I think your friend is trying to reduce Priesthood to a Sacramental giver
Maybe. At the same time, isnt that what a priest is? I don’t think that is reductionist at all, as the Sacraments are very important. The priesthood takes its dignity from the Sacraments they dispense, not the Sacraments their dignity from the priesthood!
It seems to me that the “mysticism of the priesthood-as-such” was definitely a later invention, and that the early Presbyters were simply men chosen by the bishop to dispense the sacraments as a service to their community.
The Priest in-himself, as a mere mortal man outside his Sacramental function…was not put on a pedestal, was not treated differently than any man in the congregation except that he could preform this role. It did not become all-engulfing for them.
Bishops are said to be consecrated, and bishops seem to have always been a full-time lifestyle supported by the Church. But presbyters are not said to be consecrated, only their hands are. Extending that to his whole person and whole life…is a later (and clericalist) development.
If we can ignore Ecumenical Councils than perhaps you are on to something,
We can advocate for changing their non-essential disciplinary decisions.
If this “theology” of the priesthood you claim was defined “at Trent” or “at Vatican II” was not always …then it is not of the Deposit of Faith.
Otherwise, that’s tantamount to saying that all throughout the Middle Ages, or back in catacomb days, or in the Ethiopian Church to this very day…that the whole clerical structure was heretical.
But I am not willing to say that. I don’t think it’s a dogmatic question like that. You are attempting to turn discipline into dogma in a clericalist way. That is the very thing we’re trying to deconstruct. The bishop may be consecrated as a permanent icon of Christ in his own person, in his own life. The simple presbyter, however, is not. He acts in persona Christi only at the moment the Sacraments are confected.
That is the connection with the bishop you speak of, and which I believe: the priest is the bishop’s “hands” as it were, distributing the sacraments to the parishes. He is only an instrument. But, outside that role, his whole person and life aren’t consecrated in the way a Bishop is. Only his hands are. The symbolism is quite clear.
If the “theology” of the priesthood that has developed in the West isn’t essential to the priesthood, then there is definitely flexibility and room for change and experimentation with different models. If approved by the due authorities, of course.
Your position requires simply writing off much of history, and certain Eastern churches…as simply “abuse”. I think that’s disingenuous.
As for needing to protect reverence to the Sacraments, the cat is out of the bag definitely. There are plenty of schismatic priests with valid Apostolic Succession; if someone wants to procure one of them, it’s easy enough. At that point the risk of one more…is worth the benefits.
But, even besides that point: permanent deacons get to take the Eucharist to the sick, etc. So I still don’t see what, exactly, the tighter leash is “protecting” anyone from.