2010 News Central, Items of Interest

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Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 10:53:35




In 1965, the Vatican finally gets it right when it declares: 

Whatever is opposed to life itself, such as . . . arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, prostitution, the selling of women and children, and slavery . . . all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed. They poison human society and are a supreme dishonour to the Creator . . . 

Human institutions, both private and public, must labour to minister to the dignity and purpose of the human person. Let them put up a stubborn fight against any form of slavery and safeguard the basic human rights under any political system. 

Vatican II, Gaudium et Spes (AD 1965) § 27, 29


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 10:56:17
Dear friends, 

On the matter of slavery, the Vatican's current Prefect for the Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith, Cardinal William Levada  acknowledges: 


There is a long tradition in the church of accepting the institution of slavery, but in the light of the repeated teachings of modern popes and the Second Vatican Council on the dignity of the human person, church teaching has evolved from acceptance of slavery as part of the human condition to its eventual condemnation. 

- Cardinal William Levada, Prefect for the Vatican's Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith

Cardinal William Levada 
Prefect for the Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith 

Those of us working for the ordination of women generously applaud the Vatican for finally getting it right in endorsing a categorical condemnation of slavery in its modern teachings.  Thanks to the agents for change who courageously worked for abolition, the Vatican  finally saw the light!  

Please join us now in this campaign as we work towards conversion of the Vatican... encouraging them to see the light that women do have a place as deacons, priests, bishops and even popes within our Church. 

We appreciate your presence here!  Welcome!  Please explore and enjoy our site.  If you have any questions, let me know. 

with love and blessings, 

~Sophie~

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 10:58:50
Catholicism and slavery a compromising history 
By Barbara Fawcett 
The Prairie Messenger 
June 25, 2008 

WINNIPEG — That the church views slavery as “a supreme dishonour to the Creator” comes as no surprise to people of faith, but such a statement from the Vatican only first appeared in 1965, said Rev. John Perry, SJ, when Pope Paul VI included it in the Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World (Gaudium et Spes). 

Perry, author of Catholics and Slavery: A Compromising History, told his audience at the book launch at McNally Robinson Booksellers June 5 that slavery was inserted in a list of condemnations during the drafting of the constitution at the suggestion of several bishops, leaving the unfortunate impression that it had been included as an afterthought. 
  
Perry, who teaches ethics at St. Paul’s College at the University of Manitoba, holds a doctorate in theology. He explained that the final version of Gaudium et Spes reads, “whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women and children, as well as disgraceful working conditions where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed.” 

Perry said that, at various times throughout history, the church has “promoted, condoned and participated in slavery.” 

The scriptural justification for slavery is found in Genesis 9:24-27, in which Noah became drunk and “lay naked in his tent.” His son Ham looked on his father’s nakedness while his other sons, Shem and Japheth, averted their eyes as they covered him. On waking, Noah cursed Ham’s son Canaan and his successors to be eternal slaves. As Canaan had been accepted in some circles as the biblical progenitor of black Africans, “the curse of Ham” had long been used in defence of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. 

Perry spoke of the work of Antonio Viera, a Portuguese priest who worked among slaves in Brazil, encouraging them “to be imitators of Christ crucified and thus become better Christians than their owners,” and of St. Paul, who described himself as a slave of Christ, lending dignity to the condition of those living in slavery and comparing it to the obedience and submission of those entering religious life. 

According to Perry, through most of the church’s history, slavery has been part of an economic reality, and while the church has always urged slave owners to treat their slaves kindly, the issue of abolition was never vigorously addressed. 

Papal documents of the 15th and 16th centuries gave European powers permission to conquer and enslave Africans and North Americans. Perry noted that many of these rulings have not officially been rescinded. 

Perry said that slaves are still kept in many parts of the world, including sugar cane workers in the Dominican Republic, child soldiers in Uganda and sex trade workers in Central America and Italy. The victims are unnumbered and their need is dire. 

Perry said the success with which the church can combat this evil is yet to be seen. 

http://www.stpeterscollege.ca/prairie_messenger/

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 10:59:32







The implications for ordination of women?  We respectfully submit: History shows that the Vatican sometimes makes mistakes.  It is doing so when it insists on the exclusion of women from the priesthood.  What  does history shows?  Once errors are realised, the Vatican has a demonstrated capacity to get things right...and to become champions for a cause!  With hope in our hearts, we press on!  

Calling all agents of transformation -- help open the doors to women deacons... women priests... and women bishops... and yes, women popes!!!!


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 11:00:06




Dear friends, 

In order to remain prophetic, the Catholic Church must continue to adapt to a deepening comprehension of truth. It is concerning that the Vatican stubbornly insists on its ban against women in ordained ministry when: 
evidence shows clearly there are no justifications --scriptural, traditional, theological and otherwise -- to justify the ban  and while the majority of the world is working to gain ground in conquering the evil of discrimination against women. The world is more clearly appreciating the truth. So too must Rome... We cannot permit the Vatican to hide from the truth or hide the truth from the faithful ... especially since it claims to lead! 

Given the global nature of our Church, its face in the developing world, and its capacity for connection between First and Third Worlds, a potentially positive consequence of ending discrimination against women inside the Church will be the concurrent energy that waits to be harnessed to build justice for women in the world. 

with love and blessings, 

~Sophie~

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 11:01:21
Dear friends, 

Part of the work for women's ordination means labouring for cultural change so as to lift the blinders of prejudice against women from people's vision. One hundred years ago, in both society and in the Church, women had little standing.  As in society, so in the Church -- women were:  
  • barred from receiving communion during their monthly periods.  
  • After giving birth, it was believed that a women needed to be purified before reentering a Church building. The practice was known as being 'churched' (see: Churching of women.)  
  • Women were strictly forbidden to touch sacred objects such as the chalice, the paten or altar linen.  
  • Women could not distribute holy communion.  
  • In church, women needed to have their heads veiled at all times. 
Women were also prohibited from: 
  • entering the sanctuary except for the purpose of cleaning it.  
  • reading Sacred Scripture from the pulpit.  
  • preaching.  
  • singing in a church choir.  
  • being altar servers.  
  • becoming full members of confraternities and organizations of the laity. 
The most significant restriction of all  which continues today is that women were barred from receiving the sacrament of Holy Orders -- seven sacraments were open to men, only six for women.  

Spurred on by the emancipation of women in secular society, in our own time  we see the institutional prejudice of the Church beginning to crumble. But we are far from the total collapse of this sin. Women are still excluded from ordained ministry. The prejudice is kept alive by Church authorities who cling to flimsy arguments. Quite simply, as people become more informed, the Vatican will not be able to shore up its untenable exclusion of women from priesthood for much longer. 

