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PetraG
Guest
We had a great blessing in having that saintly man as Pope.
I think that people might really want to have more priests, but I am not convinced that a lot of men would want to sign on to actually be priests. It does require a lot of commitment to classes and formation and once you’re ordained, you and your family are committed to serving in an area that might prohibit you from relocating later.After reading and thinking a bit more about this subject, there’s no question to me that there will be alternate processes of forming priests in the future – including ways which were once common in the Western Church. Failure to do so would be a grave misstep.
So does the formation for the permanent diaconate.It does require a lot of commitment to classes and formation and once you’re ordained
That’s not really true.…once you’re ordained, you and your family are committed to serving in an area that might prohibit you from relocating later.
Definitely start small. I think it would be especially interesting to see this program tested in an archdiocese like Chicago that not only has a priest’s union, but also the largest number of permanent deacons (yes, an entirely different vocation!) in the entire US. It has more than many countries.But there is only one way to find out. Launch the program as a pilot in a single diocese, and if it works out expand it.