The Emasculation of the Priesthood
by Father James McLucas - Spring
1998
Cardinal Ratzinger recently caused a stir among Catholics
by questioning the legitimacy of the wholesale restructuring
of the Roman Rite following the Second Vatican Council. A return
salvo was not long in coming. Archbishop Rembert Weakland, in
a cover story that appeared in the prestigious Jesuit journal America,
attacked the whole idea of the indult traditional Mass that is
growing steadily throughout the Church. Despite the request of
the Holy Father to the bishops of the world to be "generous" in
their implementation of the Latin Mass indult, there is massive
resistance in the overwhelming majority of the episcopal conferences
throughout the world.
Catholics who view tradition as their rightful heritage are often
mystified as to the reason for such opposition to the ancient Mass.
The most vociferous enemies of traditional Mass, however, have
never been reticent about stating the reasons for their reaction.
They have made it clear that what is at stake is the liturgical
and ecclesiastical revolution of the post-Vatican II era. The late
Cardinal Giovanni Benelli said it best. When asked if the traditional
Mass would ever return (this was long before the indult was granted
by Pope John Paul II), he answered negatively in rather emphatic
tones. The reason: the traditional Mass
represented an ecclesiology at variance with the one articulated
at Vatican II.
That is the heart of the matter.
A steadily increasing number of Catholics have arrived at the conclusion
that the Church is in the midst of a crisis that will only worsen
unless Rome is willing to examine the possibility that for the
past thirty years there has been a consistent violation of the
norm which governs Catholic tradition: authentic
reform must be grounded in organic development. On a
wide range of issues, there are growing questions as to whether
or not this ecclesiological fundamental has been respected (Cardinal
Ratzinger's recent observations about the new Mass causing "extremely
serious damage" are an example). If a rite of fifteen hundred
years had to be scrapped to accommodate a Vatican II ecclesiology,
sufficient prima facie evidence
exists to question whether or not authentic development occurred.
One aspect of the current crisis has
escaped scrutiny: the present status of the celibate priesthood
following the expansive absorption
of many sacred functions by the laity that were formerly reserved
to the ordained. Endangering priestly celibacy because it is inherently
hostile to a healthy masculinity, this structural revolution evokes
an image of a square peg being pounded into a round hole. The post-Conciliar
Church is of a different shape from that which housed the traditional
theology of the priesthood, and a mandatory celibate priesthood
simply doesn't fit. Sadly, all the pieces are in place for the
introduction of "optional celibacy" into the Western Rite.
The preparation for optional celibacy began with the introduction
of the permanent diaconate following the Second Vatican Council.
The Church was informed by Pope Paul VI that this was nothing more
than the restoration of a classic practice. He remained silent,
however, about the fact that there had never been
a Holy "Order" that was non-celibate since the mandating
of celibacy in the Western Church.[1] The creation of this married
rung of Holy Order, followed by many Protestant minister converts
being admitted to the priesthood,[2] has broken down resistance
to mandatory celibacy.
The drift towards optional celibacy
was not limited to incremental developments like the diaconate
and
the ordination of married Protestant
converts. They are simply the more obvious. The catalyst that oriented
the Latin Church towards the married priesthood was the introduction
of the concept of "collaborative lay ministry." This
began with the elimination of "minor orders" by Pope
Paul, and the tearing away of the substitutions, the "ministries" of
lector and acolyte, from an exclusive orientation towards the ordained
priesthood. Originally, the legislation limited these ministries
to lay men. The bishops of
the United States, with Rome's approval, quickly demonstrated their
second thoughts about that limitation by allowing lay women to
perform these functions. They simply declared that, while only
lay men could be admitted to these ministries,[3] women could and
would be called upon for the special liturgical services of Reader
and Extraordinary Minister of tile Eucharist.
