J
JB_Brother_4446
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How does a married deacon show celibacy was the general rule?How does Phillip equal “all of the apostles except John”?
How does a married deacon show celibacy was the general rule?How does Phillip equal “all of the apostles except John”?
Apples and pebbles.How does a married deacon show celibacy was the general rule?
I think a slight addendum to that is this. As far as I know, a deacon can only be married prior to becoming a deacon. Once a deacon he cannot marry or remarry (if his spouse dies). There might be exceptions but as far as I know that is the rule I think.Apples and pebbles.
We have married deacons now. The rule is still that priests and above are celibate.
ICXC NIKA
Earlier in the thread, I presented two of them, and their rebuttals:the work and mission of the Church is better served by men and women who give themselves totally to living and proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ. it is not that marrying and bearing children is in any way bad. it is a God given vocation. we are talking about the Church and not only about the faith.
i may have missed them, but what again are the best reasons we have been given for why the Church should abandon her millenium old discipline of only ordaining those given the gift of celibacy?
A). “The priestly shortage would be cured if seminarians didn’t have to face celibacy.”
First of all, the priestly shortage is mostly a European/NA issue, but the Church is worldwide. Also, celibacy is 1000 years old, but the supposed shortfall in priests is far more recent.
And as was said, priests never “get married.” The deepest change that could occur would be the normative admission of married men to formation. I’d expect that, if celibacy were really such a red flag, we would see men rush out of formation to “find a wife.” This would result, for a generation at least, in fewer priests, not more.
B) “Celibacy is the reason for all the sexual stuff in the recent past.”
To this I would add:No it’s not. Other subsectors that tend to kids (and have never practiced celibacy) have long generated the same problems.
Not celibacy. Continence. After accepting his ordination as a deacon.How does a married deacon show celibacy was the general rule?
GEddie #144
Also, celibacy is 1000 years old, but the supposed shortfall in priests is far more recent.
D) “The Eastern and Orthodox Churches have always had married priests.”
The fallacy that “celibacy is 1000 years old” only, has been refuted totally by the relatively recent and enormous contributions of Fr Christian Cochini, S.J., Cardinal Stickler, Fr Stephen Heid and others.True, but that is neither here nor there.