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Priesthood in the Catholic Church

The priesthood is the office of the ministers of religion, who have been commissioned ("ordained") with the Holy orders of the Catholic Church. Technically, bishops are a priestly order as well; however, in layman's terms priest refers only to presbyters and pastors (parish priests). The church's doctrine also sometimes refers to all baptised (lay) members as the "common priesthood",[1][2] which can be confused with the ministerial priesthood of the consecrated clergy.

The church has different rules for priests in the Latin Church–the largest Catholic particular church–and in the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches. Notably, priests in the Latin Church must take a vow of celibacy, whereas most Eastern Catholic Churches permit married men to be ordained.[3] Deacons are male and usually belong to the diocesan clergy, but, unlike almost all Latin Church (Western Catholic) priests and all bishops from Eastern or Western Catholicism, they may marry as laymen before their ordination as clergy.[4] Priesthood is open only to men; women are excluded. The Catholic Church teaches that when a man participates in priesthood after the Sacrament of Holy Orders, he acts in persona Christi Capitis, representing the person of Christ.[5]

Unlike usage in English, "the Latin words sacerdos and sacerdotium are used to refer in general to the ministerial priesthood shared by bishops and presbyters. The words presbyter, presbyterium and presbyteratus refer to priests in the English use of the word or presbyters."[6] According to the Annuario Pontificio 2016, as of December 31, 2014, there were 415,792 Catholic priests worldwide, including both diocesan priests and priests in the religious orders.[7] A priest of the regular clergy is commonly addressed with the title "Father" (contracted to Fr, in the Catholic and some other Christian churches).[8]

Catholics living a consecrated life or monasticism include both the ordained and unordained. Institutes of consecrated life, or monks, can be deacons, priests, bishops, or non-ordained members of a religious order. The non-ordained in these orders are not to be considered laypersons in a strict sense—they take certain vows and are not free to marry once they have made solemn profession of vows. All female religious are non-ordained; they may be sisters living to some degree of activity in a communal state, or nuns living in cloister or some other type of isolation. The male members of religious orders, whether living in monastic communities or cloistered in isolation, and who are ordained priests or deacons constitute what is called the religious or regular clergy, distinct from the diocesan or secular clergy. Those ordained priests or deacons who are not members of some sort of religious order (secular priests) most often serve as clergy to a specific church or in an office of a specific diocese or in Rome.[9]

History

 
Priest celebrating traditional Latin Mass

Catholic priests are ordained by bishops through the sacrament of holy orders. Catholic bishops are ordained in an unbroken line of apostolic succession back to the Twelve Apostles depicted in the Catholic Bible. The ceremony of Eucharist, which can only be confected by priests, in particular derives from the story of the Last Supper, when Jesus Christ distributed bread and wine in the presence of the Twelve Apostles, in some versions of the Gospel of Luke commanding them to "do this in memory of me". (Some Protestant critics have challenged the historical accuracy of the claim of unbroken succession.[10])

Catholic tradition says the apostles in turn selected other men to succeed them as the bishops (episkopoi, Greek for "overseers") of the Christian communities, with whom were associated presbyters (presbyteroi, Greek for "elders") and deacons (diakonoi, Greek for "servants"). As communities multiplied and grew in size, the bishops appointed more and more presbyters to preside at the Eucharist in place of the bishop in the multiple communities in each region. The diaconate evolved as the liturgical assistants of the bishop and his delegate for the administration of church funds and programmes for the poor. Today, the rank of "presbyter" is typically what one thinks of as a priest, although church catechism considers both a bishop and a presbyter as "priests".[11]

The Pentarchic Church of the three first Holy Synods, which continues to hold various degrees of communion, from which the Catholic Church broke AD1054 - the Great Schism share the tradition of the sacrament of ordination by which the grace of apostolic succession is secured. Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church the Church of the East (split in 424), the Oriental Orthodoxy (split in 451) and the Eastern Orthodox Church (split with the East–West Schism of 1054). During the Protestant Reformation, Martin Luther and William Tyndale advocated the priesthood of all believers, the idea that all baptized Christians are equally part of the sacred priesthood and that ministerial priesthood has no real authority beyond that of the congregation. This was a complex and controversial matter, contributing to further schisms within the Reformation movement of the Church. The Lutheran-Evangelical Swedish Church maintains the sacrament of ordination and the doctrine of Apostolic Succession, as the Anglican Church. The doctrine is interpreted in various ways by different Protestant denominations, with some dropping apostolic succession and holy orders as a sacrament, as per example the Church of Norway and Denmark who keep their respective Monarchs as Pontifexes, sovereign heads of the church-hierarchy. There are different requirements for the performance of the Eucharistic ceremony to be valid among different kinds of Christian denominations, in regard of who are to oversee the sanctity of the Eucharist and stand as guarantor that the Holy Service is properly performed. There are significant differences particularly regarding the strictness/liberality of whom are welcome to receive the sacraments.

Through the principle of church economy, the Catholic Church Norms at the same time recognizes as valid the Holy Service of denominations practicing the Symbolum Nicaenum, also known as the Nicene Creed, and deem illicit and therefore find the ordination of priests "objectively sacrilegious" in denominations separated from the one, holy, apostolic and catholic (i.e. universal) Church. holding an unbroken apostolic succession. With the Orthodox Catholic Church it shares and defines the so-called First seven ecumenical councils. The Eastern Catholic Churches or Oriental Catholic Churches, also called the Eastern-rite Catholic Churches, Eastern Rite Catholicism, or simply the Eastern Churches are 23 Eastern Christian sui iuris (autonomous) particular churches of the Catholic Church, in full communion with the Bishop of Rome. Although they are distinct theologically, liturgically, and historically from the Latin Church, they are all in full communion with it and with each other. The Coptic Catholic Church among these 23 is not identical with the Coptic Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria. The US-based expatriate Polish National Catholic Church is an Old Catholic Congregation not in communion with the Roman Catholic Church, or any other, except from their trace of Apostolic Succession with the Old Catholics of the Netherlands, yet part of is a communion of Old Catholic churches established in 2008 by the Polish National Catholic Church (PNCC) of the United States, after the Union of Utrecht began ordaining women and blessing same-sex unions. Since then, it has expanded to include the Nordic Catholic Church (NCC), begun by people who had separated from the Church of Norway, a Lutheran-Evangelical church under sovereignty of the King of the , in opposition to similar practices and has developed a more Catholic theology. The Nordic Catholic Church includes the Christ-Catholic Church of German in Germany as a daughter-church, which traces its history through the Old Catholics of the Union of Utrecht and the Polish-Catholic Church of the Republic of Poland. In AD2008 the Old Catholics of the Union of Scranton broke away from the Union of Utrecht after the Union of Utrecht began ordaining women and blessing same-sex unions. It is after this it has expanded to include the Nordic Catholic Church . The Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Congregation of the East holds apostolic succession, but is not in communion with either the Oriental Orthodox Congregation in full communion with the Roman or the Eastern Orthodox Church. In contrast to the Evangelical-Lutheran religion of Denmark and Norway, the Church of Sweden practices Apostolic Succession, and holds Ordination as a sacrament. Recognition of the ordination of Anglican Church priests was denied in 1896 by Pope Leo XIII through the papal bull Apostolicae curae, over a dispute in the wording of the Anglican ceremony starting in the 1500s.

