For some reason reporters like to
ask married Catholic priests whether the Catholic Church should change the
rules and to allow the ordination of more married Catholic men. When I ask reporters why they don’t ask celibate
Catholic priests what they think about it, they look at me funny, like it never
occurred to them.
Maria Antonia asked me what I think
about opening the Catholic priesthood to married men several different ways in
an interview for Channel 9 News November 27.
She is a very good news reporter and interviewer, and I think she really
wanted to know. She asked the question a
number of different ways, and I answered it a number of different ways. The snippet that was chosen for broadcast is
something I really said and really believe.
I do believe that the idea opening the priesthood to married men
deserves deep thought. But they didn’t
broadcast my answer to the next question: If I could make the decision for the
Catholic Church today, would I open the priesthood to married men? No.
As a married Catholic man I am very
grateful that the Catholic Church deemed that it was appropriate to ordain me
as a Catholic priest, but I would still be Catholic even if I were not ordained. There are about a hundred or more former
Episcopal priests as well as former Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian and other
protestant ministers who have been ordained as Catholic priests and many of
them are married. In addition we have some
Catholic priests who are widowers and have children and grandchildren; we have
many Eastern Rite Catholic priests with wives and children, and we have many,
many ordained deacons with wives and children.
So we are getting a lot of experience with married Catholic clergy. We have gifts to offer, and limitations,
too.
When married and celibate priests
gather, the question of changing the rules of celibacy hardly ever comes up. A celibate priesthood has been a great gift
to the church for 1500 years, and every time the church has gone through a
period of spiritual renewal, the gift of celibacy has been renewed and the
church has been reinvigorated. We
certainly do not want to introduce a change to this great gift, which the pope,
most bishops and most current priests support and find life giving, unless we
have done some deep conversation, study and prayer.
Does being married and having
children make me a better priest? I
don’t know how to measure that. It makes
me different, but I cannot say that it makes me better. I have never been a priest without being
married and having children. It is part
of who I am, and I have no way of telling how I would be different if I were
celibate. There are many times when
coming home to Valerie and the kids gives me a sense of balance in my life,
especially when going through difficult times at church. But it also works the other way. I am sure there are times when I was not as
available to Valerie and the kids as I could have been if I church needs and
pressures had not intruded. I find that
if I have more than two or three evening meetings a week, family life really
suffers. Fr. Steve Cook, Pastor at St. Peter’s, told me that he spends six or seven nights a
week with parishioners in their homes or at meetings at church. There is simply no way I could match
that. His parish is blessed to have a
celibate priest. Does that mean that my
parish suffers because St. Therese has a married one? I don’t know.
It is possible. Right now I’m the
only priest they’ve got, and there’s no way to test whether I would be a better
pastor for them if I were celibate.
Episcopalian Bishop Robert Folwell
gave me some advice that I have tried to live by, even as a Catholic
priest. He said, “Put God first, your
wife second, your children third, and the church after that.” What would it mean if most Catholic priests
were unavailable to their flocks because they need to have family time? Catholic priests are “married” to the church
in a way. Some Catholic priests call
their breviary their “wife.” Their lives
are very different from the one I have lived. It may be essential that Catholic
priests be able to put the needs of his flock next after God. It deserves much thought.
Would married Catholics find it
easier to relate to a married priest when discussing their own family
issues? People have occasionally told me
that. But no priest, single or married,
can ever say, “I know how you feel” or “I know what you are going through” even
if we have experienced something similar. None of us knows what it is like for
the other person until they tell us. We
do our best to meet people in their need and to be as helpful as we can,
perhaps a little from our own family experience, but mostly from what we learn
from the person herself or himself and from what we have learned from helping
others, always dependent upon God’s help.
It is easy to forget that all priests have families: parents and
siblings, cousins, nieces and nephews.
We are probably just as likely to have experience with divorce, to have
relatives who are single and married, straight and gay. Whatever our family status we try to assist
the person in the way that is appropriate for them.
Would having more married priests
help the Catholic Church, especially through the troubles the church is facing
now? No.
There is no evidence that a person’s marital status makes a person more
or less likely to abuse a child. The
Catholic Church is one of the safest places a child can be, and even safer with
the new safeguards instituted by Bishop Finn recently. All priests, employees and volunteers that
work with children are background checked, trained and re-trained. The safety of children is of first
importance. If child abuse is suspected,
we call the police first and then our ombudsman will investigate. Other institutions – public schools, sports
leagues, scouts – all have problems and work hard to be safer. But the Catholic Church is held to a higher
standard because we hold ourselves and call others to a higher standard. When we fail or appear to fail it is doubly
troubling and very public.
People who say we should have more
married priests are trying to be helpful.
When there is a tragedy, people often say things with the best of
intentions. Perhaps they say things they
have heard other people say, without really thinking deeply about it. Those who have experienced a tragic loss can
easily remember the things that were said by people who were trying to be
kind. Saying that God doesn’t give us
more than we can bear or that God needed another angel may contain some truth,
but it is not helpful to the person experiencing the tragedy. Saying that married priests would help the
Catholic Church is similar. It is meant
to be helpful. There may be some truth
in it. But it is unrelated to the
current circumstances.
Should the Roman Catholic Church
start ordaining more married men? I
think we should ask our celibate priests what they think about it. How does this gift of celibacy make them
better priests? We should also ask the
Catholic faithful if they have to share a priest with his wife and children,
and that their priest is no longer “married” to his flock. It is an idea that deserves much study and
deep thought. The Catholic Church does
not make decisions like this quickly, without deep thought, study and
conversation. Perhaps the best we can
say is that our current married Catholic clergy who are deacons, former
Episcopalian and protestant clergy, and Eastern Rite priests could help with
that study, deep thought and conversation.
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