I feel the Pope should let Priests get Married

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For deacons, not necessarily. It would be up to the Bishop.
If the Holy Father grants a rescript reducing a deacon to the lay state, then that cleric is never again to function or present himself as a deacon and a bishop would be wholly wrong to disregard the rescript without recourse to and a favorable resolution from the Holy See.
 
Prior to 692 all the Eastern Churches followed the apostolic tradition requiring continence of both married and unmarried clergy. Their Council of Trullo in 692 radically changed this discipline.
Let’s say for a moment that I accept your premise that clerical continence is of apostolic origin. I must ask the question: So what? We live in different times and we have long since abandoned many disciplines that were practiced at the time of the apostles. According to your figures, the Eastern Churches abandoned the idea of clerical continence in marriage nearly1400 years ago. How long since we abandoned public confession and the order of penitents? Years-long penance? How do our modern-day fasting practices compare to apostolic time and how many times have they been modified over the centuries? The Latin Church used leavened bread for the Eucharist for hundreds of years before using unleavened bread. The earliest use - the apostolic use - appears to have been leavened bread.

The Church has the power to change these matters and has done so many, many times throughout history.
 
Let’s say for a moment that I accept your premise that clerical continence is of apostolic origin. I must ask the question: So what? We live in different times and we have long since abandoned many disciplines that were practiced at the time of the apostles. According to your figures, the Eastern Churches abandoned the idea of clerical continence in marriage nearly1400 years ago. How long since we abandoned public confession and the order of penitents? Years-long penance? How do our modern-day fasting practices compare to apostolic time and how many times have they been modified over the centuries? The Latin Church used leavened bread for the Eucharist for hundreds of years before using unleavened bread. The earliest use - the apostolic use - appears to have been leavened bread.

The Church has the power to change these matters and has done so many, many times throughout history.
No-one is arguing that it can’t; the question is whether it should.

And none of the arguments in favor of changing away from
Celibacy (for the Roman church) are all that compelling.

ICXC NIKA
 
babochka #60
While neither of these constitute official teaching, these accounts are certainly compelling evidence that early Christians did not have a problem with the concept of St. Peter having a wife and children.
Why should they, since that is totally beside the point? Focus on post #58:
“….the Directory on the Ministry and Life of Priests, issued in 1994 by the Congregation for the Clergy. Section 59 affirms (that) the Church, from apostolic times, has wished to conserve the gift of perpetual continence of the clergy and choose the candidates for Holy Orders from among the celibate faithful (cf. 2 Thess. 2:15; 1 Cor. 7:5, 9:5; 1 Tim. 3:2-12, 5:9; Tit. 1:6-8)”, and cites several of the early councils which mandated continence for married as well as unmarried clergy.”
cuf.org/2003/05/priestly-…estly-celibacy
His is certainly a voice worth listening to when forming an opinion about the subject, but he does not speak with the authority of the Church.
As not even the Popes are here recognised to write with authority – any fancy rules. The false ideas still rule some, even after the great scholarly studies have been cited.
This was a local council and did not apply to the entire Church, but it certainly does speak to a very early practice of clerical continence, at least in some regions.
Take the time to get the facts – confirmation in post #58:
**The council reminded the married clergy that they were bound by a vow of perpetual continence. Penalty for breaking that vow was deposition from the ministry. Commenting on this council, Pope Pius XI said that these canons, the “first written traces” of the “Law of Ecclesiastical Celibacy,” "presuppose a still earlier unwritten practice. " (Ad *Catholici Sacerdotii *, 43, 1935).
**
This was the Apostolic Norm for the whole Church.

The inability to focus on papal confirmation of the discipline seems endemic in some, whether Catholic or otherwise.
 
No-one is arguing that it can’t; the question is whether it should.

And none of the arguments in favor of changing away from
Celibacy (for the Roman church) are all that compelling.

ICXC NIKA
Why in creation do people insist on saying that anyone who thinks married men should be allowed to be ordained, is thereby **in favor of changing away from celibacy?
**
That is simply a red herring. In 50 years of discussion, I have never ever heard anyone say “we should get rid of celibacy”. The Eastern Churches have never gotten ride of celibacy. The Orthodox have never gotten rid of celibacy.

The only compelling argument concerning not ordaining married men is that God does not call married men to the priesthood - and that, factually is poppycock. The Church in the Roman rite does not call them - unless, of course, they are a minister convert. But there is nothing prohibiting Rome from expanding beyond that subset, because the Church ha been doing so for 2,000 years.
 
Why should they, since that is totally beside the point? Focus on post #58:
**“….the Directory on the Ministry and Life of Priests, issued in 1994 by the Congregation for the Clergy. Section 59 affirms **(that) the Church, from apostolic times, has wished to conserve the gift of perpetual continence of the clergy and choose the candidates for Holy Orders from among the celibate faithful (cf. 2 Thess. 2:15; 1 Cor. 7:5, 9:5; 1 Tim. 3:2-12, 5:9; Tit. 1:6-8)”, and cites several of the early councils which mandated continence for married as well as unmarried clergy.”
cuf.org/2003/05/priestly-…estly-celibacy

As not even the Popes are here recognised to write with authority – any fancy rules. The false ideas still rule some, even after the great scholarly studies have been cited.

Take the time to get the facts – confirmation in post #58:
The council reminded the married clergy that they were bound by a vow of perpetual continence. Penalty for breaking that vow was deposition from the ministry. Commenting on this council, Pope Pius XI said that these canons, the “first written traces” of the “Law of Ecclesiastical Celibacy,” "presuppose a still earlier unwritten practice. " (Ad *Catholici Sacerdotii *, 43, 1935).

This was the Apostolic Norm for the whole Church.

The inability to focus on papal confirmation of the discipline seems endemic in some, whether Catholic or otherwise.
You nailed the whole matter right there - it is a discipline. And discipline is subject to modification and/or change.
 
Otjm #66
You nailed the whole matter right there - it is a discipline. And discipline is subject to modification and/or change.
Thank you. Now see why the normative discipline will NOT be changed by the Magisterium.

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, as Cardinal Ratzinger, in *The Theological Locus of Ecclesial Movements *(note 10), explains the unity existing with and from the apostles, including priestly celibacy.
“That priestly celibacy is not a medieval invention, but goes back to the earliest period of the Church, is shown clearly and convincingly by Card. A.M. Stickler, *The Case for Clerical Celibacy: Its Historical Development and Theological Foundations *(San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1995). Cf.also I: Cochini, *Origines apostoliques du celibat sacerdotal *(Paris-Namur, 1981); S Heid, *Zolibat in der friihen Kirche *(Paderborn, 1997).” (p 483 n 2)
Notes
10 Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, “The Theological Locus of Ecclesial Movements.” Communio (Fall 1998), footnote 2, p. 483.

**Fr. John Echert of EWTN on 10/Nov/03 had this to say: **
"This is the definitive scholarly statement on the discipline of priestly celibacy in the Church East and West.

“The disciplinary canons of the Council of Elvira in 305 are the Church’s earliest record regarding priestly continence(Ad Catholici Sacerdotii, 43, 1935)” [Pope Pius XI].

There is no question of a dogma or a doctrine involved here as the continent priests are a result of the Apostolic Norm which was recognized by the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, in *Non latet *(1858).

The ”debate” on the preference for a life consecrated by profession of the evangelical counsels of chastity, poverty, and obedience, has been settled from the beginning by the Apostolic Norm. More recently by Pope Pius XII’s Sacra Virginitas, Pope Paul VI’s Sacerdotalis Caelibatus, (On The Celibacy Of The Priest) 1967, and by St John Paul II’s Pastores Dabo Vobis (On The Formation Of Priests In The Circumstances Of The Present Day), 1992:
“26. Thanks to the insightful teaching of the Second Vatican Council,(66) we can grasp the conditions and demands, the manifestations and fruits of the intimate bond between the priest’s spiritual life and the exercise of his threefold ministry of word, sacrament and pastoral charity.

