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AngryAtheist8
Guest
Statements like this and your endorsement of Catholic Planet makes me wonder if you would advocate some sort of Catholic (sharia style) state enforced gender segregation if that were on the table?Dear ryecroft,
Cordial greetings and a very good day. Thankyou for your response above and please forgive the delay in replying, but yesterday in the UK was a public holiday so I was otherwise engaged.
Traditionally, dear friend, when a Catholic women entered into wedlock it was usual for her to relinquish her occupation and become a full-time housewife and mother. This in itself is a full-time job, hence the old adage ‘a woman’s work is never done’, thus the strain and stress of simultaneously working and being a homemaker is considerable and puts a women under enormous pressure. In any event, this is an unnatural set up as His intention was for a women to gratefullly receive the divinely ordained role of motherhood (see I Tim. 5: 14; Titus 2: 4). Indeed, it is by accepting her proper sphere that a woman fulfills her true destiny - “Woman will be saved through bearing children, if she continues in faith and love and holiness, with modesty” (I Tim. 2: 15).
As regards St.Gianni, it is quite true that she did harmonize the arduous demands of motherhood with being a doctor, but she regarded the field of medicine as a ‘mission’ and so probably received special divine grace to combine the two effectively. However, this is unique and we cannot use, for polemical purposes, the case of St. Gianni as a template to justify a wholesale departure from the norm of married women being “workers at home”. That, my dear friend, is just plain disengenuous**. That she was both holy and heroic admits of no doubt, but I do not think that she should be used to support the case of those who defend the right of married women to work.**
God bless.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
Pax