A
Andreas_Hofer
Guest
The descriptions of actual situations that work (wife gets paid to be administrator, tuition is free, etc.) are compelling.
But so is the point that we usually forget about our ungrounded assumption that a parish will have only one priest. Many parishes that used to have 3 or 4 priests now have only one. Even restoring them to their full contingent of celibate clergy would cost more, and then adding in families could very well become burdensome.
Of course, if it comes down to making a decision as to allowing married clergy, I don’t think think the money question should come into play. Either it will be spiritually beneficial to the Church or it won’t. If it’s truly something good, we’ll have to come up with the money whether we like it or not.
But so is the point that we usually forget about our ungrounded assumption that a parish will have only one priest. Many parishes that used to have 3 or 4 priests now have only one. Even restoring them to their full contingent of celibate clergy would cost more, and then adding in families could very well become burdensome.
Of course, if it comes down to making a decision as to allowing married clergy, I don’t think think the money question should come into play. Either it will be spiritually beneficial to the Church or it won’t. If it’s truly something good, we’ll have to come up with the money whether we like it or not.