Monday, April 27, 2009

Married Priests in the Latin Rite?


From America magazine...

Silence and fervent prayer for vocations are no longer adequate responses to the priest shortage in the United States. As the church prepares to observe the Year of the Priest, which begins on June 19, open discussion about how to sustain the church as a eucharistic community of faith and fortify the pastoral life of Catholic congregations has become imperative. For making do within the limits set by present demographic trends presents a double threat to Catholic life: Catholic communities will become only infrequent eucharistic communities, or eucharistic communities will be severed from the pastoral care and public witness of priests.

In 2008 the sociologist Dean Hoge said: “We need at least a doubling of ordinations to maintain the American priesthood as we know it now. But this is impossible.” Of current diocesan priests, only 70 percent are available for parish ministry, with the rest sick, retired or absent for a variety of reasons, according to Mary Gautier of the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate. An increasing number of Catholics are unable to participate in a Sunday or weekday Mass. All this prompts the question, Will the priest shortage impose a eucharistic famine on the Catholic people?

The de facto remedy already applied in many places— making the priest a circuit rider moving from parish to parish to dispense the sacraments—risks narrowing the ministry of the priest and impoverishing the Christian life of the communities he serves. A narrowly sacramental definition of priesthood satisfies the requirements of only one of the three canons that define the pastoral responsibilities of the priest, Canon 530. As a consequence the sacramental office is as a practical matter severed from its integral connection with comprehensive pastoral care. Canons 528 and 529 provide a broader understanding of the priestly ministry. The first sees the priest as one who instructs, catechizes, fosters works of justice, shows special care for the education of children and brings the Gospel to those who have ceased to practice the faith. The second requires that he should come to know the faithful entrusted to his care, visit families, share their concerns, worries and griefs, help the sick and seek out the poor, the afflicted and the lonely. Diminishing numbers make it difficult to carry out this holistic vision of the priest’s pastoral ministry.

We hope that the upcoming Year of the Priest will lead to a broader discussion of the priesthood in the contemporary world and, in particular, will open examination of the various ways the shortage of priests can be addressed honestly and with imagination. New vocations can be promoted through youth rallies, the Internet and, as always, with prayer. In addition, the pastoral needs of parishes may also be met in part by more effective pastoral assignment of permanent deacons and by increased leadership by lay men and women.

What about the recruitment and training of married men as priests? Married priests already minister in the Catholic Church, both East and West. Addressing the married clergy of the Eastern Catholic churches, the Second Vatican Council exhorted “all those who have received the priesthood in the married state to persevere in their holy vocation and continue to devote their lives fully and generously to the flock entrusted to their care” (Decree on the Ministry and Life of Priests,” No. 16). That exhortation now applies to the more than 100 former Anglican priests and Lutheran ministers who have entered the Catholic Church, been ordained and now serve in the Latin rite. As we face the challenges of the priest shortage, some of the more than 16,000 permanent deacons in the United States, many of them married, who experience a call to priestly ministry might be called to ordination with a similarly adapted discipline. In addition, the views and desires of some of the more than 25,000 priests who have been laicized (and are now either single or married) should also be heard.

Our plea is modest. The bishops of the United States should take greater leadership in openly discussing the priest shortage and its possible remedies. These should not be conversations in which we face a problem only to find every new avenue of solution closed. Rather, they should be exchanges fully open to the possibilities offered by the Spirit.

In March, Cardinal Edward Egan, the newly retired archbishop of New York, said in a candid moment that the topic of married priests “is a perfectly legitimate discussion.” He added, “I think it should be looked at.” The cardinal later nuanced his statement, but the need for a creative re-visioning of priestly life to sustain the eucharistic life of the church in its fullest sense can no longer be delayed.

5 comments:

Ecgbert said...

Of course it's a perfectly legitimate discussion, nothing to do with doctrine.

It can be done but I don't think it would stop the decline including that of vocations.

How about more laity praying the office?

John Edwards said...

Father,

One wishes one could eagerly embrace this kind of thing. The opening of the priesthood to married men would not only return to the Roman Catholic Church to the apostolic tradition, but also (I speak as an outsider, so I'm guessing) assist that Church with some of the difficulties it has lately faced in terms of its ordained ministry.

Unfortunately, the movement within the Roman Church for the ordination of the married is usually carried out by those who also agitate for "progressive reform" of the Church on all manner of other issues (especially sexuality). America is, of course, a publication that caters to just such an audience.

Ken said...

I think the number of only 16,000 permanent deacons points away from the idea that the celibacy requirement is the problem for lack of vocations to the priesthood. I mean that 16,000 out of a population of over 25,000,000 active R.C.s isn't much.

Say the requirement is lifted, and a middle-aged married man "feels the call". Who will pay for his education? Who will pay for the support of his family during seminary? Will he spend 70 to 80 hours a week on church matters as many priests currently do?

Ken

Anonymous said...

I would think that comparing the record of married priests in the Eastern Rites and among the Trad Anglicans to that of the First-World Roman/Latin Rite would make the case itself.

Of course, as in the East and in Anglicanism, the celibate route should remain an honored option -- and Bishops should probably be limited to celibates, at least for a the first few hundred years.

J. Gordon Anderson said...

I was in the Roman communion for two years or so, and in all that time no one ever asked me if I thought of becoming a priest. No priest ever took the time to talk to me after mass or show any interest in me or human friendliness at all. At the Roman seminary I attended, when professors and classmates knew I was going to enter the Roman Church maybe one person asked if I thought of continuing my studies as a candidate for the Roman priesthood. The vocations director in the archdiocese met with me once, and we had a good meeting, but then he never mailed me any literature that he promised to, or let me know about the upcoming meetings of aspirants. My conclusion? If the Roman Church doesn't have enough priests its their own damn fault. They need to ask more men. To get people to consider DOING something, you have to engage them on a personal level, and ASK them. What the leaders of that Church need to do is instruct their clergy to be "salesmen" for the priesthood, and to ask every Catholic man who is even a little devout if he has ever considered becoming a priest.