Just as there have been relaxations of what are now recognised as ridiculous prohibitions, eg:
  • forbidding women to sing in Church choirs, see here: members of church choirs
  • forbidding women to serve at the altar.
From its formulation in the the Middle Ages, Church Law forbade women to serve at the Eucharist for three reasons:
More transformation is yet to come.  In time, it will come to be seen that it was as ridiculous to keep women from presiding at the Eucharist, as it was to keep them from singing in Church or serving at the altar!  

If you have any questions, please let me know! 

with love and blessings, 

~Sophie~



Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 11:07:28





Cultural prejudice against women began building up in Catholic community during the first millennium. In the early Middle Ages this became the Church’s institutional prejudice when it was enshrined in Church Law. The beginnings of this we can see in Gratian’s first collection of Church Law (1140 AD).  Rest assured that as we journey together, we will learn more about this. 
 
In our own time, spurred on by the emancipation of women in secular society, the institutional prejudice of the Church has begun to crumble. But we are still far from its total collapse. Women are still excluded from the ordained ministries in the Catholic Church.  Compare the shift in official Church laws and learn more, see this document from our library:Most restrictions against women have now been lifted. But the ban against women priests still remains.


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/08/2010 11:29:50

On this day August 23 in 1989 - The Singing Revolution: 


Approximately two million people joined their hands to form an over 600 km (370 mi) long human chain across the Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian Soviet republics to demonstrate the desire for independence for each of the three Baltic states.

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 24/08/2010 11:51:54
Dear friends,

For those among us who are new to our dialogues, from time to time we feature stories about heroes who have worked for change to make the world -- in whatever way -- a better place.


Participants in The Singing Revolution
 
From a practical point of view, work for women's ordination includes labouring for cultural transformation. There is strong resistance to acknowledging the fact that God calls women to be Catholic priests. As workers for change, facing resistance is not an easy part of the journey. Despite the fact that work for justice is a noble endeavor, shunning, condemnation, abusive rhetoric and hostility are unfortunately a reality sometimes encountered by those who forge ahead.


Wood engraving of the pro-slavery mob burning down the warehouse
where American Presbyterian minister, journalist, newspaper
editor and abolitionist, Elijah P. Lovejoy, kept his printing press.
Lovejoy was murdered -- martyred -- by the mob because of his work for the abolition of slavery.
 
Though many are the tests of determination and committment, sources of inspiration are plentiful, too. We are not alone. Many brothers and sisters have travelled parallel journeys before us. When we look to them for role models, we can learn from and be inspired by them.

Along with our lives of faith, the stories of heroes serve as sources of empowerment for us.

In that same vein, our dialogue threads devoted to heroic agents of change and transformation are places where we can gather read the stories of people who inspire because of their committment to work for what is right. Though not necessarily connected to our Catholic faith community in name, through their works for truth and justice, they share a journey with us. They continue to serve by inspiring us to 'keep going' when perseverence is tough.
 
The threads, if you are interested, are located in our Inspiration forum.
 
If you have any questions, please let me know.


~Sophie~


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 24/08/2010 11:53:12
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On this day August 24 in 1215 - Pope Innocent III opposes the Magna Carta and declares it to be invalid.

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 24/08/2010 12:13:07
Dear friends,
 
Opposition to the Magna Carta is not the first or only time that  a Pope or the Vatican has got it wrong!  Pointing this out is not an attack on their integrity but instead simply a way of putting things into perspective:  we need to keep our thinking caps on when it comes to faith!  As we have just been learning, thanks to those who had courage to raise questions, an evolution of understanding about the Truth of slavery led today's Vatican to shed old teachings so that it could categorically condemn slavery as an offense to human dignity. 
 

The Magna Carta

Application to the case for women's ordination? In the same way -- through an evolution of understanding of Truth -- we are learning that the exclusion of women from priesthood is not of God.  Condemnation of the Magna Carta, supporting slavery as though it were the will of God, and treating women as second class constitute serious error on the part of teaching authority. The exclusion of women is offensive to human dignity. 

Documentation included in our library makes clear that slavery is not the only example where an evolution in understanding thus a change in Church teaching has occurred. I invite you to consider the following links: 
Because our Church shows its capacity to embrace necessary evolutions in teachings so as to journey in closer communion with Christ's Truth, it has the capacity to move forward with teachings about women priests, too! While Truth never changes, the attempt to defend the exclusion of women from Holy Orders on the basis that 'this is the way it always has been' is like a last ditch kitchen sink argument. It is neither convincing nor sound. 

We will learn more as we journey together. If you have any questions at any time, please let me know. 

with love and blessings, 

~Sophie~  

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 24/08/2010 12:15:44
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On this day August 24 in 1858 – In Richmond, Virginia, USA, 90 blacks are arrested for learning.

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 24/08/2010 12:18:09

  Eleanor Roosevelt and Edith Sampson 
  
  
On this day August 24 in 1950 -  Edith Sampson becomes the first black U.S. delegate to the UN.

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 25/08/2010 09:56:38
Today, it almost seems hard to believe that only 90 years ago in the USA, women did not have the right to vote. How could withholding this basic right from half of the population possibly have been justified? One day, they'll be asking, 'How could prohibiting the ordination of women have been justified?'   Thanks be to those who brave work for change!
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Women — Still a Menace?
by Elizabeth Galewski
The Capital Times (Madison, Wis.)
August 25, 2010

"DANGER! Woman's Suffrage Would Double the Irresponsible Vote. It is a MENACE to the Home, Men's Employment and to All Business."  I stumbled upon a poster with these headlines while doing research for the 90th anniversary of women's right to vote, which is on Aug. 26. The rest of the poster shows a sample ballot and explains that the (responsible male) voter should "Be sure and put your cross (x) in the square after the word ‘no' as shown here." A drawing of a hand points a finger at the sample ballot's "no" box, which is checked.


Presumably, the Responsible Vote had required this kind of careful guidance. At least, the "Progress Publishing Co.," which printed it, thought so.

Uncovering this gem of a poster resulted in a moment of high hilarity for me at the Wisconsin Historical Society. I could not resist pulling a librarian over and showing it to him. "I must, I simply must," I told him, "get this as an electronic file."

Today, it almost seems hard to believe that only 90 years ago, women did not have the right to vote. How could withholding this basic right from half of the population possibly have been justified?

Poking around in the archives, I unearthed more than one answer to that question. For instance, when asked why he didn't support women's suffrage, Milwaukee Sentinel editor James Densmore reasoned, "Women are confessedly angels, and angels do not vote."

Women are angels -- does this mean we're already dead?

Even some women argued strenuously against women's suffrage. Mrs. J.V.L. Pruyn of New York played on men's fears, arguing that corrupt powers would bribe "uneducated women," thereby "swell(ing) the number of the worst class at the polls."

