Some of you have contentions about celibacy and its place in the Church…Well, I couldn’t properly articulate to you why the Church understands the call to celibacy to be a “higher” calling, but don’t be confused into thinking that the Church somehow looks down on marriage as if it were an inferior calling. Marriage is a very high calling, and is
the first calling of man and woman. It is the Divine road sign to the everlasting communion in the thrice Holy Trinity, and the primordial sacrament.
But those called to celibacy are given it by God as a gift for the kingdom of God. The Church, and consequently, many married people, need the prayers and witness of these souls who are called to magnify God with their whole being – with God as their sole spouse. That they may be sacrificing marriage for example is only one aspect of this high calling. It is a calling to a intimate union with Christ in spiritual solitude. Those who have such a calling are pulled in the heart by grace, and have such an intense desire to live that single life for God. While marriage is as dignified as celibacy (both are valid and ordained by God), the call to religious life or the priesthood is a higher one by its extraordinary example and poverty.
In my experience with speaking to religious and married people, they truly do need each other by way of example and imitation. Married people need to remember that marriage isn’t the end-all be-all of their existence, and that while their devotion to each other and to God is great, it still needs purification. Religious and priests need to see the concrete and tangible sacrament of Christ’s love for His Church the Bride lived with piety, and by example they should assume with sublime virtue their role as
alter Christus as a living sacrifice in Christ, the Fathers only beloved, begotten Son. In marriage the spiritual reality of communion with God is made visible, to those called to live the Gospel in a radically sacrificial way are given courage by married people living their vocation with fervor. So to those who are married, if you want to see your priests happy and holy, live your vocations to the full!
Make yourselves saints and do so quickly, n’est pas?
This is my impression at least. Feel free to tear me apart.
Try to think of it this way: Priests are to be available to their flock 24/7. Marriage doesn’t benefit the flock, and it wouldn’t benefit the family of the Priest, as a married man has obligations to his wife and children. It’s not fair to the parish, the wife and children, or the Priest. It only makes sense. Keep in mind, exceptions are just that, exceptions, not the norm.
Actually, the situation you’ve described here is largely determined by the society in which the local church happens to reside. You’ve probably heard that in the East (not the West), priests were encouraged by their bishops to marry before being ordained (knowing full well that if they were married they could not become a bishop). This was actually considered “ideal” for most priests! That they have a wife and raise what we today called a “domestic church”. The priest was the Father and his wife was Mother of the people, and both played significant roles in church life…And still do today. You can visit an Eastern Catholic parish and see for yourself how this tradition is maintained today, even by churches in communion with the Holy See.
I’ve been considering the Eastern priesthood for a little while now, and it just seems too wonderful to me. I’d be living something of both mysteries: being consecrated to my wife and to the church. Sure, I’d be busy as heck, but its the only business I could deal with and keep sanity.
However, I must conclude with the affirmation of the discipline enforced by Rome pertaining to the Latin Rite. There is good reason for this discipline, and I would rather see it than not see it. It is, in the final analysis, an invitation by God to Catholic men to consider the holy priesthood in its dignity and grace.
In Him, the True Vine, Jesus Christ.