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Guest
Well, give them a break; after all, they didn’t have a Bible, yet.This first generation of Christians may have understood it like this but you don’t find this in the NT itself.
This is the earliest council rulings on this:
celibacy of the early church’s priests:[3]
Council of Elvira **(300-306) **
(Canon 33): It is decided that marriage be altogether prohibited to bishops, priests, and deacons, or to all clerics placed in the ministry, and that they keep away from their wives and not beget children; whoever does this, shall be deprived of the honor of the clerical office.
Council of Carthage **(390) **
(Canon 3): It is fitting that the holy bishops and priests of God as well as the Levites, i.e. those who are in the service of the divine sacraments, observe perfect continence, so that they may obtain in all simplicity what they are asking from God; what the Apostles taught and what antiquity itself observed, let us also endeavour to keep… It pleases us all that bishop, priest and deacon, guardians of purity, abstain from conjugal intercourse with their wives, so that those who serve at the altar may keep a perfect chastity.
These canons are purely local to Latin Catholics, as the prohibitions do not apply to Eastern Catholics in communion with Rome.
Notice a couple of things here. One are the dates–300-390. This centuries after the apostles. Notice also the unbiblical mandate from these councils in regards to marriage—“let us also endeavour to keep… It pleases us all that bishop, priest and deacon, guardians of purity, abstain from conjugal intercourse with their wives, so that those who serve at the altar may keep a perfect chastity.”
God never called husbands and wives to “perfect chastity” i.e. life long chastity.
How do you know for certain that the one is wrong, and the other is right? After all, it was the exact same group of Catholic Bishops who made both rulings.
These are disciplines of the Church. Jesus gave the Apostles (and through them, their successors) the authority to set discipline for the Church when He told them that everything they bind on earth is bound in Heaven, and everything they loose on earth is loosed in Heaven. St. Paul further emphasizes that we are to obey lawful authority, even when we disagree with it.How could it be right in “those days” for priests to be married but not in “these days”?