In the time of National Socialism there were countless priests who offered resistance. In many cases they acted against the instructions of their church superiors. Many were executed or sent to concentration camps. The Austrian priest Heinrich Maier, who saw himself as Miles Christi, headed a resistance group which, among other things, passed on plans and production sites for V-2 rockets, Tiger tanks, Messerschmitt Bf 109, Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet and other aircraft to the Allies, which were crucial for the war. The Group informed very early about the mass murder of Jews. Like Maier, many priests were brutally tortured by the Gestapo and in the concentration camps.[12][13][14][15]

In 1965, the Second Vatican Council released Presbyterorum Ordinis on the ministry and life of priests, and Optatam Totius on the training of priests.

Since 1970, the number of Catholic priests in the world has decreased by about 5,000, to 414,313 priests as of 2012.[16] but the worldwide Catholic population has nearly doubled, growing from 653.6 million in 1970 to 1.229 billion in 2012.[16] This has resulted in a worldwide shortage of Catholic priests. In 2014, 49,153 Catholic parishes had no resident priest pastor.[16] The number of priests is increasing in Africa and Asia, but not keeping pace with growth in Catholic populations there. The number of priests is falling in Europe and the Americas faster than the number of local Catholics is declining. This has resulted in some African and Asian priests being recruited to European and American churches, reversing the historical practice of Catholic missionaries being sent from Western countries to the rest of the world.

Only men are allowed to receive holy orders, and the church does not allow any transgender people to do so.[17][18]

In the 1990s and 2000s, the cases of sexual abuse by Catholic priests gained worldwide attention, with thousands of accused priests and tens of thousands of alleged victims. The church estimated that over the 50 years ending in 2009, between 1.5% and 5% of Catholic priests had a sexual encounter with a minor,[19] and Dr. Thomas Plante estimated a figure of 4%.[20][21] Public anger was fueled by the revelation that many accused priests were transferred to another parish rather than being removed from ministry or reported to police. The scandal caused some Catholics to leave the church, made recruitment of new priests more difficult, and resulted in billions of dollars in lawsuit settlements and bankruptcies that increased financial pressure to close parishes with declining membership. In February 2019, clerical abuse of nuns, including sexual slavery, has been acknowledged by the Pope.[22][23]

Theology of the priesthood

Passover and Christ

 
Ordination to the priesthood (Latin Church); devotional card, 1925

The theology of the Catholic priesthood is rooted in the priesthood of Christ and to some degree shares elements of the ancient Hebraic priesthood as well, since the Catholic priesthood is considered the fulfillment of the priesthood of the Old Covenant.[24] A priest is one who presides over a sacrifice and offers that sacrifice and prayers to God on behalf of believers. Jewish priesthood which functioned at the temple in Jerusalem offered animal sacrifices at various times throughout the year for a variety of reasons.

In Christian theology, Jesus is the Lamb provided by God himself as the sacrifice for the sins of the world. Before his death on the cross, Jesus celebrated the Passover with his disciples (the Last Supper) and offered blessings over the bread and wine respectively, saying: "Take and eat. This is my body" and "Drink from this all of you, for this is my blood, the blood of the covenant, poured out for the forgiveness of sins." (Matthew 26:26–28 Jerusalem Bible). The next day Christ's body and blood were visibly sacrificed on the cross.

Catholics believe that it is this same body, sacrificed on the cross and risen on the third day and united with Christ's divinity, soul and blood which is made present in the offering of each Eucharistic sacrifice which is called the Eucharist. The Catholic Church teaches the doctrine of transubstantiation, which states that the substances, or underlying reality, of the bread and wine is supernaturally changed by the Words of Consecration of the priest in the ritual of the Mass. At the same time, the accidents (that is, the outward appearances and attributes) remain that of bread and wine: i.e. under normal circumstances, scientific analysis of the Eucharistic elements would indicate the physical-material properties of wine and bread.[25][26]

Thus Catholic priests, in celebrating the Eucharist, join each offering of the Eucharistic elements in union with the sacrifice of Christ.[27] Through their celebration of the Holy Eucharist, they make present the one eternal sacrifice of Christ on the cross.

The Catholic Church teaches that the Sacrifice of the Mass and the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross are one and the same sacrifice (as decrees in the Council of Trent affirmed);[28] "The sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice,"[29] whereas the Jewish concept of memorial states "..the memorial is not merely a recollection of past events....these events become in a certain way present and real" and thus "...the sacrifice Christ offered once and for all on the cross remains ever present."[29] Properly speaking, in Catholic theology, as expressed by Saint Thomas Aquinas, "Only Christ is the true priest, the others being only his ministers."[30] Thus, Catholic clergy share in the one, unique, Priesthood of Christ as his instruments.[31]

Education

The Canon law of the Catholic Church holds that the priesthood is a sacred and perpetual vocational state, not just a profession (which is a reason for, and symbolized by, the state of celibacy). There are programs of formation and studies which aim to enable the future priest to effectively serve his ministry. These programs are demanded by canon law (in the Latin Church, canons 232–264) which also refers to the Bishops' Conferences for local more detailed regulation. As a general rule, education is extensive and lasts at least five or six years, depending on the national Programme of Priestly Formation.[32]

  • In the United States, priests must have undergraduate-level instruction in philosophy plus an additional four to five years of graduate-level seminary formation in theology. A Master of Divinity is the most common degree.
  • In Scotland, there is a mandatory year of preparation before entering seminary for a year dedicated to spiritual formation, followed by several years of study.
  • In Europe, Australasia and North America, seminarians usually graduate with a Master of Divinity or a Master of Theology degree, which is a four-year professional degree (as opposed to a Master of Arts which is an academic degree). At least four years are to be in theological studies at the major seminary.[33]
  • In Germany and Austria, priest candidates graduate with an academic degree (Magister theologiae, Diplom-Theologe, Master of Arts in Theology). The degree takes five years and is preceded by a year of spiritual formation (plus learning of the ancient languages) and followed by two years of pastoral practice (during which the candidate is ordained to the deaconate). Usually, priests spend all of that time in a seminary except one "free year".
  • In Africa, Asia and South America, programmes are more flexible, being developed according to the age and academic abilities of those preparing for ordination.

Regardless of where a person prepares for ordination, the process includes not only academic but also human, social, spiritual and pastoral formation. The purpose of seminary education is ultimately to prepare men to be pastors of souls.[34] In the end, however, each individual Ordinary (such as a bishop or Superior General) is responsible for the official call to priesthood, and only a bishop may ordain. Any ordinations done before the normally scheduled time (before study completion) must have the explicit approval of the bishop.

Rite of Ordination

 
During the Rite of Ordination, after the bishop, the priests present lay their hands on the ordinands.
 
Coat of arms of a Catholic priest

The Rite of Ordination is what makes one a priest, having already been a deacon and with the minister of Holy Orders being a validly ordained bishop.[35]

The Rite of Ordination occurs within the context of Holy Mass. After being called forward and presented to the assembly, the candidates are interrogated. Each promises to diligently perform the duties of the Priesthood and to respect and obey his ordinary (bishop or religious superior). Then the candidates lie prostrate before the altar, while the assembled faithful kneel and pray for the help of all the saints in the singing of the Litany of the Saints. The essential part of the rite is when the bishop silently lays his hands upon each candidate (followed by all priests present), before offering the consecratory prayer, addressed to God the Father, invoking the power of the Holy Spirit upon those being ordained. After the consecratory prayer, the newly ordained is vested with the stole and chasuble of those belonging to the Ministerial Priesthood and then the bishop anoints his hands with chrism before presenting him with the chalice and paten which he will use when presiding at the Eucharist.[citation needed]

Clerical celibacy

Early Christianity

The earliest Christians were Jews and Jewish tradition has always deemed the married state as more spiritual than the celibate state.[36][dubious ] However, some Christian traditions place a higher spiritual value on chastity. According to the Bible, the Apostle Peter had a spouse from Gospel stories of Peter's mother-in-law sick with fever (Matt 8:14, Mark 1:29, Luke 4:38)[37] and from Paul's mention that Peter took along a believing wife in his ministry (1 Cor 9:5). In I Corinthians 7, Paul makes it clear that celibacy is superior to the married state: "Now to the unmarried and the widows I say: It is good for them to stay unmarried, as I do... I would like you to be free from concern. An unmarried man is concerned about the Lord’s affairs—how he can please the Lord. But a married man is concerned about the affairs of this world... An unmarried woman or virgin is concerned about the Lord’s affairs; [b]ut a married woman is concerned about the affairs of this world[.] I am saying this for your own good, not to restrict you, but that you may live in a right way in undivided devotion to the Lord. ...So then, he who marries the virgin does right, but he who does not marry her does better."[38]

From its beginnings, the idea of clerical celibacy has been contested in canon courts, in theology, and in religious practices. Celibacy for Roman Catholic priests was not mandated under canon law for the universal church until the Second Lateran Council in 1139.[39]

The Council of Elvira in Spain (c. 305–306) was the first council to call for clerical celibacy. In February 385, Pope Siricius wrote the Directa decretal, which was a long letter to Spanish bishop Himerius of Tarragona, replying to the bishop's requests on various subjects, which had been sent several months earlier to Pope Damasus I.[40] It was the first of a series of documents published by the church's magisterium that claimed apostolic origin for clerical celibacy.

After the Great Schism

Within a century of the Great Schism of 1054, the Churches of the East and West arrived at different disciplines as to abstaining from sexual contact during marriage. In the East, candidates for the priesthood could be married with permission to have regular sexual relations with their wives, but were required to abstain before celebrating the Eucharist. An unmarried person, once ordained, could not marry. Additionally, the Christian East required that, before becoming a bishop, a priest separate from his wife (she was permitted to object), with her typically becoming a nun. In the East, more normally, bishops are chosen from those priests who are monks and are thus unmarried.

In the West, the law of celibacy became mandatory by Pope Gregory VII at the Roman Synod of 1074.[41][42] This law mandated that, in order to become a candidate for ordination, a man could not be married. The law remains in effect in the Latin Church, although not for those who are priests of the Eastern Catholic Churches, who remain under their own discipline. (These churches either remained in or returned to full communion with Rome after the schism, unlike for example the Eastern Orthodox Church which is now entirely separate). The issue of mandatory celibacy in the Latin Church continues to be debated.[citation needed]

Duties of a Catholic priest

Bishops, priests, and deacons who want to become priests are also required to recite the principal and minor offices of the Liturgy of the Hours, or Divine Office, daily,[43] a practice which is also followed by non-ordained people in some religious orders.

A priest who is a pastor is responsible for the administration of a Catholic parish, typically with a single church building dedicated for worship (and usually a nearby residence), and for seeing to the spiritual needs of Catholics who belong to the parish. This involves performing ceremonies for the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church, and counseling people.[44] He may be assisted by other diocesan priests and deacons, and serves under the local diocesan bishop, who is in charge of the many parishes in the territory of the diocese or archdiocese. In some cases due to the shortage of priests and the expense of a full-time priest for depopulated parishes, a team of priests in solidum may share the management of several parishes.

According to Catholic doctrine, a priest or bishop is necessary in order to perform the ceremony of the Eucharist, take confession,[45] and perform Anointing of the Sick.[46][47] Deacons may distribute Holy Communion after a priest or bishop has consecrated the bread and wine, and, in extraordinary circumstances, lay people, called "Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion", may do so as well. Priests and deacons ordinarily perform Baptism, but any Catholic can baptize in emergency circumstances. In cases where a person dies before the baptism ceremony is performed, the Catholic Church also recognizes baptism of desire, where a person desired to be baptized, and baptism of blood, when a person is martyred for their faith.

According to church doctrine, a priest or bishop ordinarily performs a Holy Matrimony, but a deacon or even a layperson can be delegated if that is impractical, and in an emergency the couple can perform the ceremony themselves as long as there are two witnesses. (Church doctrine says it is the couple actually conferring marriage upon each other, and the priest is merely assisting and witnessing that it be done properly.)[48]

Eastern Catholic Churches

 
Married Romanian Eastern Catholic priest from Romania with his family

The Catholic Church has different rules for the priesthood in the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches than those in the Latin Church. The chief difference is that most of the Eastern Catholic Churches ordain married men, whereas the Latin Church, with very few exceptions, enforces mandatory clerical celibacy. This issue has caused tension among Catholics in some situations where Eastern churches established parishes in countries with established Latin Catholic populations. In the Americas and Australia, this tension led to bans on married Eastern Catholic priests, all of which were overturned by Pope Francis in 2014.[3]

Within the lands of the Eastern Christendom, priests' children often became priests and married within their social group, establishing a tightly-knit hereditary caste among some Eastern Christian communities.[49][50]

Demographics

Worldwide, the number of priests has remained fairly steady since 1970, decreasing by about 5,000. This stagnation is due to a balancing of large growth in Africa and Asia and a significant decrease in North America and Europe.

Historical number of priests worldwide
YearPriests±%
1970419,728—    
1975404,783−3.6%
1980413,600+2.2%
1985403,480−2.4%
YearPriests±%
1990403,173−0.1%
1995404,750+0.4%
2000405,178+0.1%
2005406,411+0.3%
YearPriests±%
2010412,236+1.4%
2014414,313+0.5%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

Asia

Singapore

Historical number of priests in Singapore
YearPriests±%
195043—    
1969105+144.2%
198090−14.3%
YearPriests±%
1990119+32.2%
2000140+17.6%
2004137−2.1%
YearPriests±%
2010131−4.4%
2014145+10.7%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

Europe

Belgium

Historical number of priests in Belgium
YearPriests±%
195014,690—    
197012,100−17.6%
198012,741+5.3%
YearPriests±%
19909,912−22.2%
20006,989−29.5%
20046,366−8.9%
YearPriests±%
20135,595−12.1%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

France

Historical number of priests in France
YearPriests±%
195540,000—    
197832,475−18.8%
YearPriests±%
200317,473−46.2%
200615,440−11.6%
YearPriests±%
201314,000−9.3%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

Luxembourg

Historical number of priests in Luxembourg
YearPriests±%
1950601—    
1969524−12.8%
YearPriests±%
1980457−12.8%
1990352−23.0%
YearPriests±%
2004248−29.5%
2013205−17.3%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

Poland

Historical number of priests in Poland
YearPriests±%
18482,218—    
YearPriests±%
19126,500+193.1%
YearPriests±%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

Sweden

Historical number of priests in Sweden
YearPriests±%
194945—    
196980+77.8%
198099+23.8%
YearPriests±%
1990110+11.1%
2000134+21.8%
2004151+12.7%
YearPriests±%
2010156+3.3%
2014159+1.9%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

Switzerland

Historical number of priests in Switzerland
YearPriests±%
19702,877—    
YearPriests±%
19892,100−27.0%
YearPriests±%
20091,441−31.4%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

North America

Mexico

Historical number of priests in Mexico
YearPriests±%
198010,192—    
199011,641+14.2%
YearPriests±%
200014,176+21.8%
201016,856+18.9%
YearPriests±%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

United States

Historical number of priests in the US
YearPriests±%
193027,000—    
195050,500+87.0%
196558,632+16.1%
197059,192+1.0%
197558,909−0.5%
YearPriests±%
198058,398−0.9%
198557,317−1.9%
199052,124−9.1%
199549,054−5.9%
200045,699−6.8%
YearPriests±%
200541,399−9.4%
201039,993−3.4%
201537,192−7.0%
Includes both diocesan and religious priests.

See also

References

  1. ^ Lumen Gentium 10
  2. ^ "Catechism of the Catholic Church – IntraText". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  3. ^ a b Dragani, Anthony (2016). "Eastern Catholic Churches in the United States". In Kurian, George Thomas; Lamport, Mark A. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 745–746. ISBN 978-1442244320. Retrieved October 24, 2018.
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  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 31 May 2016. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  6. ^ Woestman, Wm., The Sacrament of Orders and the Clerical State St Paul's University Press: Ottawa, 2006, p. 8, see also De Ordinatione
  7. ^ Junno Arocho Esteves, Vatican statistics report increase in baptized Catholics worldwide, Catholic News Service (March 7, 2016).
  8. ^ "Father".
  9. ^ Cf. Code of Canon Law, canon 266
  10. ^ Jay, Eric G. The Church: its changing image through twenty centuries John Knox Press: 1980, p.316f
  11. ^ Catechism of the Catholic Church #1547–57; Aidan Nichols, Holy Order: The Apostolic Ministry from the New Testament to the Second Vatican Council
  12. ^ Elisabeth Boeckl-Klamper, Thomas Mang, Wolfgang Neugebauer: "Gestapo-Leitstelle Wien 1938–1945." Vienna 2018, pp. 299–305.
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  15. ^ Der Priesterblock im Lager Dachau
  16. ^ a b c "Frequently Requested Church Statistics". cara.georgetown.edu. Washington, DC: Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate. from the original on 2016-01-20. Retrieved 2016-02-01.
  17. ^ The church considers trans men to be women, and considers trans women to be men of unsuitable character. See LGBT clergy in Christianity § Roman Catholic for details.
  18. ^ Norton, John (14 January 2003). "Vatican says 'sex-change' operation does not change person's gender". Catholic News Service. Retrieved 19 July 2009.
  19. ^ Tomasi, Silvano (September 22, 2009). "Vatican Sets Record Straight on Sexual Abuse". Catholic Education Resource Center. Retrieved 2018-09-27.
  20. ^ Thomas Plante: OpEd: "A Perspective on Clergy Sexual Abuse," San Jose Mercury News, 24 March 2002 (updated online version)
  21. ^ Pastoral Psychology, Vol. 52, No. 5, May 2004 ( C ° 2004) "The Sexual Abuse Crisis in the Roman Catholic Church: What Psychologists and Counselors Should Know", Thomas G. Plante, 1;2;3 and Courtney Daniels1 Springer Publishing, 2004 http://www.scu.edu/cas/psychology/faculty/upload/Plante-Clergy-Paper-2.pdf
  22. ^ Staff (February 6, 2019). "Pope admits clerical abuse of nuns including sexual slavery". BBC News. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  23. ^ The Associated Press (February 5, 2019). "Pope Publicly Acknowledges Clergy Sexual Abuse of Nuns". The New York Times. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  24. ^ "Priesthood". Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  25. ^ "transubstantiation | Definition & Doctrine | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-03-12.
  26. ^ Saunders, William. "Transubstantiation". www.catholiceducation.org. Retrieved 2022-03-12.
  27. ^ Taylor Marshall, The Crucified Rabbi: Judaism and the Origins of the Catholic Christianity, Saint John Press, 2009 ISBN 978-0-578-03834-6 pp. 91–92
  28. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Sacrifice of the Mass". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 2022-03-12.
  29. ^ a b "Catechism of the Catholic Church – Part 2 Section 2 Chapter 1 Article 3". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  30. ^ "Catechism of the Catholic Church – The sacrament of Holy Orders". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  31. ^ "Presbyterorum ordinis". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  32. ^ can. 242.1 CIC 1983
  33. ^ can. 235.1, CIC 1983
  34. ^ Presbyterorum ordinis 4
  35. ^ "Code of Canon Law: text – IntraText CT". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  36. ^ Encyclopedia Judaica, second ed, vol 4, 2007, New York: Thomson Gale, 537
  37. ^ Audet, Jean, Structures of Christian Priesthood, New York: Doubleday 1961
  38. ^ "1 Corinthians 7". Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  39. ^ The New Catholic Encyclopedia, Washington, DC: Catholic University of America: Washington, vol 3, 366
  40. ^ "Current Sales Email Promotions - Christianbook.com". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  41. ^ John Trigilio, Kenneth Brighenti. Catholicism for Dummies, p. 221 (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2011). ISBN 978-1-118-07778-8
  42. ^ Helen Parish, Clerical Celibacy In The West: c. 1100–1700, p. 100, footnotes 45 and 46 (Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2010). ISBN 978-0-7546-3949-7
  43. ^ Congregation for Divine Worship, Institutio generalis de Liturgia horarum Feb. 2, 1971
  44. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Priesthood" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  45. ^ "Code of Canon Law – IntraText". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  46. ^ "Code of Canon Law – IntraText". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  47. ^ "Code of Canon Law – IntraText". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  48. ^ "canons 1108–1116".
  49. ^ W. Braumüller, W. (2006). The Rusyn-Ukrainians of Czechoslovakia: An Historical Survey. University of Michigan Press. p. 17. ISBN 9783700303121. because Eastern Christian priests were allowed to marry and therefore the clergy soon became somewhat of a caste made up of a closely - knit families
  50. ^ Tarnavky, Spohady, cited in Jean-Paul Himka. (1986). The Greek Catholic Church and Ukrainian Society in Austrian Galicia. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press pg. 444

