Roy5;6589423 said:
A couple mof brief thoughts
“How many… believed that demons caused insanity, swallowed wild accounts of levitation, bilocation and many other wild stories?”
quote]
I will allow other erudite minds to answer your main points. I will say that Scripture speaks of holy eunchs for the Kingdom and Christ’s unmarried priestly life is the model par excellence
I will content myself by stating that I still do believe demons cause insanity (although not in a lot of cases and only if there is human consent)…Levitation may occur to Holy Saints (but also practitioners of the dark arts) it does happen though and bilocation…some Holy Saints were granted this rare gift by God to promote his Glory through their works in multiple places such as Padre Pio
Peace of Christ
I’m not sure what this has to do with marriage and celibacy, but celibacy is not a superstition. Moving right along. As both a psychologist and theologian, there are caess of mental illness that have been reported in books that have no other explanation but the presence of evil. Read William James. He’s an expert on this stuff.
Levitation, while it is uncommon, it is not a superstition. Many people have witnessed it. St. Teresa of Avila was seen to levitate by those who did not believe what they saw. St. Pascal Baylon was also seen to levitate and his superior refused to believe it when he was told about it. Then one day he walked into the chapel and saw Paschal praying, on his knees, about six feet off the floor.
Bilocation has been witnessed by people who were not Catholic as well as Catholics and no one can find a reasonable explanation. The people who have witnessed it did not know what they were looking at. They did not know that Padre Pio was still in Italy. They saw him in Milwaukee, I believe.
Don’t forget the stigmata. Francis of Assisi was the first person to have a visible stigmata. There was an eye witness who saw the seraph, saw the light and saw Francis collapse. When he ran to help Francis, the seraph was gone and Francis was bathed in blood. Fr. Pio’s stigmata disappeared right before everyone’s eyes the moment he died. There were doctors and other friars in the room when he died. So we have seen the stigmata come and disappear, by rational people.
None of it can be explained and all of it has witnesses. That does not have anything to do with with celibacy. Celibacy can also be explained and it does not need witnesses.
By the way, consecrated celibacy is not just for priests. Whoever created the thread may not have known this. In fact, we have 20 out of 22 Catholic Churches that have alwasy ordained married men and still do so today. Consecrted celibacy actually began with the Apostle Paul but was adopted as a way of life by monks and nuns. Much later do the Roman and Marinite Catholics adopt celibacy as a condition for ordiantion. By that time, religious brother and religious women had been doing it for almost 1,000 years. Many priests became brothers, but they had to be celibate in order to become brothers. They wanted this life as a way of consecrating their lives to God. By the time we reach the year 1100, there are more priests in the monastery than outside of it. All the priests who are brothers at this time are celibate. Because you can’t be a consecrated religious witout celibacy.
What happened was that the consecrated life took off with so much force in the Roman Church, that the standard of celibacy was adopted for the secular man who wanted to be a priest. But there were hundreds of thousands of celibate priests whom we don’t hear about, because we often refer to them as Brother, monk or friar. Not all monks were priests and not all priests were monks. But all monks and friars were celibate brothers, whether they were priests or not.
By sheer numbers this became the norm for everyone entering the priesthood, whether you were going to be a religious or not.
The Eastern Churches did not adopt this, because religious life is still very far behind the Roman Church. They have very few religious. They have not had that strong influence of a celibate life lived in community. However, they do have a rule. If the wife of the priest or the deacon dies, these men cannot remarry.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF