"AngryAtheist8:
Moreover women (and for that matter men) have no ability to grant motherhood in its traditional (biological) sense to men. But the priesthood is different.
I think what we’ve been saying over and over is that the priesthood is not different. The whole point is that even if a bishop (and on a few cases it has unfortunately happened) put their hands on a woman’s head and says the words, she is not a priest. If the pope were to do so, she would not be a priest.
Priests aren’t just hired, they are ordained. This is an action of God administered by a bishop. A bishop can try to ordain a woman, and can even believe he is doing so (and even put her in a Church), but this would no more make her a priest - hence capable of administering the sacraments - than someone tapping me on the shoulder and saying “I now pronounce you capable of motherhood” would in fact make me capable of motherhood.
Regardless of whether it was instituted or inspired by God the Catholic priesthood remains a human institution, managed and regulated by humans (who all happen to be male).
Catholic understanding is that (the dogma part) is run by God through humans. Priests bishops, etc are instruments through which God acts, not managers in their own right.
That Catholic doctrine has never significantly changed throughout the history of the Church. It has merely been refined.
Aside from the fact that this obvious isn’t true (the official Church position regarding the Papal States and Italy has changed significantly over the last 150 years for instance) such a thing is nothing to be proud of.
I don’t think you understand what we mean by unchanging. The papal state stuff was not dogma defined as revealed by God. That was just temporal policy - in large part to maintain order in the region if I understand what you are talking about. Temporal policies (rules and regulations) are subject to change, and some of the teaching which are not said to be determined with certainty could change as well.
A better example for you to use would have been the idea of Limbo. For some time many people within the Church supported the idea that unbaptized children neither go to Heaven nor to Hell when they die, but to a place of perfect “natural bliss.” But this was never taught to be definitively true, and it is currently not believed by as many people (thought I don’t think it is taught to be definitively false either). The point is that nothing which is said with certainty to be true is later said to be false.
If an institution around for two thousands years could not significantly change in that time, if it could not grow and adapt, that would be a mark of shame.
This assumes that it needs to change. We say it doesn’t and didn’t, or at least not in the way that we say that it can’t. Clearly, such things as posting official documents on the internet instead of having monks hand write as many copies as they can and deliver them to a couple places is a valuable change, but just as clearly it isn’t a change of the type we say can’t and won’t happen.
In reality an organization that static and stagnant probably could not survive so long, and would certainly not deserve to.
You seem really hung up on things changing. If something can survive for a long time without changing, what that means is that it started out really good. “Change” with no adjectives is neutral. It’s good change, or improvement that we want, in general. As it is, one of the arguments that the Church is what it says it is is precisely that it didn’t need any change (outside of a deepening of understanding) in dogma to survive 2000 years.
Change a long the lines of “teaching what most people want to hear at the moment” we, or at least I, tend to consider to be stupid.