Posted on 03/14/2010 2:18:46 PM PDT by NYer
Rome is using this day of rest to stir a debate that never seems to rest:
The Vatican on Sunday denied that its celibacy requirement for priests was the root cause of the clerical sex abuse scandal convulsing the church in Europe and again defended the pope's handling of the crisis.Continue at the link.
Suggestions that the celibacy rule was in part responsible for the ''deviant behavior'' of sexually abusive priests have swirled in recent days, with opinion pieces in German newspapers blaming it for fueling abuse and even Italian commentators questioning the rule.
Much of the furor was spurred by comments from one of the pope's closest advisers, Vienna archbishop Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, who called this week for an honest examination of issues like celibacy and priestly education to root out the origins of sex abuse.
''Part of it is the question of celibacy, as well as the subject of character development. And part of it is a large portion of honesty, in the church but also in society,'' he wrote in the online edition of his diocesan newsletter.
His office quickly stressed that Schoenborn wasn't calling into question priestly celibacy, which Pope Benedict XVI reaffirmed as recently as Friday as an ''expression of the gift of oneself to God and others.''
But Schoenborn has in the past shown himself receptive to arguments that a celibate priesthood is increasingly problematic for the church, primarily because it limits the number of men who seek ordination.
Last June, Schoenborn personally presented the Vatican with a lay initiative signed by prominent Austrian Catholics calling for the celibacy rule to be abolished and for married men to be allowed to become priests.
In the days following Schoenborn's editorial this week, several prominent prelates in Germany and at the Vatican shot down any suggestion that the celibacy rule had anything to do with the scandal, a point echoed Sunday by the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano.
''It's been established that there's no link,'' said the article by Bishop Giuseppe Versaldi, an emeritus professor of canon law and psychology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.
''First off, it's known that sexual abuse of minors is more widespread among lay people and those who are married than in the celibate priesthood,'' he wrote. ''Secondly, research has shown that priests guilty of abuse had long before stopped observing celibacy.''
when i googled about apostles being married I also came across links where popes were even married
This is actually not true. "The other apostles" (those except for Paul), according to the Bible itself, had wives. And according to the explicit statement of the Bible, Peter was accompanied in his travels as an apostle BY HIS BELIEVING WIFE: "Don't we have the right to take a believing wife along with us, as do the other apostles and the Lord's brothers and Cephas?" - 1 Corinthians 9:5
Not according to the Bible itself: According to the explicit statement of the Bible, Peter was accompanied in his travels as an apostle BY HIS BELIEVING WIFE: "Don't we have the right to take a believing wife along with us, as do the other apostles and the Lord's brothers and Cephas?" - 1 Corinthians 9:5
Not actually true. We know for certain that he had a living wife while serving as an apostle, and we know for certain that most of not all of the other apostles except for Paul also had wives and traveled with them in their apostolic duties. See post 102.
See 102.
The Bible explicitly tells us that most (if not all) of the Apostles except for Paul (and specifically including Peter) had wives whom they took along with them in their Christian-ministry travels:
The Bible: "Don't we have the right to take a believing wife along with us, as do the other apostles and the Lord's brothers and Cephas?" - 1 Corinthians 9:5
You: I suggest that in the future before opining on a topic you know little about, educate yourself. Unless of course, you enjoy coming across as a buffoon.
Hmm... Not generally a good idea to accuse others of being buffoons unless you really know what you're talking about... lol...
Also see 106.
Jesus never married .. this is true. As for the quotation, I will defer to Karl Keating's analysis of the scriptural passage. (Karl Keating received his undergraduate degree in Applied Math at UCSD in 1972 and went on to get a J.D. at the University of San Diego. )
Last week I wrote about the incident in which our Lord cured Peter's mother-in-law. I noted that the account does not mention the woman's daughter, Peter's wife. Such an omission always has struck me as odd, as though an expected player were left out of a dramatic scene. I speculated that perhaps Peter's wife already was dead.
Some subscribers agreed with my view, and others disagreed. Most of the disagreements centered on 1 Corinthians 9:5: "Do we not have the right to be accompanied by a wife, as the other apostles and the brethren of the Lord and Cephas?" (RSV-CE).
