I am not lobbying for it as a solution. If you read my posts carefully, you would pick that up.
**No, no, I fully appreciate that you’ve been careful to hedge the Crisis and the present discussion of optional celibacy. But–despite your caveats–it is still too ambiguous for you to say this (i.e., the ‘culpability’ of celibate priests in the Crisis) in the same breath, as when you’re speaking about celibacy.
Its just not clear what you’re suggesting anymore, after several pages of heated posts, because so much of it is insinuation.**
That has nothing to do with the discussion.
I beg your pardon, but your treatment of the issue of the Holy See’s position on celibacy has been fraught by two concerns: (1) a distrust of the prelates, and (2) a petition for the greater involvement of an undifferentiated body of lay persons.
I am really curious as to your age and background.
Why? I guess I should have put this less clumsily, as you’ll now jump down my throat over my diction.
Personally, I am not invested in you agreeing with me.
Well, OK I guess…
I find you bringing forth your opinions without even the substantiation I provide to mine.
**I don’t really write my opinions on here. I’ve told two anecdotes (the USAF officer ret.who is a priest in my parish and the grocery woman), but neither were central to my arguments.
You bring your experiences to bear in several ways, which is commendable and I enjoy reading the experiences of older CAF members, but you expect us to somehow appreciate the impact of these stories (ex: the priestly (dis)satisfaction with celibacy)… this would be a lot more compelling** if it were accompanied by some statistics.
In fact, there exist studies to the contrary, that priestly job/life satisfaction rates are far higher than their correligionists. Granted, I don’t really agree with the methodology used for these studies because it doesn’t adequately take into account that priests have a different relationship with their ‘employer’, generally higher level of education, and the rest.
What I mean to say is that you probably have valuable things to contribute here, but your style of contribution pretty much sabotages that value. Sorry.
One does not have to have a study to quote when one has done the study oneself.
Sorry, friend–even the Bible has citations.
The fact that I have not written a tome or published a paper in some journal appears to be your stumbling point; I have put forth what I have found, and I have actually talked with priests - and far more than one or two.
Sure, granted. I’m not an academic snob, I am just giving fraternal advice on how to make your points a little more compelling.
I\f you choose to disbelieve my statements, then our discussion is pretty much at a dead end. This forum is a place to chat, to learn and to share. I have shared. You seem to be dismissive of it; that’s fine, because as I said, I have nothing invested in convincing you. I state my opinion and give you sourcing material. You state yours. And that is about as far as any of it will go.
**Well… when your points impugn the character of dozens, even hundreds, of men whom you have never met (the ‘cabal’ of prelates, that we have to make our voices heard by), I don’t think its unreasonable to ask you provide a little bit of evidence besides ‘conversations’ you’ve had.
Remember, you basically want to alter one of the most distinctive features of an ancient, worldwide office… I only want to maintain an all-inclusive status quo. This is not a difficult argument for me, but for you it requires a high burden of proof. :/**
Best wishes and prayers if you enter a seminary.
Thanks…
I am taking a new job as of tomorrow morning which will require my relocating 80+ miles from my current home, so this will most likely be one of my last posts.