Once that hurdle was cleared, it was
only a relatively small step to the erection of full-time lay "pastoral administrators" that
currently "lead" anywhere between 10 to 15 percent of
the priestless parishes in the United States. Curiously, in 1995
the Vatican declared that no lay person who administered a priestless
parish could have the word "pastoral" attached to his
title.[4]
The next crucial stride towards optional
celibacy was the introduction of "the priestless Communion service," which was initiated,
one would guess, to provide a degree of liturgical solemnity for
those lay persons charged with the pastoral care of priestless
parishes. It always amazed me that Catholics who have been in the
pews for fifty years label this liturgical hybrid with such local
characterizations as "Sister Ruth's Mass." This would
seem to indicate that, to many Catholics in the pew, the Novus
Ordo Mass is visually not all that different in essentials
from the priestless Communion service. (If that is the case, one
might say that the Novus Ordo itself
prepared vast numbers of Catholics for the laypresider Communion
rite.)
Thus far, what I have attempted to
describe is the elimination of the relationship between function
and ontology.
Those ordained
to the priesthood have not lost their traditional "roles." The
issue is, rather, that the non-ordained have assumed many of the
functions that have been reserved to the priesthood since the Church
emerged from the catacombs (and probably before).
Sacramental doctrine explicitly reserves
to priests only the offering of the Eucharistic Sacrifice and
the absolution of sin.
However, to state that this defines all that is unique about their
ordination mandate is to sponsor a doctrinal minimalism in regard
to the sacramental priesthood that parallels what is being done
to the Sacrament of the Eucharist. The promoters of a Eucharistic
minimalism have been largely successful in their endeavor to confine
the Eucharist to the act of consumption at Holy Communion. Any
expansion of Eucharistic devotion such as Benediction, the reservation
of the Blessed Sacrament within the sanctuary or Corpus Christi
processions has been thwarted in large parts of the Western Church.
The consequent loss of devotion to the Eucharist and a creeping heterodoxy
among the faithful concerning Eucharistic doctrine have been well
documented.
In a parallel manner (and given the innate relationship between
Eucharist and priesthood, not surprisingly) the Vatican and the
bishops are undermining the priestly identity, primarily by altering
his unique relationship with the Eucharist through the introduction
of Communion in the hand, lay ministers of the Eucharist, and lay
presiders of Communion services. Lay pastoral administrators and
lay pastoral associates, as well as the lay administration of sacramentals
(i.e., prayer and liturgical action at the blessing of throats
and distribution of ashes), and lay presiding at funeral and wedding
liturgies are examples of the further usurpation of tasks from
within the sacred environment that was, until thirty years ago,
the distinctive domain of ordained celibate priests in the Latin
Rite.
The Second Vatican Council repeated the doctrine that the ministerial
priesthood differs in essence and not merely in degree from the
priesthood of the faithful. The reality of that doctrine had always
been made incarnate through the unique sacramental and pastoral
role of the priest. But it was never enough simply to proclaim
this doctrine. The priest as alter Christus was
made perceptible (to himself as well as to others) through a visible
role that expressed a clear and unambiguous ecclesial "division
of labor," which was essential to the personal appropriation
of his supernatural identity.
I will argue that the assumption of sacred functions by the laity,
reserved to the ordained for at least fifteen hundred years, is
poisoning the priesthood. The contention proceeds from a simple
premise: if the priesthood is reserved
to men, as has been taught by the Church, then what does harm
to the masculine nature of the ordained weakens the priesthood
itself.
Frank Sheed, the great apologist
of the Catholic Evidence Guild, was always scornful of an entity
he referred to as the "man-eating Thomist." He was referring
to those philosophers supposedly devoted to St. Thomas Aquinas
who narrowly focused on his insights into the Divine but who were
seldom intrigued by the formidable psychological acumen of the
Angelic Doctor. Saint Thomas' eloquence in regard to human emotions
is extraordinary. He indicates that the emotions are often the
first to know, in a non-conceptual form, that which is right and
true. While St. Thomas warns that the intellect must always confirm
the intuitive insights of the emotions, he is equally concerned
about the consequences of ignoring the input of the emotions.