This suggests that in his travels Peter (also known as Cephas) journeyed with his wife. If so, then my speculation about her early death would be moot.
The issue is whether the RSV-CE and similar translations are correct. Should the underlying Greek words be rendered as "wife" or as something else? I think the stronger case is with the something else, even though most modern translations do, indeed, have "wife."
In this passage Paul is defending himself and the other apostles against charges from a few disgruntled people. He says he is giving "my defense to those who would examine me" (1 Cor. 9:3). He is talking about a situation or perception that applies to himself, not just to the others, yet he certainly was not accompanied by his wife, since he had no wife. We know from other testimony of his that he was unmarried.
He also is not speaking of a theoretical marriage, one that he might have had or might someday have but does not yet have. He is not saying, "If I had a wife at the moment (which I do not), I would have the right to have her accompany me." He is responding to complaints concerning whichever women actually did accompany him and his male companions. This indicates to me that "wife" probably is not the right translation here.
Up to this point my argument does not rely on a look at the primitive text. Now it is time to go to the Greek. The key words in 1 Corinthians 9:5 are adelphaen gunaika. The first word means "sister," and the second can be translated as either "woman" or "wife." This means the phrase translates as either "sister woman" or "sister wife." Which makes more sense?
In either case the word "sister" is understood by all commentators to refer not to a biological relationship but to spiritual one--that is, a woman so described was a believer, a Christian. A "sister woman" was someone like those pious women who accompanied our Lord (Luke 8:3).
It would make sense for the apostles to be accompanied by "sister women" who could assist them in ministering to women--for example, at full-immersion baptisms, where a question of modesty could arise, or in cases where it would be more appropriate for a woman to perform a charitable or catechetical function.
From other passages we know that those who accepted our Lord's call left everything behind, including their wives. It would seem a bit strange, then, for Paul to be writing about wives who tagged along with their husbands, if the wives had been left behind.
My take on 1 Corinthians 9:5 finds support in the Fathers. "Sister woman" is found in Jerome's Vulgate, and Jerome wrote that "It is clear that [they] must not be seen as wives but, as we have said, as women who assisted them with their goods" (Ad. Jovinian I, 26).
Clement of Alexandria, writing much earlier, said the women were not the wives of the apostles but were female assistants who could enter the homes of women and could teach them there (Stromata III, 6).
Tertullian said, "Those women taken along by the apostles are not described by [Paul] as wives ... but simply as women who were at their service, just like those who followed the Lord" (De Monogamia, 8).
Other ancient references can be found in Christian Cochini's "The Apostolic Origins of Priestly Celibacy" (Ignatius).
This issue is not something we can decide with certitude. Whether these "sister women" were "sister wives" or were prototypes of women religious is something Scripture does not try to settle for us. Taking all the little clues together, I still hold to my speculation from last week, but those who hold to a differing opinion will not risk excommunication.
Interesting. It is unfortunate that the ambiguity exists.
However, I think it reads a bit too much into the Bible to state that these women were non-wives. (I also note that most modern translators (including George Lamsa who is sometimes good for an outside viewpoint) translate “wives” and apparently don’t feel the need to mention the other possibility. Elsewhere in the New Testament we are admonished to abstain from the very appearance of evil. For the apostles to routinely go around with women who were not their wives would have opened them up to easy criticisms that would have brought a bad name to the Christian faith and Christ, in a time when there were many enemies who would not have hesitated to make use of such an opportunity.
Obviously, it’s possible for reasonable people to arrive at different conclusions.
On the contrary, it makes perfect sense. We tend to look at events through the lens of contemporary society. Clement of Alexandria agreed, saying the women were not the wives of the apostles but were female assistants who could enter the homes of women and could teach them there (Stromata III, 6).
Perhaps. But the abusers in the general population are eventually caught and prosecuted.
The abusers in the Church are “rehabbed” and reassigned.
When they retire, they get full benefits and go to places like Indonesia or Costa Rica to continue preying on young boys.
All at the expense of the faithful churchgoers who give to their annual Bishops Appeals.
The full extent of the problem in America is in these articles:
http://www.bishop-accountability.org/
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