Mark & Marilyn:
The Conservatives allege (or imply):
- The difference between men and women is absolute!
- a.) Women simply have NO place in the clergy.

In such a vital role in the Church, they have nothing to contribute.
(not in the clergy, anyway)
2 b.) It may be that God made woman to be the servant of man.
- Those women who feel they have a “calling,” or seriously believe that women have a right to become priests, are simply being mislead.
…But many progressives deny all of the above, and insist:
- Men and women are essentially made of the same material, spirit, basic human nature, etc., but have differences determined by DNA and hormones, etc. This was not well understood in ancient times. Fact: women have souls, too.
- In many modern, “progressive,” philosophies and policies, equal rights, and equal treatment under the law, are desirable.
Our Lord treated women with more respect than was usually customary for rabbis and religious leaders (and most men) in ancient Palestine region.
- There is no sound or convincing reason for excluding women from religion altogether, or from high respectable ranks, or from the priesthood. Our Lord has never been on record ordering women specifically out of any position of high responsibility.
Women have made considerable contributions to the Church, religion and religious culture thoughout history.
DECLARATION ON THE QUESTION OF ADMISSION OF WOMEN TO THE MINISTERIAL PRIESTHOOD
October 15, 1976
Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
Paragraph 2.- The attitude of Christ.
Jesus Christ did not call any women to become part of the Twelve. If he acted in this way, it was not in order to conform to the customs of his time, for his attitude towards women was quite different from that of his millieu, and he deliberately and courageously broke with it.
For example, to the great astonishment of his own disciples Jesus converses publicly with the Samaritan woman (Jn 4:27); he takes no notice of the state of legal impurity of the woman who had suffered from hemorrhages (Mt 9:20); he allows a sinful woman to approach him in the house of Simon the Pharisee (Lk 7:37); and by pardoning the woman taken in adultery, he means to show that one must not be more severe towards the fault of a woman than towards that of a man (Jn 8:11). He does not hesitate to depart from the Mosaic Law in order to affirm the equality of the rights and duties of men and women with regard to the marriage bond (Mk 10:2; Mt 19:3).
In his itinerant ministry Jesus was accompanied not only by the Twelve but also by a group of women (Lk 8:2). Contrary to the Jewish mentality, which did not accord great value to the testimony of women, as Jewish law attests, it was nevertheless women who were the first to have the privilege of seeing the risen Lord, and it was they who were charged by Jesus to take the first paschal message to the Apostles themselves (Mt 28:7 ; Lk 24:9 ; Jn 20:11), in order to prepare the latter to become the official witnesses to the Resurrection.
It is true that these facts do not make the matter immediately obvious. This is no surprise, for the questions that the Word of God brings before us go beyond the obvious. In order to reach the the ultimate meaning of the mission of Jesus and the ultimate meaning of Scripture, a purely historical exegesis of the texts cannot suffice. But it must be recognised that we have here a number of convergent indications that make all the more remarkable that Jesus did not entrust the apostolic charge to women. Even his Mother, who was so closely associated with the mystery of her Son, and whose incomparable role is emphasized by the Gospels of Luke and John, was not invested with the apostolic ministry. This fact was to lead the Fathers to present her as an example of Christ’s will in this domain; as Pope Innocent III repeated later, at the beginning of the thirteenth century, ‘Although the Blessed Virgin Mary surpassed in dignity and in excellence all the Apostles, nevertheless it was not to her but to them that the Lord entrusted the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven.’