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ddarko
Guest
Aaah, and I keep showing you how your claim that it will solve the vocational crisis is groundless.ddarko
Your argument from history can only take you so far btw. You can’t just keep bringing up church fathers for every thing. You should also look at matters logically. Right now you are ignoring the logic and trying to solely rely on what someone else did in the past. Not very good strategy by any means.
I am trying to be logical. The Church is enduring the gravest crisis in centuries with the decline of those who are entering the priesthood. Now that the world needs evangelizing more than ever, there are few priests left to do it. Those who are left are living out a martyrdom of burdens. If it were not for revival of the married diaconate, I think many more priests would have left Orders long ago or collapsed from overwork and discouragement. In our diocese we have five seminarians studying for the priesthood and forty married laymen studying for the diaconate. This is relief of some sort, but it only indicates how many more vocations for the priesthood might be out there for married laymen.
Give me some better logic on your side than just the tradition of the Church for celibacy that was never formalized at all until the Spanish Council of Elvira in 295 A.D.
I give you the following reasons to show that its groundless
- There is a decline in number of people entering marriage
- The issue is not with the celibacy but with the distorted western view of sex and marriage
- I back (2) with the fact that in many other non-western countries which hold to traditional sexual values, there is no vocational crisis. In fact, to the contrary, there is an abundance of priests.
- Given the problem is with the distorted view of sex, married priests are a temporary solution. It’s only a matter of time before marriage goes completely out of the window and even married priesthood becomes threatened.
- Evangelizing can be done by anyone. I try to do it almost every time I meet a non-catholic and I am not a priest. I am sure you do too. So if someone wants to evangelize, they can just as easily be a lay theologian or something of that nature.
- Is it not true that to sacrifice the marital good (since you clearly admit that its a Good) for the sake of God is a greater sacrifice? Should not that vocation be respected as such? To say that we now have to allow married priests is a slap in the face since it seems to say, celibacy is impossible. But the reason you and many others like you feel this way is because you are fed with the distorted view of sex day in and day out.
So I think the burden is on you to provide me with
*1) The vocational crisis is solely because of celibacy and not because of the distorted view of sex
*2) Married priests can ***in general ***be just as effective as a celibate priest
I believe that *1) is impossible since there are counter examples to suggest you are wrong in other non-western countries and nearly everyone knows the state of sexual morality of the West.
As for 2), I believe there is a good psychological case against you that you will have to overcome. One cannot put ones own family second while putting every-other family first. That will result in marital disharmony. There are some who can do it BUT it is in general impossible. So in the end, a celibate priest can** in general*** serve his flock better than a married priest.
But anyway, I await to see if you can present a better logical case than what you have presented so far or a defense to my objections against your case.
God Bless