2010 News Central, Items of Interest

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Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 09/10/2010 12:42:06

'Pink smoke' portrays growth of women's ordination movement

By Marjorie Reiley Maguire
The National Catholic Reporter
October 08, 2010
 
The Pope told the Scottish people in his homily at Bellahouston Park on Sept. 16, that "Just as the Eucharist makes the Church, so the priesthood is central to the life of the Church." That same week, the Women's Ordination Conference (WOC) celebrated its 35th anniversary --- 35 years of witnessing to the Church that there is no need for ordinations to be declining worldwide because there is no shortage of vocations to the priesthood among women. 


Altar scene from Pink Smoke over the Vatican

As part of its anniversary celebration in Chicago on Sept. 18, 2010, WOC had the first public showing of "Pink Smoke Over the Vatican," a one-hour documentary on the women priest movement made by Jules Hart for her company, Eyegoddess Films.
 
Hart, who is not Catholic, said she was moved to make this film after she met some of the women priests and their supporters because "it is not every day that you meet people who give up everything for what they believe in."
 
Pink Smoke features interviews with some of the women who claim to have been ordained in the same line of apostolic succession that male priests and bishops also claim - women such as Bishop Patricia Fresen, Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan, Bishop Dana Reynolds, Victoria Rue, Janice Sevré-Duszynska, Kathleen Kunster, Juanita Cordero, Alta Jacko, Jean Marchant, and Mary Ramerman.
 
The story of the first modern woman priest, the Czech woman Ludmila Javorova, is also told by Sister Miriam Therese Winter, who presented Ludmila to the world in Winter's 2001 book, "Out of the Depths."
 
Except for Ludmila, who was ordained by a male Roman Catholic bishop in the underground Czech Church, and Mary Ramerman, who was ordained by a bishop of the Old Catholic Church, these women were all ordained as Roman Catholic Womenpriests (RCWP) by women bishops, who themselves were ordained bishops by unnamed but valid, male, Roman Catholic bishops in communion with Rome.
 
The male bishops ordained the first several women bishops so that the ordination of women bishops and priests, which was begun with the Danube 7 in 2002, could continue, even if something happened to the male bishops.
 
The film also has interviews with prominent Catholic women who have not been ordained - Dorothy Irvin, Sister Louise Akers, Sister Christine Schenck, Edwina Gateley, Joanna Manning, Angela Bonavoglia, and Nicole Sotelo.
 
Father Roy Bourgeois's observations on the women priest movement and the sacrifices he made for supporting it are a uniting commentary throughout the film.
 
The film is dedicated to the late Don Cordero, who also speaks in the film as a former Jesuit and husband of one of the womenpriests. Scenes from the various recent ordinations of women provide a visual richness to the film.
 
The personal stories and observations of the women priests are moving. Until she was ordered to recant or leave the Order, Bishop Patricia Fresen was a Dominican nun for 45 years in South Africa, where she fought apartheid and was briefly jailed for running a school with both black and white girls as students. Her decision to be ordained was inspired by this experience, which taught her that, if an unjust law cannot be changed, it must be broken.
 
Victoria Rue's testimony of being called to the priesthood as a young child is punctuated by old home movies showing her saying "Mass" for her friends using Necco wafers for communion, a childhood experience familiar to many Catholic women.
 
Ludmila Javorova was ordained to minister to women prisoners by Bishop Felix Davidek who himself had been imprisoned by the Communists for 16 years. Yet, the Vatican's response when they learned about Ludmila's ordination years later was to say that Davidek had been insane.
 
Janice Sevré-Duszynska prostrated herself in a white alb before her bishop during an ordination in 1998, telling him that she came before him in the name of Sarah, Hannah, Elizabeth, and the woman who touched the hem of Jesus's garment to ask the bishop to ordain her along with the male candidate.
 
