Pacem in Terris Press
The Cruel Eleventh-Century Imposition of Western Clerical Celibacy: A Monastic-Inspired Attack on Catholic Episcopal & Presbyteral Families
The Cruel Eleventh-Century Imposition of Western Clerical Celibacy: A Monastic-Inspired Attack on Catholic Episcopal & Presbyteral Families
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Driven in part by a vicious spiritual misogyny infecting some medieval networks of Benedictine monasticism, the popes of the "Gregorian Reform" tried to destroy in the Western Church the thousand-year-old apostolic tradition of married bishops and presbyters - a tradition rooted in the New Testament.
They did that in order to construct a papal theocracy supported by a celibate cadre with no allegiance to family. At the time, their attacks precipitated a tragic fraternal battle between heterosexual and homosexual "clerics" - tragic because the two sides were brothers equally beloved by God.
The book outlines a three-stage historical construction of non-evangelical clericalism: 1) the fourth-century Imperial Church's fabrication of the "clerical state;" 2) the eleventh-century papal imposition of "clerical celibacy;" and 3) the sixteenth-century Council of Trent's mandate of "clerical seminaries."
Finally, the book proposes that, while the modern Western Catholic male "clerical-celibate-seminary" system is breaking down, the Holy Spirit is inspiring a lay-centered "New Evangelization" energized by postmodern feminine spiritual regeneration.
JOE HOLLAND is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy & Religion at Saint Thomas University in Miami Gardens, Florida. The author of 17 other books, he is also President of Pax Romana / Catholic Movement for Intellectual & Cultural Affairs USA.