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notredame_999
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By John L. Allen
orthodoxanswers.org/celibacy.asp
However contrary this may be to the modern mind, Fr. Ryland has a point: a married clergy can be seen as “compromise,” a ‘lower ideal.’ This unpopular affirmation is simply based on the scriptural model of service and dedication. St. Paul viewed the married state as a holy icon of Christ and His Church , but also as “a concession ,” or what St. John Chrysostom calls “moderate virtue.” It must be recognized with the Apostle that not all have received the gift of celibacy or continence which certainly opens the door for undivided service to the Kingdom. At the same time, there is a safe harbor in the holy and undefiled marriage bed that is well understood, especially in today’s world. The disciplinary practice of East and West have borne the fruits that can be expected from both disciplines, some glorious, some more problematic.
The Church has always seen in dedicated virginity a living icon of the age to come, a radiant witness to radical discipleship to our Lord Jesus Christ. Certainly, celibate vocations, for those who have received this gift, should be fostered, and those who embrace this vocation should live in a context that is helpful and supportive. The trouble with the Latin model of the vocational priesthood is that is presupposes that the highest forms of service in the Church are now reserved to those who have also received the gift of celibacy. There are many gifted preachers who found themselves discouraged from entering the Roman Catholic Communion because ministerial service is reserved to the celibate caste.
The restoration of the permanent diaconate in the wake of Vatican II - without requirements of marital continence – has addressed this problem with significant success. In seems quite obvious, though, that in post-Vatican II liturgics, ‘proximity to the altar’ is granted to just about anyone, so that the Levitical model endorsed by the councils of Carthage is in fact abandoned, along with the Temple worship paradigm of the Novus Ordo. The Eastern discipline of the altar, which includes Levitical continence on the day prior to serving the Divine Liturgy – seems consistent with the ancient spirit of the ancient Eastern Christianity.
orthodoxanswers.org/celibacy.asp
However contrary this may be to the modern mind, Fr. Ryland has a point: a married clergy can be seen as “compromise,” a ‘lower ideal.’ This unpopular affirmation is simply based on the scriptural model of service and dedication. St. Paul viewed the married state as a holy icon of Christ and His Church , but also as “a concession ,” or what St. John Chrysostom calls “moderate virtue.” It must be recognized with the Apostle that not all have received the gift of celibacy or continence which certainly opens the door for undivided service to the Kingdom. At the same time, there is a safe harbor in the holy and undefiled marriage bed that is well understood, especially in today’s world. The disciplinary practice of East and West have borne the fruits that can be expected from both disciplines, some glorious, some more problematic.
The Church has always seen in dedicated virginity a living icon of the age to come, a radiant witness to radical discipleship to our Lord Jesus Christ. Certainly, celibate vocations, for those who have received this gift, should be fostered, and those who embrace this vocation should live in a context that is helpful and supportive. The trouble with the Latin model of the vocational priesthood is that is presupposes that the highest forms of service in the Church are now reserved to those who have also received the gift of celibacy. There are many gifted preachers who found themselves discouraged from entering the Roman Catholic Communion because ministerial service is reserved to the celibate caste.
The restoration of the permanent diaconate in the wake of Vatican II - without requirements of marital continence – has addressed this problem with significant success. In seems quite obvious, though, that in post-Vatican II liturgics, ‘proximity to the altar’ is granted to just about anyone, so that the Levitical model endorsed by the councils of Carthage is in fact abandoned, along with the Temple worship paradigm of the Novus Ordo. The Eastern discipline of the altar, which includes Levitical continence on the day prior to serving the Divine Liturgy – seems consistent with the ancient spirit of the ancient Eastern Christianity.