Alta Jacko, the first African-American woman ordained in RCWP, recounts the inspiration she received from Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth to take this step. Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan's statement, "My faith is in my DNA," captures the reason all these women choose ordination as women priests but do not leave the Church whose hierarchy has rejected their vocation.
 
The official position of the hierarchy on women's ordination is presented in interviews with Father Ronald Lengwin, the spokesperson for the Pittsburgh diocese.
 
Pink Smoke will be shown again at the annual Call to Action meeting in Milwaukee on Nov. 6 and during the annual School of the Americas march in Columbus Georgia the same month. A DVD will then be available for purchase for $20 from Jules Hart at www.eyegoddess.com [3].
 
[Marjorie Reiley Maguire is a Catholic theologian and attorney in Milwaukee, WI.]
 
http://ncronline.org/news/women/pink-smoke-portrays-growth-womens-ordination-movement

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 09/10/2010 01:15:54
 
 
 
 
Quebec will soon have its first female Roman Catholic priest.
The Examiner
October 7, 2010
 
Linda Spear, a former Montreal teacher originally hailing from Winnipeg, will become the sixth Canadian woman ordained as a catholic priest.
 
The ceremony is presided by the group Roman Catholic Women Priests. It's been around since 2001 and includes about a hundred women priests in Europe and 75 in the U.S.
 
Spear said she'd prefer to wait until after she's ordained before doing an interview.
 
. . . Read complete article, click here: Roman Catholic WomenPriests

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 09/10/2010 02:22:24
In Memoriam: Mary Daly
October 16, 1928 - January 3, 2010
 

 
Mary Daly, radical feminist theologian and philosopher who spent most of her career teaching at Boston College, died in Gardner, Massachusetts on January 3, 2010, at the age of eighty-one, and after several years of declining health. Daly’s incomparable contributions to the fields of religion, philosophy, and feminist studies have been duly noted in the many obituaries published in leading newspapers around the world following her passing. Countless expressions of appreciation, local gatherings to remember her and her work, a large national memorial service, and a gathering of intimates to bury her among the illustrious at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts, have honored her in all of her complexity. Still, there is much to ponder and many issues to address as the legacy of this great feminist pioneer takes shape. 
 
. . . Read complete article here:

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 09/10/2010 03:26:37
What is Femininity?
by Marica Reynolds
The Huffington Post
October 6, 2010

Since I launched my book, "Wander Woman," this year, I have been asked to speak and write for many groups that tout feminine power. When I look into the message that forms the foundation of each group, they define this power very differently. Some of them stand for ideals I can align with. Others make my unwanted hair stand on end.


Marcia Reynolds

Does accepting my femininity mean I like wearing nice shoes and getting my nails done? I do like this. Does it mean I like to nurture others? To be honest, I don't ... I like to challenge people more than nurture them. Does expressing my femininity mean I will make a better leader in today's interconnected, collaborative workplace? This is possible, but in most cases my success would still be determined by patriarchal men. So I work for myself and include no one in my work decisions.
. . . Read complete article, click here: What is Femininity?

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 15/10/2010 08:41:21
 
 
UNITY

Community is a way of being present to another person so that another person can be present to you.  It’s a quality of being, a style of relating.  It makes room inside of you so that there is room for others within; it frees you so that you can get out of yourself and connect with others.  You become touched and touchable, supporting and supportable.
 
I could summarize Jesus’ teaching as symbolized in what some call “universal table fellowship.”  He is always eating with new people, the wrong people, women at a men’s symposium, non-Jews, and sinners, and ignoring all the purity codes of how, when, and where that his religion required at that time.  He forms new unity wherever he goes. 
 
Today the church often makes it very hard for us to do the same.  Did Jesus change his policy after he died?
 
Adapted from Richard Rohr's Radical Grace: Daily Meditations, p. 235, day 245
 
Starter Prayer: May we all be one.
 

