I always wonder if married priests would really be an improvement, based on things I’ve seen happen with Protestant ministers, which include:
- the minister and his wife deciding to have a large family and some in the congregation objecting to the fact that they have to support not only the minister and his wife but what they think are an excessive number of kids
- the minister and his wife having marital problems, or some other family scandal, which ends up being not only a distraction from his ministry, but a big scandal or source of gossip for the whole congregation
- the minister wants to transfer to another church or is being forced to transfer to another church and his family isn’t happy about it
- the minister is single and available, causing women in the congregation to be hitting on him (no other way to say it)
Plus the fact that when you get a priest with a wife and children, he’s not going to be able to live in a couple of rooms in a small rectory that he maybe shares with other priests or has them staying there when they visit the parish from the missions or whatever. He may even need to go get a bigger house, and who is going to pay for that?
Add on top of that the fact that the priest would now have the responsibility to his family instead of just to his parishioners, and it doesn’t seem like an attractive option to me as a parishioner. In addition, I really wonder about the strength of men’s call to be priests if they weren’t willing to make sacrifices, like not being married, in order to become a priest.