and St. Gregory VII, the Magisterium decided that a celibate priesthood better served the Church; Pope John Paul the Great judged that it wasn't time yet to restore the ancient discipline of the Church. The next Holy Father may decide that it is time to restore the ancient discipline, or he may not, and that's fine too. We should all be happy and at peace and always remember that our agenda, our schedule, is not the Spirit's. The Catholic Church will go where the Spirit blows, when the Spirit blows, and at no other time and often, in spite of ourselves.
- Read "Can a priest be a husband?" from Time Magazine
- Read Split in push for married priests, from Australia's Fairfax Digital
- Read What's the deal about legally married priests? at EWTN.
The following links are from the Married Priest Website. Vivificat! doesn't necessarily support everything they say, and may in fact oppose some of the things they say. In other words, this is not a blanket endorsement of that site's content. I link to it because they have the documents I want my readers to study. Caveat emptor.
- Read the English Catholic Bishops' Statutes for the Admission of Married Former Anglican Clergymen into the Catholic Church
- Read the Provisions of the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches Related to Married Clergy from the Code of Canon Law for Oriental Churches.
They're also discouraged by their families. Most of the men who do get ordained today are older (over 30 or near 30) and take some time to decide if a life of celibacy is for them.
If some positive action is not taken to bring more men into the priesthood in the Western countries over the next decade, more and more parishes will be run by deacons and laymen and laywomen, with priests as sacramental functionaries.
OTOH, there are some positives to that model of parish governance.
That article is wrong. There are married priests in the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church today. Over 700 of them.
The homosexual cliques in the Catholic priesthood are violently opposed to married men in the priesthood. It's easy to understand why.
the FIRST STEP, for a whole lot of reasons, should be to get rid of the homosexual cliques. that is just common sense. if, after the fabric of the priesthood is repaired, a need remains, THEN look to ordaining married men. the SIN has to be rooted out, prior to slapping on bandaids.
I don't want homos OR married priests in the Church. I could care less what they think especially since their sexual lust is what is motivating them.
good point
if you are being strangled by someone, do you want to have the person strangling you knocked OUT immediately, quickly freeing you up to breathe, or do you want to release a noxious fume into the room where you are being held and hope that the person strangling you is overcome by those fumes so that you may be freed? an extremely rudimentary attempt to illustrate BOOTING OUT THE HOMOSEXUALS, versus allowing married men in as priests and hope that the homosexuals are sufficiently discomfited to leave.
No.
Yes, ridding the Church of active homosexuals is necessary, and that is more or less being done. But even celibate homosexuals with effeminate mannerisms give a normal het the creeps. And bishops are not going to kick a priest out of the priesthood just because he's light in the loafers.
Additionally, men don't want to commit themselves to a life that has been labeled a "gay profession" as far back as 20 years ago.
The Church will lose 12,000 priests over the next ten years due to death or retirement. With the numbers in the seminary today--even if all of them went on to ordination--we're 6,000 short.
Into that vacuum will march deacons and lay people to run parishes, administer programs, lead communion services, and perform every ministry short of hearing Confessions and celebrating Mass. I'm comfortable with that arrangement. Are you?
That should read "The Church in America will lose........."
This is another path on the slippery slope. The modernists have made their bed and destroyed the priesthood by setting bad examples and gaining no adherents. The laity, for the most part in the U.S. have aided and abetted this.
The FSSP and the ICKSP and the orthodox dioceses have no problems ordaining married men. There are valid theological and spiritual reasons that override doing this in today's climate. Celibacy is a special and unique witness.
If we have married priests, we will have divorced priests. Why do we need more scandals?
Finally, on the practical level, most parishes do not tithe enough to support a married priest with 9 or 12 or 6 children, and send them to college. And a priest who is opent to life presumably, does not need his wife going off to work. It is something that would create tensions at home and while ministering to the congregations. A priest has a vocation. A married man has a vocation. A priest's vocation doesn't end at 5 p.m. Neither does a married man's.
The cure is Tradition and fostering pious, prayerful young men and getting rid of altar girls. This is a "band-aid" cure. Orthodox priests I know have one or two children, and the Orthodox are NOT against contraception, so this comparison does not hold.
"The FSSP and the ICKSP and the orthodox dioceses have no problems ordaining CELIBATE men." I mistakenly wrote "married" in my previous post.
They have an overflow of vocations knocking down their doors. Go to Atlanta and to Rockford, Illinois and copy how they do it.
i am afraid i differ with you with respect to your belief that normal heterosexual men won't enter a seminary if they are guaranteed not to be drummed out by the gay hierachy. The priesthood is a calling. God will not abandon His church.
Like you, I don't think admitting married men to the priesthood is THE solution, but it is part of A solution.
The ultimate question we have to ask ourselves is "Is depriving Catholics of the Eucharist worth maintaining mandatory celibacy in the Latin Rite?"
Good. Glad to hear it.
In your opinion; not in mine.
And, yes, they are discouraged by their families. This is yet another of the wonderful side effects of the contraceptive mentality. Families don't have enough children to "spare" one for the priesthood.
Your "facts" are wrong. Mandatory celibacy dates to 1139; but the tradition goes back much further. Also, continence was required for married priests, which is certainly not envisioned by today's "reformers."
That anti-Catholic chestnut about inheritance makes no sense whatsoever, which hasn't stopped it from spreading via the likes of Fr. McBrien. How could children inherit property that did not belong to their parent? Ludicrous.
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