J
JReducation
Guest
Let’s clarify some things in tiny steps here. Because language that is too long trips us up.But it was OK for Jesus to choose a married man as the first Catholic Pope? And it was OK for Jesus to choose eleven married men as Apostles? Or was that a bad thing also?
- Jesus chose 12 men to be the first bishops of the Church.
- To the best of our knowledge, Peter was married and John was celibate. We do not know anything about the other apostles.
- Paul was also celibate.
- Jesus and Paul both speak about celibacy as a higher calling and invite those who can, to do so.
- The fact that Peter was married is not wrong.
- The Church has never said that there is anything wrong with marriage.
- Married men in the Eastern Rites can become deacons and priests, but never bishops.
- Married men in the Latin Rite can become deacons.
- Married men in the Latin Rite can become priests by a dispensation from the local bishop.
- So far, every married man admitted to the priesthood, in the Latin Rite, is a minister who converted to Catholicism.
- Single deacons or priests are never allowed to marry in any rite of the Catholic Church or any rite of the Orthodox Church either.
- The fact that Jesus ordained Peter and made him Pope does not imply that the clergy has to be married. There is no biblical statement that makes this a command. This seems to have been a coincidence. Peter was married. He was also the first pope. The marriage and the papacy were not contingent on each other.
- Peter was given the power to bind and unbind.
- That power was handed down from generation to generation.
- Pope Gregory VII made it binding that all candidates for the priesthood in the Latin Rite be single and remain celibate.
- Pope Gregory inherited the power to bind from Peter.
- As long as that bind is there, it is a mortal sin to violate it, because it is a sin against the authority of Christ himself.
- The authority that Christ gives to Peter is what was given to Christ by the Father.
- He who violates Peter’s authority, violate’s Christ’s authority.
- Christ reminds the apostles that he who listens to them, listens to him.
- In conclusion, the Pope can bind deacons and priests to be celibate, so can any bishop, without the permissiono of the pope. That’s why the Orthodox can do so. They have apostolic succession. All you need is apostolic succession to make a discipline into a morally binding law.
The Pope has apostolic succession, protected by scripture, sacred tradition and the magisterium.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF