G
Gorgias
Guest
Really? Are you sure about that? Let’s look upthread…Nowhere have I said that the ordination of married men will “alleviate” the clergy shortage problem
Nope… that sure looks like an assertion of alleviation of clergy shortage.We are short of priests - and that is not just hard on the priests; it is also hard on the laity. Additional priests - possibly married - could provide some more coverage of what right now is thin at best
Let’s look at the other dynamic we’re facing: the number of the faithful who actively practice their faith is declining. I would assert that the two trends are operating roughly hand-in-glove. (Sure, there are exceptions, but in locales where we have increasing numbers of practicing Catholics, we also tend to have increasing numbers in vocations.)That would not “alleviate” the priest shortage, but it most certainly would not cause the shortage to increase - that would be due to more priests dying. we are losing them faster than we are replacing them.
Are you sure about that assertion, too? Let’s see what you’ve written:Nor have I said that ordaining married men would “invigorate” the Church. I have no clue where you get that one, but it wasn’t from me.
If the point of your words isn’t that “witness and evangelization” doesn’t invigorate the Church… then what is the point you’re making?Deacon Harold Burke Sivers … had some very good points to convey - and should the Church decided to ordain married men to the priesthood, those points would appear to be as valuable there as to his witness and evangelization.
We had more priests, in the West, in the first half of the twentieth century. We had more priests, throughout history, when that vocation was more lucrative. Are you seriously suggesting that the ills being paraded publicly today aren’t concurrent with – if not the result, to an extent, of – those halcyon days of a glut of vocations?As to what the Church needs, it needs more priests.