T
thejeopardyfan
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I meant it’s not about ordaining married men. I think you misunderstood me, not that it’s relevant to the rest of the conversation. Maybe see the article I link to in the first post of this thread.Good.
I meant it’s not about ordaining married men. I think you misunderstood me, not that it’s relevant to the rest of the conversation. Maybe see the article I link to in the first post of this thread.Good.
No, I believe we do not know the number, since laicizations aren’t made public knowledge by the Church (out of respect of the privacy of the men).Do we know how many laicized priests there are in the U.S.? There can’t be many, especially who left to get married to a specific person.
Why would you think that? It doesn’t make any sense. Are you saying that you think large numbers of priests want marriage so badly that, if married men were allowed to be ordained, the existing priests would leave their ministry in order to be married? Or, are you saying that you think that existing priests would attempt to leave so that they could get married and then come back again? Neither of these make any sense – the former asserts that large numbers of priests don’t want to be priests (statistics don’t bear that out) and the latter is an impossibility (there isn’t such a loophole – even today, it isn’t really possible to be formally laicized and come back again).I would think that if future priests were allowed to marry and current ones weren’t, we’did see a mass laicization.
Tarpeian Rock:Ordaining to the priesthood experienced married deacons who already work for no pay and whose children are grown and gone avoids every issue you mentioned.
I don’t think laicized men would be allowed to re-enter the priesthood. I’ve heard that former Catholic priests who became Episcopalian are not allowed to become priests under the Pastoral Provision. (Example: Fr. Alberto Cutie will not be allowed to do this. There are also others - quite a few in the 60s and 70s - who became Episcopal priests. I personally know at least one who left the Diocese of Austin sometime in the 90s and is now an Episcopal priests outside of Texas - I will not put his name here. I mention Fr. Cutie because he is well known, and I did read his book Dilemma, mostly because he and I are from the same generation - and I know the seminary that he attended in the Archdiocese of Miami had quite a few problems in the early to mid 1990s, so I was interested in what Fr. Cutie had to say).No, I believe we do not know the number, since laicizations aren’t made public knowledge by the Church (out of respect of the privacy of the men).
However, we know that, around the time of the Second Vatican Council, a wave of priests left the priesthood, for two reasons: some left because VCII’s theology of the priesthood (especially what ‘priesthood’ and ‘episcopacy’ mean and how the two are related) shattered their self-image; and others left once it became clear that the ‘conventional wisdom’ that the Church was going to allow existing priests to marry was just an unfounded rumor.
Methinks you are misunderstanding the issue a wee-bit.Well, imagine if you were a priest, and the extremely unlikely happens where the pope says priests can get married. Now imagine the pope stipulated that doesn’t apply to you (which is not the act of mercy I consider such a move). Can you feel the hopelessness? I think it would be intense enough that existing priests wouldn’t stay.
I don’t know, I guess it depends on human nature. Indeed the change will never be getting married once already ordained, but rather, already ordained priests feeling like they got the rug pulled out from under their feet, especially if the norm quickly becomes married priesthood. Like they were cheated or lied to. Some (spiritually healthy) priests won’t care, but we as humans are not always spiritually healthy. Some will be fine with it, some will be fine but then get into a slump and later feel bad about it, and others will be sour right off the bat. I don’t think jepordyfan is misstating the issue, I think one would definitely have to deal with prior-ordained priests who feel jealous, cheated, and frustrated at various points in their priesthood, if such a change in discipline occurred.Methinks you are misunderstanding the issue a wee-bit.
The change, if it ever came, would not be “Priests can now get married, except --oops-- suck and such.”
It would be, rather, “Married men will be considered, in some instances, to enter seminary formation; but no-one shall marry after ordination.”
In other words, current priesthood to remain the same.
I don’t think large numbers would try to leave the priesthood. What I do think, however, is that many in formation would leave to find a wife. The result would be a worsening of the “priest shortfall” for many years.
ICXC NIKA.
Completely agree.I am torn with what has been going on in my state with clergy sexual abuse scandals and cover ups that never seem to end. From the croziers to the benedictine monks, all the way up to our archbishop, the church in our area is wrought with scandal. We also have a shortage of good priests which has caused me to question why hanging onto the celibacy requirement seems to be so important to the Catholic church.
