Recently my dad celebrated a “milestone” birthday – one when the person
is over 70 and their age is divisible by five.
Many family members celebrated the occasion with him at my house.
My dad arrived first at the party so he could help setup and was one of
the last to leave so he could help clean.
We didn’t have to request “no gifts” because family and close friends
just know the routine – any gifts should be a donation to charity rather than
something given to him. As per usual, my
dad talked to his children and grandchildren – often asking questions to learn
about their lives and to learn about life in general. He dropped pearls of wisdom in the mix of
conversation but was at ease shifting between being a learner and an
educator. Thus is the case with many
good fathers.
We do not call my dad “father” preferring more familiar terms such as
“dad” or “pa” instead. Yet we have a
tremendous amount of respect for him. I
think if we addressed him as “father” he would assume we were joking. However, throughout my dad’s birthday
festivities, I found myself contemplating why this man who is a true father,
and a very good one at that, isn’t called as such while conversely many priests
who aren’t fathers insist on being called precisely that, “father.”
I then started to compare my dad’s behavior with that of many priests,
thinking perhaps the title was fitting due to vast similarities between the
two. However, it was instead a parade of
opposites. So I decided to make a table
and share my comparative contemplations. As a side note, since priests rarely have
biological children, the priest column often refers to spiritual children,
i.e., laypeople whereas the column for my dad refers to his actual children.
ATTRIBUTE
|
MY DAD
|
MOST PRIESTS
|
Has one or more biological children
|
√
|
|
Raised his children with the help of his wife
|
√
|
|
Collegially shared power with a female
|
√
|
|
Lived most of his life in community with multiple women
|
√
|
|
Has numerous healthy deep interpersonal loving relationships
including with women
|
√
|
|
Taught his children to love via the example of his deep interpersonal
loving relationships
|
√
|
|
Taught his children to love via his deep interpersonal loving
relationships with them
|
√
|
|
Taught his children values via persistent unwavering alignment
between his words and actions
|
√
|
|
Spent hours per day with his children in their formative years
|
√
|
|
Is available to his kids 24 x 7
|
√
|
|
Makes his children schedule appointments with him
|
√
|
|
Bi-directionally communicates with his children
|
√
|
|
Primarily uni-directionally speaks at his children
|
√
|
|
Encourages his children to ask questions and think critically
|
√
|
|
Demands unquestioned obedience from his children
|
√
|
|
Thinks his children are of inferior intellectual capacity
|
√
|
|
Treats even infants as intelligent beings who have tremendous
capacity for wisdom
|
√
|
|
Readily learns from his children
|
√
|
|
Frequently seeks advice from his children
|
√
|
|
Takes direction from his adult children
|
√
|
|
Treats his adult children as adults
|
√
|
|
Dictates to his adult children
|
√
|
|
Assumes his children are incapable of helping with many chores until
proven otherwise
|
√
|
|
Declares himself as the sole competent person to perform numerous
tasks
|
√
|
|
Welcomes his children’s diversity
|
√
|
|
Supports expelling some children from the family
|
√
|
|
Asks his children for money
|
√
|
|
Prefers children give money to needy people rather than him
|
√
|
|
Prays
|
√
|
√
|
Highlights his human fallibility
|
√
|
|
Practices true reconciliation outside of the sacrament on a daily
basis
|
√
|
|
Reconciles with others because he realizes he is no better person
than them
|
√
|
|
Reconciles with others because he believes he is better than others
|
√
|
|
Asserts he is closer to God than his children
|
√
|
|
Feels his children interfere with him having time to devote to God
|
√
|
|
Feels his wife and children bring him closer to God
|
√
|
|
Cooks meals for his children
|
√
|
|
Does laundry for his children
|
√
|
|
Changed his children’s dirty diapers
|
√
|
|
Attended his children’s activities
|
√
|
|
Wears dresses
|
√
|
|
Has an expensive wardrobe to wear at church
|
√
|
|
Encourages his daughters in non-traditional roles
|
√
|
|
Treats his sons and daughters equally
|
√
|
In fairness I must highlight the one behavioral similarity between my
father and most priests; they pray. Also
in fairness I must acknowledge there are some priests whose behavior aligns
somewhat closer to my father’s but, not so much so that I would ever confuse a
priest as my father. And I realize that
not all fathers behave like mine. But
it has been my experience that my father more closely emulates Jesus’ behavior
than any priest I have ever known.
