J
JReducation
Guest
As I posted on another thread with a similar subject, celibacy is not the reason for a decline in the number of vocations to the priesthood. Let’s look at the decline in the number of married couples. Marriage too is a vocation. How many people stay married until death? How many couples get married at all? It seems to me that in many metropolitan areas, where the larger concentration of people live, there are many transitional couples.
If people were that committed to marriage and the exclusion of marriage were the only reason for the decline in priestly vocations, we would not be seeing a decline in marital vocations. The fact is that there are more couples together who are not married or who are on their second or third marriages than ever before.
I doubt that men are not choosing to be priests because they want to be married. If that were the case, they would be married and stay married.
The instability of marriages is a bigger crisis than the shortage of priests. Almost every priest I know comes from a family. I don’t’ think that I’ve ever met one who was poofed into existence.
Before the laity tries to reconstruct the priesthood and the religious life, why doesn’t it try to work on marriage. Marriage falls within the Apostolate of the Laity according to the decree of Vatican II. I think that we’re trying to solve the shortage of priests and forgetting that priests are born into nurturing families.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF
If people were that committed to marriage and the exclusion of marriage were the only reason for the decline in priestly vocations, we would not be seeing a decline in marital vocations. The fact is that there are more couples together who are not married or who are on their second or third marriages than ever before.
I doubt that men are not choosing to be priests because they want to be married. If that were the case, they would be married and stay married.
The instability of marriages is a bigger crisis than the shortage of priests. Almost every priest I know comes from a family. I don’t’ think that I’ve ever met one who was poofed into existence.
Before the laity tries to reconstruct the priesthood and the religious life, why doesn’t it try to work on marriage. Marriage falls within the Apostolate of the Laity according to the decree of Vatican II. I think that we’re trying to solve the shortage of priests and forgetting that priests are born into nurturing families.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF