Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Catholic Priests and Marriage -- Why Christian Celibacy?



In October last year, a synod of 184 bishops met at the Vatican to discuss the future of the Church in the Amazon. It was argued that older, married men should be allowed to become priests. Estimates show that at least 85% of villages in the Amazon are unable to celebrate mass every week as a result of a shortage of priests. Some are said to only see a priest once a year.

However, the married men would need to be men who are particularly well-respected and would preferably come from the indigenous communities where they intend to work.

The decision needed the Pope's approval to be implemented. Catholic priests are required to abide by the rule of celibacy upon ordination except in cases where married Anglican ministers have converted.

But the conservative wing of the Catholic Church – particularly in Europe and North America – spoke out against the idea, arguing that this could lead to the global abolition of celibacy.

In response, Pope Francis has just ruled against ordaining married men in the Amazon region as a means of addressing the shortage of Catholic priests. Also, the Pope announced he had decided not to allow women to serve as deacons, a lower rank than priest – but that is a topic for a different blog entry.

The obvious need of the faithful has been short circuited by this papal decision. Is this denial a positive affirmation of the faith or is it another denial of needed change? I wonder.

First of all, I must establish I am not a Catholic, and any views I express here are those perspectives of an outsider looking in. I am not trying to influence Catholic beliefs or push for any change. I approach this subject as something I have always questioned – no more and no less.

Saying that, I have always wondered why priestly celibacy, rooted in tradition and canon law, not in Catholic dogma, is still a part of the Pope's requirements for priesthood. I understand the general religious theory that celibacy allows priests time and energy to focus completely on their flock and to emulate Jesus more faithfully. However, where did that idea originate and how much of the tradition is rooted in dated and archaic understandings?


Christian Celibacy

As expected, I found the roots of celibacy requirements in Jesus Christ: According to the Bible, Jesus was an unmarried virgin. In the Bible, Jesus is often likened to a bridegroom whose bride is the Church. From a spiritual perspective, priests are called to act as another Christ, which includes his celibate lifestyle. Many of the early martyrs and church fathers emulated his life of chastity.

One such passage from the Bible (of which there are many) shows support for celibacy … and also for marriage:

1 Corinthians 7:32-40 ESV

I want you to be free from anxieties. The unmarried man is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord. But the married man is anxious about worldly things, how to please his wife, and his interests are divided. And the unmarried or betrothed woman is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit. But the married woman is anxious about worldly things, how to please her husband. I say this for your own benefit, not to lay any restraint upon you, but to promote good order and to secure your undivided devotion to the Lord. If anyone thinks that he is not behaving properly toward his betrothed, if his passions are strong, and it has to be, let him do as he wishes: let them marry—it is no sin. ...”

St. Paul Center for Catholic scripture study also reveals “the Catholic priest is celibate in order to be freed for fatherhood.” Priests renounce natural fatherhood in order to more perfectly image the supernatural fatherhood of God. Fr. Carter Griffin, rector of Saint John Paul II Seminary in Washington, DC. and author of Why Celibacy?: Reclaiming the Fatherhood of the Priest says …

While God’s fatherhood looks different than the natural fatherhood we’re familiar with, his role as Father is mysteriously more true and complete than fathers who generate natural life. Every other image of fatherhood is a faint echo of the supernatural fatherhood of God.”

This belief admits priests still fall short of God's example, but it supports celibate priests who more closely mirror this complete role of “father.” Like God the Father, they give of themselves entirely for the sake of a supernatural fatherhood.

Celibacy, lived well, can offer a great deal of support to a priest who wishes to exercise generous, self-giving love. A celibate heart is open to all, without preference.

-- Fr. Carter Griffin, Why Celibacy?

Yet, Judaism has always valued family life, and many ritual observances were centered on the family. Also, the first head of the Catholic Church (effectively the first pope), Peter, was married, as were many of the other apostles during Jesus' time. But in the New Testament, marriage was seen as a holy option for those who would otherwise have trouble controlling their sexual urges.