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/10/2010 08:17:18








On this day October 21 in 1945 Women allowed to vote in France for the first time 

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/10/2010 08:20:21









See our new Timeline that compares the history of women's situation in the Church to that in the secular world.  

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 23/10/2010 08:04:26
Long Good-Bye: Why Some Catholics Are Leaving the Catholic Church
by Cathleen Kaveny
Commonweal
October 22, 2010  

 

Cathleen Kaveny

Several Catholics I know and respect have recently chosen to worship in other Christian churches as a matter of conscience. I doubt that Pope Benedict XVI will move heaven and earth to accommodate their concerns, as he has done for Lefebvrists and traditionalist Anglicans. Still, I think he and other members of the hierarchy ought to be worried. 

The Catholics I have in mind aren’t teenagers or sexual libertines. They stand among society’s caretakers; two are legal professionals whose vocation requires them to articulate or enforce basic norms of justice. If a conservative is defined as someone dedicated to preserving a society’s basic values, they are staunch conservatives. 

Thirty years ago, devout Catholics like these friends of mine would have stayed in the church to fight or to suffer, or maybe both. What has changed? Why are they and others like them leaving? After talking with a number of people in their situation, here’s what I see. 

Leaving the Catholic Church is possible for these cradle Catholics in a way that it wasn’t for their grandparents and parents. They have been taught and believe that God’s saving grace is everywhere, not merely within the structure of the Roman Catholic Church. They emphasize the generosity of a loving God, who would not refuse anyone whose knee bends at the name of his Son. So they believe that they will remain within Christ’s church, even as they loosen their ties with the Catholic communion. 

They worry that in important ways the Catholic Church is not acting like Christ’s church now. Like many Catholics, they have long doubted the wisdom of elements of church teaching on matters of sexual morality (contraception and gay marriage, for example) or gender roles (the all-male priesthood). But for two reasons they were content to wait, praying and hoping for change. First, they trusted in the basic good sense and good faith of the church leadership. Second, they were confident in the general trajectory of the post–Vatican II church, which they assumed was solidly based in the teaching of the council, especially the council’s statements on ecumenism, episcopal collegiality, and the role and spiritual dignity of the laity. 

Needless to say, their faith in church leadership has also been badly shaken by the sexual-abuse crisis. 

For some, frustration boiled over after the Vatican released a statement that seemed ineptly to equate as sacramental crimes the sexual abuse of minors and any attempt to ordain women. For the women I spoke with this supposed PR gaffe raised once again the deep suspicion that among those at the highest levels of the church hierarchy there remains a deep, visceral, and seemingly inexpungable disrespect for—and even fear of—women. 

These Catholics see no hope of institutional reform. The pope largely views the sexual-abuse crisis as a problem of individual sinfulness, not of broader flaws in church teaching and practices. Vatican II is fast becoming a ceiling for reform, not a floor for reform, as the emphasis increasingly falls on interpreting it in continuity with the Council of Trent in the liturgical, political, and moral realms. As we saw in the fracas over the health-care reform bill, key members of the U.S. hierarchy are calling for loyal deference to ecclesiastical authority even on matters Vatican II recognized to be within the competence of the laity, such as the technical meaning of a complicated piece of legislation. 

In the end, most people are what some ethicists call evidence-based virtue theorists. They think that if you cannot get the answer to a basic moral problem right, your advice on more complicated issues will not be reliable. The inability of the hierarchy to grasp immediately the basic injustice of clergy sexual abuse undermines their claim to wisdom on difficult and divisive issues of sexual ethics. To some people, the conjoining of women’s ordination and sexual abuse showed that the hierarchy was not merely bumbling in its approach to these issues, but twisted in its ultimate presuppositions about what the real threats facing the church today are. 

From the perspective of these Catholics, doctrine and practice are not developing but withering. But why not stay and fight? First, because they think remaining appears to involve complicity in evil; second, because fighting appears to be futile; and, third, because they don’t like what fighting is doing to them. The fight is diminishing their ability to hear the gospel and proclaim that good news. The fight is depriving them of the peace of Christ. 