External links

  • The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church Current and historical information about its bishops and dioceses (includes current and historical demographics for priests)
  • VISION Vocation Guide information about Roman Catholic priesthood and religious life with directory of men's religious communities and diocesan links.
  • Milwaukee Holy Orders: The Making of a Priest 2016-03-16 at the Wayback Machine Documentary produced by Milwaukee PBS
  • Application to Mount Angel Seminary in Oregon (an example of questions asked about potential priests' character and activities)

priesthood, catholic, church, priesthood, office, ministers, religion, have, been, commissioned, ordained, with, holy, orders, catholic, church, technically, bishops, priestly, order, well, however, layman, terms, priest, refers, only, presbyters, pastors, par. The priesthood is the office of the ministers of religion who have been commissioned ordained with the Holy orders of the Catholic Church Technically bishops are a priestly order as well however in layman s terms priest refers only to presbyters and pastors parish priests The church s doctrine also sometimes refers to all baptised lay members as the common priesthood 1 2 which can be confused with the ministerial priesthood of the consecrated clergy The church has different rules for priests in the Latin Church the largest Catholic particular church and in the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches Notably priests in the Latin Church must take a vow of celibacy whereas most Eastern Catholic Churches permit married men to be ordained 3 Deacons are male and usually belong to the diocesan clergy but unlike almost all Latin Church Western Catholic priests and all bishops from Eastern or Western Catholicism they may marry as laymen before their ordination as clergy 4 Priesthood is open only to men women are excluded The Catholic Church teaches that when a man participates in priesthood after the Sacrament of Holy Orders he acts in persona Christi Capitis representing the person of Christ 5 Unlike usage in English the Latin words sacerdos and sacerdotium are used to refer in general to the ministerial priesthood shared by bishops and presbyters The words presbyter presbyterium and presbyteratus refer to priests in the English use of the word or presbyters 6 According to the Annuario Pontificio 2016 as of December 31 2014 there were 415 792 Catholic priests worldwide including both diocesan priests and priests in the religious orders 7 A priest of the regular clergy is commonly addressed with the title Father contracted to Fr in the Catholic and some other Christian churches 8 Catholics living a consecrated life or monasticism include both the ordained and unordained Institutes of consecrated life or monks can be deacons priests bishops or non ordained members of a religious order The non ordained in these orders are not to be considered laypersons in a strict sense they take certain vows and are not free to marry once they have made solemn profession of vows All female religious are non ordained they may be sisters living to some degree of activity in a communal state or nuns living in cloister or some other type of isolation The male members of religious orders whether living in monastic communities or cloistered in isolation and who are ordained priests or deacons constitute what is called the religious or regular clergy distinct from the diocesan or secular clergy Those ordained priests or deacons who are not members of some sort of religious order secular priests most often serve as clergy to a specific church or in an office of a specific diocese or in Rome 9 Contents 1 History 2 Theology of the priesthood 2 1 Passover and Christ 3 Education 4 Rite of Ordination 5 Clerical celibacy 5 1 Early Christianity 5 2 After the Great Schism 6 Duties of a Catholic priest 7 Eastern Catholic Churches 8 Demographics 8 1 Asia 8 1 1 Singapore 8 2 Europe 8 2 1 Belgium 8 2 2 France 8 2 3 Luxembourg 8 2 4 Poland 8 2 5 Sweden 8 2 6 Switzerland 8 3 North America 8 3 1 Mexico 8 3 2 United States 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory Edit Priest celebrating traditional Latin Mass Catholic priests are ordained by bishops through the sacrament of holy orders Catholic bishops are ordained in an unbroken line of apostolic succession back to the Twelve Apostles depicted in the Catholic Bible The ceremony of Eucharist which can only be confected by priests in particular derives from the story of the Last Supper when Jesus Christ distributed bread and wine in the presence of the Twelve Apostles in some versions of the Gospel of Luke commanding them to do this in memory of me Some Protestant critics have challenged the historical accuracy of the claim of unbroken succession 10 Catholic tradition says the apostles in turn selected other men to succeed them as the bishops episkopoi Greek for overseers of the Christian communities with whom were associated presbyters presbyteroi Greek for elders and deacons diakonoi Greek for servants As communities multiplied and grew in size the bishops appointed more and more presbyters to preside at the Eucharist in place of the bishop in the multiple communities in each region The diaconate evolved as the liturgical assistants of the bishop and his delegate for the administration of church funds and programmes for the poor Today the rank of presbyter is typically what one thinks of as a priest although church catechism considers both a bishop and a presbyter as priests 11 The Pentarchic Church of the three first Holy Synods which continues to hold various degrees of communion from which the Catholic Church broke AD1054 the Great Schism share the tradition of the sacrament of ordination by which the grace of apostolic succession is secured Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church the Church of the East split in 424 the Oriental Orthodoxy split in 451 and the Eastern Orthodox Church split with the East West Schism of 1054 During the Protestant Reformation Martin Luther and William Tyndale advocated the priesthood of all believers the idea that all baptized Christians are equally part of the sacred priesthood and that ministerial priesthood has no real authority beyond that of the congregation This was a complex and controversial matter contributing to further schisms within the Reformation movement of the Church The Lutheran Evangelical Swedish Church maintains the sacrament of ordination and the doctrine of Apostolic Succession as the Anglican Church The doctrine is interpreted in various ways by different Protestant denominations with some dropping apostolic succession and holy orders as a sacrament as per example the Church of Norway and Denmark who keep their respective Monarchs as Pontifexes sovereign heads of the church hierarchy There are different requirements for the performance of the Eucharistic ceremony to be valid among different kinds of Christian denominations in regard of who are to oversee the sanctity of the Eucharist and stand as guarantor that the Holy Service is properly performed There are significant differences particularly regarding the strictness liberality of whom are welcome to receive the sacraments Through the principle of church economy the Catholic Church Norms at the same time recognizes as valid the Holy Service of denominations practicing the Symbolum Nicaenum also known as the Nicene Creed and deem illicit and therefore find the ordination of priests objectively sacrilegious in denominations separated from the one holy apostolic and catholic i e universal Church holding an unbroken apostolic succession With the Orthodox Catholic Church it shares and defines the so called First seven ecumenical councils The Eastern Catholic Churches or Oriental Catholic Churches also called the Eastern rite Catholic Churches Eastern Rite Catholicism or simply the Eastern Churches are 23 Eastern Christian sui iuris autonomous particular churches of the Catholic Church in full communion with the Bishop of Rome Although they are distinct theologically liturgically and historically from the Latin Church they are all in full communion with it and with each other The Coptic Catholic Church among these 23 is not identical with the Coptic Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria The US based expatriate Polish National Catholic Church is an Old Catholic Congregation not in communion with the Roman Catholic Church or any other except from their trace of Apostolic Succession with the Old Catholics of the Netherlands yet part of is a communion of Old Catholic churches