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Cardinal says Priests will marry
The Scotsman ^ | 5/26/2005

Posted on 05/25/2005 10:35:49 PM PDT by sinkspur

THE leader of Scotland's Catholics has risked reigniting a row over married priests by predicting the Vatican will eventually relent and allow the practice.

Cardinal Keith O'Brien, the Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, said the success of married deacons in the church means the change is likely.

The church leader has upset traditional Catholics in the past with his views on celibacy, homosexuality and the priesthood.

His latest comments were made in an interview with the Catholic Times, which will be published on Sunday,

Asked if he believed married priests will become a reality, he said: "Having seen something of the apostolate of married deacons, I can foresee the day when there will be married priests."

The Cardinal has angered conservative Catholics in the past with his acceptance of gay priests, as long as they remained celibate.

However, since being elevated to the College of Cardinals he has espoused views more in line with Vatican teachings. Cardinal O'Brien's latest comments drew criticism from the right-wing Catholic Truth movement.

A spokesman for the group said: "He is trying to say that he is not necessarily personally in favour of this but we can debate it. It's a sleekit way of trying to have his cake and eat it."

However, a poll of 80 Catholic priests in Scotland conducted only last month suggested 40 per cent believed they should be allowed to marry, but the issue remains thorny to many conservative Catholics.

Cardinal O'Brien gained a reputation as a liberal after he said in 2002, before he became a cardinal, that he saw no end to theological argument against celibacy within the priesthood.

A day later he issued a joint statement with Mario Conti, the archbishop of Glasgow, in which the pair said: "While no-one would suggest clerical celibacy is an unchangeable discipline, we believe it has an enormous value."

The following year he risked angering conservatives again when he broached the subject of married priests.

He said in a thanksgiving mass that the church should have "at every level" a discussion about clerical celibacy.

He said the argument for married priests was supported by the case of married Anglican priests who have converted to Catholicism and been allowed to continue their ministries.

However, at the ecclesiastical senate in Rome in October 2003, he made a statement at the end of the Nicene Creed in which he affirmed support of the church's teachings on celibacy, contraception and homosexuality.

It was claimed at the time, but denied, that the added words were said under pressure from the Vatican.

Since then the Cardinal has been careful not to speak out on any of the issues that caused so much controversy.

A spokesman for the Church said today that the Cardinal's comments were not incompatible with his profession of faith in 2003.

He said: "It is a neutral comment on the issue, it is neither a ringing endorsement of the concept, neither is it an outright denunciation."


TOPICS: Catholic; General Discusssion
KEYWORDS: catholicchurch; europeanchristians; marriage; priests; scotland
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To: newgeezer
Now, if you still have a problem with how and where I entered this thread -- especially the conversation with you -- please do us all a favor and click the Report Abuse link on my offending post(s). I'd be curious to see whether that provides you with the satisfaction you seem to be craving.

LOL

Wow, that's all you got left?


341 posted on 06/01/2005 9:58:55 AM PDT by Petronski (A champion of dance, my moves will put you in a trance, and I never leave the disco alone.)
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To: BlackElk
I actually use the KJV

This might be unwise. While miles ahead of the modern dumbed-down translations, King James has the Protestant obfuscating language in numerous key points. "Kecharetomene" in Luke 1, for example, is normatively translated as "gratia plena" -- "full of grace", but King James has the tortured "most favoured one" instead. When John is instructed to take Mary as mother, the original says "elaven auten o mathethes eis ta idia [end of verse]", "the disciple took her to his own", but King James inserts "home", which twists the meaning into a trivial economic arrangement.

Use Douay. It is not free of errors (notably, Genesis 3:15 incorrectly uses feminine, "she will crush [the serpent's] head", when "he" is correct), but it is much cleaner overall.

342 posted on 06/01/2005 10:00:44 AM PDT by annalex
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To: BlackElk
Will newgeezer's persistent rude buttinski-ism succeed where neither Luther nor Calvin nor Zwingli nor Nero nor Julian the Apostate nor Hitler nor Stalin have succeeded in the past?

