C
Chris-Wa1
Guest
Absolutely not, 100%.
I’m sorry but you don’t have much experience here. First mainline Protestant churches deal with the issue. I know of at least a few incidents recently in which pastors were stripped from the roster. aka no longer Pastors. They also tell every Pastor in the area about it. Also these churches also deal with families just fine, some provided housing some just provide money. More amazingly many mainline Pastor’s have to self-finance their education, which is exactly what seminarians receive, which is a Masters of Divinity. Then they a saddled with this debt doing jobs that in many situations don’t pay all that well. Parishes have the benefit in that Priests have had that provided for them.Then explain the abuse in the Protestant churches with married men (you don’t hear of as much because it’s not popular with the media, but it’s definitely going on). And if disordered men are attracted to the church why would they stop being attracted if priests were allowed to marry? Married priests would require private family homes, not rectories, and who will pay for those homes, the education, health care, and all other expenses of their wife and children? What if there are 2 or 3 priests in a rectory who are married men with families? Many/most parishes have a hard enough time just paying the expenses of the parish. Then with marriage comes adultery and divorce. Let us not be wannabe Protestants, that just creates different problems.
Then why does the Communauté St. Martin in France, inspired by Benedictine spirituality, insist than their good holy men not be assigned alone to a parish?Well that’s setting the bar pretty low. I think most good men are capable of much better than that. Celibacy is a serious commitment, and serious men who want to devote their lives totally to the Church are quite capable of it.
It depends. If a seminarian has gone to confession for fornicating, then they should talk to their vocational director to help them discern things out. Past sexual sins should not bar a person from the priesthood. A complacency about sin or a persistent lack of chastity should help to discern out. Remember, chastity is the strength to control yourself. So if person is persistently demonstrating a lack of ability to avoid fornicating either with a member of the same or opposite sex, then they should be excluded out UNLESS we’re going to start allowing married men to enter the priesthood. In that case, the question needs to be about adultery and not fornication.So should seminarians who have sex continue with seminary?
Go back and read what I meant about “going off the rails”. It can also include alcoholism, depression, or other non-sexual disordered behaviour.And you don’t need to be a superhero to control your sexual urges.
I don’t think it’s phrased as “boys will be boys” but the attitude definitely is present that men are held to a lower standard than women because it’s presumed they struggle with chastity more. I’ve gone to confession with some older priests, confessing only impure thoughts during my single years. And mind you, I don’t even have a very strong sex drive. I’ve heard women with much stronger sex drives with me complain about how it’s been difficult to get priests to acknowledge that women can indeed have strong sex drives and struggle with masturbation and porn.In my experience both the preaching and counsel in confession of most any priest is almost the exact opposite of this.
I don’t think it is unclear.As a SSA Catholic guy, I’m increasingly becoming confused as to what the Catholic Church wants from gay people. Or at least, what several Catholics in the online world want from gay people.
On the one hand, they want us all to be celibate and chaste.
On the other the other hand, they imply that this in an impossibility for gay people.
Maybe they just want us out of the Church altogether?
I don’t agree. If a heterosexual seminarian and a homosexual seminarian fornicate to the exact same degree, both men are as unchaste as the other. It is not a compounded sin. Homosexuals called to live a chaste do not have the benefit of being able to segregate themselves from the ones they’re attracted to because of cultural norms. Moreover, they are not permitted the hope of marrying one day and expressing themselves sexually. As such, remaining chaste requires celibacy regardless. If they struggle with chastity, we need to support them, not shun them. But as for the priesthood, the priest should be one who can live out his vow of chastity and celibacy.I think past sins and homosexual sex during seminary, with other seminarians is a big difference.
Fornication with opposite gender is also different than with same gender. It’s a compounded sin.
Thank you for providing the stats to help people understand this is true.Denominations with married clergy do not have lower rates of sex abuse.