How could marriage prevent a priest from performing his duties faithfully? One issue raised is that a priest would not be as committed to God if he were to marry, and have a family. By that statement, it can be assumed that married men are not as committed to God as bachelors… But that simply is not the case. It would not blight the faithfulness of a man to take a woman as his lawfully wedded wife. With that being said, why shouldn’t a priest be able to marry?
Well, I don’t think your understanding of this particular reason proffered for celibacy is nuanced enough. I’m not sure if people actually say that “a priest would not be as committed to God if he were to marry, and have a family. By that statement, it can be assumed that married men are not as committed to God as bachelors… But that simply is not the case.” If someone does argue that, then they are flatly wrong, but again, I don’t think that’s what people argue.
The more correct rendering of this argument is a bit more nuanced than that, and is really quite a bit more mundane. No one says that married men are not as committed to God as bachelors, one-for-one, or that it is impossible to do so or whatever. What people say is that married men, if they are good husbands and fathers after all, necessarily have less time for their extra-familial obligations than bachelors. If a priest is married and he wants to be a good husband and father, he will necessarily have to spend time with family meals, playing with his children, being a husband to his wife, praying with his family, helping kids with homework, forming his sons and daughters correctly in the faith, being at Johnny’s football games, etc. This presumably takes a lot of time from day to day, things add up–I’m not married so I’m just guessing here, but I think my assertions are rational–so the argument is that the man simply can’t spend 10-12+ hours a day on parish work.
Sure, some married men do work 12-hour shifts. If you’re a doctor or a nurse, or a member of some other professions, you will almost constantly do this unless you seek a job that doesn’t require it, but then again, these people often don’t work five/six days a week. Shifts are often long, but there are usually 3-4 days off at a time. Priests almost never get that, unless they are elderly part-time assistants or something like that. Being a priest is a seven-day-per-week job even when a priest
is on his off day.
Now, there are other arguments for priestly celibacy, so I just want you to know that I’m just trying to clarify this one.
Cliff’s Notes: the argument is essentially about time, not commitment to God (necessarily).