Married clergy exist and they are a great good, yet it truly is not the norm for Latin Rite Catholicism, and a celibate priesthood has its virtues and spiritual and other advantages as well. I did not mean to give the impression that I thought married priests would necessarily be a terrible thing, but taken in context of the long history of the faith I do believe it is well outside the norm of how priest shortages have been handled in the past in Latin Rite Catholicism. That was the point I was attempting to make; there are noble and good ways of dealing with these situations in the past that served to strengthen the community of faith, i.e. the greater responsibility of the laity. Why implement those first, in keeping with the way our ancestors in the faith did them, before moving on to the more ‘modern’ answer of allowing married priests? The way things have been done in the past may yield some good fruit.
I think there may be something to the idea of strengthening catechesis and vocation response through responsibility given to the laity in accordance with the way the issue was dealt with in the past, I don’t think it’s so off base to draw the parallel.
The method of handling the shortage of priests in the US when the US was new is not exactly applicable to the current situation for several reasons.
The first is that there was not particularly a shortage of priests in Europe, when the US was new; the priests who came to the US were primarily from the countries which had been the source of the Catholics in the first place. As Brazil is primarily a Portuguese speaking country (and granted that many in the outer areas may speak a native dialect and not Portuguese), Portugal is highly unlikely to provide priests. Neither, for that matter, is the US, as currently there is an average of a little more than 1 priest per parish - I think the number I saw was about 1.1 priests per parish.
And while Africa is experiencing a positive vocation boom, it is far more likely that priests from there are going to have English as a second language rather than Portuguese; thus immediately, Brazil is faced with a possible influx of priests who are not conversant with the population. Further, given the size of Brazil and the extreme lack of priests (see the original post), it is reasonably questionable whether or not Africa has the ability to make a significant, long term commitment to staffing.
So from two directions, the deaconate has been a significant change of tradition - establishing something that has been gone for well more than 1,000 years, and establishing clergy who are married.
And the cross-over from Protestant to Catholic of a number of married men has effectively changed the issue of married priests; it is not like this is either brand new, or something that doesn’t exist. Granted their numbers are small, but the fact is, a change has been made.
And it is not like the issue in Brazil got to this point in the last decade or so; this has been a long gradual issue; in part, I would not be the least bit surprised, to a decline in missionary work over the last 50 years, which would coincide with the reduction in the number of priests in both the USD and in Europe.
Another way of saying it is that two norms have been broken; the greater - or at least, longer norm of a permanent deaconate (coupled with anyone of any sort of clergy rank being married) is the most obvious. It could have been reinstated with only celibate men, as celibacy seems to be the major issue. But it was not, and any number of people have suggested that it was a way, in gradual terms, of introducing the matter/idea/concept of married clergy to the people in the pews.
And the second norm, while not broken as to cradle Catholics, is broken as to the actual ordination of married men. I will be quick to grant that it has been repeated by Rome more than once or twice that this is an exception to the rule; but it is and remains a discipline that only celibate men may be ordained, and factually, that barrier has been broken; again, allowing for a gradual further opening to ordaining other married men.
I have heard that elsewhere, most married clergy are effectively “hidden from view” in that many, if not most are given positions in chanceries and elsewhere as opposed to parishes; in Oregon that appears to be a bit different as we had one (a previous Presbyterian) who was pastor of a parish, and another who is currently an assistant pastor in another city.
I would not be the least bit surprised if the Church were to return to the earlier practice (within the Roman rite) of ordaining married men, and the Brazil need would be a likely starting place. One can postulate all one wishes to concerning what has been done or not done, and how the situation was handled 200 years ago. That was then and this is now, and the need then was reasonably responded to. It is debatable if the current need can be responded to in any adequate manner. North America is just starting to see increases gradually in the number of men ordained, and certainly not in sufficient numbers as to answer Brazil’s crisis. I have not heard anything to indicate that South or Central
America is ordaining in sufficient numbers to answer the need. And while Africa, and perhaps to some extent Asia might be ordaining sufficient numbers as to send a few into missionary work, with Africa more than a few, Brazil is not the only country in need (although perhaps the most needy) and language is an issue not easily addressed by a large surge from Africa.
Then, again, it would not surprise me to hear Rome say “No soap”. It has been said many times before, so the words come easily.