Catholics resisting the post-Conciliar revolution found their
emotions screaming at every new break with tradition. They were
reflexively obedient, however, to the decisions of Holy Mother
Church. Yet for millions of Catholics, the pain has compounded;
the emotions have not ceased to groan. While they have been told
by those in authority that their pain is contrived, the conflict
between their intellect and emotions is approaching critical mass.
Not a few Catholics have begun to reexamine the raw data provided
by their emotions through the filter of an intellectual reappraisal
of the past thirty years of Church history.
Likewise, many priests with whom I've
conversed have expressed an innate sense that something is wrong
with the Vatican-sponsored
Usurpation of their shepherding roles by the laity. Whenever attempts
are made to articulate reasons for the discomfort, the conversation
is at-rested when someone inevitably drifts into the mantra, "Well,
we're talking about discipline here; there is nothing in Church
doctrine that would disallow this." So, the silent conclusion
was equally certain: there must be something wrong with the priest's
unease with the developing "collaborative" structure. "I
must be too conservative," "I must be too rigid," "I
must be too selfish in not wanting to share my pastoral role," were
often the unspoken feelings and yet the negative visceral emotions
remained and often intensified.
The mistake was the failure to take
into account the obvious possibility that the unique sacramental
/
pastoral role of the
priest is not a mere timebound whim of the Church, but is intrinsic
to the nature of the priesthood, particularly a celibate one. From
the time that priestly celibacy came to be understood as the norm,
the unique administration of the sacred and, in particular, the
priest as sole steward of the Eucharist, were supernatural responsibilities
that grounded the celibate's commitment.[5] The man who has
sacrificed wife and family is discovering that the structure that
guarded his self-identity as a spiritual spouse and father is in
the process of being dismantled. The effects are simultaneously
subtle and pronounced.
A constitutive part of masculinity is the desire for unique intimacy.
Much has been written in the past three decades about appropriate
intimacy for the priest. Most of the literature focuses upon the
nature of the human relationships that dot the landscape of a priest's
life. In the 1970s a best seller among priests and religious was
a work entitled, The Sexual Celibate.
It suffered from a variety of weaknesses, but it articulated a
reality worth repeating: namely, the distinction between the sexual
and the sensually sexual within each human person. The forfeiture
of the sensually sexual does not mutate the human being into an
asexual creature. The need for a unique physical intimacy with
another is constitutive of permanent monogamous relationships ordained
by the Creator, Yet it is precisely that type of intimacy with
another human being that the celibate sacrifices. The celibate
priest, however, was offered through his office an incomparable
and unparalleled intimacy: he alone
could touch God.
The liturgical legislation of the
post-Conciliar era has eliminated the Eucharistic exclusivity that
marked the office of the priest. The celibate priest no longer
possesses the unique corporeal relationship with God. He is not
denied the relationship, but others have access to it. Consider
a parallel situation: i.e., within the Sacrament of Matrimony.
The possession of an exclusive bodily prerogative with one's spouse
is primary; in fact there exists no greater convergence between
the Divine Law and the instincts of even fallen human nature than
on this point. Violate this pact, and one risks murderous rage.
If a celibate priest, however, reacts with even the slightest resentment
towards the loss of what was his corporeal exclusivity within his
Sacrament of Holy Orders, he is considered a candidate for psychological
evaluation.[6]
The fact is that many priests do have
an instinctive reaction against the presence of the non-consecrated
hand touching the Body of God. A non-consecrated hand in the tabernacle,
or reaching for the Sacrament at the reception of Holy Communion,
violates an intimacy that was, before the engineering of liturgical "roles," exclusively
the priest's.[7] A dynamic equivalent to what would fuel the emotions
of a husband who realizes another has shared the exclusive intimacy
with the one to whom he has permanently committed himself, is present
within priests.[8] The sense of alienation is more intense for
the traditional celibate priest because he is aware that his spouse,
the Church, has arranged and promoted the nonexclusivity.
