G
GKC
Guest
I’d like to hear how it is planned to work.Complex indeed. I will ask my Anglo-Catholic mates and try and make sense of it!
GKC
I’d like to hear how it is planned to work.Complex indeed. I will ask my Anglo-Catholic mates and try and make sense of it!
Ok, let’s.Let’s look at the theology of the priesthood.
What is it about offering sacrifice* in particular* that renders women unsuitable or incapable? After all, the orthodox and catholic doctrine of the sacraments is that Christ is the real priest, and that the *ministerial *priesthood is just that; priests act as ministers of the one sacrificing priest. You need to give a reason as to what it is that allows a man to stand-in for Christ qua sacrificing priest, and not a woman.The priest offers the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass in persona Christi.
A pastor of souls exercises spiritual fatherhood over his flock in his giving masculinity, and the Church, as Bride of Christ, receives this love in her femininity.
So yes, when you think about it, someone who says “women can be priests” is really trying to say “Christ’s masculinity, and God the Father’s, is of no consequence, and anyone who really wants to can fill into that role.”
This seems beyond the remit of a theological debate.It’s one more peg in the Population Control agenda, in particular the homosexualist division thereof, that seeks to emasculate men and defeminize women, therefore destroying God’s vision of sexual complementarity and the family along with it
Unbelievably clueless arguments like this do little to persuade dissenters that the traditional position is true.Well, this is one of the saddest things I’ve ever read. I must be missing the comments Ruth Gledhill made. Went through it three times and didn’t see the quote. Are you saying that the Catholic weekly newspaper is in agreement with this decision? Not that it really matters.
This decision only puts more space between Anglican and Catholic communions. This will never, ever, be accepted by the CC.
Maybe, at some distant time in the future science will find a way that men can become pregnant. I mean is it fair that men should be denied this privilege?![]()
As an organization, The Tablet presents no requirement on my part for charity, and I stand by this comparison; while it may be a bit off-topic for me to expound on it, I will for your benefit explain what I mean. Identifying as a member of a class which the Tablet and their ilk seek to marginalize and destroy, I find camaraderie in persecuted Jewish people and I join them in a call of “Never again” in memory of the Shoah. Yet the cycle continues. The Tablet and company are not as far advanced in their mission to destroy us, but have made great inroads in a propaganda campaign (the Germans were well-known for their prowess here) to destroy the Church and create schism from the inside. It is their belief that Catholics should follow other Christians down the road to perdition which was well-laid more than 500 years ago as they cut themselves off from the fullness of the Truth. Those Catholics who do not follow will be bullied, shamed, and persecuted for not falling into line. It is the same old story throughout history and both Christians and Jews are in it together.While I agree that the Tablet is awful, that’s just the most horrendous and inappropriate comparison to draw. Aside from the complete lack of charity displayed, the trivialisation of anti-semitism and crimes against humanity is something Christians ought to be working against. I hope you retract this comparison.
Physical fatherhood and the priesthood are intrinsically linked. Physical motherhood and the Church are likewise intrinsically linked. They each share qualities which cannot be replicated or exchanged between the sexes. I suggest for anyone who cannot grasp this to undertake a good, reputable study of the Book of Revelation. This misunderstood book is about liturgy, the Church, and marriage. Sure, it’s about the End Times and good and evil, too, but that is but a tiny part of its import. Revelation is a book that’s not just good for predicting the future, but for exploring the present, and the relationship of the faithful to God, the relationship of the Holy Trinity to itself, and by extension, all human relationships, especially that of conjugal love.Unbelievably clueless arguments like this do little to persuade dissenters that the traditional position is true.
You’re assuming a parallel between the biological role of motherhood and the sacramental role of priesthood/episcopacy, so that one is the counterpart of the other. Where on earth does that leave physical fathers?
Now this line of thinking may actually be correct. There may be a profound truth here. But rolling eyes and making smarty comments doesn’t bring out that truth. On the face of it, it’s just silly, equating two clearly different things.
