That being said, there is immense value to mandated priestly celibacy and, in my opinion, it would not be a good idea to get rid of it. In a certain sense , the celibate priest is more Christlike than a married priest (again, see Sacerdotalis Caelibatus for an explanation of this).
My thoughts exactly. Celibacy, while not absolutely essential to the priesthood (many uninformed Catholics would be stunned to hear this, I managed to scandalize a supposedly Catholic-educated young woman about this once), is a rich, valuable gift, enables a man to serve God and His people with an undivided heart ad mind, and ensures that the potential priest “have skin in the game” and “put his money where his mouth is”. In short, it’s an indication of sincerity like none other. (And please don’t anyone say that I suggested married clergymen are insincere, because I suggested no such thing.)
NO. Once a man is ordained celibate, he cannot marry. This is the constant Tradition of both East and West. What the Eastern Catholic Churches allow is for a man who is already married to become a priest . If a man is ordained celibate, he must remain celibate.
Just out of curiosity, is this doctrine, or just the perennial practice of the Church?
I knew of one case where a priest left the Byzantine Rite for Orthodoxy, and was allowed to marry. Just guessing, I would assume that in the eyes of the Orthodox, he had been unjustly forced to remain celibate by the RCC, and that allowing him to marry was an act of
economia. Any Eastern Church experts here, is that a fair bet?
This priest said otherwise:
Public Lecture by Fr. Hans Zollner, SJ – Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia
The video of the lecture isn’t up yet but he said that there were
less abusers in celibate priests. However, as the deacon from the USCCB said, even
one case of abuse is one too many.
I just wanted to comment on that. My experience in Reformed church circles, unfortunately, is that neither married men on the clergy, neither (since Reformed churches allow it) married women on the clergy are a protection against abuse. I can even think of cases where it had exactly the opposite effect, because people wanted to protect the innocent family of the guilty minister. And then you have the just as complex situations where abuse is committed by the close family member of a minister (son, wife…).
I am very interested to know this, and I think comments and anecdotal evidence, such as are offered here, are very helpful in understanding the abuse crisis, and to what extent celibacy does — or does not — contribute to it. Clearly secretive environments, and a culture that “covers up”, can exist even where people are married.