J
jweich
Guest
Alright, I have to admit that people just get silly when they suggest that the Church reduces woman to their biological capacities.The Church (i.e., the Magisterium) has consistently spoken of the dignity of women being linked to their procreative faculties. If that is the only dignity the Church can come up with, then it is the Church who has placed women’s value at little more than a broodmare.
I think women who raise their children full time are darn near miracle workers, esepecially in today’s world where it’s nearly impossible to get by without two incomes. Dozens of descriptions come to mind for such women… clever, industrious, loving, self-sacrificing, inventive… the list can go on and on. For the Church to consistenly focus on one thing, i.e. babymaking, denigrates them and all women who have so many other qualities other than birthing.
Gen 1:27. “God created man in his image; in the divine image he created him; male and female he created them.”
Maybe we could have a discussion on how English is a sexist language, I don’t know - and that would be an entirely different discussion - but we would never approach a contradiction of the undeniable fact that it is a fundemental tenet of the faith that God, in creating “man” in His image, was creating men *and *women in His divine image. Woman is as much the image of God as man is. This isn’t skirting the issue or running around making excuses. This is confronting the faith honestly and in its totality.
*Which means *- and this is hugely important because it contradicts everything you just wrote - every time the pope or the Church writes or produces or teaches anything concerning the fundamental dignity of humanity, meaning of human existence, or wonder at the profound and infinite depths of the human person, woman is always as much being described as man is.
This isn’t making excuses. This is the core of the faith. It seems far more likely that it is you who are focusing on the babymaking, and ignoring the rest of the Church’s teaching on what it means to be human.
If you notice, in fact, whenever the Church teaches on the dignity of women, it is to reaffirm her dignity and worth as simulataneously equal and unique to man as a beloved creature of God. It needn’t even do so. If people were willing to pay attention to the reality that each human person, male and female, posseses the marvelous capacity to be “clever, industrious, loving, self-sacrificing, and inventive,” there would never be a rejection or diminution of anyone, let alone women as a category of person. It is through sin and the rejection of God’s plan that this happens.
And it is through confusion - or perhaps invincible ignorance - that anyone fails to realize the infinite worth and dignity of the human person , and capacity in each individual for radical holiness and possession of wonderful qualities, that the Church has always professed, easily and inherently applies to women as to men.
If anything, “babymaking” is a profound mystery that draws attention to the profound miracle of human life and existence; the Church’s reverance for woman as the bearers of new life does only, and can only, add to her dignity as an image of God, rather than in any way reduce her. “Babymaking” - and note how casual and ultimately demeaning it is to refer to procreation that way in a discussion like this - is something that woman can do that man cannot. Which increases, rather than diminishes, her infinite and inherent value. (If infinity can be increased. I guess not.)