Then Peter said: Behold, we have left all things, and have followed thee. Who said to them: Amen, I say to you, there is no man that hath left house, or parents, or brethren, or wife, or children, for the kingdom of God's sake, who shall not receive much more in this present time, and in the world to come life everlasting. (Lk 18.28-30)This suggests the possibility that St Peter had in fact left his family to follow the Lord. Such a course of action would be unacceptable in our time, but in the culture of Palestine in the time of Our Lord, the extended family would mean that it was possible.
Then we come to St Paul's injunction in 1 Timothy 3.2 that the Bishop should be the husband of only one wife. It would be improbable to suggest that St Paul was dealing with a problem of polygamy. Much more likely he was saying that the Bishop should not be someone who had married a second wife after his first wife had died.
These indications from scripture are tantalising but need further illumination. Fortunately, there have been a number of studies that have cast light on the historical practice of the Church, arguing that the discipline of clerical celibacy is of apostolic origin.
Christian Cochini presented the historic debate between Bickell and Funk over certain key texts from the Council of Nicea, the Council of Elvira and others. He also exhaustively examined all of the cases from the first seven centuries of the Church’s history which were relevant to the issue of clerical marriage. His work supported the thesis that there was an apostolic rule of continence for those clerics who were married and that the legislation of the Church against the clerical use of marriage is witness to this ancient tradition.
Roman Cholij examined in particular the Council in Trullo of 691, concluding that the Council’s permission for the clerical use of marriage was an innovation, giving rise to the legislative anomaly in the East (and occasionally in the West) whereby married men may be ordained but ordained men may not marry. This law, which is still a part of modern codes of canon law, makes little sense apart from the historic rule of continence.
Stefan Heid’s work continues this school of thought, adding further research on the legend of Paphnutius which had long been used to justify the conclusion that clerical continence was not of apostolic origin. He shows that the likely origin of the legend was to further the interest of the Novatians who had not practised continence. He also adds further material on the injunction of Paul in 1 Timothy that the bishop must be the husband of only one wife.
Cardinal Stickler’s brief account is a most useful summary of the case for clerical celibacy. He notes that there have been a number of important recent studies devoted to the history of celibacy in both the East and the West, and that,
These studies have either not yet penetrated the general consciousness or they have been hushed up if they were capable of influencing that consciousness in undesirable ways.This unfortunately remains the case as articles continue to appear without finding it necessary even to address the research of these scholars.
The later imposition of a rule that clerics should be unmarried was a recognition of the growing impracticality, with the development of marriage, and the problems of inheritance, of ordaining men who had been previously married, even if there were a rule of continence. It obviously makes sense today when people would find it hard to understand a system in which men who are married would be expected to change and live a life of continence.
We should also remember in any discussion of clerical celibacy, that the Council of Trent, in its 24th session in 1563, duly defined in the canons on the sacrament of matrimony (canon 10) that
If any one says, that the marriage state is to be placed above the state of virginity, or of celibacy, and that it is not better and more blessed to remain in virginity, or in celibacy, than to be united in matrimony; let him be anathema.Of course, we do today reflect on the holiness of the vocation of marriage, but the above is the defined doctrine of the Church to which we are bound to give the assent of faith.
Throughout the history of the Church, the discipline of clerical continence or celibacy has been transgressed by some clerics. The Church has consistently fought to reform the life of clerics in the face of immorality which has been greater at some times than others. Today we live in a time when reform is needed again. We should remember that when St Charles Borrommeo went to Milan, the vast majority of his priests were living in concubinage - and he reformed his diocese. The Council of Trent was largely successful in reforming the clergy.
At the present time, we should give thanks for the faithfulness and purity of most students and young priests. They have been formed at a time when appallingly bad example has been given by some of their senior brethren. They have reckoned the cost and turned into the storm with courage and resolution. Let us pray that they become the vanguard of the new reform of the clergy, following in the footsteps of their forbears in the counter-reformation and at many other times in the history of the holy Roman Church.
References
Cholij, R. Clerical Celibacy in East and West Gracewing. Herefordshire. 1989
Cholij, R. Clerical Celibacy in East and West Gracewing. Herefordshire. 1989
Cochini, C. The apostolic origins of priestly celibacy Ignatius. San Francisco. 1990
Heid, S. Celibacy in the Early Church. Ignatius. San Francisco. 2000
Heid, S. Celibacy in the Early Church. Ignatius. San Francisco. 2000
Stickler, A. The case for clerical celibacy Ignatius. San Francisco. 1995

18 comments:
Father, thank you for this marvellous post. Celibacy is a great gift not only to the Church, but to the person to whom it is given.
We are so fortunate in our Roman Catholic Church to have this discipline.
And, it is a higher call. The long Tradition of the Church and the writings of the Doctors of the Church show us this. I have been writing over 100 posts on perfection on my blog and this aspect of giving all to Christ is so clear among the greats, like Bernard of Clairvaux and Albert the Great.
Celibacy makes God the total center of one's life, makes Christ the Bridegroom for the nun and sister, and the intimate friend to the man. To know that my clergy see the Church as the Bride of Christ and their Bride is a great blessing.
Thank you for responding to God's call to be celibate. And, pray for all those good men in the seminary who are following this same call.
Thank you very much for such a clear presentation.
Thank you Father. It's very refreshing to read something like this in the wake of pretty much everything that's going on.
Also thank you for the reminder of the superiority of the (religiously oriented, committed, chaste) single state!
Thank you Father for your clarity! The Church is blessed to have you as one of it's shepherds.