As my research continued, however, my hilarity faded. How had our foremothers felt when people told them that voting would spoil their charm, or that it would destabilize the state, or that men cannot tolerate opposition from those they love? Imagining myself in my great-grandmother's shoes, these arguments stopped sounding funny at all.

I even came across arguments that have remained with us until the present day. According to the aforementioned Mrs. Pruyn, women were "absolutely and abundantly protected now under the existing system of suffrage."

With a pang, this naivete reminded me of the arguments that have blockaded the Equal Rights Amendment in contemporary times. Unlike the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote in 1920, the ERA fell three states short of ratification. Women's equal rights, therefore, have never become the law of our land. In consequence, to mention only a few examples: The wage gap persists, few women have gained access to high office, and college admissions counselors openly admit to discriminating against female applicants. Like Mrs. Pruyn, opponents of the ERA argue that the Constitution protects women enough as it is.

Similarly, this belief that all is already right with the world seems to explain why the United States is one of only seven nations that have failed to ratify the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). This international treaty combats the sexual trafficking of women and girls, gives them legal recourse against violence, increases their access to primary education, saves lives during pregnancy and childbirth, and acknowledges women's right to own property. President Jimmy Carter signed CEDAW three decades ago, and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has voted twice to send it to the Senate floor. Still, Congress has never voted to secure women's most basic rights.

As we celebrate the 90th anniversary of women's suffrage, it might seem shocking to us Americans that women still do not have the right to vote in Saudi Arabia.  When it comes to the ERA and CEDAW, however, it is the U.S. that is lagging behind.

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/08/25-2



Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 25/08/2010 10:17:41
 

'What the Church needs today, as always, are not adulators to extol the status quo, but people whose humility and obedience are no less than their passion for truth; people who brave every misunderstanding and attack as they bear witness; people who, in a word, love the Church more than ease and the unruffled course of their personal destiny.' 

-Pope Benedict (Josef Ratzinger as he then was) from Free Expression and Obedience in the Church during his work at Vatican II, 1963, later quoted at the beginning of Christianity and the Religions: From Confrontation to Dialogue by Jacques Dupuis, SJ (Orbis, New York 2000) 


Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 26/08/2010 11:33:38
The Vatican says the “attempted ordination” of women is one of the gravest crimes under church law. We’ve recently read about that kind of flagrant hatred of women, like that appalling case that involves flogging and stoning. Why is the Catholic Church so afraid of women?

Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 27/08/2010 12:52:44
I do appreciate what the Pope said, the only problem is though...if we are obedient fully, will God's will (as I personally see it) for women to be ordained be honored? It is sad, but I feel little trust sometimes for the Vatican. I know the media has a lot to do with this as well. They hark on the wrongs of the Church more than the good often. It is necessary for the Church to be checked though because of it's world wide impact. If they would just give us a flicker of hope that they are reviewing it instead of slamming it down every time and want an honest peaceful debate, as they have said is OK, I feel my candle of faith would be re-lit. Another thing that bothered me was the Church saying full reconciliation with the Church of England is impossible. Isn't anything possible with God that is good? We are all a Christian family and as Martin Luther King Jr. wished...can't we sit all together, all religions, at a table of brotherly (and sisterly :) love?

Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 27/08/2010 01:14:42
p.s. I'm also 1/16th Cherokee and I would like to share this Cherokee wisdom as well with the group, "the man paddles, but the woman steers the canoe." Just as Martin Luther King Jr. said..."we cannot walk alone". You have to work in unison. If someone is off sync, the whole boat is.

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 27/08/2010 05:20:21
Lay Africans, nuns feel marginalized in synod process, follow-up
By Mwansa Pintu
Catholic News Service
August 19, 2010

LUSAKA, Zambia (CNS) -- Laypeople and women religious across Africa are concerned that they are being marginalized by clergy as they undertake pastoral work, despite a call from last October's Synod of Bishops for Africa to include all people in ministry.

Members of both groups told
Catholic News Service their evangelization activities have been underfunded, and some said they have been left out of the synod process since the beginning.

Some lay leaders and women religious who participated in recent synod implementation workshops conducted by the Zambian bishops said priests have threatened to discipline them if they disobeyed clerical directives.

Similar concerns have arisen in Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Malawi and Kenya.

Sister Mary Musonda of the Religious Sisters of Charity said her congregation's work in parishes was being frustrated by some local priests and that her community is considering focusing its efforts on health and education duties alone.

"We are seriously thinking of completely pulling out of pastoral work to concentrate on other duties," she said in an interview. "We are always being told it is the responsibility of priests to preach the Gospel because they are ordained for that purpose." 

 
. . . Read complete article, click here: Synod for Africa

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 27/08/2010 05:23:36
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Pope Benedict's weekly address August 25, 2010: Saints as Companions for the Journey, click here: St. Augustine

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 27/08/2010 05:24:19
Dear Pope Benedict,
 
May the peace of Christ be with you!
 
At womenpriests.org, we join with you in sharing companionship with St. Augustine.  We drew inspiration for our new logo from his writings about hope.
 
 
 
'Hope,' he said, 'has two beautiful daughters: their names are anger and courage. Anger that things are the way they are. Courage to make them the way they ought to be.'
 
His words beautifully sum up the spirit of our work for women priests! As the woman, a labourer in the field reaches out for the sun, she personifies our reaching out for Christ who is our Light!    

 
We share your love for our Church and are moved by conscience to share what we have learned.  In keeping with canon law, we respectfully draw your attention to our concerns about women and the Church.
 
In hope we struggle!

with love and blessings,

~Sophie~

Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 27/08/2010 05:41:07
Sophie, that logo was so beautiful. I thought of something to brighten the spirits and give women a chuckle if we could do it somehow/sometime. I've seen these bumperstickers that say, "Eve Was Framed."  Wouldn't it be cute to actually frame pictures of Eve for home decor as a fund raiser for the campaign? You could even do Eve on one side and Mary on the other even and come up with a cute saying about how they would have respected the idea of women priests if the "Eve Was Framed" would be a copyright infringement.

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 28/08/2010 04:44:09
  
  
  
  
Dear friend,
 
Thank you for the feedback!  When we worked on the logo, we wanted to capture a spirit of hopefulness and actual joy to be at work in the fields for Christ.
 
I think your idea about 'Eve was framed' is great!  If you would like to send me your contact particulars, perhaps we can collaborate? I am at sophie@womenpriests.org.
 
May the peace of Christ be with you! 
Be assured of my love and prayers and blessings,
 
~Sophie~

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 28/08/2010 04:46:45
A Vatican Voice for Women Theologians
by John Allen Jr.
The National Catholic Reporter
August 27, 2010
 
A piece in Saturday's edition of L’Osservatore Romano on the female role in Catholic theology is fascinating -- both for its content and its venue in a semi-official Vatican organ. The author is Lucetta Scaraffia, who has in effect emerged as L’Osservatore’s in-house feminist.
 

