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4 - Single Marriage and Priestly Identity: A Symbol and its Functions in Ancient Christianity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2020

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Summary

Abstract

This chapter argues that the emergence of marriage as a symbol and its relation to marriage as ‘sacrament’ were connected to a third factor, namely the emergence of a ‘priestly’ identity for the Western clergy. Hunter shows first that a tradition developed in the third to the fifth centuries in which the single marriage of the clergy (i.e. the prohibition of digamists from ordination) became a privileged symbol of divine–human union, and eventually the union of Christ and the Church; second, that this tradition of single marriage was directly connected to the increased sacralizing of marriage in liturgical practice; and, third, that both of these developments contributed to the identification of the Western clergy as ‘priests’.

Keywords: digamus; remarriage (or second marriage); clergy; single marriage; priesthood

The two conferences hosted by the Norwegian Institute in Rome during the summers of 2014 and 2016 provided a welcome opportunity to reflect on the character of marriage as a symbol and its functions in late antique and early medieval Christianity. As participants, we were invited to consider the relationship between construing marriage as a symbol of a divine/human union (e.g. Christ and the Church) and the impact of this symbolization on the developing notion of marriage as ‘sacrament’. In my contribution, which is presented here, I suggest that these two developments – the use of marriage as a symbol and the increased recognition of marriage as some kind of sacred union – were connected to a third factor, namely the emergence of a ‘priestly’ identity for the Western Christian clergy.

Restrictions on the sexual and marital lives of the Christian clergy emerged only very gradually in both East and West. Permanent sexual abstinence for the higher clergy (bishops, presbyters, and deacons) became a canonical requirement in the West in the late fourth century, and by the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries a complete separation of clergy and marriage had become central to the agenda of the Gregorian Reform. But prior to these developments, an earlier tradition of restricting ordination to men who had been married only once existed in both the Eastern and the Western Churches.

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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