Actually, no, I didn’t miss the part about “that’s how the Roman Rite Church sees it.” When you start talking about the priest acting in persona christi within the context of the liturgy, that is a matter of the theology or doctrine of the priesthood, not a matter of discipline concerning the priesthood. So, if you say that in order for a priest to act in persona christi, he must be celibate, as Christ was celibate, that sort of doctrinal argument transcends rites and disciplines. So, to my way of thinking, to make that argument is problematic, even from the perspective of the Roman Church, since the Roman Church, in her own Catechism of the Catholic Church, acknowledeges both the validity and fruitfulness of the ministry of married, non-celibate priests in the Eastern Churches. If being married means a man cannot act in persona christi, then he can’t, regardless of whether he is Roman Catholic or Eastern Catholic. Really, to my way of thinking, these sort of arguments amount to attempting to provide theological explanations for a practice that arose in response to practical reasons (the passing of Church property from priests to their heirs, who did not always themselves become priests, so the Church was losing property). The celibacy of Roman priests is a matter of discipline, not faith and morals. BTW, I don’t have a problem with the disciplines of the Roman Church, but I do have a problem with Roman Catholics making flawed claims about the theology of the priesthood in order to defend those disciplines, because theological/doctrinal teachings about the priesthood transcend rites.