Lucetta Scaraffia
 
It’s generally a mistake to think that pieces that appear in L’Osservatore necessarily represent what “the Vatican” thinks. It’s more accurate to say they represent what some in the Vatican may be thinking, but there’s rarely any direct cause-and-effect relationship between a piece in L’Osservatore and an eventual policy choice in the Holy See.
 
That said, Scaraffia has been producing fascinating pieces for the Vatican newspaper. Back in March she opined that greater participation of women in decision-making in the church would have “ripped the veil of masculine secrecy” that covered the sexual abuse of children by clergy. More recently, she asserted that post-Vatican II acceptance of altar girls means “the end of any attribution of impurity” to the female sex.
 
This time, Scaraffia asserts in a front-page essay that women too often are consigned to “subordinate roles” in the church, citing a recent study of ecclesiastical schools in Italy which found that women represent “just over ten percent of all theology professors, with very few teaching strictly theological disciplines.”
 
. . . Read the complete article, click here: Speaking Out

Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 28/08/2010 09:59:27
It's good to remember these words of Martin Luther King Jr.: "Let
us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup 
of bitterness and hatred. We must forever conduct our struggle on the 
high plane of dignity and discipline."

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 31/08/2010 11:58:08
 
 
Catholic Church Defends Male Only Priesthood
CNN
August 30, 2010
 
Barring women from being Catholic priests is not the result of sexism 2,000 years ago, it's because women cannot fulfill a basic function of the priesthood, "standing in the place of Jesus," a leading British Catholic thinker argued Monday. 
  
"This teaching is not at all a judgment on women's abilities or rights. It says something about the specific role of the priest in Catholic understanding - which is to represent Jesus, to stand in his place," argued Father Stephen Wang in a statement sent out by the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales.
 
It's rare for the Catholic Church to defend its fundamental positions in this way.
 
Wang was responding to the announcement that campaigners for female priests will plaster posters on London buses next month during the pope's visit to London.
 
. . . Read complete article, click here: No to female priests

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/09/2010 08:18:55
New list of 'grave crimes' belies intent
Sister Teresita Kambeitz, OSU
The Prairie Messenger
September 1, 2010
 
 
It is regrettable that the crime of clergy sexual abuse of minors was linked with the issue of women’s ordination in the Vatican’s recent revised list of “more grave crimes.” No matter how much Msgr. Charles Scicluna, the promoter of justice at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, claims that these revised norms “send a clear signal that the church is serious about protecting children and punishing abusive priests,” the linking of these two unrelated issues seriously undermines the intended strong stance on clerical sexual abuse on at least three counts.

First, it appears to be a diversionary tactic, deflecting attention away from the seriousness of the crime of clerical sexual abuse of minors. To many, it will once again seem to be an attempt at cover-up on the part of the hierarchy.
 
Second, the fact that punishment is more severe for priests who support women’s ordination (excommunication) than it is for priests who rape children (no excommunication) again appears to mask the seriousness of sexual abuse. What moral grounds can possibly justify milder punishment for committing sexual sins against children than for believing that women, created in the image and likeness of God, can validly represent the risen Lord in the faith community? 

(Furthermore, the timing of this extremely negative decree on the ordination question reflects a rather callous insensitivity to the feelings of Catholic women, already in deep pain over the official ban placed on discussion of the topic. Are we to believe that all this is truly inspired by the Holy Spirit?)
 
Third, this soft-pedalling of the sexual abuse issue will seriously weaken the teaching voice of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. As our official teachers and guides, they are to adhere to the centuries old principle of sensus fidelium and listen to the people they are called to serve. If they were doing so, they would hear the pain of the victims of clerical sexual abuse without obfuscating the issue by linking it with the topic of women’s ordination. 

For those of us who love our church, it hurts to see the already eroded credibility of church leaders become even more eroded by this apparent glossing over of the heinous crime of sexual abuse of children.
 
Furthermore, it is disheartening to see the teaching authority of our leaders undermined by their own actions which seemingly distort the Gospel message of Jesus. 

May I point out respectfully that the treatment recommended by Jesus for those who scandalize little ones was fastening a great millstone around their neck and having them drowned in the depth of the sea (Mt. 18:6; Mk 9:42; Lk. 17:2), while in selecting proclaimers of the all-important good news of the resurrection, Jesus chose women. 
 
www.prairiemessenger.ca/09_01_2010/Teresita_09_01_10.html

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 06/09/2010 02:24:41
Seeking new paths through the abuse maze 
By Virginia Saldanha, Mumbai
September 6, 2010
  
 
Virginia Saldanha 

In response to a recent article in ucanews.com highlighting the issue of sexual abuse of women in the Church,  Sister Helen Mendonca of Streevani (Voice of Women),  a Pune, India-based human rights group,  called for a consultation on the problem. That group developed guidelines for dealing with sexual abuse in the Church in India. 

Viriginia Saldanha reports on the group’s findings and their call for a dialogue with India’s bishops.

The original document containing the group’s recommendations can be found here

The Assumption of Mary and the anniversary of India’s independence provided the inspiration to a committed group of women and men gathered at Streevani, Pune, India, to discern the liberating voice of God’s Spirit in the recent events of sexual abuse that have challenged the Catholic Church. 

While acknowledging the many positive contributions of the Church to society and the country, they rued the absence of structures and processes for reporting sexual abuse. 

These need to be sensitive, confidential, and include women the group decided.

They felt that: 

• Patriarchal society provides a milieu for a patriarchal Church with men exercising power as control and domination over women and children.  

• Christian teaching and images of God/man/woman that promotes the image of the ruler and the ruled, socializes women to subservience, silence inferiority, and compounds vulnerability to various forms of exploitation, violence and sexual abuse by men.  

• The “deification” of priests entitles them to unquestioning obedience. 

Participants were concerned about the vulnerability of women, who are dependent on priests for spiritual and/or emotional counseling particularly in times of personal crisis or difficulty.

This was compounded by the culture of silence borne of the fear of bringing shame to themselves, their family/congregation and the Christian community in India.

Finally, the group also raised concerns about the clerical culture of secrecy that seeks to deny and cover up the cases of sexual abuse to uphold celibacy of the ordained.

With pain they noted that women’s stories of abuse are frequently discounted.

“Consensual” sex is often cited as a mitigating circumstance with little or no awareness of the defenselessness of the woman trapped under the weight of  ”double patriarchy” (that of the wider society as well as the patriarchal authority structures within the Church).