The change in Church practice that was the gateway to all of
the above was Communion in the hand. Paul VI, in the very document
that permitted the radical departure from tradition, appealed to
the faithful to keep the original practice of receiving the Eucharist
on the tongue. His entreaty revolved around one main point: that
it was an ancient and venerable practice; it was tradition.
Whenever tradition, however, is made to be the major defense of
any ecclesial practice, it becomes incumbent upon legitimate authority
to articulate the reason for the tradition. Without such an effort,
the rationale is reduced to a strategy which embraces a nominalist
framework. A practice is of tradition because it may well be the
best (and perhaps even the only) vehicle for conveying an aspect
or aspects of the Faith in ways that may not be readily apparent.
From the liturgical revolution to the deliberate role revision
among priests and laity that was essential to its success, we have
operated on a daily basis within a Church that has forgotten that tradition
is tradition for a reason.
The suggestion is being raised that within the priest there exists
a sublime alignment of the supernatural masculine and the natural
masculine which protects and articulates his gender integrity.
Tradition safeguards these divine and human
spheres. This concept never had to be analyzed because the
traditions which shielded the priesthood from plagues of spiritual
neurosis had never been subjected to tampering. Nor had there been
a need to reflect upon those visible components required to integrate
the supernatural vocation of celibacy with the masculine role.
Let us look at a specific development
that intrinsically violates the cohesiveness of the masculine
within the celibate priest. A "presider" at
a priestless Communion service sits in the priest's chair, proclaims
the Gospel, preaches a homily (supposedly composed by a priest
or deacon, though seldom is this the case), goes to the tabernacle,
prays at the altar of sacrifice and distributes the Eucharist. This
non-sacerdotal anomaly talks like a priest, acts like a priest,
appropriates the sanctuary which for at least a millennium and
a half had been the sacred domain of the priest and clothes him
or herself in priestly vesture.[9] All of this is incompatible
with the celibate priest's identification with fatherhood (in his
case, a spiritual one). It represents a radical departure from
century upon century of Church history and experience, and offers
liturgical approbation to the concept of a "Fatherless" parish
society.
I use the phrase "Fatherless" society
deliberately because of the direct parallels within the present
secular order.
The fatherless family is a late twentieth-century invention, as
is the Fatherless parish. There have always been parishes that
have had to go weeks suffering the absence of a priest as he makes
his appointed circuit among his far-flung flock. Yet the idea that
someone could replace him in almost all of his pastoral tasks has
no pedigree.
Social scientific data do not deny that in the secular sphere
other adult substitutes can do
what a father does, but there are increasing questions as to whether
they should. The analysis points
to adverse effects upon both father and family. Anthropological
research suggests that the key to responsible fatherhood lies in
a condition known as "the desire for paternal certainty."[10] In
the secular culture, this means that a key motivation for the male
to accept the responsibilities of fatherhood is the sure knowledge
that the child is his own.[11] Similarly, what will animate
the celibate male to accept and embrace his commitment to be a
spiritual father is the sure knowledge that there are no rivals
to his spiritual paternity. Manufacturing, positions that substitute
for his pastoral care contradicts the very notion of paternal certainty.
The protection of priestly identity
through a structure which visibly reinforces key components of
his masculine
nature is a
necessity, not an option. That means, besides respecting his unique "sacred
space" within the sanctuary, there must be the reservation
of all sacramental and liturgical functions (Eucharistic stewardship
in particular) to his hands and his hands alone.
These external functions provide and manifest the constant and
conscious self-reference point of the priest as alter
Christus and spiritual father. These external responsibilities,
reserved singularly to the priest, interiorly assist his masculine
nature to integrate the purpose of his celibate commitment and
motivate him to acquire the single heartedness that is the priest's
only path to holiness.
The post-Conciliar priest of the contemporary
Church (continuing a trend that began long before Vatican II
in the United States)
has become a resident CEO and CFO of a parish plant. He oversees
countless committees that add layers of bureaucracy and which—paradoxically—place
a barrier between the priest and his people.
