G
Gorgias
Guest
It’s always easier to pooh-pooh an assertion when you demonize those who are making it, eh? “Ad hominem” much, do you?However, it is because many do not have an ability to see beyond the current model of “priest = parish administrator” , or to put it another way, the ability to think outside the box, that many are automatically against ordaining married men.
This is a reasonable point. Yet, what is it, precisely, that you’re suggesting? “Working priests”, who hold down a secular job Monday through Friday, but celebrate Mass on the weekends? We’ve already tried that, and it failed miserably. Or, perhaps, you’re suggesting that we swell the ranks of (paid) 40-hour-a-week priests? Where would the funds to support them (and their families) with a living wage come from? We already find it rather difficult to support the (meager) ranks of priests that we have!A married priest could be a non-administrative priest, spending time administering the sacraments in one or more parishes, which is the first need for priests.
Look – I’m cool with "thinking outside of the box’! However, “married priests” isn’t the panacea that many make it out to be.
I was trying to find the post upthread that contradicted this assertion, but apparently, my search fu isn’t as strong as I might have thought. The assertion that had been made was that this was precisely where the only uptick in vocations is being realized – in married men who approach the permanent diaconate. So… no: your doubt seems to fly in the face of the data.I seriously doubt there would be a massive rush of married men applying