Our campaign for the ordination of women in the Catholic Church should stay squarely within the body of the Church. In other words: we want women to be ordained priests because we are Catholics and we know that opening the priesthood to women agrees with our deepest Catholic convictions.
On no account should we allow ourselves to be manoeuvered outside the Catholic community. We should not allow the campaign for the ordination of women to be pushed to the fringes, or even: over the cliff, on a rubbish heap outside the Church. This is what some of our conservative opponents would love to do: to get rid of us as an invasion by aliens, a secular infection, a lump that needs to be amputated.
But if we do not want others to push us out, we ourselves should also refrain from doing anything that would put us outside the community of the Church. I refer in particular to arranging for women to be ordained by bishops who are not in communion with the Catholic Church or by building up fringe Churches with their own independent bishops..
I am not speaking here of individual women who may discern that in their own case, their priestly vocation weighs heavier than service within the Catholic community. Given the present lack of prospect for ordination in the Catholic Church, I can understand that such women may have valid motives for joining another Sister Church and offering themselves for the ministry there. They should have our full support. But this is quite different from whole organisations, or the womens ordination movement as such, promoting the ordination of women by illegal ordinations. Such an approach would be misplaced for many reasons.