This piece is quite interesting in the confusion it reveals concerning women's ordination. It's about Susan Ringler who was ordained to the deaconate in the United Catholic Church (which is not valid, licit, or recognised in any way by Rome). She sends up the usual wail:
Until a couple of years ago, she held out hope that lay Catholics and women would gain roles of importance, but the church, she says, has turned hard-line and any dream of eking out more change from Vatican Council II of 40 years ago long faded.
"As a Roman Catholic woman, to think that you have a calling to a deeper ministry from God is almost blasphemy, and the guilt associated with that is huge," says the mother of three grown children who trained as a registered nurse. "It took me a long time to realize that my calling was from God." She says the affirmation she received from family, friends and others redoubled her desire to serve more deeply in ministry and assuaged "guilt that comes naturally to Catholics."
So in that blurb, she basically told the rest of her flock: you're unimportant and shallow. I'm sure they appreciated that. Then it tells of what she had accomplished to date:
In 1987, she was tapped by her then-pastor at St. Timothy’s Catholic Church, Monsignor Dale Fushek, to develop a major outreach ministry to the East Valley’s homeless and poor in the tradition of Phoenix’s Andre House ministry. When Paz de Cristo food kitchen in Mesa served its first meal on Sept. 15, 1988, "we had more volunteers than people to serve," recalls Ringler, who was Paz’s executive director until 1995.
Today, the homeless program, with broad ecumenical support, serves more than 200 meals per night and provides a range of social services. Fighting neighborhood and political opposition to Paz de Cristo’s move to its site and winning Mesa’s approval was the highlight of her work there.
Great guns -- what an accomplishment! Was that unimportant? Highly doubtful. But here's the kicker:
When she became cocoordinator of liturgy at St. Timothy’s, "it just blew me away," she says. For five years, until 2002, she had "the honor to work with one of the best liturgical churches in the country."
"I always was fascinated by liturgy. I went in not knowing anything," she says, but she found she was able to help shape it to resonate with women and the poor.
Her pastor tapped a layman who knew nothing about the liturgy to be its coordinator? There's the silliness: two thousand years of sacred tradition, deep and layered meanings over the centuries, revealed truth entrusted to an established hierarchy, and this priest hands it over to a woman who knows nothing? And she takes that invitation as an initiative to create her own style? We wonder why there's disunity and scandal from the altar.
Actually, bless her heart, she did stumble on some long-neglected needs and prayer intentions:
"I am one of those people who really truly believed for a long time that if you’ve got a position where you can be a voice for the voiceless, then you work within to make changes. The reaction I got from women who saw me up there was, ‘Oh, my gosh.’ They were so grateful seeing me up there telling those guys what to do." In that role, she says, she pushed the envelope to ensure that prayers included "the homeless and the hungry and all the social justice issues and talking about peace."
Oh, my gosh. Maybe we should alert the Vatican: we need to pray for the homeless, the hungry, and victims of injustice. I'm sure Benedict will want to know.
The last paragraph connects the dots:
Ringler is the third female deacon in the United Catholic Church, said the Most Rev. William Christen, Southwest Diocese bishop, who ordained her. His wife, Mary, is one of three female priests, and there is a female bishop. "We have a lot of couples that left (the Roman Catholic Church) a long time ago because of divorce and remarriages," he says. "Now they have found a community where that doesn’t matter."
Dissent is all of a piece. The teachings on marriage and chastity, which are the guarantors of human dignity -- especially the children -- "don't matter." Thus, neither does the liturgy of the ages, the "priest as bridegroom" image, the quiet holiness of the lay state, or the visible unity under the Vicar of Christ. Take a number, get in line. Despite clinging to "catholic" in your name, you're just one more frenetic moth immolating yourself on the wrong light.
Comments
“People have realized that the complete removal of the feminine element from the Christian message is a shortcoming from an anthropological viewpoint. It is theologically and anthropologically important for woman to be at the center of Christianity."
This is just another of the unintended consequences of the cultural acceptance of contraception and abortion! Men's sexuality has been robbed of its creative essence. It is now viewed as something that imposes a burden on women (when conception happens to occur), something used to control women or something that is purely recreational. Why would men bother?? In taking away their responsibility, we've also robbed them of their significance! In the big picture of humanity, men have been made into nothing more than a nuisance women have to figure out how to control in order to bring about the next generation. Men don't see it as their task to protect the vulnerable because they see themselves as the vulnerable ones. A few well preserved vials of sperm would make men entirely obsolete in the world's ethos today!!
That is astounding Robin, and good for you for standing up. At the heart of that matter, I think, is even worse than a gender mixing message. There is an increased sharper and sharper focus on the "self." Solid Catholic teaching returns our focus away from ourselves to Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The original sin, Eve denied her womanhood when she desired to be like "gods." Since the only god she knew was the Father. Where was Adam? He stood impotent... in other words, they were divorced. There's a young girl at Robin's son's high school who was just told that she is the center of the universe and it's a tragic disservice to her.
Ditto what Mary said! A lot of high schools have very poor math and science depts, for boys and girls. I also am educated as a chemical engineer, but chose to teach the two years before we had children because its hours were more suited to spending time with children. (I was looking ahead). When it came time and I was pregnant with our first, I realized that I did not want to leave him with someone else, and was able to stay home full time. I am not sure it would have been that easy if we were used to another engineering income and not just a private school teacher income. Also some of my first job offers were out on oil rigs - I had no interest in that at all even though I enjoyed my engineering classes and did well in them. No one discouraged me from an engineering job, on the contrary I got a lot of flack for my decision not to pursue an engineering career.
I've been lurking, but this is one that irritates me. Beats the heck out of me what these "barriers" are. I was educated as a chemical engineer, where 1/3 of our class was women. However, in electrical engineering, only 1 or 2 out of 30 were women. Is it possible that women are Just Not Interested in some areas? Nah, it must be The Man keeping us down so we must legislate (and, I agree -- when they say "legistlate", I hear "quota"). And actually, I have a friend that was also a chemical engineer. When she lost her job, she decided not to go back into engineering and started working from home so she could spend more time with her 3 kids. Also, if nothing else, there are all kinds of incentives for women to enter science and engineering -- scholarships not available to men, guaranteed housing on campuses that do not guarantee housing to the general population, etc. I think you hit the nail on the head when you said that schools in general are not preparing students for the hard sciences. It is truly a sad state of affairs, the lack of science education these days.