An Argument for the Marriage of Priests
June 19, 2020
Larry Beane
Although this could have been written yesterday by the Roman Catholic watchdog organization, Church Militant , it was actually penned in 1531 by Philipp Melanchthon in response to the Roman Catholic critique of our married priests. Melanchthon takes the gloves off in defense of the restoration of the older catholic practice sacerdotal matrimony:
What greater impudence has ever been read of in any history than this of the adversaries? [Such shameless advocates before a Roman Emperor will not easily be found. If all the world did not know them, if many godly, upright people among them, their own canonical brethren, had not complained long ago of their shameful, lewd, indecent conduct, if their vile, abominable, ungodly, lewd, heathenish, Epicurean life, and the dregs of all filthiness at Rome were not quite manifest, one might think that their great purity and their inviolate virgin chastity were the reason why they could not bear to hear the word woman or marriage pronounced, and why they baptize holy matrimony, which the Pope himself calls a sacrament, infamiam imperii.] For the arguments which they use we shall afterwards review. Now let the wise reader consider this, namely, what shame these good-for-nothing men have who say that marriages [which the Holy Scriptures praise most highly and command] produce infamy and disgrace to the government, as though, indeed, this public infamy of flagitious and unnatural lusts which glow among these very holy fathers, who feign that they are Curii and live like bacchanals, were a great ornament to the Church! And most things which these men do with the greatest license cannot even be named without a breach of modesty.
Apology of the Augsburg Confession 23:2
(In theology, an apology means never having to say you’re sorry.)