G
Gorgias
Guest
LOL⦠the way the insults were flying around here, it sounded like an accusationā¦A question is not an accusation. Relax, old man.![]()
The ā400ā broke their promises. Itās difficult to see how thatās a āchallengeā to āre-thinkā. Rather, itās a breach of oneās personal honor. Telling an institution, āchange your rules (which I agreed to) or else Iāll pick up my toys and go homeā isnāt āchallengingā, itās āpoutingā.The 400 priests in Portugal were throwing down the glove, challenging the Roman hierarchy to rethink celibacy.
I think celibacy is irrelevant to it.And you think celibacy is going to save it?
Priestly celibacy didnāt cause the ādecline in the Church in Americaā, and it didnāt cause the decline in the number of ordinations. Rather, it seems, the decline comes from poor catechesis of our youth, coupled with a societal trend away from making life-long commitments, and topped with an unwillingness to eschew what the world offers for the sake of Christ. Your ā400ā in Portugal are an example of why we have problems in the first place: people want religion on their own terms, not on Christās or the Churchās. In the final analysis, letting married men become priests wonāt fix these issues.
At best, weāll get men who didnāt say āyesā to a vocation in their youth and married instead, or those who, later in life, decide they can āretireā into the priesthood. While each of these would be helpful, neither will stem the tide.