Enjoying the perquisites of the CEO
that have nothing to do with his spiritual identity, he begins
to
delegate the more burdensome
and distasteful pastoral duties in hospitals, nursing homes and
the houses of shut-ins; he avoids being available for the distribution
of Holy Communion outside of his own Masses; baptisms and weddings
are merrily passed off to deacons, as well as marriage preparations;
convert instruction is transferred to the RCIA committee. He'll
appropriate the vocabulary of those who hold legitimate authority
in the Church: "This is collaborative ministry!" No,
it is not. This is masculine pathology, the abdication of fatherhood.
At the same time, this behavior is
understandable within the context of the role-reversal paradigm
that infects
all of Western
culture. Social science analysis indicates that the propensity
described in the above paragraph is typical of men. Psychological
and social patterns confirm that the role of "nurturer" often
is not a comfortable fit for the male. Anthropological evidence
indicates that fatherhood is very much a learned experience.
In her work Male and Female: The
Study of the Sexes in a Changing World, Margaret
Mead writes (all emphases are mine), "the human family depends
upon social inventions that will make each generation of
males want to nurture women and children" (206). Indeed, "every
known human society rests firmly on the learned nurturing
behavior of men" (195). Mead observes that in every known
society, each new generation of young males
learn the appropriate nurturing behavior and superimpose
upon their biologically given maleness this learned parental role" (198).
In other words, the male must learn fatherhood and that learning
must be buttressed by distinct proprietary functions protected
throughout the social fabric.
Given this information, it is not surprising
that the man ordained to the priesthood, finding that the traditional
pastoral tasks
of spiritual fatherhood are being diverted to others for a variety
of ideological and so-called "practical" reasons, begins
to substitute the nurturing role of a spiritual father with one
more conducive to the boardroom atmosphere of a company officer,
permitting more secular competitive and aggressive instincts to
emerge.[12] In fact, he will search for excuses to promote this
exchange of roles, especially when Church authority is encouraging
him to do it.
Again, to understand fully this pathology
one needs to review developments that are taking place within
the secular culture.
There is an increasing amount of information suggesting that men
are being marginalized by the emerging social structure in contemporary
Western society. [13] Women, due to their physical ability to bear
children and the concomitant endowment and desire to nurture them,
have a significant and irreplaceable role through the design of
nature. Men, on the other hand, are not as comfortable with themselves.
Unlike women, who possess a clarity of role due to their inherent
maternal qualities, men do not have a "built in" social
niche that is effected through biology. The man possesses a subtle,
intuitive sense that once a child has been conceived his presence
is not strictly required. Modern society encourages this thinking
and rewards it. The abandonment of the family by thousands of fathers
has, in fact, provided verification that women, when forced by
circumstances, can do it all. The psychological and emotional cost
is, of course, enormous upon both mother and child. Yet, mothers
and children in countless cases are surviving, even if not thriving,
without benefit of the masculine presence.
Therefore, the man's instinct concerning the strict necessity
of his role is not incorrect. From primitive history men have had
to appropriate a role that parallels the indispensability of women:
that of provider and protector. With the increasing economic independence
of women, the necessity of this role is being challenged and men
are generally responding in two ways: they either (1) promote the
diminution of their necessity because it allows them to engage
in the selfish side of their masculinity (all play and no work
in regard to relationships with women) and/or (2) experience a
distinct diminution of self-confidence that manifests itself in
behavior that further alienates: promiscuity, impotence, homosexuality
or other sexual aberrations, the abandonment of children, etc.
As pastoral and sacramental care are increasingly becoming independent
of the priest, this secular pathology is finding all too-familiar
parallels among Catholic priests. The post-Conciliar ecclesial
structure has fostered priestly dysfunction, resulting in a destructive
pattern of behavior that is becoming too evident.[14]
The loss of the priest's unique intimacy
with the sacred has subtly, but mightily, contributed to this
development. While insisting
that nothing has essentially been changed for the priest because
lie is still the one who consecrates, the liturgical engineers
have made his presence optional at the most intimate moment of
holy communion between the flock under his care and Our Lord. The
majority of Catholics receive the Eucharist from the hands of a
lay person. The act of shared intimacy that is at the heart of
shepherding ("Feed my lambs, feed my sheep") is absent.
