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I, for one, do not believe that it will help one bit. The slackening of discipline has never been good for any militant organization that I am aware of.Many of the usual objections to married priests are full of hot air.
What’s hardly ever mentioned is that the early Church was full of married priests and did quite well.
With the manpower shortage the way it is, I’d say it would be solved overnight. Moreover, a great many Protestant ministers who have looked seriously into Catholicism may take another serious look and come in, some possibly bringing their congregations with them.
As for racking up medical bills and college tuition bills for the priests’ kids, Protestant seem to handle that without resentment. Should Catholics not be just as good as Protestants helping out their pastors?![]()
Every protestant minister I have ever known has had to get a second job to support his family. How can a priest be expected to deliver the sacrament of the sick at odd hours when he is at work on his other job? I suppose if the parish had more than one priest, they could be ‘on call’ but many parishes can’t afford more than one priest.Many of the usual objections to married priests are full of hot air.
What’s hardly ever mentioned is that the early Church was full of married priests and did quite well.
With the manpower shortage the way it is, I’d say it would be solved overnight. Moreover, a great many Protestant ministers who have looked seriously into Catholicism may take another serious look and come in, some possibly bringing their congregations with them.
As for racking up medical bills and college tuition bills for the priests’ kids, Protestant seem to handle that without resentment. Should Catholics not be just as good as Protestants helping out their pastors?![]()
For historical accuracy the reality is that while the fact of priestly celibacy is a discipline, it is also more than a discipline because it is an Apostolic norm from the choices made by Jesus, and Sacred Scripture attests to its roots. The celibacy required for priests from the apostles was mandatory, and obligatory, and yes, they did very well.Charlemagne III #3
What’s hardly ever mentioned is that the early Church was full of married priests and did quite well.
I happen to know several pastors who are married and have several children which are managing their ministerial duties as well as their family duties quite well. One of them is also an ordained woman minister therefore we cannot use that argument. Pastors learn to manage their time it is that simple. Furthermore most priests have families such as siblings, nieces and nephews, parents, aunts and uncles that they see as much as their schedules permits. I know many priests who are very close with their families and some of which don’t live nearby therefore it is safe to say, if the priest knew he was going to be busy or away, it would be his responsibility to have someone cover him. So we cannot use the excuse if he had a family, and an emergency arose, he wouldn’t have time to give the sacrament of the sick.Every protestant minister I have ever known has had to get a second job to support his family. How can a priest be expected to deliver the sacrament of the sick at odd hours when he is at work on his other job? I suppose if the parish had more than one priest, they could be ‘on call’ but many parishes can’t afford more than one priest.
Also, the early church can’t be compared to the modern church at all, financially. Totally different situations.
Such a lack of understanding and knowledge of the Church’s tradition helps no one.SecretGarden #9
at least give the Catholic priests this option afterall not everyone is called to married or celibate life.
There are many ways to get around celibacy as a requirement, and keep it as an option.Every protestant minister I have ever known has had to get a second job to support his family. How can a priest be expected to deliver the sacrament of the sick at odd hours when he is at work on his other job? I suppose if the parish had more than one priest, they could be ‘on call’ but many parishes can’t afford more than one priest.
Also, the early church can’t be compared to the modern church at all, financially. Totally different situations.
Many priests nowadays are so exhausted by the demands madde upon because there are so few priests, that I don’t see how it can be said they can be 100% devoted to their flock or that their flock can get the kind of personal attention they deserve because they are spread so thin.By abandoning, or making an option, the discipline of celibacy, a priest can no longer be fully, 100% devoted to his flock. He now has to tend to his personal family and his flock. One of the two groups is going to get left out.
Yes, I see that happening. If there were an option for marriage, I’m sure it would attract more men, and that would be a relief for priests who serve a parish by themselves. I just wonder if there is money enough to pay more priests, and married priests would need more money than single priests. But I do think married priests might be a little less devoted to his parishioners than a single priest. But who knows? We should ask the Orthodox how it works for them.Many priests nowadays are so exhausted by the demands madde upon because there are so few priests, that I don’t see how it can be said they can be 100% devoted to their flock or that their flock can get the kind of personal attention they deserve because they are spread so thin.
That’s a common assertion, but upon what is it based? ‘Conventional wisdom’, that suggests that there’s a ton of married men out there longing to be priests?With the manpower shortage the way it is, I’d say it would be solved overnight.
Many who think they are thinking are merely rearranging their prejudices (William James), and ignorant of the greatness and reality of Saint John Paul II who recalled in Pastores Dabo Vobis (I Will Give You Shepherds), 1992:Charlemagne III #3
Many of the usual objections to married priests are full of hot air.
History attests to the reality that celibacy was mandatory and those married priests freely, with the consent of their wives, accepted chastity from the beginning.#11
Letting priests be married in no way impinges on the right of priests to choose celibacy, and I’d even like to see only celibate priests allowed to be candidates for episcopal office.
That would be one way to limit nepotism, and was probably one of the reasons celibacy was made mandatory in the Middle Ages for all priests and bishops.
Even if a little less dedicated, married priests still offer considerable manpower, as any married Protestant minister does, and as any married Orthodox priest does. And let’s not forget the mighty manpower of the many married preachers of the Gospel in the 1st Century, without whom the Church could not have flourished as it did.But I do think married priests might be a little less devoted to his parishioners than a single priest. But who knows? We should ask the Orthodox how it works for them.
Right… because that’s representative.No money for kids’ braces? Perhaps, for example, dioceses should sell their often luxurious real estate used by bishops. Start with the 5000+ square foot mansion getting a 3000 square foot addition, including hot tub, to be used by the Archbishop of Newark, NJ, and that has caused such a firestorm of controversy in that Archdiocese.
But I guess the Archbishop needs a hot tub to minister to his flock.
What makes you think that priests are spending their time other than ministering to their flocks?And speaking of the need to “minister to the flock”…what makes people think priests are now “ministering to their flock” and nothing else?
Non sequitur. People are people, and are prone to individual imperfections; true enough. What is it about married priests that resolves this? Nothing. So… it’s irrelevant.People seem to view priests as such paragons of perfection. Many are just as political, just as ambitious, and just as prone to petty jealousies as are their secular brethren.
Nice… but unsubstantiated. Aside from your personal opinion… do you have anything to back up this assertion?I can think of one problem that would be solved by married priests: The priest shortage.
400 priests in Portugal are looking for a silver bullet For them marriage is the silver bullet.If we’re looking for silver bullets, a married clergy isn’t it. Unless, of course, there are other arguments that transcend ‘conventional wisdom’. Got any?![]()
And then you’ve got those billions of dollars paid out by American dioceses for child abuse.As to the concept that Catholics won’t want to pay for braces for the priests’ kids…Protestant congregations do.
No money for kids’ braces? Perhaps, for example, dioceses should sell their often luxurious real estate used by bishops. Start with the 5000+ square foot mansion getting a 3000 square foot addition, including hot tub, to be used by the Archbishop of Newark, NJ, and that has caused such a firestorm of controversy in that Archdiocese.
But I guess the Archbishop needs a hot tub to minister to his flock.