Eastern Catholic Priests

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I have read recently that the Ruthenian Catholic Church in the US doesn’t ordain married priests currently. That got me wondering if there are any Eastern Catholic Churches that regularly ordain married men to the priesthood in the US? If so, which ones do?
 
I have read recently that the Ruthenian Catholic Church in the US doesn’t ordain married priests currently. That got me wondering if there are any Eastern Catholic Churches that regularly ordain married men to the priesthood in the US? If so, which ones do?
The Ruthenian Church has in their particular canons a provision saying that they need to ask Rome for permission before ordaining a married man to the priesthood. Its not that they can’t or won’t, but I guess a married man has to prove he’s worth the trouble of going through the permission process for him to receive ordination.

The Ukrainian Catholic Church ordains married men to the priesthood in the US. St. Elias has a video of their deacon who transferred to the US and got ordained a priest there to serve there. And he’s married, which is in the captions of the video on youtube that he moved to the US with his family (wife and kids).
 
The Ruthenian Church has in their particular canons a provision saying that they need to ask Rome for permission before ordaining a married man to the priesthood. Its not that they can’t or won’t, but I guess a married man has to prove he’s worth the trouble of going through the permission process for him to receive ordination.

The Ukrainian Catholic Church ordains married men to the priesthood in the US. St. Elias has a video of their deacon who transferred to the US and got ordained a priest there to serve there. And he’s married, which is in the captions of the video on youtube that he moved to the US with his family (wife and kids).
The Ruthenian eparchy of Parma has ordained married men to the priesthood and from what I hear the Eparchy of Phoenix has 2 married men in seminary studying for the priesthood. The Melkites and Ukranians have a number of married men as priests and most of the priests of the Romanian Catholic eparchy of Canton are married (a good number of them ordained here in the US by bishop John Michael). 🙂
 
The Ruthenian eparchy of Parma has ordained married men to the priesthood and from what I hear the Eparchy of Phoenix has 2 married men in seminary studying for the priesthood. The Melkites and Ukranians have a number of married men as priests and most of the priests of the Romanian Catholic eparchy of Canton are married (a good number of them ordained here in the US by bishop John Michael). 🙂
👍
 
I understand that about 70% of our priests up here are married. A friend of mine is a married priest and his daughter is studying Catholic philosophy in university and will be getting married to a UGCC seminarian (also a canon lawyer) in three weeks - my wife and I will both “dance at their wedding” and “sing at the ordination!” 🙂

I’m hoping that as many married Anglican and Lutheran ministers join the Catholic Church as possible and become ordained priests.

There’s really nothing like having a Presbytera/wife of a Priest in the parish!

You Latins don’t know what you are missing! 👍

Alex
 
I’m hoping that as many married Anglican and Lutheran ministers join the Catholic Church as possible and become ordained priests.

There’s really nothing like having a Presbytera/wife of a Priest in the parish!

You Latins don’t know what you are missing! 👍

Alex
👍
 
Thanks but I prefer Priests who give up family for Christ. I’d be happier having a celibate Priest around who might be there whenever i might need him. Not like my current Priest (God Bless him) who is married and twice now has been unreachable for my inquiring about joining RCIA before its too late this year, due to being home with his family. If a married man is going to join the Priesthood he should be his obligations to his spiritual family above that of his literal family. But instead of raising that point I just decided to go to a parish in the neighboring town. I’m not saying married Priests are a bad thing, but I am very grateful the Vatican hasn’t budged on this matter (at least not yet). Unmarried Priests are most often best suited to their roles as they can offer undivided attention to their congregations at any given time.
 
Thanks but I prefer Priests who give up family for Christ. I’d be happier having a celibate Priest around who might be there whenever i might need him. Not like my current Priest (God Bless him) who is married and twice now has been unreachable for my inquiring about joining RCIA before its too late this year, due to being home with his family. If a married man is going to join the Priesthood he should be his obligations to his spiritual family above that of his literal family. But instead of raising that point I just decided to go to a parish in the neighboring town. I’m not saying married Priests are a bad thing, but I am very grateful the Vatican hasn’t budged on this matter (at least not yet). Unmarried Priests are most often best suited to their roles as they can offer undivided attention to their congregations at any given time.
I have said time and again, its a fallacy that celibate priests are available 24/7. They also have family to take care of (parents, siblings) and to a lot of personal business. Even priests from Religious Orders who are celibate and practically do nothing all day but devote their lives to prayer and service of God, also have duties to their Order which may mean they may not be available whenever you need and want them.

I’m wondering how many of the folks here at CAF who claim that celibate priests are available 24/7 have actually tried to reach their priest at odd hours.
 
I have said time and again, its a fallacy that celibate priests are available 24/7. They also have family to take care of (parents, siblings) and to a lot of personal business. Even priests from Religious Orders who are celibate and practically do nothing all day but devote their lives to prayer and service of God, also have duties to their Order which may mean they may not be available whenever you need and want them.

I’m wondering how many of the folks here at CAF who claim that celibate priests are available 24/7 have actually tried to reach their priest at odd hours.
Well said. I once tried to reach a priest to hear my confession outside of “normal” confessional hours. It was not an easy task. I must have gone through about a half dozen churches before I found one with a priest available…and that was only because he was very newly transferred to the parish and didn’t have other duties yet outside of saying Mass. Just because they are celibate doesn’t mean they are available 24x7.
 