The challenge to Commonweal Catholics, then, is coming now from two sides. We have long been in conversation with other Catholics in the pews. But what do we say to Catholics who have abandoned the pews as a matter of conscience? 

http://commonwealmagazine.org/long-goodbye



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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/11/2010 06:50:58









On this day November 4 in 1924 - First woman governor in the United States. 

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/11/2010 06:52:39









On this day November 4 in 2009 - First black African-American President in the United States.

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/11/2010 07:09:28
Campaign for Women Bishops Just Like 1939: Fury as Church Row is Compared to Nazi Crisis 
By Katherine Faulkner  
The Daily Mail 
November 4, 2010 

The Right Rev Wallace Benn, Bishop of Lewes, said church traditionalists were in a similar situation to those who faced the Nazis in January 1939.  

  
The Right Rev Wallace Benn, Bishop of Lewes, said church traditionalists were in a similar situation to those who faced the Nazis in January 1939 

The conservative bishop told a conference: ‘I’m about to use an analogy and I use it quite deliberately and carefully. And it slightly frightens me to use it but I do think it’s where we’re at. 

‘I feel very much increasingly that we’re in January of 1939. We need to be aware that there is real serious warfare just round the corner. It’s actually arrived in some places already. And we’re in a challenging and serious situation.’  

His reference to January 1939 is all the more provocative because it was the month in which Hitler gave a speech calling for the annihilation of the Jewish people in Europe. 


. . . Read complete story, click here: The View from The Anglican Church

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/11/2010 12:37:13
Study: 74 percent of Irish Catholic women don't feel valued by church
By Michael Kelly
Catholic News Service
November 3, 2010
 
DUBLIN (CNS) -- Irish Catholic women feel that they are not sufficiently appreciated by the church, but their faith remains strong, according to a newly published survey.

The research, which compared attitudes between Catholic and Protestant women, found that 74 percent of Catholic women surveyed felt that the church did not treat them with "a lot of respect." Among Protestant women, just 6.3 percent felt that lack of respect.

However, 61 percent of Catholic women said they looked to Mary as a positive role model who empowered them within the church, compared with 27 percent of Protestant women who looked to Mary.

When given a statement that the church had tried to control their position in society, 72.3 percent of Catholic women agreed compared with 19.7 percent of Protestant women.

The research, carried out by Trinity College Dublin among more than 500 women across 12 counties in the Irish Republic between 2002 and 2006, also found that religious faith remains strong among women and they remain actively involved in the church. Results were published in a book by Florence Craven of Trinity's Social Attitude and Policy Research Group.

Dominican Sister Geraldine Smyth of the Irish School of Ecumenics said she was not surprised by the figures.

She said the high percentage "needs to be listened to and attended to, not written off as lunatic fringe."

Sister Smyth said the Catholic Church "is wonderful at highlighting marginalization of women in society and standing up for vulnerable women in the social and political sphere," but that "does not translate in to the church where women are not sufficiently valued."

She said that if there is to be a meaningful process of Catholic renewal in Ireland, "the voice of women must be acknowledged, listened to and valued.

"Women have been excluded; this needs to be acknowledged and redressed in a practical way where the voices of women will be heard in structures within the church," she said.

The research confirmed anecdotal evidence and reports from various diocesan "listening sessions" around the country, where Catholic women expressed frustration about feelings of exclusion.

In the Diocese of Ossory, where more than 800 people participated in the session, the final report noted: "It was strongly felt that, while women make up two-thirds of the congregation, they have little say or role within the church and its structures.

"It was felt that if more people, particularly women, had been involved in leadership roles in the church the manner in which the abuse allegations were dealt with would have been different," it added.

