Celibacy of deacons Following recommendations made at the Second Vatican Council, the Latin Church now admits married men of mature age to ordination as
deacons, to remain permanently as deacons and not as part of the process by which aspirants are temporarily deacons on their way to priestly ordination. The change was effected by
Pope Paul VI's motu proprio
Sacrum diaconatus ordinem of 18 June 1967. A candidate for ordination to the
permanent diaconate must have reached the age of 25 if unmarried or the age of 35 if married (or higher if established by the
Conference of Bishops), and must have the written consent of his wife. Ordination even to the diaconate is an impediment to a later marriage (for example, if a man who was already married by the time of ordination to the diaconate subsequently becomes a widower), though special dispensation can be received for remarriage under extenuating circumstances.
Celibacy of priests Debate on celibacy of priests Garry Wills, in his book
Papal Sin: Structures of Deceit, argued that the imposition of celibacy among Catholic priests played a pivotal role in the cultivation of the Church as one of the most influential institutions in the world. In his discussion concerning the origins of the said policy, Wills mentioned that the Church drew its inspiration from the ascetics, monks who devote themselves to meditation and total abstention from earthly wealth and pleasures in order to sustain their corporal and spiritual purity, after seeing that its initial efforts in propagating the faith were fruitless. The rationale behind such strict policy is that it significantly helps the priests perform well in their religious services while at the same time following the manner in which Jesus Christ lived his life. Moreover, the author also mentioned that although the said policy insists on helping priests focus more on ecclesiastical duties, it also enabled the Church to control the wealth amassed by the clerics through their various religious activities, hence contributing to the growing power of the institution. The Latin Church discipline continues to be debated for a variety of reasons. First, many believe celibacy was not required of the apostles. Peter himself had a wife at some time, whose mother Jesus healed of a high fever. And 1 Corinthians 9:5 is commonly interpreted as saying that years later, Peter and other apostles were accompanied by their wives. However, on the basis especially of , others think the apostles left their wives, and that the women mentioned in 1 Corinthians as accompanying some apostles were "holy women, who, in accordance with Jewish custom, ministered to their teachers of their substance, as we read was the practice with even our Lord himself." Second, this requirement excludes a great number of otherwise qualified men from the priesthood, qualifications which according to the defenders of celibacy should be determined not by merely human hermeneutics but by the hermeneutics of the divine. Supporters of clerical celibacy answer that God only calls men to the priesthood if they are capable. Those who are not called to the priesthood should seek other paths in life since they will be able to serve God better there. Therefore, to the supporters of celibacy no one who is called is excluded. Third, some say that resisting the natural sexual impulse in this way is unrealistic and harmful for a healthy life. Sexual scandals among priests, especially homosexuality and pedophilia, the defenders say, are a breach of the Church's discipline, not a result of it, especially since only a small percentage of priests have been involved. Fourth, it is said that mandatory celibacy distances priests from this experience of life, compromising their
moral authority in the pastoral sphere, although its defenders argue that the Church's moral authority is rather enhanced by a life of total self-giving in imitation of Christ, a practical application of the Vatican II teaching that "man cannot fully find himself except through a sincere gift of himself." In 1970, nine German theologians, including
Joseph Ratzinger (the future Pope Benedict XVI), signed a letter calling for a new discussion of the law of celibacy, though refraining from making a statement as to whether the law of celibacy should in fact be changed. In 2011, hundreds of German, Austrian, and Swiss theologians (249 as of 15 February 2011) signed a letter calling for married priests, as well as for
women in Church ministry.
Since the Second Vatican Council During and after the Council, the
Magisterium of the
Catholic Church has repeatedly re-affirmed the permanent value of the discipline of obligatory clerical celibacy in the
Latin Church. Pope John Paul II wrote in 1992: He added that the "unchanging" essence of ordination "configures the priest to Jesus Christ the Head and Spouse of the Church." Thus, he said, "The Church, as the Spouse of Jesus Christ, wishes to be loved by the priest in the total and exclusive manner in which Jesus Christ her Head and Spouse loved her." There has never been any doubt, however, that it is an ecclesiastical discipline, as the Council Fathers explicitly recognised when they stated that "it is not demanded by the very nature of the priesthood." Pope John Paul II took up this theme when he said at a public audience on 17 July 1993 that celibacy "does not belong to the essence of priesthood." He went on to speak of its aptness for, and its congruence with, the requirements of sacred orders, asserting that the discipline "enters into the logic of [priestly] consecration." Yet some commentators have argued for the possibility that married men of proven seriousness and maturity (
viri probati, taking up a phrase which appears in the first-century
First Epistle of Clement in a different context) might be ordained to a localized and modified form of the priesthood. The topic of
viri probati was raised by some participants in discussions at Ordinary General Assembly XI of the Synod of Bishops held at the Vatican in October 2005 on the theme of the Eucharist, but it was rejected as a solution for the insufficiency of priests.
