Almighty God, our heavenly Father, let thy protection be upon all those who are in the service of our country; guard them from all harm and danger of body and soul; sustain and comfort those as home, especially in their hours of loneliness, anxiety, and sorrow; prepare the dying for death and the living for your service; give success to our arms on land and sea and in the air; and grant unto us and all nations a speedy, just and lasting peace. Amen.
Please Note: Recognition of the following blogs & periodicals should not be considered personal endorsement of the opinions contained therein, especially when content is not consistent with Church teaching.
This Site Adheres to the Welborn Protocol: All correspondence is blogable unless you specifically request otherwise.
DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed on this blog do not necessarily reflect those held by Pope Benedict XVI or other members of the 'Ratzinger Fan Club' website, which serves as host to this online journal.
No commercial commenting (links to your own blog site or relevant URL's permitted).
Keep in mind I have a day job -- hence, no time to respond to any and all comments. When I do so, it's as time permits.
Lastly, think before you post, and be considerate of others. Your comments may be recorded for posterity -- or the duration of Haloscan's memory.
Tuesday, August 01, 2006
Faux Ordination on a Riverboat
On July 31st, 6 members of Roman Catholic Womenpriests "ordained" themselves "priest[esses] of the Catholic Church on July 31st. Needless to say Catholic bloggers are responding with mixed emotions -- amusement, befuddlement, and not a few groans of disgust. Here is a roundup of some reactions:
The Diocese of Pittsburgh has provided a good Q&A on "ordination" Ceremony, while Robert Lockwood, director for communications, Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh, and general manager of the Pittsburgh Catholic, puts it bluntly:
"The Catholic Church does not ordain women because it has been committed for 2,000 years to honor the teaching of Christ. It has nothing to do with discrimination or prejudice."
The hard questions that I wish these participants would be asked are these, in really what amounts to a simple exercise in logic.
If you wish to be ordained and to practice Christian ministry as an ordained person, there is no lack of denominations in which to do that, with all of the titles, regalia and pomp - perhaps even more, if you're going to be High Church Anglican - that you'll find in the Roman Catholic Church.
So...why stay? Why the determination to be Roman Catholic priests? . . .
If The Catholic Church is the Christian church "closest" to Christ...wouldn't one conclude that this closeness is embodied in it? That its closeness is not just a matter of apostolic succession (a concept I'm doubting they care that much about either), but in what the successors of the apostles, you know...do and say?
So how could this Church which is the one you must be ordained in because it's so close to Jesus and apostolic Christianity be...wrong about something so fundamental to its existence over the past 2000 years?
As one reader put it, "The media would actually be doing it's job if they asked questions like that." Lo and behold, Amy finds one who does -- in the form of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Ann Rodgers: Group ordains 8 women as priests - The Catholic Church rejects validity of a riverboat rite (August 1, 2006). Rodgers interviewed Phyllis Zagano, who -- despite her own support for the ordination of women -- voices her concern:
[Zagano] is concerned that some of the women wouldn't qualify if they were male because of their theology or lifestyle.
"From what I have read of their biographies, some of the women are not much interested in much of what the Roman Catholic Church teaches. So there is a conundrum there. How can you be ordained to serve a community of believers if you don't agree with them?" she said.
-- Is this only about women's ordination? Does that mean you aren't seeking any change in Church teaching on, say, divorce-and-remarriage, contraception, homosexual behavior, or other areas that are controversial?
-- Do any of the women seeking ordination agree with the Catholic Church on these "hot button" issues? If not, why not? Doesn't that suggest this is about more than women's ordination?
Jean Marie Marchant is one of the 9 women who claimed to have been ordained as Catholic priests in a surrealistic ceremony that took place last year in international waters. Like most of the other would-be priestesses, Marchant showed her courage by using a false name.
But now she had identified herself in a letter to Boston's Cardinal Sean O'Malley, forcing him to make some public response. Here it is:
Donilon, O'Malley's spokesman, said yesterday that "the cardinal has imposed no penalty on Jean Marchant, because, according to church law, she separated herself from the church by her own action."
Translation: By participating in a mockery of the sacraments, Marchant has incurred the penalty of excommunication, but the cardinal isn't going to say that out loud. Why not?
The website of Roman Catholic Womenpriests bears the image of a mosaic, along with the caption:
This archaeological photograph of a mosaic in the Church of St. Praxedis in Rome shows, in the blue mantle, the Virgin Mary, foremother of women leaders in the Church. On her left is St. Pudentiana and on her right St. Praxedis, both leaders of house churches in early Christian Rome. Episcopa Theodora, "Bishop Theodora" is the bishop of the Church of St. Praxedis in 820 AD.
Theodora was never "bishopess" in Rome or anywhere.
St. Praxedis Church in Rome was built during the reign of Pope Paschal I, son of Theodora.
As mother of Pope Paschal I, Theodora received the title Episcopa, "Bishopess", as a cultural honorific, not as a title for any function she exercised in the Church.