Being an Altar server is not the same thing as being a priest.
{…}
A priest is now free, should he so choose, to ask a woman or girl to assist him as an Altar server at Mass, in addition to still being able to ask boys and men to do this, as well, because the role of Altar server is now officially classified as a lay role; it is no longer the first step towards Ordination to the priesthood.
Here is a quote from
Redemtionis Sacramentum (2004) of the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments, supplied above by “Servurus,”
Here’s what the 2004 Instruction
Redemtionis Sacramentum has to say on the subject:
“47. It is altogether laudable to maintain the noble custom by which boys or youths, customarily termed servers, provide service of the altar after the manner of acolytes, and receive catechesis regarding their function in accordance with their power of comprehension.
Nor should it be forgotten that a great number of sacred ministers over the course of the centuries have come from among boys such as these. Associations for them, including also the participation and assistance of their parents, should be established or promoted, and in such a way greater pastoral care will be provided for the ministers. Whenever such associations are international in nature, it pertains to the competence of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments to establish them or to approve and revise their statutes.
Girls or women may also be admitted to this service of the altar, at the discretion of the diocesan Bishop and in observance of the established norms.”
Being such an advocate of the “if the Vatican says it” position, I hope you will look at the italicized (by me) portions above. Clearly, the Vatican does recognize and says we should continue to recognize the natural and historical link between alter serving and sacerdotal ordination. Also, ironically I think, the document quoted above does not even attempt to give reasons for
why female altar servers is a good idea - of
the reasons it should be permitted.
I have to agree with “adrift.” The original query of this thread is going unanswered.
To give the “what” of a practice is not to automatically give the “why;” anymore than knowing
what you believe is the same as knowing
why you believe it. They are quite distinct. And although everyone is in a hurry to point out that femal altar serving is legit, via the Vatican, no one seems to be in much of a hurry of providing any reasonable support (in the form of argument) for the practice.