The ordination of women is almost the only substantive reason to be Anglican rather than Catholic, in my opinion. Catholics have so far failed miserably in giving a theological rationale for the male-only priesthood. I donāt want this to take over the thread, and Iāve participated in threads on this over and over again. If you want me to explain, I can find an old thread or start a new one. But conservative Catholics assume so casually that this must be a point in their favor.
Certainly there are Anglicans, like GKC, who are at least as opposed to womenās ordination as any Catholic (note that GKCās church is separated from the larger Anglican Communion over this issue among other things). And of course a case can be made that Iām not a real Anglo-Catholic or whatever. But I am an Anglican who wishes to be in full communion with the Church throughout space and time (i.e., the Catholic Church in the theological sense of the word, the only one that matters). And it seems to my fallible theological judgment that the principles and logic of historic Christian orthodoxy point toward the ordination of women, not away from it. Given the testimony of the Catholic Church on the other side, I accept that I am probably wrong. But it would be nice to hear the theology of the matter actually discussed instead of dogmatic assertions on one hand and secular political rhetoric on the other.
Edwin