“Papists”? Wow – no need to get defensive or put words in my mouth. That’s not a word I would ever use. The facts speak for themselves. An all-male celibate priesthood is an objective mistake, a bad policy that should be abandoned. And I’m not out to “fix the whole of Christianity”; Christianity is taking care of itself quite nicely. 60% of American Catholics favor the ordination of women, and unless those believers leave the church, it’s unlikely that this number is going to decrease.
Your arguments are obviously the same as any who would call us papist. Rooted in the same place.
I am not that easily influenced by popular media. You, like the media, are focusing on a small percentage of priests. I hope one day you meet a good man, who has chosen to serve God. Maybe then you’ll stop lumping every priest into a stereotype that doesn’t match to reality.
I also think you are making a correlation that isn’t a causation. All you need to do is look at the world outside of Catholicism. Then explain how celibacy causes sexual abuse. Sin is more complicated than that. I see your argument the same as those who would say homosexuality is the cause of the priest scandal. The statistics are clear, the abuse was by far a male preying on a male. Should I believe homosexuality causes sexual abuse? (I don’t, by the way.)
If sin is your measurement of what should be abandoned, then the whole of humanity should be abandoned, no? None are without sin. But we have not been abandoned. While it is the Protestant temptation to say Christ has left His Church, it is not the understanding of Salvation for Catholics. Our sins haven’t scared God off. Christ died for us while we were still sinners.
You never did respond to any of my actual arguments. Why is Jesus’ maleness fundamentally connected to his divinity in a way that femaleness never could be? Why pick out maleness as the sole decisive attribute, rather than his ethnicity or language background, that all priests need to mimic? These are valid questions to which there is no answer.
I would think the answer is obvious. Cultural practices are not the same as gender, which is not a cultural practice but a reality of who Jesus is. So I ask again, should I be offended that God became Man? Do you think God went eenie meenie miney moe, I pick, male!
By teaching that only males can be the vehicle of holy things, you have allowed a cultural bias to overturn the principle in Genesis that men and women are both created in the image of God.
No Catholic believes only males are the vehicle of holy things. Why would you? I also recommend that you delve deeper in the doctrine of the communion of saints.
We no longer live in a world where most people are unprepared to accept ministry from a woman. It’s only a matter of time before the Church abandons gender-based ordination, and that “infallible” doctrine goes the way of other “infallible” teachings like Unam Sanctam, into the bin reserved for retired and outdated teaching.
I doubt it. The Catholic Church doesn’t change because culture changes.