IF I may, I would add two books by Laurent Touze: Célibat sacerdotal et théologie nuptiale de l'ordre, EDUSC, Romae 2002; L'avenir du célibat sacerdotal et sa logique sacramentelle, P. Lethielleux, Paris 2009
Excellent post, imho. Thank you, Father.
I agree with most, Father, of what you say. I would add but two points, one merely practical, the second doctrinal.
Allowing those already ordained to marry is pastorally and practically unedifying. In the Church of England, one had the prospect of all the young women in a parish vying for the eye of a nice young curate. It is best for lay people to know that, sexually, a priest Is Not For You; either because he is married or because he is celibate.
Theologically, I think a good starting point would be the tradition that the Episcopate is the Plenitudo Sacerdotii; it is the Bishop who is, in the fullest sense, a priest. Presbyters are his Cooperatores. And the universal Tradition of East and West has... pretty well always ... been that bishops are celibate. It is not for me to say what conclusions this fact might suggest!
So did Trent say that single laymen and women are superior to a married couple in their choice of life?
They have been formed at a time when appallingly bad example has been given by some of their senior brethren.
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Yes like Benedict XVI,who instigated a non celibate priesthood by the backdoor,with Ordinariate Of Our Lady Of Walsingham.What do you have to say about that,may i ask?
There's no unambiguous reference in the NT to St Peter's wife, but it's interesting that in 1 Cor 9:5 St Paul asks rhetorically if he doesn't have the right to take an "adelphe gyne" (a woman who is a sister: a Christian woman) around with him "like the rest of the apostles and the Lord's brothers and Kephas." It's not inconceivable that the itinerant housekeeper was (at least in some cases) the apostle's wife, even if they had ceased to have marital relations.
I have read somewhere of a mediaeval writer who argued that since Peter had a mother-in-law and that priests have to be celibate he must have been a widower!
It is my understanding that celibacy is a tradition of great antiquity - but not as old as the Church.
Guild Master - no, Trent did not say that
Andrew T - It is not an entirely ludicrous speculation. Cardinal Manning had a mother-in-law but not a wife when he was ordained.
Fr Hunwicke - thank you for your comment. I am not comfortable with the idea that the Bishop has the fullness of the priesthood and the priests are his co-operators. Another tradition sees the Bishop as primarily a priest with extra powers of jurisdiction; the seven orders culminating in the priesthood. But yes the tradition in the East has required that Bishops are unmarried. Once again, this makes no sense apart from a general rule of clerical continence.
Andrew
I think it is telling that when Jesus arrived for dinner that Peter's mother in law had to be raised from her sickbed to wait on Him. If there had been a living wife at home this would not have been necessary. Trust me - One Woman in charge of One Kitchen is a very long established rule.....
If any one says, that the marriage state is to be placed above the state of virginity, or of celibacy, and that it is not better and more blessed to remain in virginity, or in celibacy, than to be united in matrimony; let him be anathema.
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That means according to St Pope Pius V & Council Of Trent,"Monsignor" Newton & company from Ordinariate Of Our Lady Of Walsingham are to be anathema?
I have the greatest admiration both for Fr Tim and for Fr Hunwicke but when the latter states: "And the universal Tradition of East and West has... pretty well always ... been that bishops are celibate" he might have explained that "pretty well always". He could also have explained the difference between celibacy and continence. For, if he actually means celibacy, he is wrong, pretty much.
St Gregory Nazanian's father was a bishop, Bishop Gregory the Elder of Nazanius. St Gregory of Nissa was also married.
Cochini in "The Apostolic Origins of Priestly Celibacy (San Fracisco, 1990) gives a lengthy list of bishops, priests and deacons who, during the first seven centuries of the Church, both in the East and the West, were married.
According to Rev Fr Dr Clarence Gallagher SJ, Rector Emeritus of the Pontifical Oriental Institute Rome (of which he had formerly been Dean of the Faculty of Canon Law) Cochini's thesis was that the legal obligation of continence (not celibacy) for bishops and priests goes back to Apostolic times.
In "Church Law and Church Order in Rome and Byzantium" (Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Monographs (Ashgate Publishing 2002) Fr Clarence (I should point out a bias here, Wee Clarence is both a friend and distant relation) observes in a footnote: "Not everyone has found his arguments convincing." He makes the same observation about Roman Choliji's works which came later and was predicated upon an acceptance of Cochini's thesis.
Of Elvira, Fr Clarence notes: "A Spanish provincial Council held at Elvira, near Granada, at the beginning of the fourth century, in canon 33, required that the higher clergy who had been married before ordination must observe continence under pain of deposition. This is the earliest Western canonical document that has come down to us concerning priestly continence. It is an isolated document not generally known at that time even in the West, and it did not make celibacy obligatory."
Fr Finigan, what makes you uncomfortable about the bishop having the "fullness of the priesthood" and the priests being his cooperators? The older Pontificale Romanum speaks of ordaining men to the "second degree of priestly office" during the consecratory preface and in the form. I fail to see what is troublesome about the bishop having the complete faculties Christ instituted and the priest possessing some of them for administering of sacraments.
The point I was making is that the writer who thought St Peter must have lost his wife was wrong - the rule of clerical celibacy did not exist at the time or until much later.
Dilly: you are right but it does not only apply to women. In single days when I lived alone I well remember turfing my mother and my sister out of my kitchen!
Andrew T - the point of the post is that there is serious scholarship which gives evidence that there was a rule of continence.
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