The evidence [that sexism regulates the Church’s practice] is that our society is still dominated by men - which amply illustrates the deeply ingrained conservatism and prejudice of many men against women. They have been in power so long they resent having to relinquish it and ensure, amongst other inequalities, that women are often still paid less than men for doing exactly the same work. One has only to read the irrational comments in this thread…
Your sexism is multiplying, as is you’re false logic. Honestly, I have to give you credit – at least you take your logic seriously. No one else does.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but this appears to be your argument: “Sexism is thriving in our society and keeps us from having priestesses. The proof that sexism is thriving is that we don’t have priestesses yet.” And you accuse ME of putting the cart before the horse? Please.
Your use of “priestesses” rather than “women priests” reveals your contempt for the very idea that they should be ordained.
I suppose my use of ‘actresses’ reveals my contempt for women actresses too. I apologize for my proper use of grammar – perhaps we should not only change the Church, but our language too. (We would almost have to, to keep up with the ever-changing world of liberal feminism.)
It is absurd to speak of the “infallible Catholic Church” as if all the pronouncements and decisions by popes, bishops and priests are true.
All of the infallible ones are. And as the Church has specified, the teaching about the male-only priesthood is an infallible one.
You are forgetting that our ultimate authority is not the Church but our conscience.
The conscience is the authority that we must listen to during questions of morality, and even then it must be formed according to the standards set by the Church. But we aren’t talking about how to act – your conscience can’t define for you whether or not Mary was assumed into heaven. For that, you have to trust an authority such as the Church. It’s the same with priestesses – your conscience can’t decide whether women are called to the priesthood because the conscience only tells you how to act, not how to believe.
tonyrey:
dmar198:
They are the representatives of God’s quest for His bride, the Church – as such, priests must represent a bridegroom, and a woman cannot do so.
This is one of the most fantastic arguments I have come across!
Thanks. I thought it was pretty good too. So, why DO you think it’s fantastic?
Do you really believe sexuality is an attribute of the eternal Deity?
No, but I believe masculinity is. God is as masculine as men were created to be, because He created masculinity to represent Him. If that sounds like heresy to you, it’s probably because you’ve never taken into account the fact that Scripture tells us that it is so in the clearest, most direct terms, and it tells us so more than once.
How can you possibly defend the thesis that the Church is feminine?
How about this: “a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh. This is a profound mystery—but I am talking about Christ and the church.” (Eph. 5:31-32)
You are putting the cart before the horse. The metaphor of the Bride of Christ is based on the creation of male and female by God.
Not according to Genesis 1:27 – “God created man in his own image, / in the image of God he created him; / male and female he created them.” This teaches that we – as male and female – are created in the image of God, not that God has revealed Himself in the image of man.
Jesus had not been born and the Church did not even exist when man and woman were created.
God created men and women to be His Church, His people, His counterpart, just as a woman is the counterpart of a man. The fact that we have to repeat such basic points of revelation is proof that you are not getting your opinions from the teaching of the Church.
You imply that Jesus did not make women worthy by grace because He did not consider them suitable
No, I am not. If someone had been suitable for the priesthood, then Jesus wouldn’t have needed to make them worthy. My point was that no one was suitable, so Jesus chose certain unworthy people to make them worthy by His grace. (It’s the same process we use today.) Never did He do this for a woman, and never has the Church. Who are you to judge this constant practice?
You are deducing from the fact that the Church has not ordained women until now that they have not been, nor are, nor ever will be, called to the priesthood.
Yeah, it’s called “tradition” and it is normative for the Catholic Church. We cannot break with the constant practice of the Church of Christ without breaking from her Head, which is Christ.
Similar accusations were made by the Inquisition against Bruno, Galileo and many others…
That was an ultimatum, and ultimatums are made against heretics – “stop doing what you are doing or
anathema sint.” The pope has taught that the male-only priesthood is “a matter which pertains to the Church’s divine constitution itself,” and therefore he has declared “that the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church’s faithful.” If you refuse to obey, you are a heretic.
Does the fact that the Church has not ordained women or married men until now categorically exclude the possibility that it ever will?
The Church has at some points ordained married men, (and still does, in the Eastern rites,) therefore it may do so (more often) in the future. But the Church has never ordained a woman, and this is a matter of doctrine – therefore she cannot ever do so.
God bless!