D
DavidGonzalez
Guest
The Catechism teaches that celibacy is a sign that priests [and religious] have consecrated themselves with undivided hearts to the Lord and to the affairs of the Lord (1579).
The part about the affairs of the Lord might make sense: A married person has to invest so much time and energy into his family that he cannot afford to give undivided attention to the work of the Church. A celibate person can.
But what about this idea of loving God with an undivided heart?
Here’s the problem: When Catholics talk about undivided hearts to justify celibacy, it sounds like we’re saying that the more you’d love your spouse, the less you’d love God.
Clearly, that’s wrong. It’s worse than wrong.
First of all, the love you have for God is not in competition with the love you have for your spouse. You might think that loving your spouse somehow takes away from the attention to pay to God. But the best way to love God is to love the people around you. Therefore, the more you love your spouse, the more you love God. And the more you love God, the more you love your spouse.
People who are thinking about taking vows of celibacy sometimes say, “I’m doing this because I want to love God more than anything else.” Allow me to point out that this is nonsense. They could get married and love God more than anything else all the same.
What they should say is, “I’m doing this because I want to love the work of the Church more than anything else.”
Now maybe you see where this is going. But I don’t want this thread to turn into a long discussion about whether priestly celibacy should be mandatory. Let’s just stick to the mini-topic at hand:
You don’t need to be celibate to love God with an undivided heart despite what the Catechism implies.
The part about the affairs of the Lord might make sense: A married person has to invest so much time and energy into his family that he cannot afford to give undivided attention to the work of the Church. A celibate person can.
But what about this idea of loving God with an undivided heart?
Here’s the problem: When Catholics talk about undivided hearts to justify celibacy, it sounds like we’re saying that the more you’d love your spouse, the less you’d love God.
Clearly, that’s wrong. It’s worse than wrong.
First of all, the love you have for God is not in competition with the love you have for your spouse. You might think that loving your spouse somehow takes away from the attention to pay to God. But the best way to love God is to love the people around you. Therefore, the more you love your spouse, the more you love God. And the more you love God, the more you love your spouse.
People who are thinking about taking vows of celibacy sometimes say, “I’m doing this because I want to love God more than anything else.” Allow me to point out that this is nonsense. They could get married and love God more than anything else all the same.
What they should say is, “I’m doing this because I want to love the work of the Church more than anything else.”
Now maybe you see where this is going. But I don’t want this thread to turn into a long discussion about whether priestly celibacy should be mandatory. Let’s just stick to the mini-topic at hand:
You don’t need to be celibate to love God with an undivided heart despite what the Catechism implies.