The Church, echoing an increasingly feminized society, is telling
priests: "Once you have consecrated, you are no long needed." The
act of the priest "feeding" the faithful with the Bread
of Life incarnates his role as Its sole provider and, far more
than the eye can see, forms his and his people's perception of
his spiritual fatherhood. The priest's role was never confined
to the sanctuary, but what made him unique to his people was his
unique relationship to the Eucharist which he brought forth from
within the sanctuary. The committment to celibacy in the Latin
Rite was the tangible sign of the Eucharistic "Christ-man."
The entire panoply described above is far more damaging to the
celibate priest than it is to the married priest. Unlike the married
priest, he does not have the benefit of the entire natural side
of the psychosexual dynamic enjoyed by a husband and father of
children. The traditional role of the celibate priest as the sole
administrator of the sacred assisted him in sublimating his natural
desire for exclusivity with another in marriage, and preserved
his orientation toward his spiritual espousal to the Church and
his spiritual fatherhood. In the present situation, celibacy for
many priests has begun to feel like something that one puts on
like a costume. It's not needed for the role in the play; it just
lends a bit of color to the set.
Interestingly, in the Eastern Church, where there has been a
tradition of a married priesthood, there is no toleration of any
transference of the spiritual tasks of the priest to the laity.
It would seem that matrimonial espousal and fatherhood enhance
the understanding of the requirements needed to maintain the relationship
between authentic maleness and spiritual fatherhood.[15]
This may not be as odd as it first
sounds. After Vatican II, the revolution was not led by those
priests
who were actually exercising
the tasks of spiritual fatherhood on the parish level (in fact,
many initially resisted it). The priests whose natural habitat
is the world of academia, who have indicated a propensity to value
their professorships at least as highly as their priesthood, have
been the agents promoting the dismantling of the traditional structures
that had protected the celibate priesthood. Weak bishops unwilling
to contradict their entrenched bureaucracies have hidden behind
these "experts." These periti have
wielded unusual power through their ability to influence and even
direct the bishops who exercise the heady authority of the apostles
themselves.
Careerism and ambition rooted in pride
have often served (always to the detriment of spiritual vitality)
as the "acceptable" substitutions
for sex for those called to celibacy and vows of chastity. One
must worry that those priests and bishops who have promoted role
revision, although they possess the office of spiritual fatherhood,
are without a natural disposition for it. The desire for power
and status in the form of careerism may easily eclipse the intensity
of male concupiscence. Never having identified primarily with the
role of spiritual fatherhood, role revision caused them no sense
of loss. This mind-set has filtered down, and the icon of priest
as spiritual father degenerates into the image of the "professional
man," and celibates for the kingdom are reduced to mere bachelors.
The priest is increasingly perceived as an ecclesiastical technician,
and often lives down to that role.
Some will think it odd that little in the way of theological
reasoning has been offered in this discussion of the most sacred
of subjects. As I have attempted to suggest, however, the present
situation is a historical novelty. Not only that, but in all candor
I must confess that I do not believe that arguing from historical
precedent by itself will cause many to pause today. So much of
what has occurred in the past thirty years has been contrary to
organic development that there is no reason to be confident that
such arguments in themselves will produce any reflection.
However, a theological response that
will be argued against the premise of this article, especially
the plea for the reservation
of Eucharistic stewardship to the priest alone, is that, due to
the shortage of priests, lay ministers and permanent deacons are
necessary: "After all, the Eucharist is meant for people;
their ability to receive the sacrament, especially in mission lands
and in places experiencing severe priest shortages, far outweighs
any possible detrimental effect upon the celibate priesthood." My
initial response is that permanent deacons since the Council have
not been widely used in mission lands precisely because
of the confusion that the disconnect between Holy Orders and celibacy
frequently engenders. Second, any practice that does harm to the
natural connective tissue that makes visible and apparent the unique
bond between the Eucharist and priesthood (expressed by the term, ordinary
minister) [16], will not leave undiminished the supernatural
effects of the sacrament.
