Joe leans back in his chair and sighs.
โTwenty-five years, Nelly. Twenty-five years Iโve been an online priest,โ he says, half laughing, half exhausted. โConfessions in the digital desert, sermons in comment sections, trying to keep people sane in the middle of the circus.โ
Nelly raises an eyebrow. โSo whatโs the problem, Father Joe?โ
Joe throws his hands in the air.
โThe problem is celibacy! Enough already. If the Church really wants to save Europe from the demographic abyss, maybe they should rethink the strategy.โ
He taps the table like heโs making a declaration.
โLook, if Pope Leo XIII โ or any pope named Leo โ wants people to take holy orders seriously, maybe the order should be this: get married.โ
Nelly laughs. โThatโs quite a reform.โ
Joe nods.
โIโm serious. The first commandment in the old book wasnโt โargue on the internet.โ It was โbe fruitful and multiply.โ Families, kids, life โ thatโs how civilizations survive.โ
He gestures toward Europe on the map on the wall.
โHalf the countries there are aging out. Empty villages, shrinking schools, nobody to carry the culture forward. You donโt solve that with speeches โ you solve it with weddings and baby strollers.โ
Nelly smirks. โSo your solution to the demographic crisis isโฆ marriage?โ
Joe shrugs.
โExactly. If you want renewal, stop preaching permanent celibacy to everyone. Tell people to build families, raise kids, and create the future.โ
He grins.
โAfter twenty-five years of online priesthood, I think Iโve earned the right to request a transferโฆ to the married life department.โ ๐
Nelly shakes her head, laughing.
โWell, Father Joe,โ she says, โthat might be the most enthusiastic sermon on marriage Iโve ever heard.โ
Joe folds his hands like heโs finishing a homily.
โSimple message,โ he says.
โLess doomscrolling, more weddings. Civilization might survive yet.โ