Besides, it has nothing to do with “fair.”
It has to do with expressing the fullness of God’s creation in the image of God and of our participation in Christ through the Sacraments.
I’m willing to submit to the Catholic Church on this one. But I’m not willing to submit to every sarcastic wise-cracker on the Internet who obviously can’t be bothered to think through the theological issues or understand the position he’s ridiculing.
Edwin
LOLThe Tablet is a Catholic weekly newspaper like the Nazi SS were a peace-loving German synagogue.
Word! Adam desecrated the sanctuary not Eve.The first priest is Adam, Jesus is the 2nd Adam, all bishops are icons of Christ, priests represent their bishop. No where does Eve get to take on the sin of Adam and atone for his mistake. In fact, it is Adam’s sin which caused humanity to fall; and the 2nd Adam recovers humanity. Eve shouldn’t be forced to take on the sins of humanity for Adam and never has.
(1) The icon (εἰκων/צלם) of God himself in Genesis 1.27 is both male and female. Imaging God doesn’t seem to be limited by sex any more than being in Christ is limited by sex.The first priest is Adam, Jesus is the 2nd Adam, all bishops are icons of Christ, priests represent their bishop. No where does Eve get to take on the sin of Adam and atone for his mistake. In fact, it is Adam’s sin which caused humanity to fall; and the 2nd Adam recovers humanity. Eve shouldn’t be forced to take on the sins of humanity for Adam and never has.
Whose job was to protect the garden?(1) The icon (εἰκων/צלם) of God himself in Genesis 1.27 is both male and female. Imaging God doesn’t seem to be limited by sex any more than being in Christ is limited by sex.
(2) Are you suggesting that bishops and priests take on the sin of Adam?
(3) Are you suggesting that Christ, in taking on Adam’s sin, was not also taking on himself the sins of women?
(1) I’m curious about your exorcism stats. Based on my imperfect memory of the Gospels, I’d say that the Biblical evidence re: exorcism, at least as encountered by Christ and the early Church, shows more men requiring exorcism than women.Sacrifice of the Mass is not the only function a priest has. Don’t forget casting out demons is also part of the job description and for some reason the vast majority of demonic possessions happen to women not men, the Church does not know why this is but it might one of the reasons why Jesus only chose men for the priesthood and not women. Exorcisms are both spiritually and physically draining.
You are completely missing my point. Ordaining women is neither Biblical nor Traditional. The entire COE argument is based upon the issue of equality and fairness. While my comparison is obviously absurd, so is their argument. That is why I made the comparison. When the whims of secular society begin to influence and even govern the ministerial priesthood we are in grave trouble.Unbelievably clueless arguments like this do little to persuade dissenters that the traditional position is true.
You’re assuming a parallel between the biological role of motherhood and the sacramental role of priesthood/episcopacy, so that one is the counterpart of the other. Where on earth does that leave physical fathers?
It was Adam’s job to dress and keep the garden. We can argue over whether שׁמר here means protect. I’d ask, protect from what?Whose job was to protect the garden?
While that’s what the media have been saying, and what many individuals within the Church have been saying, that’s not the Church of England’s argument. The Archbishops have been clear; ‘equality’ and ‘fairness’ are at best happy byproducts of what, for the Church, is an issue of theological anthropology and sacramental theology.The entire COE argument is based upon the issue of equality and fairness.
For goodness sake, actually defend these assertions!Physical fatherhood and the priesthood are intrinsically linked. Physical motherhood and the Church are likewise intrinsically linked. They each share qualities which cannot be replicated or exchanged between the sexes.
:blackeye: Wow. I missed that one the first time around. I understand the position very well, Edwin, and it makes me sick. Sorry you were so offended.But I’m not willing to submit to every sarcastic wise-cracker on the Internet who obviously can’t be bothered to think through the theological issues or understand the position he’s ridiculing.
Edwin