OH man. You just had to step in it.

So I guess Mother Theresa, Catherine of Siena, OUR LADY, and others have not brought spirituality to the table? Mary gave our High Priest life with her fiat.

Come on. You know better…
Johnny had the right concept, but the wrong terminology. Spirtual was, as you pointed out, NOT the correct word.
The role of the men is to bring about ONTOLOGICAL life
In Catholic terms, a human person is a union of body and soul ( Corpre and Animus Unis). It is not a Soul occupying a body, like Plato once suggested, but what defines the human person is a soul in union with the body. Neither is complete without the other, neither is greater than the other in terms of our human ‘completeness’
We also see in God that His greatest desire is for us to spend Eternity with Him. In other words, to have Saints in Heaven with Him.
Since the human person has two realities, the biological and the ontological, we see the sexual experience in both.
The woman brings forth the biological, or more specifically, has the greater role in bringing forth the biological aspect of humanity. The priest enhances the ontological. Both operating together are what produce a saint.
We see that reality in the biological sense, where the man and the woman together, but with the woman’s unique biology, bring forth physical life.
In the Sacraments, we see the man, with his unique ontology, bring forth ontological life, in the Consecration of the Eucharist, and the in the Absolution of sin in Reconcillation. In the Eucharist, He is is Life itself is brought forward. In Reconcillation, especially in the case of mortal sin, the dead soul is restored to life! In both, the ontological reality of the soul is strengthed by Grace
Since the body is the Form of the Soul (thanks to St. Thomas Aquinas), we know that the souls of each person are not only unique, but the souls of men and women must differ as well.
Now a Platonist, who views the spiritual elements of humanity to be greater than the biological, would therefore hold that the priest has the greater role in making a saint. Not so with a Catholic. As I mentioned, we are not Platonic dualists. We are Ontologically Unitists.
Nor are we Protestants, who view the priesthood as a simply a presider role, who simply leads a congregation. In our priesthood, the priest brings forth the Sacrament of the Eucharist, an ontological reality that requires a soul that is changed and configured for exactly that purpose, as in the same way, a woman’s body is both changed and configured to bring forth biological life
We therefore see God dividing the role of the participation of His creation of new Saints to be equally and fairly divided between the sexes.