established in 2008 by the Polish National Catholic Church PNCC of the United States after the Union of Utrecht began ordaining women and blessing same sex unions Since then it has expanded to include the Nordic Catholic Church NCC begun by people who had separated from the Church of Norway a Lutheran Evangelical church under sovereignty of the King of the in opposition to similar practices and has developed a more Catholic theology The Nordic Catholic Church includes the Christ Catholic Church of German in Germany as a daughter church which traces its history through the Old Catholics of the Union of Utrecht and the Polish Catholic Church of the Republic of Poland In AD2008 the Old Catholics of the Union of Scranton broke away from the Union of Utrecht after the Union of Utrecht began ordaining women and blessing same sex unions It is after this it has expanded to include the Nordic Catholic Church The Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Congregation of the East holds apostolic succession but is not in communion with either the Oriental Orthodox Congregation in full communion with the Roman or the Eastern Orthodox Church In contrast to the Evangelical Lutheran religion of Denmark and Norway the Church of Sweden practices Apostolic Succession and holds Ordination as a sacrament Recognition of the ordination of Anglican Church priests was denied in 1896 by Pope Leo XIII through the papal bull Apostolicae curae over a dispute in the wording of the Anglican ceremony starting in the 1500s In the time of National Socialism there were countless priests who offered resistance In many cases they acted against the instructions of their church superiors Many were executed or sent to concentration camps The Austrian priest Heinrich Maier who saw himself as Miles Christi headed a resistance group which among other things passed on plans and production sites for V 2 rockets Tiger tanks Messerschmitt Bf 109 Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet and other aircraft to the Allies which were crucial for the war The Group informed very early about the mass murder of Jews Like Maier many priests were brutally tortured by the Gestapo and in the concentration camps 12 13 14 15 In 1965 the Second Vatican Council released Presbyterorum Ordinis on the ministry and life of priests and Optatam Totius on the training of priests Since 1970 the number of Catholic priests in the world has decreased by about 5 000 to 414 313 priests as of 2012 16 but the worldwide Catholic population has nearly doubled growing from 653 6 million in 1970 to 1 229 billion in 2012 16 This has resulted in a worldwide shortage of Catholic priests In 2014 49 153 Catholic parishes had no resident priest pastor 16 The number of priests is increasing in Africa and Asia but not keeping pace with growth in Catholic populations there The number of priests is falling in Europe and the Americas faster than the number of local Catholics is declining This has resulted in some African and Asian priests being recruited to European and American churches reversing the historical practice of Catholic missionaries being sent from Western countries to the rest of the world Only men are allowed to receive holy orders and the church does not allow any transgender people to do so 17 18 In the 1990s and 2000s the cases of sexual abuse by Catholic priests gained worldwide attention with thousands of accused priests and tens of thousands of alleged victims The church estimated that over the 50 years ending in 2009 between 1 5 and 5 of Catholic priests had a sexual encounter with a minor 19 and Dr Thomas Plante estimated a figure of 4 20 21 Public anger was fueled by the revelation that many accused priests were transferred to another parish rather than being removed from ministry or reported to police The scandal caused some Catholics to leave the church made recruitment of new priests more difficult and resulted in billions of dollars in lawsuit settlements and bankruptcies that increased financial pressure to close parishes with declining membership In February 2019 clerical abuse of nuns including sexual slavery has been acknowledged by the Pope 22 23 Theology of the priesthood EditSee also Sacerdotalism Passover and Christ Edit Ordination to the priesthood Latin Church devotional card 1925 The theology of the Catholic priesthood is rooted in the priesthood of Christ and to some degree shares elements of the ancient Hebraic priesthood as well since the Catholic priesthood is considered the fulfillment of the priesthood of the Old Covenant 24 A priest is one who presides over a sacrifice and offers that sacrifice and prayers to God on behalf of believers Jewish priesthood which functioned at the temple in Jerusalem offered animal sacrifices at various times throughout the year for a variety of reasons In Christian theology Jesus is the Lamb provided by God himself as the sacrifice for the sins of the world Before his death on the cross Jesus celebrated the Passover with his disciples the Last Supper and offered blessings over the bread and wine respectively saying Take and eat This is my body and Drink from this all of you for this is my blood the blood of the covenant poured out for the forgiveness of sins Matthew 26 26 28 Jerusalem Bible The next day Christ s body and blood were visibly sacrificed on the cross Catholics believe that it is this same body sacrificed on the cross and risen on the third day and united with Christ s divinity soul and blood which is made present in the offering of each Eucharistic sacrifice which is called the Eucharist The Catholic Church teaches the doctrine of transubstantiation which states that the substances or underlying reality of the bread and wine is supernaturally changed by the Words of Consecration of the priest in the ritual of the Mass At the same time the accidents that is the outward appearances and attributes remain that of bread and wine i e under normal circumstances scientific analysis of the Eucharistic elements would indicate the physical material properties of wine and bread 25 26 Thus Catholic priests in celebrating the Eucharist join each offering of the Eucharistic elements in union with the sacrifice of Christ 27 Through their celebration of the Holy Eucharist they make present the one eternal sacrifice of Christ on the cross The Catholic Church teaches that the Sacrifice of the Mass and the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross are one and the same sacrifice as decrees in the Council of Trent affirmed 28 The sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice 29 whereas the Jewish concept of memorial states the memorial is not merely a recollection of past events these events become in a certain way present and real and thus the sacrifice Christ offered once and for all on the cross remains ever present 29 Properly speaking in Catholic theology as expressed by Saint Thomas Aquinas Only Christ is the true priest the others being only his ministers 30 Thus Catholic clergy share in the one unique Priesthood of Christ as his instruments 31 Education EditSee also Candidacy Deacon and List of Roman Catholic seminaries The Canon law of the Catholic Church holds that the priesthood is a sacred and perpetual vocational state not just a profession which is a reason for and symbolized by the state of celibacy There are programs of formation and studies which aim to enable the future priest to effectively serve his ministry These programs are demanded by canon law in the Latin Church canons 232 264 which also refers to the Bishops Conferences for local more detailed regulation As a general rule education is extensive and lasts at least five or six years depending on the national Programme of Priestly Formation 32 In the United States priests must have undergraduate level instruction in philosophy plus an additional four to five years of graduate level seminary formation in theology A Master of Divinity is the most common degree In Scotland there is a mandatory year of preparation before entering seminary for a year dedicated to spiritual formation followed by several years of study In Europe Australasia and North America seminarians usually graduate with a Master of Divinity or a Master of Theology degree which is a four year professional degree as opposed to a Master of Arts which is an academic degree At least four years are to be in theological studies at the major seminary 33 In Germany and Austria priest candidates graduate with an academic degree Magister theologiae Diplom Theologe Master of Arts in Theology The degree takes five years and is preceded by a year of spiritual formation