Catholic Priests cannot be married . Their spouse is God. They pledge all loyalty to their Bishop. The duty of a husband it to his wife. There would be a conflict between loyalty to a wife and to the Bishop.
Well, you could not be more wrong.
My grandfather was an Eastern Catholic priest and was married with seven children. He was arrested by the soviets who imprisoned him, beat him and put needles under his fingernails.
His father was his Archbishop’s groundskeeper and it was that Archbishop who put my grandfather through seminary, knowing he would be a married priest (my grandfather could not have afforded to attend seminary otherwise).
So there was no conflict for my grandfather with respect to his Archbishop . . .
Our late Bishop here once said in a speech, “You know, I prefer married priests . . . They are always so well behaved! I guess it’s because they have their own bishop and patriarch in the person of their wives at home . . .”
My grandfather was always guided well by his wife. She would keep him in check with, “John, don’t do that, you’ll offend that person!” And so on.
When I was getting married, my wife ONLY agreed to lessons from a married priest. And she was right.
I think it is time the Roman Catholic Church realize that:
- Celibacy is not an infallible dogma of the Church;
- Marriage for priests can be very workable as it is in the Eastern Churches and for the Anglican/Lutheran pastors who are now coming into the Latin Church with their wives and children;
- Roman Catholic priestly candidates should have the choice of whether to be married or single;
- Rome should pardon the thousands of priests who were forced into inactive ministry as a result of their wishing to be married.
Celibate priests will always be around. But it is time to put pay to the illusion that priesthood and celibacy are part and parcel of the same vocation.
Alex