R
Roguish
Guest
Thanks for pointing that out. Still, I feel like we’re being tested for our willingness to tolerate stuff that goes flagrantly against established doctrine. Obviously there’s a certain shock value to sending a woman in priestly garb to a meeting of RC bishops. So why do that? Why did the synod organizers and the WCC agree on this girl to be a representative? I say it’s a test. And it’s smart too, because it’s pretty safe this way: if it blows up in the synod’s face they can blame it on the “weird Hussite girl” or on the WCC. If it doesn’t blow up (as apparently it hasn’t), fine, then we’ve inched another inch closer to putting female ordination on the table.The fraternal delegates who represent other Christian churches can make interventions in the synod aula and participate in small group discussions, but they cannot vote. The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople has a delegate, as do ecclesial organizations like the World Lutheran Federation, the World Communion of Reformed Churches and the World Methodist Council
Now, one could argue: Hey, it’s a synod, it’s okay to have different points of view represented, even if they are very different points of view. But there’s something amiss with this reasoning. It’s obvious that the Hussite “priestess” takes no interest whatsoever in considering the RC position that female ordination is out of the question. She’s not there because she’s willing to consider the possibility that maybe female ordination is indeed not right. She’s there to give visible (and verbal) evidence to the established fact of her “ordination”. So the “ecumenism” and “dialogue” are purely a one-way street, with the RC Church at the receiving end, and (in this case) a Hussite priestess simply there to represent a radically different idea of what the priesthood is.
P.S. Sadly it seems to be the RCC’s trend to “cordially invite” those who behave or act in ways that are grossly contrary to RCC teaching, to come and “enter into dialogue”. There are “qualified pro-choicers” on the Pontifical Academy for Life these days, for example. What’s next? The RCC will invite SSM couples to synods on the family? (And that analogy is not a stretch. It’s precisely the same as inviting a “priestess” to discuss the possibility of a female deaconate in the RCC.)
P.P.S. Another way of putting this (my earlier P.S.) is that it seems that the RCC is giving up more and more on being a firm teacher, and giving in more and more to the idea that She must “learn from everybody”, even (or especially?) from those who’s opinions and lifestyle are obviously at odds with the RCC’s teachings so far. It’s as if the Church is looking to learn from the world, instead of learning from God and teaching the world.
P.P.P.S. I wonder how many young nuns are at the synod, and I’d be interested to hear what they have to say about the Hussite lady.
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