In Kerry, where more than 500 people participated, many people expressed strong views that the church is marginalizing lay people, particularly women. Some said the Irish church's introduction of the permanent diaconate further excluded women from playing a "real role" in the church.


http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/1004513.htm

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/11/2010 12:42:33
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Read some of the recent Irish Times' debate about women's ordination.  We carry it in our dedicated thread located here: The Irish Times Debate: Women and Equality in the Church

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/11/2010 12:50:59
Sophie


Campaign for Women Bishops Just Like 1939: Fury as Church Row is Compared to Nazi Crisis 
By Katherine Faulkner  
The Daily Mail 
November 4, 2010 

The Right Rev Wallace Benn, Bishop of Lewes, said church traditionalists were in a similar situation to those who faced the Nazis in January 1939.  

  
The Right Rev Wallace Benn, Bishop of Lewes, said church traditionalists were in a similar situation to those who faced the Nazis in January 1939 

The conservative bishop told a conference: ‘I’m about to use an analogy and I use it quite deliberately and carefully. And it slightly frightens me to use it but I do think it’s where we’re at. 

‘I feel very much increasingly that we’re in January of 1939. We need to be aware that there is real serious warfare just round the corner. It’s actually arrived in some places already. And we’re in a challenging and serious situation.’  

His reference to January 1939 is all the more provocative because it was the month in which Hitler gave a speech calling for the annihilation of the Jewish people in Europe. 


. . . Read complete story, click here: The View from The Anglican Church


 
How Dietrich Bonhoeffer might have replied to Bishop Benn -- See here: An Imaginary Interview with Bonhoeffer

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/11/2010 03:25:26
Dear all,
 
A great way to attend the upcoming Call to Action Conference -- live streaming -- even if you can't attend in person, distance no barrier! Forwarding this on to share.
 
The keynote presentation by Asra Nomani from the Islamic feminist movement ("Bad Girls of Faith: The Daughters of Sarah and Hajar Standing Together to Reclaim the Feminist Tradition") looks like it would be worth tuning in for!
 

Asra Nomani 
 
The CTA website is here: http://www.cta-usa.org/
 
with love and blessings,
 
~Sophie~ 
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Dear Sophie,

Nearly 2,000 of you have pre-registered for the Call To Action conference and many more will register at the door! For those who are not able to attend in-person, Call To Action is bringing you Call To Action Live!

Four major speakers will be live streamed into your home computer. Just check out www.cta-usa.org/livestreaming at the following times for a link to watch some of your favorite speakers talk about what it means to be "faithful prophets" in these times.

  • Friday, November 5, 6:45pm Central
    Opening ceremonies plus Shane Claiborne's keynote: "Resurrecting Church"
  • Saturday, November 6, 10:30am Central
    Opening prayer plus Asra Nomani's keynote: "Bad Girls of Faith: The Daughters of Sarah and Hajar Standing Together to Reclaim the Feminist Tradition"
  • Saturday, November 6, 6:30pm Central
    Introduction and Presentation by Bishop John Shelby Spong
  • Sunday, November 7, 9:45am Central
    Leadership Award to Jamie Phelps, OP and Joan Chittister's keynote: "Prophets of a Future Not Our Own"
Please note that the times are Central, please adjust for your time zone accordingly.

This live streaming is being brought to your computer at no cost, courtesy of Call To Action. Please donate to help defray the cost of this webcast as well as our ongoing programming at www.cta-usa.org/donate.

If you'd rather see these and more than 30 other speakers and workshops in-person, you may still register at the door! Check our conference website for more conference information www.cta-usa.org/conference.

Let the conference begin!

Jim FitzGerald, Executive Director

Watch the Call To Action conference from your home computer on Live Streaming!

More Information Visit our website at  www.cta-usa.org

Forward this information to a friend!


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 06/11/2010 04:41:57









On November 5, 1872 - US women's suffragist Susan B. Anthony votes for the first time, and is later fined $100.