Pope Francis Pope Francis shared his views on celibacy, and the possibility of church discussion on the topic, when he was the Archbishop of Buenos Aires, recorded in the book
On Heaven and Earth, a record of conversations conducted with a Buenos Aires rabbi. He commented that celibacy "is a matter of discipline, not of faith. It can change" but added: "For the moment, I am in favor of maintaining celibacy, with all its pros and cons, because we have ten centuries of good experiences rather than failures.... Tradition has weight and validity." He said that now the rule must be strictly adhered to, and any priest who cannot obey it "has to leave the ministry." In 2018 Francis showed that he wanted the topic discussed, beginning with remote areas like
Amazonia that have a shortage of priests. In October 2018,
Belgian Catholic bishop conference supported married priests. Different German catholic bishops like
Ulrich Neymeyr (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Erfurt),
Reinhard Marx (
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Munich and Freising),
Peter Kohlgraf (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Mainz),
Helmut Dieser (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Aachen),
Franz Jung (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Würzburg),
Franz-Josef Overbeck (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Essen) and
Karl-Heinz Wiesemann (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Speyer) support exceptions from clerical celibacy for priests. Also German bishop
Georg Bätzing (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Limburg) said, there should be also married priests in Roman Catholic Church. The same opinion was also expressed by German bishop
Gerhard Feige (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Magdeburg) in February 2019 and German bishop
Heiner Wilmer (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Hildesheim) in February 2019. In March 2019, German bishop
Stefan Oster (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Passau) said, there can be also married priests in Roman Catholic Church. In
Lingen the German catholic bishops started a reform group under leadership of bishop
Felix Genn (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Münster) to talk over a reform of clerical celibacy for priests and if married priests should also be allowed. In April 2019, Austrian bishop
Christoph Schönborn (
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vienna) said, there can be clerical celibacy priests and also married priests in Roman Catholic Church. In June 2019, German bishop
Franz-Josef Bode (
Roman Catholic Diocese of Osnabrück) said, there can be clerical celibacy priests and also married priests in Roman Catholic Church. In December 2019, German bishop
Heinrich Timmerevers answered also, there can be married priests in Catholic Church. In November 2019, the
Amazonassynode in Rome voted by 128 to 41 votes in favour for married priests in Latin America. Following the synod, Pope Francis rejected the proposal in his post-synodal apostolic exhortation
Querida Amazonia. On March 9, 2023 again in Frankfurt am Main at
Synodal Path around 75 percentage of German Roman-Catholic bishops supported married priests and want a free celibacy for priests. In January 2024, Maltese archbishop
Charles Scicluna supported married priests in Roman Catholic church. In February 2024, The Belgian Bishops developed a document to synodality, requesting optional celibacy and "viri probati" ordination. Noted Indian Physician Dr Edmond Fernandes called celibacy a "historical ill" urging the Catholic Church to immediately withdraw.
Exceptions to the rule of priestly celibacy Exceptions to the rule of celibacy for priests of the Latin Church are sometimes granted by authority of the Pope, when married Protestant clergy become Catholic. Thus married
Anglicans have been ordained to the Catholic priesthood in
personal ordinariates and through the United States
Pastoral Provision. Because the rule of celibacy is an
ecclesiastical law and not a doctrine, it can, in principle, be changed at any time by the Pope. Nonetheless, both
Pope Benedict XVI and his predecessors have spoken clearly of their understanding that the traditional practice was not likely to change. Father
Richard McBrien, a controversial voice within the Church, argued that the existence of these exceptions, coupled with a declining number of priests in active ministry (per McBrien's North America and in Europe) and reported cases of non-observance of the norm will keep the subject in the spotlight. However, the number of priests worldwide has been increased from about 405,000 in 1995 to 415,000 in 2016, reversing the previous downward tendency from about 420,000 in 1970 to 403,000 in 1990.
Lack of enforcement Despite the Latin Church's historical practice of priestly celibacy, there have been Catholic priests throughout the centuries who have engaged in sexual relations through the practice of
concubinage. One notable example was former
EWTN priest Francis Mary Stone, who was also revealed to have privately maintained his clerical status after violating his vow of celibacy and also fathering a child with an employee at EWTN when he was serving as a host of the network's show
Life on the Rock. He was later accused of sexually abusing the son he fathered with this employee, but was later acquitted. By 2018, it was reported that Stone was still only suspended from his religious order and was not yet acknowledged to have been removed. On 18 February 2019, the Vatican acknowledged that the celibacy policy has not always been enforced. Some clergy who violated the celibacy policy, which also forbids marriage for clergy who did not convert from the Protestant faiths, such as Lutheranism or Anglicanism, have also maintained their clerical status after marrying women in secret. One example was shown in the
Diocese of Greensburg in
Pennsylvania, where a priest maintained his clerical status after marrying a girl he impregnated. In 2012, Kevin Lee, a priest in Australia, revealed that he had maintained his clerical status after being secretly married for a full year and that church leaders were aware of his secret marriage, but disregarded the celibacy policy. The same year, it was revealed that former Los Angeles Auxiliary Bishop
Gabino Zavala had privately fathered two children and had "more than a passing relationship" with their mother, who had two separate pregnancies, before he resigned from his post as Auxiliary Bishop and from the Catholic clergy. ==Eastern Catholic churches==