Grace builds on nature and transforms it. However, if there exists
an ecclesial structure that disrupts the equilibrium between the
natural and supernatural, grace may lie fallow until that rupture
is repaired. The reception of the Eucharist, after all, is meant
to benefit the entire Church, not just the communicant. Therefore,
if a part of the Church (the priesthood) is damaged by the structural
disorder encompassing the administration and reception of the Sacrament,
then the entire Church is weakened.
Many aspects of the Church's visible life cannot be changed without
assaulting the human element's participation in the sacred. One
branch of the Manichean heresy thought so little of the material
world that it believed it mattered not at all what kind of sins
were committed with the body as long as there remained a spiritual
orientation towards Christ. We risk institutional Manicheism if
we continue to act as if we can do whatever we like with the visible
life of the Mystical Body without fear of spiritual consequences.
I have argued that because grace builds on nature, if there is
instituted a wholesale ecclesial role revision without regard to
the question of nature, the grace necessary to integrate maleness,
celibacy and office may well lie dormant. There will simply be
a disconnect among the emotions, intellect and will.
Those who disagree with what has been
argued thus far will frequently counter that the present discussion
has been about mere "accidentals," unimportant
in comparison to all the other problems in the Church. Our Lord,
however, began the Church with the priesthood and the Eucharist.
If what has been done in the past thirty years is harmful to either,
we are perilously close to the foundations of the Church herself.
The notion that the Church can offer the work of the priest to
others without doing harm to both his masculinity and his personality
is a gross presumption. It will affect the way he views his life
and commitment, as well as his beliefs and prayer.
One more observation about so-called "accidentals." The
greatest mystery in the world, the Eucharist, must be communicated
through"accidents." These accidents must be specific material
substances that unambiguously signify the Sacrament. What have
heretofore been considered "accidents" (mere discipline
in the parlance of the legalists among us) in regard to the functions
that form and integrate priestly identity, may well be as intrinsic
to the communication of the reality of the priesthood—to the priest
himself as well as to the faithful—as is the appearance of bread
and wine to the Eucharist.
The role revision of priest and laity
has led to declining numbers of vocations, despite the embarrassing
efforts to "sell" the
priesthood through various Madison Avenue marketing techniques.
Even when there is a temporary spike in seminary registration following
a papal visit, there is no evidence that this initial fervor persists.
It is amazing to observe the contortions required by the public
relations departments of various episcopal conferences assuring
us that all is well with the local church, and at the same time
gravely issuing study papers concerning the projected shortage
of priests and the inevitable remedy of preparing the faithful
for lay-administered priestless parishes. The bishops of England
(mimicking similar rumblings among members of the American episcopate)
are asking the Pope to reinstate into full pastoral status men
who have left the active priesthood in order to marry. [17] The
vocations crisis, created by the anti-masculine policies of the
ecclesiological revolution, is now blamed by the bishops on celibacy.
Celibacy is a problem, but only because the present structural
environment of the Church has removed those elements which traditionally
have supported its compatibility with a healthy masculine nature.
Of course, it is possible that post-Conciliar Church authority,
by institutionalizing the role revision of priests and laity, has
signaled its preference for and agreement with the social engineering
that has revolutionized so much of Western culture and society.
Or perhaps what has occurred has been a thoughtless and unreflective
drift. Either way, Church authority will discover that, regardless
of the traditional language that masks the altered structure, the
scriptural admonition against pouring old wine into new wineskins
will burst the self-deception.
Either traditional mandatory celibacy for priests or the
present structure that ignores its natural underpinnings: these
are the mutually exclusive options facing the Church. There is
no middle way.
Notes