A
AltarEnthusiast
Guest
Again, please don’t try to speak for me.I merely wrote what I read from your own answering of a question in an entirely different manner from that which I was asking. If there was misunderstanding on both sides, fair enough. But a mere noting that it is such (and kindly attempt at clarification) ought to be sufficient without getting overly upset about what someone is supposedly “trying to pin on you.”
Canard?
I don’t think I’m missing that, though. Instead, it is precisely what I was attempting to summarize above. (As well as in my other posts on this thread.)
You are correct, they are not.
And I’m not necessarily objecting to your perspective here. Indeed, I find it intriguing. Yet, it is a matter which can be honestly debated from both sides.
“Why could not more men who are employed outside the Church be priests?” Or, phrased from another angle, “Why could not more priests hold jobs independent from direct ecclesiastical ministry employment?”
Conversely, I ask, “Should not more men in ordained ministry be employed by the Church full time?” “Could not the Church recruit single men to such in a particular manner, especially through the vocation of deacon?” “Would it better for more men to dedicate themselves entirely to ecclesiastical ministry rather than having their attentions divided?” “Is there even a sort of theological/spiritual/human value to such?”
Again, I think that the answer is ultimately “both/and” here rather than “either/or” and what we are exploring is two sides of the same coin to promote more significant vocations to the ordained ministry.
Anyhow all subterfuge aside, as another person alluded to, perhaps the formation the typical permanent deacon receives is not on par with what a priestly aspirant receives in order to be ordained a transitional deacon. In other words it wouldn’t take 6-12 months of additional formation – it might well take years for a permanent deacon to become a priest. If that is indeed the case (which I don’t know), I can see why there would be a number of unmarried deacons.
Otherwise I haven’t seen anyone else express a reason why a deacon could be employed outside of the Church and a priest could not.