“Indeed only by Tradition can we know what was the authentic Scripture”
That is absurd, as “Tradition” is not even a testable medium, but is an amorphous medium which cannot be written and codified as a canon (http://www.catholicplanet.com/TSM/insights-tradition.htm), and the real authority then is the Infallible Magisterium (IM), as it claims to define Tradition and Scripture. But its authority is effectively itself.
The way writings became established as Scripture was not thru Rome’s IM, which took over 1400+ years after the last book was written to provide a finalized, “infallible” canon (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2661829/posts?page=217#217), but it was established as from God like as Jesus and the apostles were, because of God’s manifest supernatural attestation to them, and by their complementarity, and inherent enduring Heavenly qualities, which placed them on the saint’s best seller list. By such all spiritual authority is established, in proportion to their claims The best church councils could do was to recognize such, but that did not make such writings scripture, nor do they owe the enduring devotion they are given to such.
As for clerical celibacy, this was a developed discipline, and the EOs. also following Tradition, much disagree on this. And see my prior post.
Pope Benedict XVIs choice as the churchs top official for priests has said that celibacy is not a dogma, and that the Catholic church can reflect on the subject. The explosive character of the issue, however, was reflected in a clarification issued in the name of the cardinal by the Vatican Press Office on Dec. 4. Cardinal Claudio Hummes, 72, of São Paulo, Brazil, was nominated Prefect of the Congregation for Clergy on Oct. 31. He made the comments as he left for Rome in an interview with the Brazilian publication Estado de São Paulo. Even if celibates are part of our history and of Catholic culture, the church can reflect on the question of celibacy, because its not a dogma but a disciplinary norm, Hummes said. Hummes, a Franciscan, recalled that several Apostles were married, and that the discipline of priestly celibacy in the Western church developed several centuries after the institution of the priesthood itself. The church is not stationary, but an institution that changes when it has to change, Hummes said. The church must first discuss if it is necessary to reconsider the norm of celibacy. - http://www.orthodoxanswers.org/celibacy
More: http://orthodoxchurchfathers.com/fathers/npnf214/npnf2125.htm
http://www.lightshinesindarkness.com/celibate_priest.htm (evangelical)
Sorry, but I need to attend to the Quake thread.
LUB.