Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Rock On, Girls!

Excommunication schmexcommunication. This ridiculous threat of exclusion was contrived by men, not God. God would never sneer at a woman who is so passionate about serving Him.

Excommunication has nothing to do with God...and everything do to with disobeying the papacy.

The Catholic Church has always said women cannot be priests because Jesus did not have female Apostles. Well, He might not have had them back in the day...but by God He has them NOW! And those who say they are not "worthy" to conduct mass are committing the sin of judging.

Evolve already, Church! If you do what you always have done, you get what you always have got. There's no room for growth. No room for improvement. What doesn't bend --breaks.

Traditional Catholics view the Bible as the end of the conversation...however, I truly believe it exists to promote the conversation. Mary Magdalene was a close follower of Jesus despite the fact that women were viewed as second-class back in the day. Women were not recognized as apostles due to social oppression over 2,000 years ago...and unbelievably this oppression STILL presents itself in the Church TODAY as it does not allow women to be priests. Pshaw!

I self-excommunicated and it was the best choice I have ever made in my spiritual life. And these headlines reinforce that decision.

As for these brave women priests (though our theological beliefs differ) - I say rock on, girls!

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Boston Archdiocese Says Trio Will Be Excommunicating Themselves

TheBostonChannel.com - BOSTON – July 18, 2008 - Three Catholic women will be ordained as priests in a Back Bay neighborhood church this weekend, despite the Vatican's admonition that the trio will be excommunicated if they do so. "Excommunication or not, I will still be a validly ordained priest and still will be able to serve the people of God," said Gabriella Velardi Ward, 61, a Staten Island architect and mother of two. Also a grandmother of three, Ward said she has wanted to be a priest ever since she was five years old and once considered becoming a nun, but felt the priesthood was her true calling because she wants to be able to celebrate the sacraments. She will be joined by Gloria Carpeneto, of Baltimore, and Judy Lee, of Florida. Mary Ann McCarthy Schoettly, of Newton, N.J., will be ordained as a deacon. The Vatican, however, said the ordinations would be illegal and the Boston Archdiocese sent out an e-mail to all priests saying that women who try to receive sacred orders and priests who try to confer them are automatically separating themselves from the church. The Catholic Church has always said women cannot be priests because Jesus did not have female Apostles. The ordination ceremony will take place Sunday at the Church of the Covenant on Newbury Street, which is affiliated with two Protestant denominations, the Presbyterian Church (USA) and the United Church of Christ, the Boston Globe reported. The church, which has a female pastor, offered to let the ordination take place there as a way of supporting and encouraging the women's group. The trio will be ordained by Dana Reynolds, of California, a woman who was consecrated as a bishop in Germany in April. They are all part of an organization called Roman Catholic Womenpriests, which has been holding ordination ceremonies for women since 2002; the organization says there are now 28 women Catholic priests in the United States, according to the Globe. The group says its ordinations are valid because its first female priests were ordained by bishops who were in good standing with the Vatican. They won't reveal the names so those bishops can avoid sanctions. The Boston ordinations will coincide with the first Boston conference of four organizations that are pushing for the admission of married men, as well as of women, to the priesthood. Jean Marchant, who once worked for the Boston Archdiocese's healthcare ministry, has already been ordained and, together with her husband, serves a small Catholic congregation in Weston, Mass.

2 comments:

Zombaggedon said...

So the argument is that the apostles were men so priests are men? Ok. So couldn't the argument then be made that because none of the apostles were black, no priests can be? Or Latino? I don't think any of the apostles were American, so priests can't be either. Its a shitty argument. The current administration of the vatican is looking for difference, and despite that fact that innumerable tangible differences can be found between any person and the apostles, the fact is that they choose to see gender because it reinforces their bigoted narrow minded worldview.

SM said...

I could not have put it better myself. LOL.