You never cease to amaze me, BlackElk. LOL

343 posted on 06/01/2005 10:03:21 AM PDT by Petronski (A champion of dance, my moves will put you in a trance, and I never leave the disco alone.)
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To: Stone Mountain; eastsider

I don't have my historical sources at hand, but I know Igantius Press has published a book on this subject. I'll try to cite you something specific if I get a chance this evening.


344 posted on 06/01/2005 10:03:42 AM PDT by Romulus (Der Inn fließt in den Tiber.)
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To: Mark in the Old South

My hope is that one day the Mass for the Ages will again be the norm, and the Novus Ordo, purufied from the abuse, will be a separate rite.


345 posted on 06/01/2005 10:06:36 AM PDT by annalex
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To: BlackElk
Well, it seems we've made some progress. I don't see an "MYOB" anywhere in there. However, I think I saw reference to that which is not my "business."

If it were not for the Roman Catholic Church giving the Bible

Need I remind you this is what you said which compelled me to respond to you in the first place? (GRIN)

At any rate, it seems you're real proud of that heritage. So, I'll just mention again that Israel could easily make the same claim. God used Israel, an "enemy of the gospel," to give us the Bible. Surely you're not ready to say that gives Israel claim to being the one true church.

(Oh, and just so you don't fall into the same confusion as happened the last time we covered this ground, I'll just mention that "Israel" is a Biblical term.)

346 posted on 06/01/2005 10:07:19 AM PDT by newgeezer (Just my opinion, of course. Your mileage may vary.)
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To: BlackElk
MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS

I see you persist in this line of "reasoning." And, you pinged more of your friends.

So, what's this thread about, and why do you keep posting this stuff?

347 posted on 06/01/2005 10:11:19 AM PDT by newgeezer (Just my opinion, of course. Your mileage may vary.)
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To: newgeezer; BlackElk
Israel could easily make the same claim

Two differences. First, Judaism is, self-admittedly, a religion of the book, so a claim that if something is not in the Jewish scripture, then it should not be Judaism, is easier to make.

Second, the Catholic Church is one, holy, catholic, and apostolic not because it produced the Christian Canon, but because it historically and dogmatically is. The fact that it produced the Christian Canon is merely a refutation of the "since X is not in the New Testament, the Chruch should not practice X" assertion.

348 posted on 06/01/2005 10:24:36 AM PDT by annalex
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To: Petronski; BlackElk

You never cease to amaze me, BlackElk. LOL






Ditto that JP. LOL. BE is amazing. I love him.


349 posted on 06/01/2005 10:32:47 AM PDT by onyx (Pope John Paul II - May 18, 1920 - April 2, 2005 = SANTO SUBITO!)
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To: biblewonk; ninenot; sittnick; onyx; Petronski
As to your first point, I ping as I please. The words of my posts (and every one else's posts) speak for themselves. The volume of pingees has nothing to do with impressing anyone. Many of us summon allies to chime in and sometimes they do. Sometimes, opponents are pinged for a wide variety of reasons. Why should you care whom I ping?

As to your second point: 1) That's special; and 2) what good does it do you to misread Scripture, ignore its origin, reject its Church, etc.

I don't doubt that many "reformed" find their way to heaven not by the magic incantation of accepting, etc., but because they obey so much of what Christ demanded whatever their probably innocent deviations, that the sacrifice of Jesus Christ upon the cross has been accessed by them despite the difficulties of lacking graces available through Masses and the sacraments. If you disagree with the last sentence, I really don't care.

For me to be vindicated as a Catholic, I don't need to make a fool of myself by imagining that you must be going to hell unless you surrender to my views or those of my Church. If you believe that I am going to hell for not agreeing with you, seek help. I might go to hell and so might you (as long as I live or you live, each of us is eligible) but it won't be for denominational disagreements.

The best Christian I ever knew was my mother's best friend, Hilda, a verrrrrrry old-fashioned, no nonsense old school Methodist. Some Catholics take the asinine tack that Hilda must be in hell because in 93 years she had plenty of opportunity to become Catholic and did not. After all, outside the Roman Catholic Church (as this particular belief goes) there is NO salvation. The PRE-VATICAN II (for the benefit of Catholics who disagree) hierarchy excommunicated Leonard Feeney, SJ, for that particular error. The Church may just be wide enough to include Hilda and, maybe, just maybe many of the "reformed" here whether they think so or not. Objective reality trumps subjective error anytime. God's plan just has to be better than yours or mine.

