What God is Not

Is There a Place for a Celibate Byzantine Parish Priest?

33 snips
Nov 5, 2025
Fr. Nathan Symeon, a Byzantine Catholic priest with experience as a married pastor, and Fr. Joel Barstad, a seminary instructor, explore the dynamics of married versus celibate priests. They discuss how a priest's marital status impacts parishioners' interactions and the challenges of assigning clergy based on community needs. The conversation dives into pastoral roles, the expectations placed on priests, and the unique spiritual offerings of both married and celibate priests, concluding with insights on the formation of future clergy.
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ANECDOTE

Married Priest Gives Practical Parenting Counsel

  • Fr. Nathan lived on campus with his wife and five daughters and parishioners sought him out for parenting and marriage advice. A parishioner later told Fr. Michael that Nathan gave peace by normalizing the hard season of young parenting.
ADVICE

Match Priests To Parish Needs

  • Advise bishops to match priest type to parish and neighborhood realities, not only parish preferences. Consider financial stability, safety, and a priest's willingness to be missionary or to be more settled.
INSIGHT

Celibacy Suits Missionary Mobility

  • Celibate parish priests function best when oriented to missionary, semi-monastic asceticism and mobility. Married priests should expect and be allowed greater rootedness for family stability.
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