C
countertenor
Guest
I agree with you that the priesthood of the Latin Church went into decline after the abandonment of the EO of the mass, and I don’t think that a married priesthood will fix that decline. Perhaps temporarily, but not in the long run. I haven’t said we need a married priesthood. I just say you are wrong to say that married priests were not part of the tradition of the Church. Even the Latin Church had them, and whether you think they were an abuse or not, this was allowed for years. Just because there was corruption in the Latin Church that flowed from this does not make it an abuse. There has been plenty of corruption with a celibate priesthood.No, the tradition and norm has always been celibacy. Married clergy were an abuse. The Church tolerated the abuse, but it was an abuse and not tradition.
The abuse got so bad, the it had completely corrupted the Church and clegy, and that is why the Church reformed and made celibacy mandatory without question.
Tradition did not start in the medievil era, but the Church moves linear through time. The Church is always moving forward. Each time it grew organically. Celibacy is never going to change in the Latin rite. It is set in stone. One has to grasp the supernatural to understand why.
The priesthood has flourished with celibacy. It was only when the Church abandoned tradition and the Latin Mass did the priesthood collaspsed.
If you want a married clergy, fine, but it is not a traditional position. It is a liberal position. No traditionalist and the traditional movement do not believe in that position.
If this were so much the norm of the Church and if married priests were such an abuse, it would not have been allowed from the beginning, in either the Western, Eastern or Oriental Churches. The Catholic Church has always allowed married priests and it is nothing more than politics and historical revisionism to claim they didn’t or that it was just some anomaly that was done away with…cont.