R
Ryan1
Guest
Even further, I would contend that early Christians faced far more intense persecution than most do today.
No, that is not correct. All Sacraments come from Christ, yes. But to be In Persona Christi means to be standing in as Christ. From the Catechism:I assumed that In Persona Christi meant that it is Christ himself ministering the sacrament.
“1548 In the ecclesial service of the ordained minister, it is Christ himself who is present to his Church as Head of his Body, Shepherd of his flock, high priest of the redemptive sacrifice, Teacher of Truth. This is what the Church means by saying that the priest, by virtue of the sacrament of Holy Orders, acts in persona Christi Capitis:23
It is the same priest, Christ Jesus, whose sacred person his minister truly represents. Now the minister, by reason of the sacerdotal consecration which he has received, is truly made like to the high priest and possesses the authority to act in the power and place of the person of Christ himself (virtute ac persona ipsius Christi).24
Christ is the source of all priesthood: the priest of the old law was a figure of Christ, and the priest of the new law acts in the person of Christ.25”
no, because anyone can baptize and the couple marry each other, the priest just acts as the witness of the church.If so, cannot women act “IPC” when baptizing and marrying? After all, it is Christ who baptizes and marries through that woman.
I would agree with that, as regards the West. But if we look to places such as Africa, India and also I believe Poland, I believe there are plenty of priests. Perhaps we need to offer more opportunities for priests from more faithful parts of the world to come to us, to minister to us, to evangelise us, and to revitalise our faith?We have a faith shortage, not a priest shortage.
This is one thing I’ve observed about arguments for women’s ordination. Advocates are always focused on words like leadership and power. It’s never about pastoring, caring for Christ’s flock, or feeding them through the sacraments. It’s about power. I don’t want that mindset from any priest (male or otherwise). But the fact that advocates for women’s ordination are focused on these things is very troubling to me and is yet another reason why I’ll never advocate for women’s ordination.I find it hard to marginalize the exclusion from leadership roles of one out of every two human beings as “today’s cause.”
Surely one could find a more appropriate example of contemporary women when Jesus was choosing apostles; Mary Magdalene, maaay-be (if Jesus wanted women priests), but IMO Mother Mary already had her life filled with a unique vocation, let’s not burden her with another role huh?If He wanted a female priest, He would have picked His Mother or Mary Magdalene.
Joanna, Susanna …phil19034:![]()
Surely one could find a more appropriate example of contemporary women when Jesus was choosing apostles; Mary Magdalene, maaay-be (if Jesus wanted women priests), but IMO Mother Mary already had her life filled with a unique vocation, let’s not burden her with another role huh?If He wanted a female priest, He would have picked His Mother or Mary Magdalene.
Nice! Joanna (one of the women who brought myrrh to Jesus’ tomb), is my daughter’s middle name.Joanna, Susanna
Yes, the bishops of the world need to be more willing “to hear and respond to God’s call.” There are people who wish to work with them to care for the Church, and they seem unable to hear.I don’t think it’s so much a shortage in ‘faith’ as it is a shortage in ‘willingness to hear and respond to God’s call’…![]()
Wow: “the bishops misunderstand what God is doing” is quite a bold assertion…Yes, the bishops of the world need to be more willing “to hear and respond to God’s call.”
This is the fun part of the discussion of ‘alternate’ ordinations. Here’s the thing: how does a person know that he’s been called to be a priest? Is it an inner sense? Is it something that’s an experience of the person alone?There are people who wish to work with them to care for the Church, and they seem unable to hear.
I don’t know, we have multiple priests in my diocese from overseas right now. Most of them are from India.That’s an immigration question, and our government makes it difficult for Cath priests to come and work in the US.
Two thoughts:It is the Church, through the bishops, who calls people and judges if people can be priests. So if someone is not hearing God calling people to the priesthood, it has to be the bishops.