R
ryecroft
Guest
For quite some time, I have had a bit of a problem with the Church’s stand on not ordaining females. I believe that the Church is saying that it has never allowed women to be ordained. I really have a hard time believing this when there are so many examples of women having had roles in the church that ranged from Deacons to Presbyters (Priest) to even Bishops. I’m not going to mentione Pope Joan as evidence because I believe that that is too much of something that has almost become a legend or myth and there is too much evidence each way to allow it to be a true source.
I guess, I’ve also always wondered why if God didn’t truely want women to be Apostles or Priests why He appeared first to the women (after rising) and then told them to take the news to the 12 Aposltes. This is not a feminist question - although I do believe that A woman who has been inspired by the Holy Spirit can be just as capable as a male who has been inspired by the Holy Spirit to preach, to run a Parish and to do everything a Priest should do. I also believe there are many women who feel they are being considered “not good enough” to be a Priest because of their sex organs. If we were all created in the Image of God than shouldn’t a woman have been created just as equally as a man had been created? I always belived that being created in the “image of God” meant that we had an intillect and soul.
There is a lot of evidence out there to support the fact that the Catholic Church has in the past had femal Catholic Priests, Deacons and Bishops.(And since I know that most will want to know where I got much of this information, I have tried to include some of the books, etc. that this information can be found in).
In Romans 16:7, Paul makes a note of one. " Greet Andronicus and Junias, my kinsmen and my fellow prisoners, who are outstanding among the apostles, who also were in Christ before me" Junias was a female and is being noted as an “apostle”. Even in the 4th Century, St. John Chrysostom refers to Junias as being a member of the “apostolic circle” (this can be found in The Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers Vol. 1 the Homilies of St. John Chrysostom Series 1 - this is the 1956 version)
Also, at the beginning of the 16th Chaper of Romans, you will find it said "I commend to you our sister Phoebe, who is a servant of the church which is at Cenchrea; " I have a hard time believing that when Paul refers to Junias as an “apostle” that he doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
There is much archaeological evidence of women Presbyters, Deacons and even Bishops up until at least the year 840 and some even past then.
I found it interesting that even Therese of Liseux wanted to be a Priest - she felt that God took her early because she could not become a Priest.
“If I were a priest, how lovingly I would carry you in my hands when you came down from heaven at my call; how lovingly I would bestow you upon people’s souls. I want to enlighten people’s minds as the prophets and doctors did. I feel the call of an Apostle. I would love to travel all over the world, making your name known and planting your cross on a heathen soil.” (Story of a Soul pg. 187) There are other quotes that make it clear what she would have prefered to do.
Atto Vercelli in the 10th century wrote that due to Church needs women were ordained to lead worship and preside over the mass - Church Historian Gary Macy also writes in the Sep. 2000 issue of Theological Studies that “For over 1200 years the question of the validity of women’s ordination remained at least an open question. Some popes, bishops and scholars accepted such ordinations as equal to those of men, others did not."
I’m not sure how to put up the Archaeological evidence-there is so much and I can’t include pictures of any - there are sarcophagi in Catholic burial grounds - one from the 4th century of Leta Presbitera that states "Of blessed memory Leta the Presbyter lived 40 years, 8 months, 9 days whose husband prepared her burial she departed in peace the day before the Ides of May.” This makes no doubt that the person in this burial crypt was indeed a woman.
I guess I don’t u nderstand why the Church has never seemed to explain why there are so many examples of women that have been Deacons, Priests and even Bishops, if they have never allowed them to exist. I have never even heard an explination of why in Romans Paul mentions Junias as an Apostle - in fact, I believe this is the only time outside of the known 12 apostles that he refers to someone else, in this case a woman as an “apostle”.
Am I misunderstanding what the Church says - are they not saying that they have never allowed women to be ordained? or is it that they just no longer allow women to be ordained?
I guess, I’ve also always wondered why if God didn’t truely want women to be Apostles or Priests why He appeared first to the women (after rising) and then told them to take the news to the 12 Aposltes. This is not a feminist question - although I do believe that A woman who has been inspired by the Holy Spirit can be just as capable as a male who has been inspired by the Holy Spirit to preach, to run a Parish and to do everything a Priest should do. I also believe there are many women who feel they are being considered “not good enough” to be a Priest because of their sex organs. If we were all created in the Image of God than shouldn’t a woman have been created just as equally as a man had been created? I always belived that being created in the “image of God” meant that we had an intillect and soul.
There is a lot of evidence out there to support the fact that the Catholic Church has in the past had femal Catholic Priests, Deacons and Bishops.(And since I know that most will want to know where I got much of this information, I have tried to include some of the books, etc. that this information can be found in).
In Romans 16:7, Paul makes a note of one. " Greet Andronicus and Junias, my kinsmen and my fellow prisoners, who are outstanding among the apostles, who also were in Christ before me" Junias was a female and is being noted as an “apostle”. Even in the 4th Century, St. John Chrysostom refers to Junias as being a member of the “apostolic circle” (this can be found in The Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers Vol. 1 the Homilies of St. John Chrysostom Series 1 - this is the 1956 version)
Also, at the beginning of the 16th Chaper of Romans, you will find it said "I commend to you our sister Phoebe, who is a servant of the church which is at Cenchrea; " I have a hard time believing that when Paul refers to Junias as an “apostle” that he doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
There is much archaeological evidence of women Presbyters, Deacons and even Bishops up until at least the year 840 and some even past then.
I found it interesting that even Therese of Liseux wanted to be a Priest - she felt that God took her early because she could not become a Priest.
“If I were a priest, how lovingly I would carry you in my hands when you came down from heaven at my call; how lovingly I would bestow you upon people’s souls. I want to enlighten people’s minds as the prophets and doctors did. I feel the call of an Apostle. I would love to travel all over the world, making your name known and planting your cross on a heathen soil.” (Story of a Soul pg. 187) There are other quotes that make it clear what she would have prefered to do.
Atto Vercelli in the 10th century wrote that due to Church needs women were ordained to lead worship and preside over the mass - Church Historian Gary Macy also writes in the Sep. 2000 issue of Theological Studies that “For over 1200 years the question of the validity of women’s ordination remained at least an open question. Some popes, bishops and scholars accepted such ordinations as equal to those of men, others did not."
I’m not sure how to put up the Archaeological evidence-there is so much and I can’t include pictures of any - there are sarcophagi in Catholic burial grounds - one from the 4th century of Leta Presbitera that states "Of blessed memory Leta the Presbyter lived 40 years, 8 months, 9 days whose husband prepared her burial she departed in peace the day before the Ides of May.” This makes no doubt that the person in this burial crypt was indeed a woman.
I guess I don’t u nderstand why the Church has never seemed to explain why there are so many examples of women that have been Deacons, Priests and even Bishops, if they have never allowed them to exist. I have never even heard an explination of why in Romans Paul mentions Junias as an Apostle - in fact, I believe this is the only time outside of the known 12 apostles that he refers to someone else, in this case a woman as an “apostle”.
Am I misunderstanding what the Church says - are they not saying that they have never allowed women to be ordained? or is it that they just no longer allow women to be ordained?