plus learning of the ancient languages and followed by two years of pastoral practice during which the candidate is ordained to the deaconate Usually priests spend all of that time in a seminary except one free year In Africa Asia and South America programmes are more flexible being developed according to the age and academic abilities of those preparing for ordination Regardless of where a person prepares for ordination the process includes not only academic but also human social spiritual and pastoral formation The purpose of seminary education is ultimately to prepare men to be pastors of souls 34 In the end however each individual Ordinary such as a bishop or Superior General is responsible for the official call to priesthood and only a bishop may ordain Any ordinations done before the normally scheduled time before study completion must have the explicit approval of the bishop Rite of Ordination Edit During the Rite of Ordination after the bishop the priests present lay their hands on the ordinands Coat of arms of a Catholic priest Main article Holy Orders Catholic Church Rite The Rite of Ordination is what makes one a priest having already been a deacon and with the minister of Holy Orders being a validly ordained bishop 35 The Rite of Ordination occurs within the context of Holy Mass After being called forward and presented to the assembly the candidates are interrogated Each promises to diligently perform the duties of the Priesthood and to respect and obey his ordinary bishop or religious superior Then the candidates lie prostrate before the altar while the assembled faithful kneel and pray for the help of all the saints in the singing of the Litany of the Saints The essential part of the rite is when the bishop silently lays his hands upon each candidate followed by all priests present before offering the consecratory prayer addressed to God the Father invoking the power of the Holy Spirit upon those being ordained After the consecratory prayer the newly ordained is vested with the stole and chasuble of those belonging to the Ministerial Priesthood and then the bishop anoints his hands with chrism before presenting him with the chalice and paten which he will use when presiding at the Eucharist citation needed Clerical celibacy EditMain article Clerical celibacy in the Catholic Church Early Christianity Edit The earliest Christians were Jews and Jewish tradition has always deemed the married state as more spiritual than the celibate state 36 dubious discuss However some Christian traditions place a higher spiritual value on chastity According to the Bible the Apostle Peter had a spouse from Gospel stories of Peter s mother in law sick with fever Matt 8 14 Mark 1 29 Luke 4 38 37 and from Paul s mention that Peter took along a believing wife in his ministry 1 Cor 9 5 In I Corinthians 7 Paul makes it clear that celibacy is superior to the married state Now to the unmarried and the widows I say It is good for them to stay unmarried as I do I would like you to be free from concern An unmarried man is concerned about the Lord s affairs how he can please the Lord But a married man is concerned about the affairs of this world An unmarried woman or virgin is concerned about the Lord s affairs b ut a married woman is concerned about the affairs of this world I am saying this for your own good not to restrict you but that you may live in a right way in undivided devotion to the Lord So then he who marries the virgin does right but he who does not marry her does better 38 From its beginnings the idea of clerical celibacy has been contested in canon courts in theology and in religious practices Celibacy for Roman Catholic priests was not mandated under canon law for the universal church until the Second Lateran Council in 1139 39 The Council of Elvira in Spain c 305 306 was the first council to call for clerical celibacy In February 385 Pope Siricius wrote the Directa decretal which was a long letter to Spanish bishop Himerius of Tarragona replying to the bishop s requests on various subjects which had been sent several months earlier to Pope Damasus I 40 It was the first of a series of documents published by the church s magisterium that claimed apostolic origin for clerical celibacy After the Great Schism Edit Within a century of the Great Schism of 1054 the Churches of the East and West arrived at different disciplines as to abstaining from sexual contact during marriage In the East candidates for the priesthood could be married with permission to have regular sexual relations with their wives but were required to abstain before celebrating the Eucharist An unmarried person once ordained could not marry Additionally the Christian East required that before becoming a bishop a priest separate from his wife she was permitted to object with her typically becoming a nun In the East more normally bishops are chosen from those priests who are monks and are thus unmarried In the West the law of celibacy became mandatory by Pope Gregory VII at the Roman Synod of 1074 41 42 This law mandated that in order to become a candidate for ordination a man could not be married The law remains in effect in the Latin Church although not for those who are priests of the Eastern Catholic Churches who remain under their own discipline These churches either remained in or returned to full communion with Rome after the schism unlike for example the Eastern Orthodox Church which is now entirely separate The issue of mandatory celibacy in the Latin Church continues to be debated citation needed Duties of a Catholic priest EditBishops priests and deacons who want to become priests are also required to recite the principal and minor offices of the Liturgy of the Hours or Divine Office daily 43 a practice which is also followed by non ordained people in some religious orders A priest who is a pastor is responsible for the administration of a Catholic parish typically with a single church building dedicated for worship and usually a nearby residence and for seeing to the spiritual needs of Catholics who belong to the parish This involves performing ceremonies for the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church and counseling people 44 He may be assisted by other diocesan priests and deacons and serves under the local diocesan bishop who is in charge of the many parishes in the territory of the diocese or archdiocese In some cases due to the shortage of priests and the expense of a full time priest for depopulated parishes a team of priests in solidum may share the management of several parishes According to Catholic doctrine a priest or bishop is necessary in order to perform the ceremony of the Eucharist take confession 45 and perform Anointing of the Sick 46 47 Deacons may distribute Holy Communion after a priest or bishop has consecrated the bread and wine and in extraordinary circumstances lay people called Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion may do so as well Priests and deacons ordinarily perform Baptism but any Catholic can baptize in emergency circumstances In cases where a person dies before the baptism ceremony is performed the Catholic Church also recognizes baptism of desire where a person desired to be baptized and baptism of blood when a person is martyred for their faith According to church doctrine a priest or bishop ordinarily performs a Holy Matrimony but a deacon or even a layperson can be delegated if that is impractical and in an emergency the couple can perform the ceremony themselves as long as there are two witnesses Church doctrine says it is the couple actually conferring marriage upon each other and the priest is merely assisting and witnessing that it be done properly 48 Eastern Catholic Churches Edit Married Romanian Eastern Catholic priest from Romania with his family The Catholic Church has different rules for the priesthood in the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches than those in the Latin Church The chief difference is that most of the Eastern Catholic Churches ordain married men whereas the Latin Church with very few exceptions enforces mandatory clerical celibacy This issue has caused tension among Catholics in some situations where Eastern churches established parishes in countries with established Latin Catholic populations In the Americas and Australia this tension led to bans on married Eastern Catholic priests all of which were overturned by Pope Francis in 2014 3 Within the lands of the Eastern Christendom priests children often became priests and married within their social group establishing a tightly knit hereditary caste among some Eastern