there are, I am sure, a multitude of reasons.
Some people see ministers converting and being ordained, and wonder why.
They’d sure better get on Wikipedia, Google, or CAF and find out why, huh.
Why, … why is it limited to someone who started off not Catholic?
Some see an inherent dishonesty … needed protection.
Cite evidence, or its anecdotal, hyperbolic, libelous malarkey.
Others see the process dishonest in itself.
Others … before.
Correction: we need good priests. Wise, holy, good priests. If they were well-suited to these aims in their original ministry, they will likely be in the Latin Rite, as well. If not better.
Others see the see the massive influx of married men into the diaconate,
Uh, … where? The diaconate is not exactly the most treasured of posts in the Church. It is usually a strain on the, in general, older and retired men who undertake to become permanent deacons. You don’t find men everywhere who have the emotional and financial stability needed for this office.
and ask why some of them cannot be ordained priests.
As I understand it: different office, different sacerdotal powers, different vocation.
Spoken … Theresa.
Pretty sure its about ‘rite’… at least in the sense that you mean it.
One tradition, …
we may be sheep, but we are not dumb sheep; and for my two cents worth, it was the laity - and non=Catholics -
… Sorry, but I am not buying into the "laity are sheep equals “dumb as,”.
So you consider the problem of sexual abuse by some individual ministers in the church to be tantamount to the ‘problem’ of the discipline of celibacy? Which other disciplines do you consider problematic, so that the ‘old, feeble-minded clerics’

occupying curial posts can strike them out by popular consensus?
Or let’s just go ahead and abrogate every discipline imposed by the Church on Her ministers, … and for every particular discipline we give them an apple fritter?
I am well aware of the fact that the abuse issue is not the same as the issue of married clergy.
Good that you’ve noticed–now I’m sure you’ll be kind enough to explain why you mention them in the same breath … :
I am not angry about the issue of celibacy only; nor am I frustrated. I see the deacons; I …
is a choice, so is the choice to ordain married Catholic men.
**… or not.
In any case, with all this ‘seeing’ and ‘noticing’ you’ve been doing, you haven’t apparently ‘seen’ that the diaconate is a separate office than the presbyterate, with separate powers and responsibilities. Accompanying this are different disciplines.
Will you soon decide, after having us abrogate the simple promises offered to his bishop by the secular cleric, that the vows constraining the regular clergy are far too austere?**
Fifty years ago this was less of an issue than it is today, if for no other reason than that the Church is ordaining married men and they weren’t then.
To clarify: it ordained married men back then, just as it does now. Back in the 50s-60s (in America, at least), laymen generally weren’t presumptuous enough to dictate the truth and good policy to the Church. Funny to think, I know. They also weren’t especially well-informed about the so-called sui juris Churches that parallel our own Latin Rite.
Growing up, I always assumed that the Eparchal see of a certain sui juris Church–which I am fortunate to say is in my home city–was simply another Orthodox branch, despite the term ‘Catholic’ suffixed to its title. You probably would, too. In fact, during the period when many of the Eastern European heartlands of the sui juris Churches were experiencing pronounced turmoil, and the Curial and intra/inter-Church authorities were making policies to provide for the possible tension that might arise between Eastern Catholics and Latin Rite Catholics in the US, their chief concern was confused Latin Rite Catholics: people like you. People who wouldn’t understand or be able to accept that different Churches within our Church followed different Rites and disciplines.
The English/Anglican Ordinate is not a whole 'nother animal. It follows a long pattern of the Holy See’s willingness to provide ecumenical relations and even total inclusion into the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ.
There is a clear movement in a direction away from an absolute mandatory rule of celibacy; that should be obvious to any observer.
So long as he is an ‘uninformed observer’.
The question is, will it move further?
Didn’t move in the first place, as far as I’m aware.
It is the laity who will be the ones impacted, not those who are professed religious.
** Well, actually, no. The laity, as the religious, will be those who are only ‘impacted’ tangentially. There is no evidence if** and/or how this will ‘impact’ the laity. Its all speculation so far as you’re concerned. If there is anyone who is impacted, it will be the clergy, most importantly the secular clergy and parish priests of the Latin Rite.
Brother J is not simply speaking as a religious. He’s speaking as a doctor of theology, an intelligent and sensitive man… as far as I can tell reading his treatise-like discussions on the Church on CAF… who has spent an unbelievably long time studying things central and peripheral to this subject.
Your opinion is certainly welcome, but it is not you who will be impacted. And that is why it is a valid discussion for the laity.