If Hilda is in heaven, she is in heaven because of the facts of her life, her passionate love of God, her fervent obedience of Him. She no doubt accepted Jesus Christ as her personal Lord and Savior. After all, who else would have or could have been her personal Lord and Savior?

Hilda and my mother had a great agreement not to argue politics or religion. My mother voted Democrat most of her life and Hilda was a very Republican and conservative woman. Eventually, my mother became (gasp) a registered Republican and never voted for another Democrat. Then she and Hilda talked politics, but not before. They never risked a great relationship by trying to convert each other on religion. After Hilda died, she got a lot of those indulgences that she did not believe in. No problem. Objective reality will trump subjective error anytime. As long as I live, Hilda will be remembered and she will be in my prayers whether she would have thught them useful or not.

BTW, (John 6:50-71) I posted Scripture earlier but got NO Scriptural responses.

350 posted on 06/01/2005 10:38:56 AM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: biblewonk; ninenot; sittnick; onyx; Petronski
As to your first point, I ping as I please. The words of my posts (and every one else's posts) speak for themselves. The volume of pingees has nothing to do with impressing anyone. Many of us summon allies to chime in and sometimes they do. Sometimes, opponents are pinged for a wide variety of reasons. Why should you care whom I ping?

As to your second point: 1) That's special; and 2) what good does it do you to misread Scripture, ignore its origin, reject its Church, etc.

I don't doubt that many "reformed" find their way to heaven not by the magic incantation of accepting, etc., but because they obey so much of what Christ demanded whatever their probably innocent deviations, that the sacrifice of Jesus Christ upon the cross has been accessed by them despite the difficulties of lacking graces available through Masses and the sacraments. If you disagree with the last sentence, I really don't care.

For me to be vindicated as a Catholic, I don't need to make a fool of myself by imagining that you must be going to hell unless you surrender to my views or those of my Church. If you believe that I am going to hell for not agreeing with you, seek help. I might go to hell and so might you (as long as I live or you live, each of us is eligible) but it won't be for denominational disagreements.

The best Christian I ever knew was my mother's best friend, Hilda, a verrrrrrry old-fashioned, no nonsense old school Methodist. Some Catholics take the asinine tack that Hilda must be in hell because in 93 years she had plenty of opportunity to become Catholic and did not. After all, outside the Roman Catholic Church (as this particular belief goes) there is NO salvation. The PRE-VATICAN II (for the benefit of Catholics who disagree) hierarchy excommunicated Leonard Feeney, SJ, for that particular error. The Church may just be wide enough to include Hilda and, maybe, just maybe many of the "reformed" here whether they think so or not. Objective reality trumps subjective error anytime. God's plan just has to be better than yours or mine.

If Hilda is in heaven, she is in heaven because of the facts of her life, her passionate love of God, her fervent obedience of Him. She no doubt accepted Jesus Christ as her personal Lord and Savior. After all, who else would have or could have been her personal Lord and Savior?

Hilda and my mother had a great agreement not to argue politics or religion. My mother voted Democrat most of her life and Hilda was a very Republican and conservative woman. Eventually, my mother became (gasp) a registered Republican and never voted for another Democrat. Then she and Hilda talked politics, but not before. They never risked a great relationship by trying to convert each other on religion. After Hilda died, she got a lot of those indulgences that she did not believe in. No problem. Objective reality will trump subjective error anytime. As long as I live, Hilda will be remembered and she will be in my prayers whether she would have thught them useful or not.

BTW, (John 6:50-71) I posted Scripture earlier but got NO Scriptural responses.

351 posted on 06/01/2005 10:39:35 AM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: newgeezer

When did Israel collect and promulgate the New Testament?


352 posted on 06/01/2005 10:44:35 AM PDT by Petronski (A champion of dance, my moves will put you in a trance, and I never leave the disco alone.)
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To: newgeezer; onyx; Petronski; ninenot; sittnick; saradippity; NYer; Siobhan; St.Chuck; Salvation; ...
I will ping whom I lease.

This thread is about the misbehavior of a Roman Catholic cardinal in Scotland and, in case I neglected to say so, therefore none of your anti-Catholic bidness.

Oh, and MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS which I am likely to continue posting until you take the hint and get some manners.

353 posted on 06/01/2005 10:45:47 AM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: biblewonk; BlackElk

As to your first point, I ping as I please. The words of my posts (and every one else's posts) speak for themselves. The volume of pingees has nothing to do with impressing anyone. Many of us summon allies to chime in and sometimes they do. Sometimes, opponents are pinged for a wide variety of reasons. Why should you care whom I ping?





FOTFL. Biblewonk, BE pings as he pleases and I am always glad when he pings me. It's not like he's calling in the calvary. He needs no help or back up.


354 posted on 06/01/2005 10:47:33 AM PDT by onyx (Pope John Paul II - May 18, 1920 - April 2, 2005 = SANTO SUBITO!)
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To: Petronski

If you'd care to cut to the chase, I'll be happy to respond. As it stands, you're coming across as just another puffed-up smart-aleck.


355 posted on 06/01/2005 10:50:01 AM PDT by newgeezer (Just my opinion, of course. Your mileage may vary.)
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To: newgeezer

You said: "So, I'll just mention again that Israel could easily make the same claim" about giving us the bible.

I said: "When did Israel collect and promulgate the New Testament?"

Already clear as a bell.


356 posted on 06/01/2005 10:53:45 AM PDT by Petronski (A champion of dance, my moves will put you in a trance, and I never leave the disco alone.)
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To: newgeezer
You were right in #346 as to my failure to remind you to MYOB, that is, MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS.

If it were not for the Roman Catholic Church giving yiou the Bible, you would not have a Bible to truncate and mangle.

Is there some reason why I should give a rat's patoot why you responded to me?

I also take it that the incredibly self-satisfied and erroneous church of newgeezer has problems with Jews as well as with Catholics. Why am I not surprised? Jews should take as a compliment your attitude towards them, considering the source.

MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS

357 posted on 06/01/2005 10:58:24 AM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: Petronski

Maybe they don't actually read the Bible but just play people who do when they post on the Internet.


358 posted on 06/01/2005 11:01:17 AM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: Romulus; Stone Mountain
From the Vatican website: Priestly celibacy in patristics and in the history of the Church. Relevant excerpt:
Pope Leo the Great writes to Bishop Rusticus of Narbonne (458/9):
The law of continence is the same for the ministers of the altar, for the bishops and for the priests; when they were (still) lay people or lectors, they could freely take a wife and beget children. But once they have reached the ranks mentioned above, what had been permitted is no longer so. [Epist. ad Rusticum Narbonensem episcopum, Inquis, III., Resp. PL 54, 1 204a.]
Introduced here is the technical expression ‘law of continence’ (lex continentiae). It can also be called the law of celibacy in a ‘wide’ sense. Early Western legislation tends to focus on clerical continence as specifically applied to married clergy: the discipline of abstinence from marital relations. If a bishop, priest or deacon (and subdeacon from the fifth century onwards) was prohibited from having sexual relations once in orders, then it is obvious that his commitment to continence would be the major impediment to subsequent marriage (quite apart from the general disfavour shown towards second marriage). For there could be no real marriage unless it was potentially open to sexual consummation. The same law of continence would also impede the unmarried deacon or priest from marrying. The laws, so clearly expressed in the East, prohibiting marriage to the already ordained may thus be reasonably understood to be but the reverse expression of this more basic discipline of continence. This possibility needs to be taken into account when reconstructing the history of clerical celibacy.

359 posted on 06/01/2005 11:04:19 AM PDT by eastsider
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To: AAABEST; St. Johann Tetzel; Petronski; sinkspur; SuziQ; vox_freedom; cyborg; Selous; B Knotts; ...
Q:Sinkspur, are you an active, permanent deacon in the Catholic Church as you have stated numerous times on this forum? Very simple question. "Yes" or "no" will suffice. Impersonating clergy was punishable by death under levitcal law.

This thread seems to have digressed into apologetics because the discussion was hijacked by an obnoxious poster who is both biblically and historically illiterate. But I would like to get back to this question of whether we have someone impersonating a deacon. Was this question ever resolved?

360 posted on 06/01/2005 11:17:02 AM PDT by GipperGal
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