Displaying posts tagged with

“priesthood”

What is ‘Living the Mass’?

Catholics have three types of Mass. Only two are really spoken of. First is High Mass which is the Saturday evening, Sunday morning Masses. The second is the weekday masses held most commonly every day; typically held in the morning, the other in the evening. But the third Mass is what the Church calls ‘Living the Mass’.

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI s...
Image via Wikipedia

Living the Mass is an actual form of Mass, and the most important because it is a continual offering of our lives and devotion that is to remain in constant submission to God’s will. Allow me to take you through Holy Scripture and re-unveil a truth that the Church has always taught over her 2000 years of service.

Share
Share

Celibacy

Celibacy. It’s a devotion, a vocation, a lifestyle. Some choose it and others are called to it. In this short essay, I will be discussing two aspects of celibacy; the Biblical references to it, and why priests are committed to celibate living. To learn more about the vocation, which celibacy applies to, please read articles Holy Orders, which is and proceeds from the article Sacraments.

Share
Share

Why Priests Are Called Father

“Call no priest father”; this is what I hear day in and day out. And if it isn’t that, then it is “why do you call them father? Don’t you know what the Bible says?” Sure. I understand that the Bible says the priesthood is spiritual fatherhood. Abraham was called the father of all nations in the Old Testament and is recognized as such according to Romans 4:16-17, “For this reason, it depends on faith, so that it may be a gift, and the promise may be guaranteed to all his descendants, not to those who only adhere to the law but to those who follow the faith of Abraham, who is the father of all of us, as it is written, ‘I have made you father of many nations.’ He is our father in the sight of God, in whom he believed, who gives life to the dead and calls into being what does not exist.” St. Paul names Abraham “our father in the sight of God”. Why? As St. Paul recognizes, “he [Abraham] is the father of many nations.” Didn’t anyone tell St. Paul about the verse “Call no man father” (Matthew 23:9) or did he understand it to mean that we have but one God who is the origin of all? Also, Jesus calls Abraham “father” in John 8:56!

Share
Share