T
ToeInTheWater
Guest
So I read the actual article and nowhere does it state that Pope Francis has actually committed to opening up the Latin Rite priesthood to married men, only to considering the possibility. (I also recall him considering the possibility of deaconesses but last I checked no deaconesses have actually been ordained, and it seems most likely they will not be.)
What he actually said was:
Note that while CAFers in the US tend to view the Church with very US-centric way, the Pope’s concerns seems to be more about countries that have a priest shortage that is literally hundreds of times as worse as the US situation is.
And as others have mentioned, this would not affect the priests in religious communities, who have always been celibate, in the East as well as the West. So it’s not like he’s stating “priestly celibacy is an old-fashioned idea, all priests should marry”. So I doubt that married priests will be “the norm” in the Catholic Church, anymore than allowing Anglicans and other married converts to become priests did.
What he actually said was:
In an interview with Germany’s Die Zeit newspaper published this week, the pope said the church should study whether so-called “viri probati” – or married men of proven faith – could be ordained as an answer to the shortage of priests around the world. He called it an “enormous problem” that must be resolved.
That seems to be more like using married priests to fill gaps that are otherwise impossible to fill, not opening up the Latin rite priesthood for all married men.“We must consider if viri probati is a possibility. Then we must determine what tasks they can perform, for example, in remote communities,” he was quoted as saying.
Note that while CAFers in the US tend to view the Church with very US-centric way, the Pope’s concerns seems to be more about countries that have a priest shortage that is literally hundreds of times as worse as the US situation is.
The “viri probati” proposal has been around for decades, but it has drawn fresh attention under history’s first Latin American pope thanks in part to his appreciation of the challenges facing the church in places like Brazil, a huge Catholic country with an acute shortage of priests.
I think this is one pitfall we can fall into on CAF, of evaluating Pope Francis only for how his actions affect the Church in the US, not the Church in other parts of the world.Brazilian Cardinal Claudio Hummes, a longtime friend of Francis and former head of the Vatican’s office for clergy, is reportedly pressing to allow viri probati in the Amazon, where the church counts around one priest for every 10,000 Catholics.
And as others have mentioned, this would not affect the priests in religious communities, who have always been celibate, in the East as well as the West. So it’s not like he’s stating “priestly celibacy is an old-fashioned idea, all priests should marry”. So I doubt that married priests will be “the norm” in the Catholic Church, anymore than allowing Anglicans and other married converts to become priests did.