there absolutely is a causal link.
wife: our daughter wants to be a priest.
married male priest: our church says she can’t be one.
wife: oh, honey, that’s not fair.
gay man: i want to be a priest.
bishop: you can’t be.
gay man: why not? you allowed women to be priests, thus blurring the distinction between masculine and feminine conduct. so, i’m feminine–what’s the big deal?
That’s only ion your mind because the Latin church
stopped ordaining married men at some point and now you are classifying the practice with other ideas that were never a serious issue in the early Latin church when married priests were relatively common.
You are thinking of it as a “camel’s nose under the tent” kind of thing, but the fact is the issue of married priesthood is not connected in any way with these other liberal western Catholic issues. By restricting the practice of ordaining married men in your church, it has confused the Roman Catholic laity into thinking that all of these practices are equallly reprehensible when in fact there is no connection.
This is poor stewardship, the hierarchy of the Latin Catholic church completely failed it’s own people. It appears that time and again, from France and America, to Australia, Poland and Italy the Latin Catholic hierachies of these many places over generations will continue to place the burden to aid and abet it’s own failure to educate it’s own people on the Eastern Catholics, who must struggle to find enough celibate priests to serve these congregations in the diaspora. In the past this resulted in raiding the monasteries, and one can see that the monastic tradition has suffered for it.
I think, personally, that the practice of using females as altar servers is far more likely to raise issues in the ranks over female ordination to the priesthood. This was something an old RC priest friend of mine believed firmly, and lamented numerous times. I came to see his point eventually.
You should also be aware, and I think it is worth it to remind others here, that celibacy is also highly prized and respected in the eastern church. One state is not superior to the other, they are different gifts, to be sure.
as far as the orthodox church goes, i fear that it, too, will either (a) give into the culture as other non-catholic churches have;
You have no warrant to make such a claim.
… or (b) become increasingly irrelevant (maybe more likely).
That is just an insult. It clearly shows one more reason for the Orthodox to avoid any association with people who think like you. You would bring us down to your level, and it would be a crime to allow that to happen to God’s Holy Church.
…celibacy must be maintained. i guarantee you satan would have a big party if rome abolished the celibacy requirement.
You are making this comment as if the Romanian Catholics, the Ukrainian Catholics and others are bringing some dreaded disease with them in the form of married priests! Do you allege that because these churches have the option of celibacy
but not the requirement of it that their churches are under the influence of Satan ?!??
Celibacy is maintained in the eastern church. As I stated above it is a highly prized and respected calling, and I cannot see how the option would not also be highly prized and respected in any church anywhere, including the Romanian Catholic church and including also the Latin Catholic church.