“29. Referring to the evangelical counsels, the Council states that "preeminent among these counsels is that precious gift of divine grace given to some by the Father (cf. Mt. 19:11; 1 Cor. 7:7) in order more easily to devote themselves to God alone with an undivided heart (cf. 1 Cor. 7:32-34) in virginity or celibacy.

**“This synod strongly reaffirms what the Latin Church and some Oriental rites require that is, that the priesthood be conferred only on those men who have received from God the gift of the vocation to celibate chastity (without prejudice to the tradition of some Oriental churches and particular cases of married clergy who convert to Catholicism, which are admitted as exceptions in Pope Paul VI’s encyclical on priestly celibacy, no. 42). The synod does not wish to leave any doubts in the mind of anyone regarding the Church’s firm will to maintain the law that demands perpetual and freely chosen celibacy for present and future candidates for priestly ordination in the Latin rite. The synod would like to see celibacy presented and explained in the fullness of its biblical, theological and spiritual richness, as a precious gift given by God to his Church and as a sign of the kingdom which is not of this world - a sign of God’s love for this world and of the undivided love of the priest for God and for God’s people, with the result that celibacy is seen as a positive enrichment of the priesthood."(**78)
Note:
66. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 4-6;13.
78. Proposition 11.
 
I thought the elephant in the room was the reality that the Catholic church has had a married priesthood for centuries, one that works.
And what everyone ignores about that is that married priests were supposed to live as brothers and sisters with their wives, which was the far older rule and tradition. The mandate for celibacy fixed (largely) the obvious failure to live up to that. And when justifying why clericial continence was important, the early fathers pointed to the sacrificial nature of the mass and the priest’s role in it. And this didn’t come from nowhere, but from Jewish practice with the Levitical priesthood in the Temple and from apostolic tradition.

Is it an absolute mandate? No. There are exceptions. The east also relaxed the standards for their priests (but not for bishops). Even so, I don’t think the ancient tradition of the western church should then be considered meaningless, unimportant, or treated with disregard. Or see the tradition treated as a medieval invention.
 
Apparently I can’t edit my post anymore, but one last addition. Let’s not speak as if a sexually active priesthood is the older tradition in the Church and continence was just a medieval inevntion. Were married priests ordained? Yes. We’re they supposed to be sexually active? No.
 
Very true… and they allow women to be priests & bishops yet they are still bleeding.
And at a much faster rate than any other Christian denomination.

And still there are Catholics of a ‘liberal’ inclination who claim that if only the Catholic Church would remove the discipline on celibacy in the priesthood, and even change doctrine to allow female ordination, that the issue of diminishing numbers of vocations would be addressed.
 
And at a much faster rate than any other Christian denomination.

And still there are Catholics of a ‘liberal’ inclination who claim that if only the Catholic Church would remove the discipline on celibacy in the priesthood, and even change doctrine to allow female ordination, that the issue of diminishing numbers of vocations would be addressed.
I’m with you on this, it’s a verifiable fact and leaves me wondering just what is the real purpose behind the constant arguments in favour of removing celibacy and female ordination, perhaps I’m missing something?
 
I’m with you on this, it’s a verifiable fact and leaves me wondering just what is the real purpose behind the constant arguments in favour of removing celibacy and female ordination, perhaps I’m missing something?
I’ve even heard some argue that the decline in vocations is the Holy Spirit guiding us towards a more ‘inclusive’ Church. I think that there is a section calling for the removal of the celibacy discipline who see it as a first ‘liberalising’ step towards female ordination. I think that the vocations numbers argument is just a tool some wish to use to add weight to their call for a ‘liberalisation’ of Church teaching on a whole range of issues. As far as the steep decline in the Anglican church is concerned, I don’t think such people care so much about declining numbers, so long as the Church ‘liberalises’.
 