Therefore I find myself wondering if it bothers real fathers that
priests co-opt the term “father” while not conducting themselves as such.
I realize many Protestants based upon MT 23:9 (“Call no on earth your
father”) criticize Catholics for calling priests “father.” But, I find myself questioning the practice given
the tremendous divergence in behaviors. At
best the lack of cognitive similarities makes the practice very illogical but with
differences far outnumbering similarities, it seems to confuse and degrade
fatherhood to call priests “father.”
As is often the case when I contemplate such things, my mind heads down
tangential avenues paved with more questions.
Priests say they best represent Jesus – whom they say wasn’t a
father. Why do they want to be called
“father” since Jesus is never portrayed as one?
God is portrayed as “father” in the Holy Trinity. By desiring to be called “father”, are
priests subliminally proposing to be God?
William
Saunders published an article in 1995 explaining the practice of calling
priests like him “father.” In
defending the practice Saunders states:
First, we must remember the context of the passage. Jesus is addressing
the hypocrisy of the scribes and the Pharisees—the learned religious leaders of
Judaism. Our Lord castigates them for not providing good example; for creating
onerous spiritual burdens for others with their various rules and regulations;
for being haughty in exercising their office and for promoting themselves by
looking for places of honor, seeking marks of respect and wearing ostentatious
symbols. Basically, the scribes and Pharisees had forgotten that they were
called to serve the Lord and those entrusted to their care with humility and
generous spirit.
With priests detached from God’s people, operating as if superior to
God’s people, taking seats upon the altar while wearing a blinding amount of “bling”,
instructing people as though they are mindless children, living more
comfortably than many of God’s people, seeking donations where the vast
majority of funds are used to promote their environment rather than feed,
clothe or house the poor, and admonishing God’s people for not following the
vast array of rules they invented whilst they wantonly ignore some of God’s
commandments in their own behavior, are we again at a point where in MT 23:9, “Jesus
is addressing the hypocrisy of…the learned religious leaders…?”
Saunders’ article continues to explain the evolutionary process by
which calling priests “father” became a common practice amongst Catholics. Originally bishops, the word meaning “those who
oversee”, were often called “papa” (pope) until around the year 400 when that term
was reserved for the bishop of Rome (i.e. THE pope). In the 6th century St. Benedict
called monastic community leaders “abbot”, a derivative of “abba” (the Aramaic
word for “father”). In the Middle Ages, monks
from religious orders who worked amongst the people caring for physical and
spiritual needs were often addressed by the people as “father.” Eventually that morphed into people calling
all priests, “father.” However, the
official title of a priest is “Reverend.”
It seems originally when the bishops actually intimately cared for
people on a practical level and when the mendicant friars lived amongst the
people caring for them, those who were addressed as “father” more closely
resembled the behavior of my dad. It is
curious that the title morphed to include more and more men whose behavior less
and less resembled that of my father.
I think there is danger in associating behavior that is almost mutually
exclusive from something with the title of that thing, such as associating the title “father”
with priests whose lives have almost no parallel behaviors with good fathers. I think it confuses people, especially those raised
by men with sub-optimal fathering skills.
It validates biological fathers who treat their children as
subordinates, who are domineering, who are hypocrites, who abuse their
children, who abuse power, who operate by one set of rules while imposing more
demanding rules upon their children, who indulge their tastes while watching
their children lack for basic necessities, etc...
The clergy bemoan the decay of the family structure as well as its
societal impact. They point to many potential
culprits but what role does their abysmal example of “fathering” while calling themselves "father" play? Why do people permit the image of fatherhood
to be co-opted by men who would make abysmal fathers? Do the people of God play a role in the distortion of fatherhood, by
mindlessly using the term “father” for priests?
God has blessed me with an excellent father whose spirituality,
charity, humility and love surpass those of any priest I’ve ever met. My father has blessed me with the fruits of
his character. In this I not only see but experience the Holy Trinity. I prefer my father not
share the same title as that of priests.
Perhaps it’s time to address priests by their baptismal names rather
than indulge them in what Saunders calls “seeking marks of respect.” Or, if they have earned respect, why not
address them by their actual title, “Reverend?”