J
jordan
Guest
Catholic2003 said:Communicationes, volume 13 (1981), page 242, contains the pontifical commission’s minutes on the canon 230 §2 wording and vote.
OK, so we’re not talking 1978. Now, I don’t have access to what was voted on in 1981, so I’d be very interested to see specifically what was voted on and what the verbiage was, since the canon was not at that time in effect.
Until the 1992 interpretation which was not made available to the bishops until 1994, it was merely an opinion.It was more than an “opinion” - it was a “correct opinion”, as the 1992 authentic interpretation proved out, that did in fact represent the will of the Supreme Pontiff.
The “Church’s” position of “local control” on this issue was not given until 1994. Many bishops had already taken control and made it a norm.I agree with the Church’s position of local control on this issue, so that each diocese and parish can do what is best for their congregation.
I am among the more than 2:1 majority thus far in the poll who will disagree that it’s a good thing. It is not supportable to claim that it was necessary.
As for Archbishop Weakland, there is no doubt that he was an outspoken advocate of altar girls in the USCCB, and had influence in the Council and at the 1987 synod. The following year, the Holy Father published his Apostolic Letter on the dignity and vocation of women, Mulieris Dignitatem, which he attributed in part to the discussions of the synod:
The wording from your 1971 BCL quotation that there should be no “apparent” discrimination against women in the liturgy is most unfortunate. Does it not “appear” that the Church discriminates against women by not allowing them the ultimate “service at the altar” - the priesthood? And yet the Supreme Pontiff, in the same letter, writes:The Fathers of the recent Assembly of the Synod of Bishops (October 1987), which was devoted to “The Vocation and Mission of the Laity in the Church and in the World Twenty Years after the Second Vatican Council”, once more dealt with the dignity and vocation of women. One of their recommendations was for a further study of the anthropological and theological bases that are needed in order to solve the problems connected with the meaning and dignity of being a woman and being a man. It is a question of understanding the reason for and the consequences of the Creator’s decision that the human being should always and only exist as a woman or a man. It is only by beginning from these bases, which make it possible to understand the greatness of the dignity and vocation of women, that one is able to speak of their active presence in the Church and in society.
Is it wrong to suggest that since the Church acknowleges that “a great number of sacred ministers over the course of the centuries have come from among boys such as these,” it just might be worthwhile to preserve the “noble” and “laudable” custom of altar servers for potential candidates for the priesthood, which girls are not? I don’t think it is. You do. We will agree to disagree.Since Christ, in instituting the Eucharist, linked it in such an explicit way to the priestly service of the Apostles, it is legitimate to conclude that he thereby wished to express the relationship between man and woman, between what is “feminine” and what is “masculine”. It is a relationship willed by God both in the mystery of creation and in the mystery of Redemption. It is *the Eucharist *above all that **expresses **the redemptive act of Christ the Bridegroom towards the Church the Bride.**This is clear and unambiguous when the sacramental ministry of the Eucharist, in which the priest acts “in *persona Christi”, ***is performed by a man.
Blessings,
jb
I agree 100%!! Many people don’t realize there is a difference between lectors and “readers” and acolytes and “altar servers”.