The non-Catholic clergyman was not born into the Catholic Church. Therefore, canon law cannot be applied to him. You can only apply law to those over whom you have jurisdiction.
When this person converts and requests to remain in ministry, he’s not asking for something that is new to him.
I beg to differ. The Anglican ordinations were declared null and void because of significant change to the ordination ceremony, and with the exception of the Orthodox, and a few other minor examples (usually of someone doing a “back door” ordination with a bishop who may have orders), the Church does not recognize the call to ministry as sacramental. This includes high and low Lutherans, high and low Episcopalians, Methodists, and the one Presbyterian (in our archdiocese, who recently died). Further, once they become Catholic, ordination is not in any way guaranteed; the matter, if I recall correctly, has to go specifically to Rome and Rome must answer positively. So I beg to differ that the rules do not apply to convert ministers as they do to cradle Catholics, or convert Catholics who were not ministers.
He’s asking for the grace and permission of continuity. The Church grants him that grace and permission, because his circumstances are extraordinary. Under ordinary circumstance, Christ only calls single men to the priesthood in the Roman Church. But this man was not in the Roman Church when Christ called him. Christ called him from before he was born. Through no fault of his own, he was born outside of the Roman Church. The Roman Church must then acknowledge the call.
What continuity, and called to what? Priests and ministers are ontologically different. Further, married ministers are no more capable, nor less, of being called to priesthood than married Catholic men; what they are first called to is conversion to the Faith; and then some, but not all, are called to the priesthood. But that call to the priesthood comes after conversion (and at that point they are a married Catholic man). It may be that some ministers felt, before their conversion, that they were called to the priesthood; but from all appearances, and from what I have read of some conversion stories, their call while they were ministers was to be Catholic, not to be a Catholic priest.
Further, the essence of what you are saying is that God would not put in one’s heart the call to be a priest if one were not capable of being one. I have met not a few Catholic married men who would say that they have felt a call to be a priest and they would differ significantly from your point (and at least two of them are related to me, though not immediate relations). But that is not the call that ultimately matters; it is the call of the Church to the man to be ordained. One may feel with all of one’s being that one is called; unless and until the Church calls, the feelings are just that. I would be somewhat hesitant to say that a man who feels called has either manufactured that feeling himself, or that it is from the Evil One; at least, I would not say that to their face.
As far as men who are born within the Roman Church, the Church knows, without a doubt, that Christ never calls a married man to the priesthood within the Roman Church. Christ does not call people where they cannot go. Christ works within the parameters set by the Church, not against them.
As noted above, I have met people, and am related to two, who would most strongly disagree with you.
He has revealed to the universal Church the sanctity of celibacy. The Roman Church has established that she wants only those men who are called to this holy state to be priests. Christ cannot act according to what he has revealed. He has revealed to us that the Church cannot err on such matters, because sacraments are part of our faith. Therefore, she cannot err on sacramental disciplines.
On the contrary, disciplines are not immutable nor doctrinal. Christ promised we would not err in faith or morals. Discipline is a judgemental call, and that judgement can err. Early on in the Church, the discipline was that one could only go to (Confession) Reconcilliation once in one’s lifetime. That was the discipline; and the Church realized that discipline was in error, and changed it (thanks in large part to Irish monks, who did not follow the discipline).
The Church is not relaxing her rules for converts. Her rules do not apply to them.
Sure it is. Each one has to go to Rome for permission, and permission is not by any means automatic. The rule specifically has to be relaxed in each instance.
The Church does not want to relax the criteria for those born into the Roman Catholic Church, because she believes that this is the will of Christ for this Church. It is not the will of Christ for the other 21 Catholic Churches.
Well, we certainly can agree on that. My questions, however, stand.
One of the areas where you’re having problems is distinguishing between rites and churches. There are only five rites. There are 22 Catholic Churches, all in full communion. Each Church uses one of the five existing rites. The Roman Church uses the Roman Rite. But the rite does not define us as a Church.
Yeah, Malphono has corrected me a couple of times, but I am old and don’t necessarily remember everything I am told. Churches, rites, and it seems to me there is another division; my categorization is a bit sloppy, but for the sake of this conversation, I think most people understand what I am getting at. Seems to me there are three other rites extent in the Roman Church; I would suspect, but don’t know for sure, that the same set of rules apply to them.