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Silly Celibacy

Posted By Rob Krause On 5th June 2006 @ 09:00 In Priesthood (Sacerdotalism) | 1 Comment

Last night, I was watching a local program from our provincial capital of Pordenone. The special was The Da Vinci Code & the Catholic Church. There were many interesting points that the monsignor attacked and defended. But here is something I noticed again and again: The monsignor representing the Roman Empire never quoted from the Scriptures during the hour I listened to the program.

Of particular interest was the subject of celibacy and priests being allowed to marry. The DVC obviously brings some negative publicity to this unscriptural practice. So, the monsignore was asked to defend Rome’s position on the subject. The host of the program started the question like this, “You are a great theologian, so let me ask you, there are Protestant pastors in our area who have their churches and are married and have families…” I laughed because there’s about 10-15 of us that would be classified as that. I made it on TV.

The monsignore started on the point that many “around” the empire were allowed to marry; just not the priests. Finally, he arrived at the priests. Here are the three points that he made for enforcing a man-made tradition that disobeys the law and order of God:

1. “Celibacy is not a divine pronouncement; it is an ecclesiological one.”

  • Ok, I’d like to ask, “To the Romanists — what’s the difference? You’ve set the empire up to be the voice and oracle of God — so why do you stress that there is a difference as if the priests have a choice to follow the Catholic pronouncement or the Divine pronouncement if there’s one handy?” Do the priests really have a choice to follow not follow Rome’s pronouncement on the basis that it’s not divine?
  • Also, are you unwittingly admitting that the ecclesiological pronouncement isn’t really in accord with the Scriptures?
  • And then, if it’s not in accord with the Scriptures — aren’t you really saying that Rome is above the authority of the Word of God? — eeeeeh, just wondering.
  • 2. “A priest can’t be devoted to the flock if he has a wife.”

  • This is very common to hear among Italian priests. Let’s interpret this phrase: A wife & kids are a big distraction; a detriment to a minister and the calling. They are definitely not a help.
  • Obviously, I don’t expect him to understand this in any way, but a wife who is committed to the Bible and the Bride is a synergy and joy and not a detriment to the minister. AND, it’s Biblical — no, really, it is. [1] 1 Timothy 3:2-5
  • How can a man (a priest in this case) be devoted to the Truth and the flock while at the same time denying God’s natural law & order? To love God is to love His ways.
  • They call themselves “priests”. Ok, even the Old Testament priests were encouraged by God to marry and to multiply. God saw this as honoring to Him. He originally designed it that way.
  • 3. “A family is an expensive thing to have. It costs a lot to take care of children and a home.”

  • Spoken like a real Italian. A family is a bottom-line issue; not a creation mandate. In Italy, the people marry and have kids based more on their financial schedule and outlook than any moral or Scriptural guideline.
  • “We (the empire) own these guys. We don’t want that money going to some distracting, costly family. How would we get privately rich that way?”
  • I know the arguments of the monsignore are both outdated & debunked, but they keep on using them — because if one of these “dogmas” falls, the rest of the fortress falls too — and Rome would lose control.

    Here, I’ll let the former pontiff speak for himself[2] 1

    He will support and encourage priests, who, called by God’s grace, have freely assumed the commitment of celibacy for the Kingdom of Heaven, and remind himself and them of the evangelical and spiritual grounds of this choice, so important for the service of the People of God. In the reality of the Church and the world today, the witness of chaste love is, on the one hand, a form of spiritual therapy for humanity and, on the other, a form of protest against the idolatry of instinct.

    I don’t think my wife would appreciate our marriage being termed as idolatrous instinct. She’s not around to “fulfill the animal in me.” Marriage is a beautiful thing… forced celibacy is silly.

    [3] celibacy [4] Krause [5] marriage [6] Priesthood (Sacerdotalism)
    1. JP2 in a 2003 encyclical “Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores”, point 21 [[7] back]

    1 Comment To "Silly Celibacy"

    #1 Comment By Carlos On 14th June 2006 @ 12:35

    So many of these false doctrines would be exposed if Christians would become familiar with their Bible. How many Christians are out there who can spout off indiviudal superbowl statistics for the past 30+ years, but can only name the four Gospels? And even then, they aren’t familiar with the contents of the Gospel. The truth comes out when we read the Word of God and light is shed on man’s darkness. So many Western Christians have a Bible in their home, but it has become a rusted sword. “I didn’t know” will not suffice on the Day of Judgement.


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    URL to article: http://i2i.smgroup.info/2006/silly-celibacy/

    URLs in this post:
    [1] 1 Timothy 3:2-5: http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=1+Timothy+3%3A2-5
    [2] 1: http://i2i.smgroup.info#footnote-1-19
    [3] celibacy: http://i2i.smgroup.info/tag/celibacy
    [4] Krause: http://i2i.smgroup.info/tag/krause
    [5] marriage: http://i2i.smgroup.info/tag/marriage
    [6] Priesthood (Sacerdotalism): http://i2i.smgroup.info/tag/priesthood-%28sacerdotalism%29
    [7] back: http://i2i.smgroup.info#footnote-link-1-19

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