L
lois_lane
Guest
This isn’t exactly an issue of social justice, but it doesn’t really seem to fit anywhere else (also, I couldn’t find a thread that already addressed this, so if there is one out there, please point me in the right direction).
Today I listened to the Catholic Answers Live segment from a couple weeks ago – Gloria Purvis’s hour on “The Role of Women in the Church.”
One of the major things I had been struggling with as someone who is considering conversion to the Catholic faith is the Church’s seeming “lack of respect” for women. Turns out this was a HUGE misconception on my part – on the contrary, through my studies and readings I’ve discovered that the church in fact holds women in higher regard than pretty much any other religious tradition or church out there.
What I’m struggling with now is that this respect of women seems only to extend to those women who either a) choose to enter a religious order or b) choose to get married and become mothers.
I am not married. I don’t have kids. I’m not even dating anyone, nor do I want to be in any type of relationship right now. I am a young, single, working woman in the non-profit sector (the arts, to be more specific) and I love my job. I love my work, in every way. I have great friends, great relationships, and in fact feel very free and at liberty to go anywhere (I’m submitting my resume to a couple touring companies) and do anything.
Frankly, I don’t know if I’ll ever get married, or at least not anytime in the near future. It’s just not one of my “life goals” so to speak.
Does this make me less of a Christian, and if I converted, would it make me a less important Catholic? Would I be looked down upon by the church because I like working and feel that this is where my ministry and my work for God lies?
I started thinking about this because of a comment Ms. Purvis made on her hour. She was talking about a woman she worked with who left Corporate America becuase she wanted to take care of her kids. Ms. Purvis told how she reassured this woman by saying, “You are doing more good than anyone could ever do in Corporate America by staying home to raise your kids.”
I just don’t see how this can be true in every case! We NEED women in the corporate world, desparately! How does it make someone more important than me, becuase they’re choosing to get married and have kids, and I’m not?
Just because I’m not and may not ever be a mother means that I’m not as good and that I’m not advancing the kingdom of God in this world??
Thoughts, please.
Today I listened to the Catholic Answers Live segment from a couple weeks ago – Gloria Purvis’s hour on “The Role of Women in the Church.”
One of the major things I had been struggling with as someone who is considering conversion to the Catholic faith is the Church’s seeming “lack of respect” for women. Turns out this was a HUGE misconception on my part – on the contrary, through my studies and readings I’ve discovered that the church in fact holds women in higher regard than pretty much any other religious tradition or church out there.
What I’m struggling with now is that this respect of women seems only to extend to those women who either a) choose to enter a religious order or b) choose to get married and become mothers.
I am not married. I don’t have kids. I’m not even dating anyone, nor do I want to be in any type of relationship right now. I am a young, single, working woman in the non-profit sector (the arts, to be more specific) and I love my job. I love my work, in every way. I have great friends, great relationships, and in fact feel very free and at liberty to go anywhere (I’m submitting my resume to a couple touring companies) and do anything.
Frankly, I don’t know if I’ll ever get married, or at least not anytime in the near future. It’s just not one of my “life goals” so to speak.
Does this make me less of a Christian, and if I converted, would it make me a less important Catholic? Would I be looked down upon by the church because I like working and feel that this is where my ministry and my work for God lies?
I started thinking about this because of a comment Ms. Purvis made on her hour. She was talking about a woman she worked with who left Corporate America becuase she wanted to take care of her kids. Ms. Purvis told how she reassured this woman by saying, “You are doing more good than anyone could ever do in Corporate America by staying home to raise your kids.”
I just don’t see how this can be true in every case! We NEED women in the corporate world, desparately! How does it make someone more important than me, becuase they’re choosing to get married and have kids, and I’m not?
Just because I’m not and may not ever be a mother means that I’m not as good and that I’m not advancing the kingdom of God in this world??
Thoughts, please.