They emphasized the distinction between sexual abuse as a sin and as a crime and the implications of that.

They expressed a desire to initiate a dialogue with the Bishops of India towards providing a safe and secure environment for children and vulnerable individuals in all institutions of the Church, and a pastoral and just response to victims,

They call for a code of professional ethics for pastoral workers including priests.

The group is also recommending that formation programmes for priests and women religious be updated to include various topics related to the empowerment of women and prevention of abuse and violence to women and children.

They committed themselves to advocate zero tolerance towards sexual abuse of women and children in the Church and to campaign for a policy that views this sin in the Church as a violation of Human Rights and therefore as a crime punishable under Indian law.

The group will now move beyond the first step initiated by this consultation, inspired by Mary’s Magnificat that proclaims the “greatness of our God” who looks with compassion upon the hurting.

http://www.ucanews.com/20...hrough-the-abuse-maze/


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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 06/09/2010 08:12:07
Why is the Catholic Church so afraid of women?

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 07/09/2010 12:07:58
 
 
 
 
 
 
Dear friend,
 
Good question!  I encourage you to keep pressing it.  We welcome your presence here!
 
with love and blessings,
~Sophie~

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 07/09/2010 12:12:35
L’Osservatore Chicago: Oak Park pastor has "Martin Luther moment" as he apologizes to women
by Margerie Frisbie
Chicago Catholic
August 24, 2010
 
 
Margerie Frisbie
 
Caesar crossed the Rubicon and changed the course of Roman history. On a fall day in 1517, Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door of the handsome Castle church overlooking Wittenberg and changed the history of Europe. In both cases, the groundwork had been laid for the tsunami to come.

When I heard from my daughter that Father Larry McNally had stood at the altar at Ascension Church in Oak Park and apologized to the women in the congregation for the way the Church was treating them, I wondered if his sermon might be the catalyst for a flood of change in the Church. Certainly, the groundwork has been laid by hundreds of nuns like Sisters Teresa Kane, Joan Chittester and Chicago's Benet McKinney, and hundreds of laywomen like Anne Burke and Patricia Ewers.

I hoped that change might be the result of his brave stand.

It was local change that impelled the strong words from Father McNally's mouth. He told the congregation that Ascension had lost many hitherto devoted women lectors, communion distributors and a spiritual director.

In an Aug. 10 letter to the Chicago Sun-Times, Father McNally objected to the Vatican declaration that, like pedophilia, the ordination of women is a grave sin. He criticized use of Church money to investigate nuns who could better use the money for retired sisters, and the official request that religious help pay for their own investigation.

I wasn't raised to think of Martin Luther as courageous. But when my daughter told me about Father McNally's sermon, I saw his bravery as a "Martin Luther moment." Both men spoke truth to power. Martin Luther may have saved the Church (as well as divided it) when it responded to his theses by organizing the Council of Trent and changing its ways.

Can we all hope the Church will listen to Father McNally's message? Then maybe the Church will change, as it did after Trent and after Vatican II, and be saved from itself.

Margery Frisbie, a graduate of Mundelein College, has raised lots of kids and written lots of columns. She is the author of several local histories, two graphic histories published in Europe, and An Alley in Chicago, the Life and Legacy of Monsignor John Egan.

Contacts: margeryfrisbie@sbcglobal.net or info@chicagocatholicnews.com
 
http://www.chicagocatholicnews.com/2010/08/losservatore-chicago-oak-park-pastor.html

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 07/09/2010 12:21:44
Dear friends, 
 
The Honorary Secretary General of the Belgian Federal Government, Roger de Borger, published an open letter to the Pope regarding the position of women in the Church. Obligatory reading!  A copy of it is posted in our thread, Speaking Out!  and also on the website here: Roger de Borger
 
with love and blessings,
 
~Sophie~
 
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
 

Roger de Borger
Honorary Secretary General of the Belgian Federal Government  
 
BE-1850 Grimbergen
September 5, 2010

Open letter to Mr Pope Benedict XVI 
Apostolic Palace                                                         
St.Peter’s Square                                                                                                    
Vatican                                                                                                                             
benedictxvi@vatican.va

 
Dear Mr Pope Benedict XVI,                                                                                   
Lieber Herr Papst !
 
You know better than anyone else that priest shortage in Western Europe is untenable and that the number of churchgoers is noticeably dwindling. You know the several reasons why. Since you know them, I shall not repeat them  to you. I would however like to take out one, because it is long-lasting and the most poignant and unjust, namely the exclusion of women to priesthood. The church has recently, and even now, under your command, given either no answer, an evasive answer or a negative answer as a response to any suggestion to admit women to this sacrament. This cannot last any longer.
 
. . . Read the complete article, click here: Speaking Out!


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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 07/09/2010 12:49:32
EMERGING CHRISTIANITY
- by Richard Rohr, ofm  
 

Richard Rohr, ofm
 
Mere literalism is always a decrease of meaning, not an increase.  The very thing that fundamentalists protect is the lowest, most narrow level of meaning that is possible.  When we read the Scriptures or receive a Sacrament with a contemplative mind, we will find 25 levels of meaning, and not feel the need to prove our “one and only” level of meaning.  Mature spirituality does not throw out a very possible literal meaning; rather it includes all possible levels.  We can agree to some good meaning on that level first level, but we must strive to see things on other levels of the heart and mind.  This was assumed for the first 1400 years of Christianity, taken for granted by the Church Fathers, mystics, and saints.  In many ways we have gone backwards and limited the ways that God could speak to us.
 
If Emerging Christianity is going to healthily emerge, we need to rise above and beyond the dualistic “desert” of literal thinking.  All religious language is by necessity metaphor and simile, which leaves both the mind and the heart free to hear all that God might be telling us through a text.
 
From Emerging Christianity: the conference recordings 

Starter Prayer:

Then I saw a new heaven
and a new earth.
(Rev. 21:1)

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 07/09/2010 05:37:27
Trent launches world revolution in theology
by John Allen Jr.
The National Catholic Reporter
September 7, 2010
 
Five centuries ago, Trent launched a revolution in Catholic life. The famous council that met in this northern Italian enclave from 1545 to 1563 engineered the Counter Reformation, thus equipping Catholicism to respond to the most significant megatrend of the day: the Protestant Reformation and the dissolution of Christendom. 
  
It just may be that in the summer of 2010, Trent did it again.
 

At the gathering of moral theologians in Trent, Italy, Maggie Ssebunya, a Ugandan doctoral student in theology at Boston College, talks with Jesuit Fr. Peter Henriot, an American who works in Zambia. (Yiu Sing Luke Chan) 
  
That, at least, was the ambition of a July 24-27 gathering of nearly 600 Catholic ethicists and moral theologians, representing four continents and 73 countries. They came together under the aegis of “Catholic Theological Ethics in the World Church,” for a conference titled “In the Currents of History: From Trent to the Future.” 
  
