It is not a jurisdictional matter, to begin with; further, it is the laity who receive the call to priesthood so the laity has an interest in it. Anyone who is married who may feel called to the priesthood has no option to approach the issue, unless they happen to be a protestant married minister. It is beyond presumptuous that only married protestant minister might have a call to the priesthood, and not married Catholic men of the Roman rite.
Priests are not the ones who will decide the issue; Rome will decide it. But the comment is an oxymoron; once one is a priest, the issue of marriage is precluded. The issue is not about priests deciding the issue; the issue is about Catholic married men who may feel called to the priesthood. And as far as the laity having (name removed by moderator)ut, there is nothing in the definition of the Church that says that any and all ideas must start at the top.
The majority of the laity will not ever even consider the call. Yet they still wish to say how things ought to be done.
Also, as Brother JR has pointed out, God would not call anyone to where they could not go. That would be insane of him. While God does have high standards for all humans, he does not demand that we do things like growing a third arm by sheer will. And so he will not call a married man to a place that he cannot go to. God may have called him before his marriage, but will not call him once he is married. The man may still be accountable for saying no to God and doing what he wanted instead, assuming he knew about his call, but I don’t think God would demand something impossible of him.
With no disrespect to you, you are a bit young to be espousing on the issue. I was in the seminary in the mid 1960’s, and have lived long enough to have seen far, far more than you have about who is /was or is/was not discontented with celibacy. Many priests, starting with those who were ordained prior to Vatican 2, left the priesthood over celibacy issues. And an issue that is little discussed is the drop-out issue of those who start seminary and do not get ordained - far exceeding 50% in years past.
I am aware that there is a dropout rate. I currently sit in a room in which 3 guys who withdrew stayed in over the past 3 years. It is not always because of struggles with celibacy. For example, one has decided to move to a monastery and become a religious priest instead.
Also, how exactly do you know that I am young? I do not recall having my age listed anywhere in my profile.
I have not suggested, and do not suggest that celibacy is a “looming horror”, or a “curse” or a “punishment”. It is a charism, a gift, and one given to some who are ordained, some who are professed, and to some who simply live that life.
Nor have I ever stated that you said that. Why you think I’m accusing you of such a thing, I do not know. However, I have met many that view celibacy as some annoying and cruel requirement that the Church inflicts upon its priests.
To begin with, I have not said and do not hold that it would be any cure to the shortage of priests. That it would give us more priests if married men could be ordained any upper level grade school child could figure out. I do not think there would be any rush to the seminaries by any large group.
Once again, have I said that you specifically said this? No. This was a general response to many things that are often said when priestly celibacy is described. Many would claim this will cure the vocation crisis.
Also, another point I would like to make on that subject (this is not directed towards you otjm). There’s an interesting book called The Priest is Not His Own by Archbishop Fulton Sheen. He makes an interesting point there that priesthood should never be advertised, because we will get too many men who are not truly interested, who shouldn’t be at the seminary in the first place. Now, in a day where men are probably getting the call but not hearing, this may be different. But this does apply somewhat to removing celibacy. If we get rid of it only to get more priests, then we will be doing it for the wrong reason, and possibly get an unintended effect.
But more to the point, if “wanting sex” is your understanding of marriage, God help the parish you are assigned to. and as to men who are married, you have just slandered 2000 years of men who were or are married and have been ordained in the Eastern rites, and those who were ordained in the Roman rite in the past and those who have converted from being a married protestant minister and been ordained. “Men to whom sensual pleasures matter more than answering God’s call”? You had best hope that your bishop and director of formation don’t get hold of that comment.
It is not my understanding of marriage. Did I state that I was specifically not talking about marriage? No. I would quite willingly show this to my rector, to my bishop, to the vocation director my diocese, or even the pope, because I am not giving a definition of what is good about marriage. I know many men for whom it is not the want of a family, or any of the other things that constitute marriage, which makes them afraid of celibacy. It is the lack of sex, and to some this is not sex within a marriage. We should not change the requirement simply to get men who are not suited in the first place.
Nope. It is an issue for any married Catholic man who believes he has a call to the priesthood.
As said earlier, God does not call us to that which cannot be done. God will not call you to grow a second head, he will not call a man to be a mother, he will not call a woman to be a father, and he will not call a married man to where he cannot go.