Mary and Child from "Song of the Angels" by Bouguereau
 

THIS ROCK

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

2000

1999

1998

1997

1996

1995

1994

1993

1992

1991

1990

Subscribe

Permissions

LIBRARY

God & Christ

Scripture & Tradition

Church & Papacy

Mary & the Saints

Faith & Science

Morality & Ethics

Sacraments

Salvation

Last things

Non-Catholic groups

Anti-Catholicism

Practical Apologetics

Fathers Know Best

Permissions

OUR SPONSORS


Sponsor: CatholicSingles.Com - The Site for Catholic Singles on the Web
Sponsor: EpiphanyFund.com - quality investment services thru faithful stewardship

Please support our sponsors

BOOKLETS

PillarofFire

Pure Love

12WaystoEvangelize

Permissions

SPECIAL OFFERS


Catholic Answers Live - Special Offers


U  p    F  r  o  n  t



DEVOLUTION

By Karl Keating



This Rock
Volume 8, Number 2
  February 1997  

 Up Front
By Karl Keating
 Letters
 Dragnet
  HOW PIUS XII PROTECTED JEWS
By JAMES AKIN
  WHO'S AFRAID OF THE BIG BAD WEB?
By TERRYE NEWKIRK
  GETTING YOUR TOES WET
  CHAPLAIN AND FRIEND
By KARL KEATING
 Dispatches
An Inexplicable Love
 Classic Apologetics
Rome Through Three Spectacles
By Arnold Lunn
 Fathers Know Best
Confession
 In Their Own Words
Baptismal Regeneration
By James Akin
 East & West
The Epiphany of the Roman Primacy
By Ray Ryland
 Reviews
 Sidebar
Sheldon Vanauken R.I.P.
By Jack Taylor
 Quick Questions

  Subscribe
  Permissions

"Out of the mouths of babes . . . and dissident priests." Or something like that.

I never thought I would find Fr. Richard P. McBrien giving a coherent argument in favor of priestly celibacy, but he has, right in the pages of The National Catholic Reporter. In fairness I should note that his intention was quite the opposite, but his argument against celibacy in fact amounts to an argument in favor of it.

Fr. McBrien refers to a lay Catholic’s proposal that "celibacy for Catholic clergy is fundamentally incorrect from a genetic perspective." After all, "Catholic clergy are and have been, on average, above-average individuals." By not having children they have lowered "the quality of the Catholic gene pool." Think of the hundreds of thousands of smart people who never were born because priests couldn’t marry! Think of all the good these people could have done for the Church and for the world!

This proposal, notes Fr. McBrien, "lacks only examples to illustrate and strengthen the argument. I will supply some here." This is where it gets interesting.

"One thinks of the sons and daughters of successful politicians who have pursued productive political careers of their own." He notes that Vice President Al Gore is the son of former Senator Albert Gore Sr. Two younger Kennedys, Joseph and Patrick, serve in Congress. George Bush’s son George Jr. is governor of Texas, while another son, Jeb, nearly became governor of Florida. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown saw his son, Jerry, become, like him, governor of California, while his daughter, Kathleen, later ran unsuccessfully for the office. Evan Bayh, the governor of Indiana, is the son of former Senator Birch Bayh. Former Senator Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas is the daughter of presidential candidate Alf Landon.

Likewise in the entertainment world. Kirk Douglas gave us Michael Douglas. Martin Sheen gave us Charlie Sheen, Emilio Estevez, and Ramon Estevez. Lloyd Bridges produced Beau and Jeff Bridges. Carl Reiner sired Rob Reiner. From Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh came Jamie Lee Curtis.

In religion, Russian Orthodox priest-theologian Alexander Schmemann gave us Serge Schmemann, a writer for The New York Times. Martin Marty, "the foremost Protestant scholar-minister in America," has a son is a state senator in Minnesota.

Look at these genealogies. I hope it is not impolitic to note that in each case we see a decline in political wisdom, artistic attainment, or scholarship. Is "Governor Moonbeam" an advance on his father? Is pro-abortion Nancy Kassebaum a wiser politician than her gubernatorial father? Is the actor who got his start on "The Streets of San Francisco" a better man than Spartacus?

Fr. McBrien’s argument against priestly celibacy reduces to an argument against the upward evolution of the species. The obvious conclusion: To improve the gene pool, more politicians, actors, and religious scholars should become celibate priests.


This Rock -- Free Offer

[BACK][TOP]

Home | Seminars | Library | Radio | Magazines | Catalogue | Support | Chastity | Search