Christian communities 49 50 Demographics EditMain article Priest shortage in the Catholic Church Worldwide the number of priests has remained fairly steady since 1970 decreasing by about 5 000 This stagnation is due to a balancing of large growth in Africa and Asia and a significant decrease in North America and Europe Historical number of priests worldwideYearPriests 1970419 728 1975404 783 3 6 1980413 600 2 2 1985403 480 2 4 YearPriests 1990403 173 0 1 1995404 750 0 4 2000405 178 0 1 2005406 411 0 3 YearPriests 2010412 236 1 4 2014414 313 0 5 Includes both diocesan and religious priests Asia Edit Singapore Edit Historical number of priests in SingaporeYearPriests 195043 1969105 144 2 198090 14 3 YearPriests 1990119 32 2 2000140 17 6 2004137 2 1 YearPriests 2010131 4 4 2014145 10 7 Includes both diocesan and religious priests Europe Edit Belgium Edit Historical number of priests in BelgiumYearPriests 195014 690 197012 100 17 6 198012 741 5 3 YearPriests 19909 912 22 2 20006 989 29 5 20046 366 8 9 YearPriests 20135 595 12 1 Includes both diocesan and religious priests France Edit Historical number of priests in FranceYearPriests 195540 000 197832 475 18 8 YearPriests 200317 473 46 2 200615 440 11 6 YearPriests 201314 000 9 3 Includes both diocesan and religious priests Luxembourg Edit Historical number of priests in LuxembourgYearPriests 1950601 1969524 12 8 YearPriests 1980457 12 8 1990352 23 0 YearPriests 2004248 29 5 2013205 17 3 Includes both diocesan and religious priests Poland Edit Historical number of priests in PolandYearPriests 18482 218 YearPriests 19126 500 193 1 YearPriests Includes both diocesan and religious priests Sweden Edit Historical number of priests in SwedenYearPriests 194945 196980 77 8 198099 23 8 YearPriests 1990110 11 1 2000134 21 8 2004151 12 7 YearPriests 2010156 3 3 2014159 1 9 Includes both diocesan and religious priests Switzerland Edit Historical number of priests in SwitzerlandYearPriests 19702 877 YearPriests 19892 100 27 0 YearPriests 20091 441 31 4 Includes both diocesan and religious priests North America Edit Mexico Edit Historical number of priests in MexicoYearPriests 198010 192 199011 641 14 2 YearPriests 200014 176 21 8 201016 856 18 9 YearPriests Includes both diocesan and religious priests United States Edit Historical number of priests in the USYearPriests 193027 000 195050 500 87 0 196558 632 16 1 197059 192 1 0 197558 909 0 5 YearPriests 198058 398 0 9 198557 317 1 9 199052 124 9 1 199549 054 5 9 200045 699 6 8 YearPriests 200541 399 9 4 201039 993 3 4 201537 192 7 0 Includes both diocesan and religious priests See also Edit Catholicism portalAmovibility some canon law applying to priests List of Catholic priests Ordination of women and the Catholic Church Religious minister Vocational discernment in the Catholic Church Impediment Catholic canon law References Edit Lumen Gentium 10 Catechism of the Catholic Church IntraText Retrieved 2 July 2016 a b Dragani Anthony 2016 Eastern Catholic Churches in the United States In Kurian George Thomas Lamport Mark A eds Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States Rowman amp Littlefield pp 745 746 ISBN 978 1442244320 Retrieved October 24 2018 Code of Canon Law IntraText Retrieved 2 July 2016 Can a Woman Be a Priest in the Catholic Church Archived from the original on 31 May 2016 Retrieved 2 July 2016 Woestman Wm The Sacrament of Orders and the Clerical State St Paul s University Press Ottawa 2006 p 8 see also De Ordinatione Junno Arocho Esteves Vatican statistics report increase in baptized Catholics worldwide Catholic News Service March 7 2016 Father Cf Code of Canon Law canon 266 Jay Eric G The Church its changing image through twenty centuries John Knox Press 1980 p 316f Catechism of the Catholic Church 1547 57 Aidan Nichols Holy Order The Apostolic Ministry from the New Testament to the Second Vatican Council Elisabeth Boeckl Klamper Thomas Mang Wolfgang Neugebauer Gestapo Leitstelle Wien 1938 1945 Vienna 2018 pp 299 305 Kershaw 2000 pp 210 211 sfn error no target CITEREFKershaw2000 help Hugo Pfeil Leben Leiden und Sterben der kath Priester im KZ Dachau 2012 Der Priesterblock im Lager Dachau a b c Frequently Requested Church Statistics cara georgetown edu Washington DC Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate Archived from the original on 2016 01 20 Retrieved 2016 02 01 The church considers trans men to be women and considers trans women to be men of unsuitable character See LGBT clergy in Christianity Roman Catholic for details Norton John 14 January 2003 Vatican says sex change operation does not change person s gender Catholic News Service Retrieved 19 July 2009 Tomasi Silvano September 22 2009 Vatican Sets Record Straight on Sexual Abuse Catholic Education Resource Center Retrieved 2018 09 27 Thomas Plante OpEd A Perspective on Clergy Sexual Abuse San Jose Mercury News 24 March 2002 updated online version Pastoral Psychology Vol 52 No 5 May 2004 C 2004 The Sexual Abuse Crisis in the Roman Catholic Church What Psychologists and Counselors Should Know Thomas G Plante 1 2 3 and Courtney Daniels1 Springer Publishing 2004 http www scu edu cas psychology faculty upload Plante Clergy Paper 2 pdf Staff February 6 2019 Pope admits clerical abuse of nuns including sexual slavery BBC News Retrieved February 9 2019 The Associated Press February 5 2019 Pope Publicly Acknowledges Clergy Sexual Abuse of Nuns The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2019 Priesthood Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 2 July 2016 transubstantiation Definition amp Doctrine Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 03 12 Saunders William Transubstantiation www catholiceducation org Retrieved 2022 03 12 Taylor Marshall The Crucified Rabbi Judaism and the Origins of the Catholic Christianity Saint John Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 578 03834 6 pp 91 92 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Sacrifice of the Mass www newadvent org Retrieved 2022 03 12 a b Catechism of the Catholic Church Part 2 Section 2 Chapter 1 Article 3 Retrieved 2 July 2016 Catechism of the Catholic Church The sacrament of Holy Orders Retrieved 2 July 2016 Presbyterorum ordinis Retrieved 2 July 2016 can 242 1 CIC 1983 can 235 1 CIC 1983 Presbyterorum ordinis 4 Code of Canon Law text IntraText CT Retrieved 2 July 2016 Encyclopedia Judaica second ed vol 4 2007 New York Thomson Gale 537 Audet Jean Structures of Christian Priesthood New York Doubleday 1961 1 Corinthians 7 Retrieved 4 January 2023 The New Catholic Encyclopedia Washington DC Catholic University of America Washington vol 3 366 Current Sales Email Promotions Christianbook com Retrieved 2 July 2016 John Trigilio Kenneth Brighenti Catholicism for Dummies p 221 John Wiley amp Sons Inc 2011 ISBN 978 1 118 07778 8 Helen Parish Clerical Celibacy In The West c 1100 1700 p 100 footnotes 45 and 46 Ashgate Publishing Limited 2010 ISBN 978 0 7546 3949 7 Congregation for Divine Worship Institutio generalis de Liturgia horarum Feb 2 1971 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Priesthood Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Code of Canon Law IntraText Retrieved 2 July 2016 Code of Canon Law IntraText Retrieved 2 July 2016 Code of Canon Law IntraText Retrieved 2 July 2016 canons 1108 1116 W Braumuller W 2006 The Rusyn Ukrainians of Czechoslovakia An Historical Survey University of Michigan Press p 17 ISBN 9783700303121 because Eastern Christian priests were allowed to marry and therefore the clergy soon became somewhat of a caste made up of a closely knit families Tarnavky Spohady cited in Jean Paul Himka 1986 The Greek Catholic Church and Ukrainian Society in Austrian Galicia Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pg 444External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Priesthood in the Catholic Church The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church Current and historical information about its bishops and dioceses includes current and historical demographics for priests VISION Vocation Guide information about Roman Catholic priesthood and religious life with directory of men s religious communities and diocesan links Milwaukee Holy Orders The Making of a Priest Archived 2016 03 16 at the Wayback Machine Documentary produced by Milwaukee PBS Application to Mount Angel Seminary in Oregon an example of questions asked about potential priests character and activities Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Priesthood in the Catholic Church amp oldid 1144441238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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