Originally Posted by AngryAtheist8
What legal rights and protections would women have in your ideal society?
What political rights would women have in your ideal society?
Would women and girls have the right to an education in your ideal society?
And yet the Catholic Planet article you endorsed is against these things.
Here’s some quotes from it to put everything in perspective:
-Women should not be political leaders. In politics, a woman should not be President or Vice President or Senator or Representative or Governor or a State legislator. A woman should not have any elected or appointed political position with authority over men, because it is contrary to the teaching of Scripture. A woman should not be Judge in any court of law, because courts have authority over men.
-God did not give women a place, in the Church, the family, or society, to teach men or to have authority over men.
As these passages make clear, women are not supposed to have any authority in society (at least where it could effect men). This would mean stripping women of voting rights, because collectively female voters have a great deal of power over male politicians.
Now Portrait, do you believe in this position, or do you think that women *should have *some power over men in society?
Dear AngryAtheist,
Hello again and thankyou for your response.
Personally speaking, dear friend, I must concur with
Catholic Planet and say that I do not think that women should be involved in the world of politics, not necessarily because this would entail having some authority over men, but rather because this would be to occupy a postion for which they were not intended by the divine providential order. The same would apply to the Judiciary. As I remarked in my previous response to you on that other thread, there does need to be a radical rethink about a great many things that we now consider quite normal and acceptable. That will clearly not be a painless exercise or one that is free from controversy, given the changes that have taken place in society in the last fifty years or so. However, I think it incumbent upon us as a society to ask some very awkward and probing questions about modern society and where we are going, and, yes, my dear friend, questions respecting gender distinctions, the roles of men and women and the sort of work with which they should or should not be involved with. That so many Western women have opted to shun marriage in order to pursue a career is a monumental tragedy of the first rank and rather than hankering after political office they should humbly and gratefully receive the divinely ordained role of motherhood, unless they have a calling to religious. Old fashioned, certainly, but also beneficial to the wider society and according to the natural order of things to boot.
The Catholic Church has always excluded women from holy orders, this is not her own regulation but was established by her Divine Founder. As St. Chrysostom says in his classic work on the priesthood c. 387 A.D., “Divine law has excluded women from the ministry” (
On the priesthood, III, 9). Thus, dear friend, it is has nothing whatsoever with women being of lesser dignity or worth than men, but everything to do with obedience to Christ, the Founder of the Church.
In the family, women, according to Sacred Scripture, are to be in subjection to their own husbands and the husband does have a patriarchal and protective role as regards the “weaker sex”. This may not sit comfortably with modern and warped feminist propaganda, but that does not render this infallible teaching invalid and untrue.
In society, dear friend, single woman must work, perhaps for their entire lives, if they do not enter into holy wedlock, for whatever reason. Obviously, dear friend, they must needs support themselves, even if they remain within the family home with their mother and father, which is far better than living alone. However, if they do marry they must relinquish their jobs and devote themselves full-time to looking after their husbands and children, so as these are not neglected (see the citation of Pope Pius XI in my previous post).
AngryAtheist, I just do not think that women having the franchise
ipso facto means that they have “power over male politicians”. They cast their vote equally along with men and therefore have an (name removed by moderator)ut as regards the ballot box result, just like everyone else. Indeed, they could collectively swing the vote one way or another, but that would apply to both a male or female politician. That is how a democracy works and I do not see it as a ‘power’ issue.
Forgive me, dear friend, but you seem to have an
idee fixe with this ‘power’ that men are supposed to have over women. In the Christian religion we do not think in such terms respecting the relations between men and women and I rather think that you have become too imbued with the radical feminist world-view and this is colouring all of your thinking. A woman teacher, for example, does not have ‘power’ over the male students in the lecture hall, she is simply there imparting knowledge about a subject in which she has acquired a high level of competence. The students hopefully benefit from this and pass their exams.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
Pax