Editorial
Note:
this
question is Part 2... Part 1 is here:
Why must Catholic
priests be celibate??
published
on November 29, 2009
(Part 2 of response to Mr. E. Z Wayout
questioning the practice of priestly celibacy in the Roman Rite of the
Catholic Church)
Continued from last
week……..

Let’s look at the Bible. Yes, we Catholics
read the Bible. We’re the ones who first wrote, edited and published
it. I wonder what your wife does with such passages as Matthew 19:12 “For
there are some eunuchs, which were so born from their mother's womb: and
there are some eunuchs, which were made eunuchs by men: and there are eunuchs,
which have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake. He
that is able to receive it, let him receive it.” This certainly
seems to indicate that Jesus saw some role for celibacy.
Then there is St. Paul, who seems to be
boasting about his celibacy in this next passage (1 Corinthians 9:5) “Have
we not power to travel about with a sister, a wife, as well as other apostles,
and as the brethren of the Lord, and Cephas?” Perhaps your
wife would say “See, this proves that the early Church didn’t practice
celibacy. After all, no one required it of
St. Paul ”Oh, yes someone did. Jesus
required it of St. Paul: (1Cor, 7: 7, 8 ) “For
I would that all men were even as I myself. But every man has his proper
gift of God, one after this manner, and another after that. Therefore to
the unmarried and widows, it is good for them if they remain even as I
(unmarried). ......v.28... Nevertheless, such (those who are married) shall
have trouble in the flesh: but I (want to) spare you (trouble).”
The introduction of celibacy to the life
of ministry was not a late thing, it happened right at the beginning. We
see it in the life of St. Paul and even in the life of our Lord Jesus.
(I don’t believe those loons who think Jesus and Mary Magdalene were
a number.)
The following passages are even more helpful
in understanding the development of priestly celibacy: (1 Timothy 3:12)
“Let the deacons be the husbands of one wife,
ruling their children and their own houses well.” And
(1 Timothy 3:2) “A bishop then must be blameless,
the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good behavior, given to hospitality,
able to teach.” We know from the continuous history and teaching
of the Church, that in the earliest days of the Church, married men might
be chosen as clergy. They could be already married but married only once.
That means if the wife of an ordained man died, he could not marry again.
In fact, in most places all those who were widowed were required to remain
unmarried. Any second marriage, was considered adultery. The Church
wisely took the lenient view that St. Paul took, that, though celibacy
for widows and widowers is better, it is still “better to marry than
to burn.” (1Cor.7:9) St. Paul clearly believes that celibacy allows a
person to be single minded for the service of the Lord. (1 Corinthians
7:33) “But he that is married cares for the
things that are of the world, that he may please his wife.”
The Church still follows this general rule;
married men may be ordained, but ordained men may not be married. Huh?
Simple. If a man comes to the sacrament with a spouse, he remains married.
That is more common now with certain men who are ordained and is the general
custom for permanent deacons.
I think that your wife gives herself away
when she says that because deacons can do just about everything priests
can do, except for the 5 sacraments (Eucharist, Reconciliation, Confirmation,
Holy Orders, Anointing). Buried in her comment is the reason for
the development of celibacy in the Western Church. The Eucharist!
Remember a long way back I said that Eastern Rite parish priests are generally
married? This is not true of Eastern Rite monastic priests. They
are celibate as a form of self denial. It is very interesting to note that
the Eucharist is not celebrated daily in most Eastern parishes. If you
want a daily Mass in much of the Eastern Christian world, you have to go
to a monastery, where men are celibate. Why? Because it is customary in
the Eastern Churches for even married clergy to refrain from “intimate
relations” (remembering this is a family column) as a kind of fasting
and preparation for the SACRIFICE of the Mass. I don’t know if this is
still common, but it certainly was.
We in the west are almost all monastic
priests in that sense. We, like St. Paul, make a sacrifice, a kind of fasting
for the advancement of the kingdom and the salvation of the world. It is
a sacrifice worth making, but a sacrifice nonetheless. Your wife
however, has given up on sacrifice by leaving the Church. She says as much
when she asks, “What can a priest do that a deacon can’t?” A priest
only says Mass and hears confessions and anoints. Nothing that important,
he just brings Christ physically into the world and announces His healing
and forgiveness. That’s all.
Luther and his followers did not believe
that Mass is a sacrifice. They misinterpret the verse from Hebrews
9:28, “...so Christ was sacrificed once to take
away the sins of many people.” So many forsake the Christian
religion for the American religion in which God does nice things for me
and never tells me things I don’t want to hear. The Scriptures are clear.
God wants to make us like Himself and if He is the sacrifice offered for
the world, we become part of His sacrifice. In the Sacrifice of the Mass
we unite ourselves to His sacrifice. (Col 1:24) “In
my own flesh I make up what is lacking in the sufferings of Christ.”
In the sacrifice of the Mass I, unite my small sacrifices and self denials
to His perfect sacrifice. That is the Eucharistic heart of the Catholic
Faith which we is so inconvenient, that with ears itching we “find
teachers to suit our own fancy.” (2Tim 4:3)
I wish your lovely wife, Anny Wayout, much
luck in her search for a Church that agrees with her. I always worry that
if I ever found the perfect local church, it would stop being perfect the
minute I joined it. Just tell her that she is free to worship God in her
way and you will worship Him in His. Happy year of the priest.
Your friend as ever,
Rev.
Know-It-All

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