Participants say the event both symbolized and advanced another Catholic revolution, this one methodological: In an era in which two-thirds of the Catholics in the world live outside Europe and North America, theology can only be done in a global key. 
  
“Historically, there’s been a lot of nationalism deeply embedded in how we train, study and work,” said Jesuit Fr. James Keenan of Boston College, the architect of the gathering in Trent. Keenan spearheaded efforts to raise more than $700,000 to ensure that theologians from developing countries were strongly represented. 
  
“Today, there’s a new Catholicity taking shape,” Keenan said. “We recognize that we have to be voices with others, not just for others.” 
  
The turnout included more than 200 theologians from the developing world, almost 150 “new scholars” (meaning recent doctorate recipients), and a few of the best theological minds in the European hierarchy, including Archbishops Bruno Forte of Chieti-Vasto, Italy, and Reinhard Marx of Munich and Freising, Germany, along with Bishop Karl Golser of Bolzano-Bressanone, Italy. It offered a dramatic visual expression of how much the theological guild has changed since the Council of Trent, as half the theologians were laity and at least 200 were women. 
  
That sense of being part of a global community became the leitmotif. 
  
“The most important fruit of Trent is not so much a new agenda for theology, but a new way of doing theology,” said Jesuit Fr. Agbonkhianmeghe E. Orobator, a Nigerian who teaches at Hekima College Jesuit School of Theology and Institute of Peace Studies and International Relations in Nairobi, Kenya. 
  
“It’s about having the kind of conversation that allows us to move forward as a world church, not just one small corner of the world,” said Orobator, who was on the planning committee for Trent. 
  
The gathering built upon an earlier summit of ethicists and theologians organized by Keenan in Padua, Italy, in July 2006. Both events responded to what is arguably the most important seismic shift in Catholicism today, which is the emergence of what analysts call a “world church.” 
  
At the dawn of the 20th century, there were 266 million Catholics in the world, concentrated in Europe and North America, so that the church’s demographic profile was roughly what it was at the time of the Council of Trent. Just a century later, there were 1.1 billion Catholics in the world, with two-thirds living in the global South. The projection is that by midcentury, three-quarters of all Catholics will reside in the Southern Hemisphere. 
  
A shift to a global way of doing theology has at least three immediate implications, according to participants. 
  
First, it means greater attentiveness to diversity of all sorts in the church. 
  
“It’s very comfortable to just stay with like-minded theologians,” said Agnes Brazal of the Philippines. “But if we are to prevent increasing polarization in the church, we need to engage in what we can call an ‘intrareligious’ dialogue.” 
  
Such a dialogue, Brazal said, must include “greater inclusion of women, theologians from the South, young scholars, and the participation of representatives from other faiths.” 
  
The assembly included 88 female theologians. To ensure the presence of African women at Trent, scholarships were awarded to seven women doing advanced studies in theological ethics in Uganda, Kenya, Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. 
  
Second, a global method means a broader sense of what the issues in theology are. Jesuit Fr. Andrea Vicini, an Italian bioethicist, flagged five key themes that emerged in Trent:
  • Human dignity (and not just in the context of health care and “life” issues);
  • Justice (North/South, but also within cultures);
  • The environment;
  • New technologies;
  • The position of persons within institutions.
Third, doing theology in a global key means that no matter what the issue may be, it’s simply impossible to think about them exclusively from one’s own national or regional perspective. 
  
“We can’t use one narrative as the paradigm for what is going on,” Keenan said. “If I’m writing on Catholicism and citizenship, I can’t just look at the American experience. I need to hear how they’re thinking about these issues in Ukraine, and in Italy, and in Brazil.” 
  
Brazal, however, stressed that the transition to a global method in Catholic theology is a work in progress. “Oftentimes theologians from the South are expected to provide the ‘context,’ meaning the examples, while theologians from the North are in charge of the theoretical frameworks,” she said. 
  
A truly global theological method, Brazal said, will have to overcome that inequity.
Orobator said, “It’s no longer just the North that teaches values or norms, but it’s becoming a really global conversation.” 
  
Going forward, Keenan said he doesn’t foresee another massive global conference in the near future. Instead, he wants to focus on building networks so that cross-border conversation becomes systematic. That likely means greater use of communications technologies and other “virtual” ways of connecting, Keenan said.
 
 
[John L. Allen Jr. is NCR senior correspondent. His e-mail address is jallen@ncronline.org.]
 
http://ncronline.org/news/global/trent-launches-world-revolution-theology

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 10/09/2010 10:21:04
Next conversation event @ the kitchen table:
 
Friday 15th October 2010 7pm
Nicola Slee will lead us in conversation:
‘Kitchen table theology: words that are good enough to eat’.
 
Feminist theologians have offered many metaphors for speaking about theology: theology as weaving, spinning, knitting or connecting disparate threads; theology as conversation that happens around the kitchen table; theology as a process of justice seeking right-relation.  Nicola Slee will speak about some of her own understandings of theology, using poetry to explore and probe some of these metaphors – and others.
 
Nicola Slee is a theologian and poet based at the Queen’s Foundation, Birmingham.  She is the author of numerous books and articles, most recently The Book of Mary (SPCK, 2008), Presiding Like a Woman (co-edited with Stephen Burns. SPCK 2010). She is a lay Anglican.
 
£6.50 including supper
Book now!.......
 
Anne Cross
 
The Kitchen Table Cafe
catering for community conversation
St. Bart's Church Community Centre
292B Barking Road
London, England
E6 3BA
 
0208 586 7979

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 11/09/2010 03:31:26

Above the Law, Beneath Contempt

WHY INDIAN ‘HONOR KILLINGS’ ARE SO HARD TO STOP
by Jo McGowan
Commonweal
September 10, 2010
 
Honor killings—in which families murder their own children for defying the elders’ wishes for their marriage—have become so frequent in North India we hardly have time to absorb news of one before another is reported.
 
 
The Indian Supreme Court recently ordered the governments of six states (including Punjab and Haryana, two of India’s wealthiest) to end the practice. The number of victims reported each year varies (from four hundred to a thousand), but civil-rights groups claim even the higher figure is too low, because many such killings are called suicides or not reported at all.
 
The term “honor killing” implies a certain degree of virtue—a wronged citizen is forced by his own higher standards to take the law into his hands to protect his family’s name.
Under an archaic community legal system, a khap panchayat, or village council, believes it can still order that an offending couple, or just the woman alone, be killed. The woman’s own family is expected to carry out the sentence.
 