Apparently I can’t edit my post anymore, but one last addition. Let’s not speak as if a sexually active priesthood is the older tradition in the Church and continence was just a medieval inevntion. Were married priests ordained? Yes. We’re they supposed to be sexually active? No.
Were they sexually active with their spouses?

Absolutely.

I have often wondered how much of this was driven by some of St. Paul’s comments on marriage - as disparaging as they seem to be, considering that marriage was elevated to a sacrament.
 
And at a much faster rate than any other Christian denomination.

And still there are Catholics of a ‘liberal’ inclination who claim that if only the Catholic Church would remove the discipline on celibacy in the priesthood, and even change doctrine to allow female ordination, that the issue of diminishing numbers of vocations would be addressed.
Here we go again, “removing the discipline of celibacy”.

How about keeping the discipline of celibacy for those who are called to it, and ordaining married men who are called to priesthood and marriage? Those are not in conflict.
 
Here we go again, “removing the discipline of celibacy”.

How about keeping the discipline of celibacy for those who are called to it, and ordaining married men who are called to priesthood and marriage? Those are not in conflict.
And what about not trying to fix what according to the magisterial Church, ain’t broke?
 
I grew up in England as a very active Anglican. My memories of “clergy families” are very mixed indeed. Of poverty of various kinds and being set apart. Later I saw riches, given from family and congregation. Now here in Ireland the same. Large clergy families and the wife seems to be doing the work at home. We have huge dioceses here for C of I. I hear that the divorce rate among Anglican clergy is high? Some indeed would benefit by having a help mate. but I am not sure. Family is so very vital and a commitment fully. Clergy here in rural areas are isolated; that needs addressing at Diocesan level.O hand there are in the US a number of religious orders who are married; ie they call themselves monks and nuns and aver that their " chastity" is in being faithful in marriage… They wear the full habit in many cases… and just at weekends and for church… the entire idea of the priesthood and religious life seems to have been diluted beyond recognition.
 
As to divorced priests, annulments, etc. - we have married deacons. Doenst seem to be a problem.
In another diocese in my home state there’s a complicated case of a widowed deacon who remarried outside the Church… Indeed, it doesn’t seem to be a problem, because the many such cases are dealt with sensibly, yet, this problem is very real.

Pax Christi

PS: I know of this particular case because of a mutual acquaintance of mine and this deacon.
 
There is evidence many priests have co-habited in the past. In recent years two of the best young Bishops in the UK left because of affairs with married women. The church here is the poorer for their leaving.
No, the Church is richer for such men, who avowed in total freedom to remain celibate for life, having left. Men who are worth their word before men and God are not worthy of the priesthood.

Pax Christi
 
And still there are Catholics of a ‘liberal’ inclination who claim that if only the Catholic Church would remove the discipline on celibacy in the priesthood, and even change doctrine to allow female ordination, that the issue of diminishing numbers of vocations would be addressed.
The proof is in their pudding: they also promised that, if Catholic doctrine were watered down and replaced with sappy self-esteem sentimentalism, the churches would be bursting at the seams. Err, the practice of the Faith has been decimated in their tenure.

Pax Christi
 
Here we go again, “removing the discipline of celibacy”.

How about keeping the discipline of celibacy for those who are called to it, and ordaining married men who are called to priesthood and marriage? Those are not in conflict.
That could indeed by done, but would it address the falling number of vocations? Would this lead to increased numbers attending Mass? Look at the Anglican church, has it worked for them? It would seem not.

And how many married men do you know who have a burning desire to become a priest?

The number of vocations isn’t falling because men cannot get married and become priests.

A much bigger issue is how many parents actively encourage their sons to consider becoming priests? Or would parents much rather their sons became lawyers, bankers, doctors etc?
 
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