Kim Haines-Eitzen, professor of Early Christianity at Cornell University, explains Greco-Roman origins of Christianity …

From Greco-Roman philosophies, Christian writers adopted ideals of self-control (“enkrateia” in Greek) and withdrawal (“anachoresis” a term that came to be applied to Christian hermits). Discipline and self-control meant control over one’s emotions, thoughts and behaviors as well as, in some cases, careful attention to what one ate and drank, how attached one was to possessions and the control of one’s sexual desire.”

(Kim Haines-Eitzen. “How did celibacy become mandatory for priests?” The Conversation. March 26, 2017.)

Mark Shea, the author of Making Senses Out of Scripture: Reading the Bible as the First Christians Did, explains …

"What you find right at the beginning of the church is that, on the one hand, marriage is seen as a good and virginity is seen as a higher good. But by the Middle Ages, many priests treated their calling as a 'family business,' giving preference to their sons for plum positions and trying to edge out the competition to protect their legacy. Because of this practice, the Church formally banned the practice of priests marrying about 1,000 years ago.”

Although Christian “clergy,” such as bishops and deacons, begin to appear around the year A.D. 100 in early Christian communities, priests emerge as Christian leaders only much later. Priests came to be the ordained clergy tasked with officiating rituals like the Eucharist or Lord’s Supper, also known as Communion.

Haines-Eitzen further explains the priestly development …

Over time, priestly celibacy became a serious point of disagreement between the Eastern Orthodox and the Western Roman Catholic churches and contributed to the Great Schism between the two in A.D. 1054. Pope Gregory VII attempted to mandate priestly celibacy, but the practice was contested widely by Christians in the Orthodox Eastern Mediterranean world.

Five centuries later, the issue was once again at the forefront of debate when it became a significant factor in the Protestant split from Catholicism during the Reformation.”

(Kim Haines-Eitzen. “How did celibacy become mandatory for priests?” The Conversation. March 26, 2017.)

There have always been exceptions to the celibate rule within Roman Catholicism as, for example, among married priests from other denominations of Christianity who convert to Catholicism. There are still a few married Catholic priests: Episcopal and Lutheran priests who were married and then converted to Roman Catholicism can be ordained, and men in the Eastern Rites, such as the Ukrainian Church, can marry before becoming ordained.

Reasons For Change

With a shortage of priests looming, many favor eliminating the celibacy requirement as a possible solution. Statistics from the Washington, DC: Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate report from1980 to 2012, the ratio of Catholics per priest increased globally, with the number of Catholics per priest going from 1,895 to 3,126." In 2014, 49,153 parishes in the world had no resident priest pastor. And, between 1970 and 2017, the number of priests declined from 419,728 to 414,582.

Other reasons for eliminating the rule exist. For example, in a 2012 study in the Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community, researchers found that a sizeable minority of priests had sexual relationships, some with men and some with women, during their tenure, and 30 percent admitted to masturbation. Why tolerate or simply ignore the obvious conflicts at hand? Some favor legitimacy over indifference.

Others feel it is difficult for celibate priests to offer wise and mature counsel on issues of sexual relationships to their parishioners. In other words, celibate priests can be sexually immature. A.W. Richard Sipe, a sociologist and former Benedictine monk who has been married for 43 years, says …

"The Catholic priesthood, in a sense, fosters a psychosexual immaturity by imposing celibacy.”

Other research has suggested that more men would be interested in priesthood if celibacy became optional. They argue celibacy is so difficult for many men that it dissuades people from the priesthood.

Conclusions?

I will give only Pope Francis's views on his recent decision. The reader can draw his or her own conclusions. The Pope stopped short of allowing the ordination of married men as priests in the Amazon, where there are severe shortages of clergy, calling instead for ordained ministers to come to the region and work alongside lay preachers.

Francis announced the decision in a lengthy document, titled "Beloved Amazon," You can read it in its entirety by clicking here: https://zenit.org/articles/full-text-of-querida-amazonia-dear-amazon-pope-francis-post-synodal-exhortation-on-the-amazon-2/

Francis has long said he appreciates the discipline and the gift of celibacy, and he didn't feel he could make such a sweeping change. However, he has also expressed sympathy for the plight of the Amazonian faithful, and said theologians had debated pastoral reasons to consider an exception, which is possible given that the celibate priesthood is a tradition of the Roman Catholic Church rather than a matter of doctrine.



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