S
simpleas
Guest
Yes Jesus trusted Peter 2,000 and more years ago with the keys to the Kingdom, the keys are still in trust to the current leader who can make certain decisions, very powerful ones!
I think this is a very important point. The Holy Spirit is omnipotent, after all, and is perfectly capable of convincing the Church leadership that things need to change.So unless God lifts the ban himself I guess women will not priests.
I am interested to see a source on this. Non-ordained persons do not preach during the Mass (or should not) and it seems difficult for me to believe that this would change.I meant that there is no function in particular that deacons can do but laypeople can’t (by divine law). So unordained deaconesses could be given the same functions as actual deacons (to be clear, I’m not saying this would be a good idea, just that it’s possible).
And why do it to the Congregation! If there is a need for women to serve as they did in the early Church, they would need to be called something different. The closest thing we have now to this role is that of a nun. It is true that the number of nuns serving in parishes has drastically reduced, but there are oblate roles and diocesan consecrated roles that would be far more appropriate.So then they would not be Deacons, but something else. They’d be practically pretending to be Deacons, but not really be Deacons. Why do it then?
Just a quick commentWingz:![]()
I think this is a very important point. The Holy Spirit is omnipotent, after all, and is perfectly capable of convincing the Church leadership that things need to change.So unless God lifts the ban himself I guess women will not priests.
Exactly. If Jesus wants something to change, such as the ordination of women, the HS will reveal it to the Church.Just a quick comment
From Jesus mouth to our ears, The HS doesn’t speak on His own.
Jn 16:12-15
So men can be included in the body (bride) as male, even though they will never give birth to the body as a female can, but women can not become a icon of Christ because she isn’t a male.That’s not how the thinking goes spiritually speaking.
There is only one Head and that is Christ, who is ontologically male so only one of the two ways of being human can properly signify Christ as Head in liturgy.
Women are primarily the signifiers of what it means to be many members who make up one body. Because the body has many members, men are included in that, even if their body doesn’t signify this spiritual reality.
In the sanctuary during worship, we see Christ as our Head, signified by the priest, offering Himself to the Father on behalf of the Body.
Perhaps the Holy Spirit is revealing it to the church but many choose to ignore it…Exactly. If Jesus wants something to change, such as the ordination of women, the HS will reveal it to the Church.oint_up_2:t2:
No. What part of “the Body has many members” do you not understand? Do women not give birth to children of both sexes? Do men not father children of both sexes? Surely, you aren’t saying only female children and women are in need of a Savior by implying there is something amiss if men can be part of the Body?So men can be included in the body (bride) as male, even though they will never give birth to the body as a female can, but women can not become a icon of Christ because she isn’t a male.
Isn’t there something a miss here?
I only came to the same conclusion about 6 months ago.There is an idol called Change. It is a god to some. And it always demands change.
They may try, but God will not be mocked. It is His Church, and she will conform to His rule. Those who do not wish to participate will be out in the cold, gnashing their teeth, saying 'Lord, Lord!". Anyone who doubts this need only give another quick read of the letters to the Churches in Revelation.Perhaps the Holy Spirit is revealing it to the church but many choose to ignore it…![]()
This is the thinking that gives rise to new Protestant denominations…who then give rise to new Protestant denominations, who give rise to other Protestant denominations…Perhaps the Holy Spirit is revealing it to the church but many choose to ignore it…![]()
That’s an example of a thought that is at the same time true, but in truth not applicable.steve-b:![]()
Exactly. If Jesus wants something to change, such as the ordination of women, the HS will reveal it to the Church.Just a quick comment
From Jesus mouth to our ears, The HS doesn’t speak on His own.
Jn 16:12-15oint_up_2:t2:
No, I’m saying men can be classed as the bride of Christ (the church) which is feminine in relation to God, yet woman can not be thought of as male in order to act in persona Christi.No. What part of “the Body has many members” do you not understand? Do women not give birth to children of both sexes? Do men not father children of both sexes? Surely, you aren’t saying only female children and women are in need of a Savior by implying there is something amiss if men can be part of the Body?
Yes I tend to think of things in a spiritual sense than in the physical.You’re making the priesthood all about what the priest would signify about all humans-male or female-as members of the Body who can be Christ through our words and actions towards others. That spiritual reality is already covered in the liturgy.
Or, perhaps the Holy Spirit isn’t, the Church is teaching soundly, and some choose to ignore it…guanophore:![]()
Perhaps the Holy Spirit is revealing it to the church but many choose to ignore it…Exactly. If Jesus wants something to change, such as the ordination of women, the HS will reveal it to the Church.oint_up_2:t2:
![]()
Right. Because as members of the Body of Christ, men are standing in relation to Christ as part of the Body. But the priest is not standing in relation to Christ (as an individual he is) but as priest he’s standing IN the person of Christ, who as we know is male and the Son of the Father.No, I’m saying men can be classed as the bride of Christ (the church) which is feminine in relation to God, yet woman can not be thought of as male in order to act in persona Christi.
But it seems you want to think of things only in the spiritual sense and forget that the physical, as created by God, has meaning too that points to the spiritual. The two can’t be separated or it can lead to all kinds of heresy as we’ve seen in Church history.Yes I tend to think of things in a spiritual sense than in the physical.
I am sympathetic to the many women who are pained by this issue and the reason for the pain isn’t because women want to make their own rules that are fair and it sees the Church as being unfair when it won’t allow women to be priests.I get it to an extent, and I appreciate your empathy and desire to eliminate pain. But, there is a difference between ‘I caused you pain’ and ‘you are choosing to feel hurt’.
The Catholic Church is a religious organization that gets to set it’s own rules.
This isn’t a case of ‘Women don’t get to vote because they’re women’. This is a case of ‘This private organization gets to define it’s roles’.