D
DL82
Guest
On another thread here someone mentioned the lack of married seminarians in the Ruthenian Church in America as evidence of Latinization and the imposition of the Roman norm of celibacy. However, I was thinking, how would a married man support his way through 6 years of seminary with a wife and (assuming they are open to life) kids.
I know Protestant seminarians do it, but often they don’t marry until they are already in ministry, or they hold off having kids until they have a good income.
My engagement happened while I was in the final year of grad school, and I was lucky to have a very good funded scholarship, the kind that only a few hundred students in the UK get, and even so, saving for marriage was really hard, I needed to move back in with my parents for part of it. I can’t imagine having a wife and kids on that salary for more than a year or two.
I have heard that in the East, being a priest’s wife is seen as a vocation in its own right - so I am guessing most of them would want to dedicate lots of time to motherhood and have lots of time to volunteer for the Church, so not holding down a full-time job as well.
Also, how would the living arrangements work, are Orthodox and Eastern Catholic seminaries non-residential, or built around a street of separate houses? I can’t imagine a bunch of families living in the kind of close quarters Roman rite seminarians put up with.
The Eastern Catholics, it seems, want this to happen, the Orthodox already do it, and many in the Roman Catholic Church would like to see it introduced too, so how do the practicalities work?
I know Protestant seminarians do it, but often they don’t marry until they are already in ministry, or they hold off having kids until they have a good income.
My engagement happened while I was in the final year of grad school, and I was lucky to have a very good funded scholarship, the kind that only a few hundred students in the UK get, and even so, saving for marriage was really hard, I needed to move back in with my parents for part of it. I can’t imagine having a wife and kids on that salary for more than a year or two.
I have heard that in the East, being a priest’s wife is seen as a vocation in its own right - so I am guessing most of them would want to dedicate lots of time to motherhood and have lots of time to volunteer for the Church, so not holding down a full-time job as well.
Also, how would the living arrangements work, are Orthodox and Eastern Catholic seminaries non-residential, or built around a street of separate houses? I can’t imagine a bunch of families living in the kind of close quarters Roman rite seminarians put up with.
The Eastern Catholics, it seems, want this to happen, the Orthodox already do it, and many in the Roman Catholic Church would like to see it introduced too, so how do the practicalities work?