A few other comments on the discussion:
No existence = no pain
existence = pain
Now you exist, and you’ve felt both pain and no pain, which is better?
no existence = none of God’s love
existence = God’s love
We all experience God’s love, but we do have the chance to reject it. You have felt God’s love, would you deny the experience to another, assuming God wills them to exist?
Face it, marriage and procreation is selfish.
I disagree that marriage is intrinsically selfish. In good marriages, the partners give totally of themselves to each other denying themselves for the good of the other. Also, good parenting is selfless – ever get up at 3:00 in the morning for a feeding? I would agree however, that
to a certain degree, in the marital embrace, where marriage and procreation intersect, people often become focused on personal desires. But at the same time both partners are giving their physical beings for the pleasure of the other, which is at least
selflessish.
If you eliminate marriage though, how much of the imagery used in the bible to describe God’s relationship with humanity would you lose?
I think if you get two people who are married and have 2 kids and you compare them to two celebant missionaries, the two celebant missionaries easily will save more souls than the 2 parents who spend all their time looking after their family primarily.
A married couple can saves some souls. If they have 8 kids, they can produce 2 priests and 2 nuns, who would save twice the number as souls as the missionaries in your example. Plus the potential continuation of more generations of missionaries with the 4 kids that do marry. Also, if you have a married couple from some far off place would they be able to relate completely with a single person who is not married. It could be that a family going on a mission together would have more chance of reaching souls. There is need for variety, because different people are reached in different ways.
Here’s a Catholic example for you, I think you’ll like it.
A Protestant Pastor and a Catholic Priest are having lunch in a restaurant during World War 2, a bomb drops not far, both men get up.
The Protestant Pastor says “I’ve got to get to my wife and kids and look after them”, the Catholic Priest says “I’ve got to get to my flock and look after them”.
When that priest reaches is flock, I bet anything that he will spend much of his time consoling those who lost spouses or children, and helping others pray for family members that are still missing.
St. Peter took his wife on his travels and Peter only wrote two epistles. Paul was celebant and wrote half of the New Testament.
You can imagine, that those lonely nights that Paul spent writing his epistles, Peter was with his family.
Now I don’t want to judge Peter, but I don’t buy the fact that a married couple can further the word of God more than a celebant person
Are we certain that Peter took his wife with him? Some people think she may have died before Peter met Jesus. We hear of his mother-in-law, but never actually his wife right?
I’m not certain you can judge the quality of Peter or Paul’s preaching by the quantity of writings produced. And for that matter not even by the quantity of souls saved.
Paul wasn’t lonely when he wrote his epistles; for almost all of them he had a scribe. And don’t forget that Luke traveled much of the way with him.
If Peter did take his wife with him, she could have been a great asset. Peter couldn’t preach in the same way to women that his wife could. (And on a purely misogynistic level, Peter could work longer hours than Paul, because Peter didn’t have to do his own laundry!

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I guess a central point to my comments on Rev’s last three statements is that there are many parts to the Body of Christ. We need preachers to spread the good news, but also people who work behind the scenes and administer to the preachers.
But if you consider where he [Judas] is now …
I can’t consider where Judas is, because like all who have died, unless they are canonized saints, and as such infallibly defined to be in heaven, we do not know God’s judgment.
Pax vobiscum