The community is so united that those directly responsible have no problem admitting to the crime or claiming it was justified. In June, for example, a nineteen-year-old woman and her twenty-one-year-old boyfriend were beaten mercilessly in Delhi and finally electrocuted by the woman’s father and uncle. “I have no regrets,” the uncle later told reporters, explaining that the couple’s intercaste relationship was against the family’s beliefs and had brought shame on them all. “I would punish them again if given another chance.”
 
Attacks are sometimes publicly witnessed. The bodies of the victims may be displayed as a warning to others. The involvement of the village council in many of the killings adds a dimension of authority to what might otherwise be seen for what it is: vigilante vengeance carried out in broad daylight.
 
Politicians have been reluctant to speak out against panchayat policies because the local councils can deliver blocs of votes. In June, India’s governing Union Cabinet met to discuss the issue and decided that the existing Indian Penal Code on murder should be amended to specifically include “honor killings.” It also decided that when such acts were ordered by the panchayat all members present should be tried for conspiracy and incitement.
 
In a landmark judgment three months before, a court in Haryana had done just that. It sentenced five panchayat members to death for the murder of a couple who had married against the wishes of the community. Perhaps more radically, the council president was also tried and sentenced to life imprisonment for incitement to murder. It was the first time a victim’s family (in this case, the man’s) had ever won in court after a panchayat had ruled against him.
 
The proposed amendment might have ensured more such judgments, but statements against it by prominent politicians—some from the ruling party—cast doubt on the government’s commitment. Naveen Jindal, a ruling-party MP from Kurukshetra, next door to the town where the controversial judgment came down, praised panchayats, saying, “I and my family have always respected society’s traditions, customs, beliefs, and culture.”
 
While he later clarified that he does not condone honor killings, it was clear that he was not prepared to distance himself from his base.
 
That base, however, gave Prime Minister Manmohan Singh concern. He worried that simply amending the penal code was not strong enough to send a clear message. As a result, a new law was drafted, similar to the one outlawing sati (the self-immolation of widows). It will come before the next session of Parliament.
 
The problem may be more complicated than the age-old custom of men trying to control women and their choices regarding marriage and sexuality. (It is almost always the woman’s family that objects and carries out the sentence.) Nor is it simply a matter of intercaste marriage, which is allowed by law but rejected by 74 percent of the population.
 
In a recent incident, Monica and Kuldeep, an intercaste couple married for four years, were shot dead, along with Monica’s cousin, Shobha. Brothers of the two women did the shooting. The case was unusual not only because the killing took place so long after the wedding, but also because of the murder of the cousin—apparently an innocent bystander. But by the brothers’ reckoning, Shobha wasn’t “innocent” at all. She too had run off with a boyfriend some years before, and although she had eventually returned alone, she had insulted the family honor.
 
Prem Chowdhry, a fellow at the Indian Council of Historical Research in New Delhi, isn’t surprised. As I reported in an earlier column, female feticide in India has led to a ratio of eight women to ten men in some areas. As a result, according to Chowdhry, more women now have the opportunity to “marry up”—Monica’s husband came from a higher caste—leaving many lower-caste men without the option to marry.
 
In Monica and Kuldeep’s old neighborhood, the Guardian reported (June 25), all the boys agreed that the couple had it coming. “Whatever happened is for the best. There’s a limit to how much you can take,” said seventeen-year-old Rohit. “I’d do the same to my sister.”
 
It’s not Rohit’s fault the elders in his community preferred boys to girls so much that they succeeded in skewing the sex ratio. But he and his friends are paying the price in limited options, a sense of powerlessness, and frustration that surfaces in misdirected violence. The Indian legal system, however, may finally give them something to reckon with.
 
http://commonwealmagazine.org/above-law-beneath-contempt

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 11/09/2010 03:42:50

 
The UK's Catholic Women's Ordination (CWO) buses are on a role!!!
 
Go buses!!!  Congratulations CWO!!!
 
 
  
 
 

Pope Benedict XVI leads his Angelus prayer from balcony of his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo August 22, 2010.
Credit: Reuters/Stefano Rellandini
 
London Bus Ads To back Women Priests During Popes Visit
Reuters
August 25, 2010
LONDON | Wed Aug 25, 2010 5:16pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - Pope Benedict will be confronted by posters on London's famous red buses during his trip to the British capital next month which will call for the ordination of women priests.
 
Protests are planned throughout his four-day trip to England and Scotland, the first papal visit since Pope John Paul II's pastoral visit in 1982 and the first-ever official papal visit to Britain.
 
One group of women, the Catholic Women's Ordination (CWO), will have its message plastered on the side of the buses as they travel along key routes, including past Westminster Hall, at the Palace of Westminster, where the pope is set to deliver a speech to Britain's civic society on Friday, September 17.
 
The group has paid 15,000 pounds for 15 buses to carry the message "Pope Benedict - Ordain Women Now!" for a month.
 
"We do not want to be disruptive, but I think the church has got to change or it will not survive," CWO spokeswoman Pat Brown told Reuters.
 
"I am quite hopeful at the moment because I think the church is in disarray."
 
It also hopes to protest outside Lambeth Palace during a meeting between the pope and Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, spiritual head of the Church of England, the Anglican mother church.
 
Set up in 1993, the CWO describes itself as loyal to the Roman Catholic Church, campaigning from within for inclusivity and the ordination of women.
 
It was angered by a Vatican document last month which mentioned the ordination of women amid sweeping revisions of its laws against child sex abuse. The Vatican later denied accusations it viewed the two issues as equally criminal.
 
The CWO has also launched a group "Catholic Voices for Reform" to coincide with the pope's visit to counter "Catholic Voices," a media-friendly group which has the backing of the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales.
 
They will go head-to-head on controversial matters such as child abuse, women's ordination, married priests, homosexuality and the way the church is run.
 
CWO will not be taking part in the main demonstration against the pope's visit, which is being organised under the umbrella banner "Protest the Pope," which includes humanists, secularists and gay rights campaigners.
 
Tens of thousands of Catholics are expected to attend the three major public events in Glasgow, London and Birmingham, with many lining the streets to greet the pope in his Popemobile.
 
http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE67M1Q220100825

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 11/09/2010 04:34:35
An Open Letter to My Daughters
The Atlantic Magazine
by Joy Levitt
September 9, 2010
 
Joy Levitt - Rabbi Joy Levitt is the executive director of The Jewish Community Center in Manhattan. 
 

Rabbi Joy Levitt, centre, appears on "This Week with Christiane Amanpour."

 
Dear Sara and Ruthie,


I know you're both very busy, so you may have missed two stories in the news over the summer. Maybe you would have overlooked them anyway. I know; religion isn't your thing. But I really need you to pay attention this time.


