It has been recently brought up to me that what I faced in the Anglican Communion concerning women in the priesthood is also an ongoing debate in the Catholic Church. This has been said to me time and time again. Yet there is a big BUT that gives the issue two totally different perspectives that actually makes them polars apart and that is the Apostolic Authority that is found within the Catholic Church that is indeed absent from Anglicanism or any Protestant ecclesial community. The authority in the Catholic Church is an authority that is in direct opposition to the 'freedom of belief' concerning sacramental teaching and authority that I found lacking within Anglicanism.Pope John Paul II makes this distinction abundantly clear in his Ordinatio Sacerdotalis. In it he upholds the Church's teaching on the spiritual giftedness of women and their role in the Church without undermining the sacramental realism taught in the Church's theology of symbol. I think it would be a wrong interpretation to say that this is open for debate in the Catholic Church as it is in Anglicanism. The following from JPII makes this abundantly clear and the authority behind his apostolic blessing seals the issue of whether or not this is a debate that is open for change.
Furthermore, the fact that the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God and Mother of the Church, received neither the mission proper to the Apostles nor the ministerial priesthood clearly shows that the non-admission of women to priestly ordination cannot mean that women are of lesser dignity, nor can it be construed as discrimination against them. Rather, it is to be seen as the faithful observance of a plan to be ascribed to the wisdom of the Lord of the universe.
The presence and the role of women in the life and mission of the Church, although not linked to the ministerial priesthood, remain absolutely necessary and irreplaceable. As the Declaration Inter Insigniores points out, "the Church desires that Christian women should become fully aware of the greatness of their mission: today their role is of capital importance both for the renewal and humanization of society and for the rediscovery by believers of the true face of the Church."(10)
The New Testament and the whole history of the Church give ample evidence of the presence in the Church of women, true disciples, witnesses to Christ in the family and in society, as well as in total consecration to the service of God and of the Gospel. "By defending the dignity of women and their vocation, the Church has shown honor and gratitude for those women who-faithful to the Gospel-have shared in every age in the apostolic mission of the whole People of God. They are the holy martyrs, virgins and mothers of families, who bravely bore witness to their faith and passed on the Church's faith and tradition by bringing up their children in the spirit of the Gospel."(11)
Moreover, it is to the holiness of the faithful that the hierarchical structure of the Church is totally ordered. For this reason, the Declaration Inter Insigniores recalls: "the only better gift, which can and must be desired, is love (cf. 1 Cor 12 and 13). The greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven are not the ministers but the saints."(12)
4. Although the teaching that priestly ordination is to be reserved to men alone has been preserved by the constant and universal Tradition of the Church and firmly taught by the Magisterium in its more recent documents, at the present time in some places it is nonetheless considered still open to debate, or the Church's judgment that women are not to be admitted to ordination is considered to have a merely disciplinary force.
Wherefore, in order that all doubt may be removed regarding a matter of great importance, a matter which pertains to the Church's divine constitution itself, in virtue of my ministry of confirming the brethren (cf. Lk 22:32) I declare 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.
Invoking an abundance of divine assistance upon you, venerable brothers, and upon all the faithful, I impart my apostolic blessing.
From the Vatican, on May 22, the Solemnity of Pentecost, in the year 1994, the sixteenth of my Pontificate.
3 comments:
I remember a further statement issued by Cardinal Ratzinger, with the approval and agreement of John Paul 11 to the effect that the teaching regarding the impossibility of the ordination of women to the priesthood is to be considered as part of the "deposit of The Faith". Thus it has the status of infallibility and the Church can do no other bu reiterate it. I cannot remember the date of this statement (perhaps my memory is completely gone on this!!!), but I remember posting it in the porch of my church several years ago in an attempt to stop any continuing debate.
Roma locuta est causa finita est.
Pat
I know many Catholics - even priests - in their ignorance just airily dismiss this, alas; their view (a bizarre misinterpretation of Papal authority, which guards, not changes the Deposit of Faith) is that sooner or later the next Pope will simply pronounce the opposite view to be correct. Their faith is thus quite perverse, and no different from that of Anglicans who seem to change doctrines by majority vote. However, this viewpoint (kindred to the replacement of morality based on fixed principles by expediency) is very widespread amongst Catholics, mainly because the majority went their own way on Humanae vitae, and thus are in bad faith.
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