Thanks but I prefer Priests who give up family for Christ. I’d be happier having a celibate Priest around who might be there whenever i might need him. Not like my current Priest (God Bless him) who is married and twice now has been unreachable for my inquiring about joining RCIA before its too late this year, due to being home with his family. If a married man is going to join the Priesthood he should be his obligations to his spiritual family above that of his literal family. But instead of raising that point I just decided to go to a parish in the neighboring town. I’m not saying married Priests are a bad thing, but I am very grateful the Vatican hasn’t budged on this matter (at least not yet). Unmarried Priests are most often best suited to their roles as they can offer undivided attention to their congregations at any given time.
Where do you get the idea that celibate priests give up marriage and family for Christ? Celibacy for Latin priests is a DISCIPLINE of the Latin church and was instituted to protect church property from being inherited by the priests family.

Most priest (married or celibate) have regular hours when they are available to receive phone calls and such. Emergency’s are another issue. And the priority of a priest is to his family first…parish second.

And! Celibate priests are no more suited to being priests then married men! :mad: Maybe the problem is overly demanding lay folk. 😃 Why would you think any priest would take a call about enrolling in RCIA outside of office hours? The local RC priests in my town are much more difficult to contact for anything…emergency or not then the local married Romanian Catholic priest. I couldn’t tell you how many times the married Romanian Catholic priest is called to anoint someone from the RC church because the celibate priest could not be contacted.
 
Thanks but I prefer Priests who give up family for Christ. I’d be happier having a celibate Priest around who might be there whenever i might need him. Not like my current Priest (God Bless him) who is married and twice now has been unreachable for my inquiring about joining RCIA before its too late this year, due to being home with his family.
My question is, why doesn’t the parish have a secretary that should handle such things. That sort of task doesn’t require the priest to answer the phone… the parish’s secretary should be taking charge of that…

I will just say that I have never had a problem reaching my former pastor who had 5 kids. So it seems it just depends on the individual parish and the organization in that parish.
 
Thanks but I prefer Priests who give up family for Christ.
The Church doesn’t entirely agree with your personal preferences, for she allows married priests.
I’d be happier having a celibate Priest around who might be there whenever i might need him.
We have two priests for 5000+ families. Scheduling personal time with a priest can be challenging, but it can be done.
Not like my current Priest (God Bless him) who is married and twice now has been unreachable for my inquiring about joining RCIA before its too late this year, due to being home with his family.
In many parishes, you will need to contact the Director of RCIA (or Adult Faith Formation), and not the parish priest. God bless you in your journey to the Catholic Church!
 
I have said time and again, its a fallacy that celibate priests are available 24/7. They also have family to take care of (parents, siblings) and to a lot of personal business. Even priests from Religious Orders who are celibate and practically do nothing all day but devote their lives to prayer and service of God, also have duties to their Order which may mean they may not be available whenever you need and want them.

I’m wondering how many of the folks here at CAF who claim that celibate priests are available 24/7 have actually tried to reach their priest at odd hours.
Uh yeah, what he said. I know a family who lost a baby during delivery (cord accident) and when they called our parish priest to come baptize the baby, he refused!!! They joined the UCC church down the street from our parish, as they were that disgusted by this priest’s selfishness. By the way, the UCC pastor came right to the hospital, without knowing the family as more than casual acquaintances. This pastor is married with four kids. I’m sure he had many things to do, but was selfless in helping a family during a crisis.

It comes down to the man and his dedication to the ministry, NOT if he’s married or celibate. It’s too easy to paint with a broad brush.
 
I understand that about 70% of our priests up here are married. A friend of mine is a married priest and his daughter is studying Catholic philosophy in university and will be getting married to a UGCC seminarian (also a canon lawyer) in three weeks - my wife and I will both “dance at their wedding” and “sing at the ordination!” 🙂

I’m hoping that as many married Anglican and Lutheran ministers join the Catholic Church as possible and become ordained priests.

There’s really nothing like having a Presbytera/wife of a Priest in the parish!

You Latins don’t know what you are missing! 👍

Alex
Not all Eastern rites have married priests, remember. It’s not just “you Latins” who could be missing out.
 
I’m not saying married Priests are a bad thing, but I am very grateful the Vatican hasn’t budged on this matter (at least not yet). Unmarried Priests are most often best suited to their roles as they can offer undivided attention to their congregations at any given time.
FYI, all Catholics are under the Vatican. Even the Eastern ones!

Not directed only at you, but your post got me thinking… if a person is going to leave a parish because there is a married priest, doesn’t it become a slippery slope? That priest’s homilies are too long, that one gives long penances, that one is mean, etc. You can’t love everyone and IMO it’s not a good thing to church hop.
 
FYI, all Catholics are under the Vatican. Even the Eastern ones!

Not directed only at you, but your post got me thinking… if a person is going to leave a parish because there is a married priest, doesn’t it become a slippery slope? That priest’s homilies are too long, that one gives long penances, that one is mean, etc. You can’t love everyone and IMO it’s not a good thing to church hop.
Well, its not like the Vatican didn’t try… 😉
 
Lol…but I’m not 100% sure what you mean…
The Vatican has tried to restrict the married priesthood for Eastern Churches outside of their canonical territories. Its a very recent development that many of the Eastern Churches can actually ordain married men to the priesthood in the diaspora.
 
The Ruthenian eparchy of Parma has ordained married men to the priesthood and from what I hear the Eparchy of Phoenix has 2 married men in seminary studying for the priesthood. The Melkites and Ukranians have a number of married men as priests and most of the priests of the Romanian Catholic eparchy of Canton are married (a good number of them ordained here in the US by bishop John Michael). 🙂
I have served at the altar many times with one of them. I cannot wait to venerate Fr. Brian’s hands!

The two had previously served as deacons.
 
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