Nowhere in the bible that I can find does it require priests to be celibate. In leviticus, it talks about the requirements for priests, talking about who they can and can’t marry. If the bible is truth, why should we think that rules made by men are better than God’s? I think that married priests could bring a new perspective to the church as they would better understand their parishioners and the things that they struggle with in their walk of faith. I’ve recently attended several evangelical churches with married pastors and have left wondering why the sermons at my catholic masses can’t be as relevant and moving. Sermons where you could swear that the priest knows what’s on your heart, what’s going on in your life and that he wrote the sermon for you! Sermons that are truly a call to action, not just a regurgitation of the readings and or gospel that you just heard. Maybe allowing married priests would infuse some much needed life into the Catholic church.
we could ask this question in a different way.I am torn with what has been going on in my state with clergy sexual abuse scandals and cover ups that never seem to end. From the croziers to the benedictine monks, all the way up to our archbishop, the church in our area is wrought with scandal. We also have a shortage of good priests which has caused me to question why hanging onto the celibacy requirement seems to be so important to the Catholic church.
As you know, priestly celibacy is a discipline not a doctrine or dogma. Therefore, technically It could change. If it did, married clergy would NOT be without its own issues.Nowhere in the bible that I can find does it require priests to be celibate. In leviticus, it talks about the requirements for priests, talking about who they can and can’t marry. If the bible is truth, why should we think that rules made by men are better than God’s? I think that married priests could bring a new perspective to the church as they would better understand their parishioners and the things that they struggle with in their walk of faith. I’ve recently attended several evangelical churches with married pastors and have left wondering why the sermons at my catholic masses can’t be as relevant and moving. Sermons where you could swear that the priest knows what’s on your heart, what’s going on in your life and that he wrote the sermon for you! Sermons that are truly a call to action, not just a regurgitation of the readings and or gospel that you just heard. Maybe allowing married priests would infuse some much needed life into the Catholic church.
I can’t think of anything in life that doesn’t have its own issues.we could ask this question in a different way.
As you know, priestly celibacy is a discipline not a doctrine or dogma. Therefore, technically It could change. If it did, married clergy would NOT be without its own issues.
Some kinks! Oh I think there would be more than a few.Yes, there are some kinks to work out. I assume married priests would not be reassigned.
Exactly, we would have a worse scenario than ever before.Methinks you are misunderstanding the issue a wee-bit.
The change, if it ever came, would not be “Priests can now get married, except --oops-- suck and such.”
It would be, rather, “Married men will be considered, in some instances, to enter seminary formation; but no-one shall marry after ordination.”
In other words, current priesthood to remain the same.
I don’t think large numbers would try to leave the priesthood. What I do think, however, is that many in formation would leave to find a wife. The result would be a worsening of the “priest shortfall” for many years.
ICXC NIKA.
Only a small number of priests have a desire for marriage. All priests I have talked with about the issue are happily celibate & unmarried.I don’t know, I guess it depends on human nature. Indeed the change will never be getting married once already ordained, but rather, already ordained priests feeling like they got the rug pulled out from under their feet, especially if the norm quickly becomes married priesthood. Like they were cheated or lied to. Some (spiritually healthy) priests won’t care, but we as humans are not always spiritually healthy. Some will be fine with it, some will be fine but then get into a slump and later feel bad about it, and others will be sour right off the bat. I don’t think jepordyfan is misstating the issue, I think one would definitely have to deal with prior-ordained priests who feel jealous, cheated, and frustrated at various points in their priesthood, if such a change in discipline occurred.
Well then you are way out in left field if you think the church should marry ordained men that have took a vow of Celibacy. This will not happen!I started this thread, so I know that’s not what it’s about.![]()
Maybe, but they are human, we all have weak moments, and not just that they would have or wanted to be married, but that they didn’t have the option to choose. Hopefully, they would see that they chose the celibate path to become a priest. It was a sacrificial choice. Of course, just because sacrificial love is beautiful, doesn’t mean it isn’t hard sometimes.Only a small number of priests have a desire for marriage. All priests I have talked with about the issue are happily celibate & unmarried.