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Allegra
Guest
This is hardly an acknowlegement that many of the fathers of the church had “problems with women”. The Pope is making an overall apology, not even for specific statements or actions by individuals. If you don’t have specific evidence to support your claim that the church fathers had problems with women, just say so. You are still entitled to think that is the case, but I’m not excepting “everyone knows that and even the Pope admitted it” as evidence enough to convince me.Even modern Church authorities have admitted that many of the Church Fathers and quite a number of medieval theologians held to the common view that women were physically and or morally inferior. Pope John Paul II himself admitted as much in some of his official documents concerning women. Here is a quote from Letter of Pope John Paul II to Women (which I read on the official Vatican site here:
-AngryAtheist8
- I know of course that simply saying thank you is not enough. Unfortunately, we are heirs to a history which has conditioned us to a remarkable extent. In every time and place, this conditioning has been an obstacle to the progress of women. Women’s dignity has often been unacknowledged and their prerogatives misrepresented; they have often been relegated to the margins of society and even reduced to servitude. This has prevented women from truly being themselves and it has resulted in a spiritual impoverishment of humanity. **Certainly it is no easy task to assign the blame for this, considering the many kinds of cultural conditioning which down the centuries have shaped ways of thinking and acting. And if objective blame, especially in particular historical contexts, has belonged to not just a few members of the Church, for this I am truly sorry. May this regret be transformed, on the part of the whole Church, into a renewed commitment of fidelity to the Gospel vision. **When it comes to setting women free from every kind of exploitation and domination, the Gospel contains an ever relevant message which goes back to the attitude of Jesus Christ himself. Transcending the established norms of his own culture, Jesus treated women with openness, respect, acceptance and tenderness. In this way he honoured the dignity which women have always possessed according to God’s plan and in his love. As we look to Christ at the end of this Second Millennium, it is natural to ask ourselves: how much of his message has been heard and acted upon?
P.S. I realize that the Pope’s words could be interpreted as a kind of ‘I’m sorry if you’re offended’ apology. Of course if it was meant that way, it calls into question the sincerity of the whole document.