The Case Against Abolishing the Priesthood

The Case Against Abolishing the Priesthood
AP Photo/Frank Franklin II

In the Dec. 11, 2000, issue of The New Yorker, the magazine's revered literary critic James Wood began his review of the writings of J. F. Powers with a blunt question, "Does anyone, really, like priests?" I read that article a few months after my ordination to the priesthood. I found it hard to understand not only how an intelligent person could write a sentence like that, but how a prestigious magazine could print it.

It does not take too much creativity to imagine what the reaction might have been had The New Yorker's literary critic written, "Does anyone, really, like imams?" Or "Does anyone, really, like rabbis?" Firestorms of denunciations would likely have followed. In the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, we saw a flurry of thoughtful articles distinguishing Islam from the terrorists who committed the atrocities (and the clerics who encouraged them), with commentators correctly making judicious distinctions between the actions of a few and the morality of the many.

But when it comes to priests, it is O.K. to hate them. Or at least wonder if anyone, really, likes them.

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