M
Michael_Saint
Guest
[1] The death of a spouse when the couple is still young, the divorced deacon…these are realities, tragic but real.
[2] I like what was offered here about King David. Diamond Girl your heart is full of love.
[3] A permanent deacon should have the support of his wife. Its what will enable him to serve the community. It is her sacrifice that enables the Deacon to perform his duties.
[4] I had said in a prior post this not just about sexuality. I do struggle with being alone and the struggle of living without a spouse, however there is another issue. Yes the Church may or may not grant a dispensation for a Deacon with small children, not only do the children need a mother but for most in this economy they need to incomes to suport the chidren and themselves.
[5] The pain of having studied and prayed for so long, just to deal with all this when i was still freshly ordained. My wife was able to conceal her motives and actions very well while i studied to be a Deacon. So Yes i am blessed every time I minister to families through baptism, marriages and funerals. and yes i cannot live without the Eucharist.
[6] The Church that i have loved with all my heart throughout my life tries so hard to make sure that all the rubrics are followed and that is great. But When Jesus the just judge, when the bridegroom comes for his church He will judge us by how much of Gods love we have in our hearts. … If any of you ever meet a deacon in a situation like mine. show him love.
[7] Celibacy is a Gift…Mathew 19 read verse 12 especially…read prayerfully. I believe that i have not been granted (given this beautiful gift)
- Which is why St. Paul did not allow widows to vow celibacy until they hit 60 (1Timothy 5:9-12). Which is why the Vatican was foolish to allow married deacons as young as 35. Obviously this passage was not grappled with during the discussions on this topic - an arbitrary age was just thrown out willy-nilly.
- Love does not mean giving someone a dispensation from his promises because he is struggling to faithfully live them after such a tragic situation. That is false charity. True charity says “I am sorry, but this is the promise you made to God, and I want to help you be faithful to that”.
- A permanent deacon promises to be celibate if he loses his wife (either to divorce or death), which means that he, like the priest, needs God to be his support. HE will enable the deacon to serve the community, just like He enables the priest.
- (a) It is easy to say that one wants a wife for the children, but often enough, the main motivation is that the deacon is lonely and wants a wife to share his life with. (b) Another reason men with young children should not be ordained to the diaconate.
- (a) You make it sound as though you were the perfect husband and your wife was just a floosy. If I were to ask her, she would probably say you were putting her second-fiddle to your newfound “love” - ministry in the Church. You would not be the first deacon to lose his wife after he started having “an affair” with diaconal ministry. Perhaps she felt lonely and in need of intimacy - sort of like the way you feel now. You speak about what the Church should do for you in that situation - what should the Church have done for your wife in that situation? (b) You speak about baptising, marrying, and saying funerals - what about your ministry to charity? Is that not the chief ministry of the deacon? When you say this about the sacraments (which is what a priest chiefly is - a man who is ordained in order to confect the sacraments), it makes me think what you really wanted was the priesthood - but since diaconate was all that the Church allowed you as a married man, you took that instead. But deacons with wives and children are not as free to serve as celibate priests are.
- (a) Love is “to will or to do good for another”. In reference to God, that means living out our vows and promises with the help of His grace. You cannot draw a dichotomy between “rubrics” and “love” - obedience to rules is an act of love. Of course, one can be obedient to rules and not do them out of love. But on the other hand, if one disobeys legitimate Church rules (and the very promises he made), he is failing to love God thereby. (b) I am honestly sorry to say I really do not know how much sympathy I can muster as a result. But I will do my best to love you like a Christian brother.
- Celibacy is a gift that you received because you promised to embrace it and God gave you that gift and that grace at that very moment and it will last with you forever. To say you have not been granted the gift is to say God is a liar who does not make good on His promises.