Why women cant be Catholic Priests

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goout:
Why do you deny men the right to have children just because they are men?
Did you read what I wrote? I don’t deny men anything. Please re-read my response.
I hear you recognizing sexual differentiation, and make real distinctions based on that.
Good for you. It’s a happy day when Catholics and atheists can agree on some common sense observations.
 
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Traditions can lie. But suppose it’s true, in what possible way is it fair to punish all women for the “crime” of one woman?

All of that without getting into the extremely suspicious symptoms of a patriarchy-promoting agenda by whoever was the author of Genesis
 
You miscalculated. If you can find a way for men to grow the necessary body parts to carry and birth a baby, I wouldn’t stand in their way. I wouldn’t have a problem with it. I know a lot of men who are more suited to that role, actually, than the woman they are attached to.
It’s great that you’d be willing to “share” motherhood with men, but no matter what you do, a man can’t get pregnant (and I’m not talking about women who decide to “become men”). Similarly, no matter what the Church does, a woman can’t be ordained because God hasn’t given it the authority to do so. A woman can’t consecrate the bread and wine, she can’t hear confessions, and she can’t ordain others. The Church won’t cave to social pressures. Souls are at stake, and they would be in further peril if we permitted women to be ordained while knowing that they can’t confer the sacraments.
 
Can’t and won’t aren’t the same thing. Please be intellectually honest.
 
But there are plenty of Catholics who have dropped out of the practice of the faith.
I agree. And when the remaining Catholics make remarks like, “Why do non-catholics bring up these issues? Catholics don’t seem to have a problem with them.” You don’t have to think too hard to realize that the people who object tend to leave. All that remains is an echo chamber. Of course most people still in the pool don’t have a problem with the dirty water.
 
Jesus chose a married man to be the first pope. Would that mean that a Pope should be married?
Say he chose someone with a full head of hair. Does that mean that no bald person should ever be pope. Doesn’t it ever occur to anyone that perhaps too much is read into all of this, including gender?
 
Therefore, they are always Catholic, whether they choose to remain faithful to her or not.
You don’t get to define people that way. I know the Church likes to, to keep their rolls looking good. However, it is a very prideful thing to try to tell someone, at the core of their spirituality, what they are. I would be very careful with that.
 
Did the Church foist these things on the world?
If your perception is that sex and marriage are things that were “foisted” on the world, I guess it tells me a lot about how you have arrived at some of your conclusions. That isn’t the way I choose to view the world.
 
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goout:
Did the Church foist these things on the world?
If your perception is that sex and marriage are things that were “foisted” on the world, I guess it tells me a lot about how you have arrived at some of your conclusions. That isn’t the way I choose to view the world.
Let’s be honest.
The assertion was made that the Church is obsessed with sex.
Your assertions about sexuality insert the negative overtones about sex, as if the Church is imposing negative restrictions on others proactively.
Let’s be honest.

The Church proposes fulfillment for human beings, and responds when false narratives about sexuality arise.
 
Say he chose someone with a full head of hair. Does that mean that no bald person should ever be pope. Doesn’t it ever occur to anyone that perhaps too much is read into all of this, including gender?
. No one says that the Church has no authority to choose a Chinese, a Cambodian, or a Norseman as priest, even though Jesus only chose Middle Eastern men.
Some things are said to be disciplines, others are said to be essential. Questions are being raised about whether the restriction against women priests is an arbitrary decision or is it something that everyone would agree with as essential.?
 
Yes, but not at the expense of the well being of others.
Not sure what you’re suggesting, but it sure sounds like you’re saying that the well-being of individual women is being harmed by the Church not calling them to orders.

Is that what you’re trying to say?
It is man made because that is what the men (not Jesus) decided it would be.
And you know, then, that the rationale the Church gives is “we can’t do it because Jesus never did it”… right?
I believe Jesus probably isn’t a happy camper over how things are with regard to this.
I can respect that. I disagree – especially since He told Peter “whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven” – but I can respect that this is your personal opinion.
PS… I am well versed in the gospels already.
Fair enough. That means that you just missed all the counter-cultural and convention-breaking actions of Jesus? 🤔
My point is that when an organization automatically eliminates half of the population, they have no room to complain when there is a shortage.
OK… then mine is that, when an organization does allow the other half of the population to apply, and there’s still a problem, it demonstrates that the vocations shortage issue among Christians in the Western world isn’t a gender issue. 🤷‍♂️
You don’t have to think too hard to realize that the people who object tend to leave.
Makes sense. I’m still of the mind that those who leave haven’t heard – or are unwilling to hear – the Church’s reasoning. In other words, it’s a catechesis issue. 🤷‍♂️
Say he chose someone with a full head of hair. Does that mean that no bald person should ever be pope. Doesn’t it ever occur to anyone that perhaps too much is read into all of this, including gender?
You’re moving the goalposts. The discussion isn’t about physical accidents, it’s about the distinctions between persons. There are male persons and there are female persons. Equal in dignity. But not identical.
Nothing denies my views, either.
The thing is, though, that the Church makes its doctrines and dogmas based on positive revelation in Scripture and Apostolic Teaching. If it ain’t there, then it ain’t gonna happen.
 
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You don’t get to define people that way. I know the Church likes to, to keep their rolls looking good. However, it is a very prideful thing to try to tell someone, at the core of their spirituality, what they are. I would be very careful with that.
I’m not defining anyone. That’s the Church’s definition.
 
Come again? This whole thread has been people explaining to you why you’re wrong.
Nothing biblically, that is. But don’t take that too seriously; I am not a big fan of the Bible.
 
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There are only two genders, male and female.
Gender is a cultural/societal conception of the roles of males and females. “Sex” is the term properly used to designate whether one is a “male” or “female”. There are a minority of people born that do not fit well into either of these categories.

http://www.isna.org/faq/what_is_intersex

I don’t believe the Church chooses from among these persons to become priests.
 
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