T
Tantum_ergo
Guest
Kendy, your perception that women are less “powerful” in the church is troubling.
The Church may exist “in” this world, but it is not “of” this world. Any sort of temporal “power” that exists does not exist to affect THIS world but the next.
Jesus Christ, the most POWERFUL BEING, CHOSE to be the most humble. GOD chose to become an infant, to live in poverty, to suffer a cruel death. . .for US.
Are we Catholic Christians because we seek to follow CHRIST? I think so.
Are we following Christ when we agitate for personal power, or complain bitterly that we think we’re getting a short end of the deal? Did Christ EVER agitate for personal power? Did He ever complain that Peter got to be Pope here on earth? Did He go around complaining about the Roman occupation? Did He go parading around asking for the best seat in the house?
Respectfully, I submit that the entire mentality that has seized upon the concept that the Church (and./or MEN in general) have been oppressing women for CENTURIES, and that women, in order to even the score, simply HAVE to be offered every single “role” a man has held, because if they don’t get it, they are being oppressed, denied power, and can’t be “full people” otherwise, is flawed at the core.
A “role” is something for an actor; it is something artificial, something that makes him into something he is not.
A “vocation” is not artificial. A vocation (literally a ‘calling’) is from God. Priests have vocations; they are called. Their so-called power is (whether society sees it that way or not) to be rooted in CHRIST, and carries with it an awesome responsibility.
You might not see it this way but a woman is actually quite powerful in the way the CHURCH sees it. St. Paul himself speaks of being powerful in his WEAKNESS. Women, lacking power in a TEMPORAL way, thus are more powerful in the ETERNAL way. They are closer to the humility of Christ. They are the peacemakers, they are the caretakers, they are the “poor in spirit”.
As a woman, I find the idea of sublimating my feminine gifts (valuable gifts bestowed on me by the Creator) and attempting instead to forcibly seize or DEMAND an incorrected perceived “worldly power” just because it is something I think I’m entitled to, as a woman, because “men had it for centuries so now it’s MY TURN”–is about as far from the teachings of CHRISTIANITY as can be.
The Church may exist “in” this world, but it is not “of” this world. Any sort of temporal “power” that exists does not exist to affect THIS world but the next.
Jesus Christ, the most POWERFUL BEING, CHOSE to be the most humble. GOD chose to become an infant, to live in poverty, to suffer a cruel death. . .for US.
Are we Catholic Christians because we seek to follow CHRIST? I think so.
Are we following Christ when we agitate for personal power, or complain bitterly that we think we’re getting a short end of the deal? Did Christ EVER agitate for personal power? Did He ever complain that Peter got to be Pope here on earth? Did He go around complaining about the Roman occupation? Did He go parading around asking for the best seat in the house?
Respectfully, I submit that the entire mentality that has seized upon the concept that the Church (and./or MEN in general) have been oppressing women for CENTURIES, and that women, in order to even the score, simply HAVE to be offered every single “role” a man has held, because if they don’t get it, they are being oppressed, denied power, and can’t be “full people” otherwise, is flawed at the core.
A “role” is something for an actor; it is something artificial, something that makes him into something he is not.
A “vocation” is not artificial. A vocation (literally a ‘calling’) is from God. Priests have vocations; they are called. Their so-called power is (whether society sees it that way or not) to be rooted in CHRIST, and carries with it an awesome responsibility.
You might not see it this way but a woman is actually quite powerful in the way the CHURCH sees it. St. Paul himself speaks of being powerful in his WEAKNESS. Women, lacking power in a TEMPORAL way, thus are more powerful in the ETERNAL way. They are closer to the humility of Christ. They are the peacemakers, they are the caretakers, they are the “poor in spirit”.
As a woman, I find the idea of sublimating my feminine gifts (valuable gifts bestowed on me by the Creator) and attempting instead to forcibly seize or DEMAND an incorrected perceived “worldly power” just because it is something I think I’m entitled to, as a woman, because “men had it for centuries so now it’s MY TURN”–is about as far from the teachings of CHRISTIANITY as can be.