The Catholic Church put the ordination of women as priests in the same category of offense as pedophilia -- and in the process sounded a lot like one of the foremost authorities on Jewish law, who had recently said something equally nasty about ordaining women rabbis. For this eminent scholar, it fell into a legal category so terrible that a person should choose death rather than perform the act. I must admit, I usually ignore these diatribes. After performing some 200 weddings, 400 bar and bat mitzvahs, and too many funerals, it's never occurred to me that I have been committing a grave sin. If I have learned anything in the last three decades, it is not to get derailed by those who try to delegitimize me.


But I feel a sense of dread that we might be leaving you a world that is still not safe for women or men, a world where important and powerful people can take away your choices with the stroke of a pen. And you might not even know what had hit you.


Don't roll your eyes at me. I know what you're thinking. You're thinking this has nothing to do with you. You're not Catholic and you're not Orthodox. You're liberal Jews, the children of liberal rabbis, raised by feminist parents to believe in a level field for everyone who works hard, lives with integrity and plays (mostly) by the rules. Well, I feel somewhat chagrined to be changing the playbook on you this late in your youngish lives, but you are going to have to get out your marching boots, roll up your sleeves, and get to work because the right of all people, especially women, to follow their God-given passions and gifts is simply not secure. Perhaps it never will be. You have to start paying attention. You have to start galvanizing your friends. You have to start supporting candidates who will fight for your rights and make sure they are in positions of power. It's not that I'm giving up, but it's your turn now.


I know you think your world looks fine, and in many important ways it is. Everywhere you go, you see women and men working side by side. Your colleges and graduate schools were filled with men and women in equal numbers. So are your workplaces. Truth to tell, there are more women than men in some of your work places. Yes, there has been the occasional difficult moment of harassment or of uncertainty; was he promoted because he is a man? Is he making more money because of his gender? But mostly, you shrug it off and work harder. And I have applauded those impulses and delighted watching both of you seize the opportunity to do what you love without letting anything--or anyone--stop you. I am hugely proud of both of you.


I do worry, however, that you've had it too easy and that privately you laugh a little at my feminism, that is, when you are not rejecting it out of hand. Do you think it is just one more thing from the '60s, like bell bottoms and tie-dye shirts? Perhaps you see it less as shallow than irrelevant, maybe even a little embarrassing. You believe you can have it all--the femininity and the power--without having to give up anything or do very much to get there. You are strong without having to build muscle, which is, after all, not very attractive. Maybe you think I built the muscle for you. Maybe I thought so too.


It doesn't matter that you don't want to be priests or rabbis. There are young women who do because they love their God and their communities and they want to serve both and believe me--you don't want to live in a world where they can't. You want--you need to live in a world where all people can follow their dreams and make choices about their work and where no one regards those choices as abhorrent. I worry that when you read statements like those of these religious leaders, you dismiss them out of hand as the ravings of fringe fanatics. I assure you they are not. The men who issued these statements about women clergy are not the Taliban. They don't live in Afghanistan; they live in places like Rome and Riverdale. They are mainstream religious leaders. They are telling you that women clergy are dangerous, so dangerous that those who would ordain them cannot be tolerated. Their language is violent.


They will not disappear. They will pursue their efforts to shape the world in a way that prevents women from having female role models in powerful, leadership positions. And while I believe that their words distort the very essence of what it means to be religious and are the definition of everything unholy, I am not at all comforted by the certainty of my belief. I need you girls to get angry on your own behalf and behalf of everyone everywhere whose future is at risk. You ignore these religious leaders at your peril.


I have noticed that, while you don't embrace everything about my generation, you do like a lot of my music. Perhaps this song from the "movement" will come in handy now (and, by the way, I'm happy to pay for the boots):


Freedom doesn't come like a bird on a wing. Doesn't come down like the summer rain. Freedom, freedom is a hard-won thing. You have to work for it ,fight for it, day and night for it, and every generation's gotta do it again. Pass it on to your children, mother. Pass it on to your children, brother. You have to work for it, fight for it, day and night for it, and every generation's gotta do it again.
 
http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2010/09/an-open-letter-to-my-daughters/62715/

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 11/09/2010 04:42:21
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Join us in hearing more of the voices of people who are bearing witness, speaking out, in our dedicated discussion thread.  It is here: Speaking Out!

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 11/09/2010 05:05:11
Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW)
Press Release
WOW in Solidarity with Irish Call for Justice for Women in the Catholic Church
 

 
Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW) was founded in 1996 at the First European Women's Synod in Gmunden, Austria. It is an ecumenical network of national and international groups whose primary mission at this time is the admission of Roman Catholic women to all ordained ministries. WOW is founded on the principle of equality and therefore opposes any discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'. (Galatians 3.28). WOW affirms the God-given diversity of humanity and is committed to providing a model of collaborative, non-hierarchical leadership.
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
 
Contact:


US Contact: Erin Saiz Hanna, WOW Leadership Circle
                      e: ehanna@womensordination.org
                      t: + (202) 675-1006
UK Contact: Therese Koturbash, WOW Leadership Circle
                      e: koturbash@btconnect.com
                      t: +44(-0)1923 779 446
 
WOW in Solidarity with Irish Call for Justice for Women in the Catholic Church
 
Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) stands in solidarity with Catholic women in Ireland who call for  a widespread boycott of Mass on Sunday, September 26, 2010. 
 
Jennifer Sleeman, an active Catholic from Cork  initiated this movement when she urged women of Ireland to send a message to the Vatican that “women are tired of being treated as second-class citizens in the Church.”  This call, which began with one woman’s voice,  is now spreading beyond the shores of Ireland as women around the world link arms together for  the boycott.
 
In solidarity, WOW  supports Sleeman’s call for justice for women in the Catholic Church.  Recognizing the many different ways of bearing witness to the institutional sin of sexism that marginalizes women in the Church, WOW encourages  people of Catholic faith to organize one of the following options for their parishes on September 26, 2010: 
  • At collection time: Instead of making a donation to your parish, place a note in the collection basket that expresses support for women’s ordination.
  • Bear silent witness: Wear a green arm band to Mass.
  • Boycott Mass:  Grieving the Church’s sin of sexism, participate in a prayerful fast from mass.  Gather together in one of the many other meaningful ways in which the Eucharist can be celebrated. 
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
 
WOW’s aims and objectives are to:
  • Coordinate, advise and represent the women's ordination movement worldwide.
  • Bring together different national and international organisations working towards the ordination of women in all Christian churches.
  • Facilitate, through regular international conferences, a public, global forum to raise awareness about the issue of women's ordination within the Roman Catholic Church and to encourage broad-based discussion.
  • Support women's equality in religions.
  • Free the Church from the sin of sexism and heal divisions between men and women, female and male clergy, and female and male laity.
  • Foster the awareness and the development of vocations in women to renewed ordained ministry.

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