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 06/11/2010 10:33:05

Bishop Helga Haugland Byfuglien Underlines Message of Hope

GENEVA, 28 October 2010 (LWI) – The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) has congratulated the first woman to be elected chairperson of Church of Norway Bishops’ Conference, Bishop Helga Haugland Byfuglien, noting her election is cause for celebration.
 

Bishop Byfuglien’s election continues the trend of women in leadership at the most senior levels of LWF member churches. © Church of Norway Information Service
 
Read complete article, click here:  Ecumenism


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 06/11/2010 10:34:24
Study: 74 percent of Irish Catholic women don't feel valued by church
By Michael Kelly
Catholic News Service
November 3, 2010

DUBLIN (CNS) -- Irish Catholic women feel that they are not sufficiently appreciated by the church, but their faith remains strong, according to a newly published survey.

The research, which compared attitudes between Catholic and Protestant women, found that 74 percent of Catholic women surveyed felt that the church did not treat them with "a lot of respect." Among Protestant women, just 6.3 percent felt that lack of respect.

However, 61 percent of Catholic women said they looked to Mary as a positive role model who empowered them within the church, compared with 27 percent of Protestant women who looked to Mary.

When given a statement that the church had tried to control their position in society, 72.3 percent of Catholic women agreed compared with 19.7 percent of Protestant women.

The research, carried out by Trinity College Dublin among more than 500 women across 12 counties in the Irish Republic between 2002 and 2006, also found that religious faith remains strong among women and they remain actively involved in the church. Results were published in a book by Florence Craven of Trinity's Social Attitude and Policy Research Group.

Dominican Sister Geraldine Smyth of the Irish School of Ecumenics said she was not surprised by the figures.

She said the high percentage "needs to be listened to and attended to, not written off as lunatic fringe."

Sister Smyth said the Catholic Church "is wonderful at highlighting marginalization of women in society and standing up for vulnerable women in the social and political sphere," but that "does not translate in to the church where women are not sufficiently valued."

She said that if there is to be a meaningful process of Catholic renewal in Ireland, "the voice of women must be acknowledged, listened to and valued.

"Women have been excluded; this needs to be acknowledged and redressed in a practical way where the voices of women will be heard in structures within the church," she said.

The research confirmed anecdotal evidence and reports from various diocesan "listening sessions" around the country, where Catholic women expressed frustration about feelings of exclusion.

In the Diocese of Ossory, where more than 800 people participated in the session, the final report noted: "It was strongly felt that, while women make up two-thirds of the congregation, they have little say or role within the church and its structures.

"It was felt that if more people, particularly women, had been involved in leadership roles in the church the manner in which the abuse allegations were dealt with would have been different," it added.

In Kerry, where more than 500 people participated, many people expressed strong views that the church is marginalizing lay people, particularly women. Some said the Irish church's introduction of the permanent diaconate further excluded women from playing a "real role" in the church.


http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/1004513.htm

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 06/11/2010 10:41:36
Her Holiness: Is the Time Right for a Female Dalai Lama
by April L. Bogle
The Huffington Post
November 1, 2010
 
Tenzin Gyatso, His Holiness the XIV Dalai Lama, would make the perfect dad. Imagine having to tell the world's most famous "simple Buddhist monk" that you wrecked the family car. Material items are not important, but you must examine the causes and conditions that gave rise to this accident. Or that you spent all the money in your checking account before the end of the month -- again. You will not find happiness through external means. You must look inside to identify the things that lead to happiness. Or that you are devastated by the breakup of your love relationship. Everything is impermanent. This suffering too will pass.
 
 
His gentle and often playful manner, his engaging smile and twinkling eyes, his quick wit and simple yet profound remarks inspire a sense of reassurance, acceptance, and peacefulness that the world has come to attribute to this one person, this man.
 
 
But what if the next Dalai Lama is a woman? Would she, or even could she, offer the world the same grounding wisdom? Inspire compassion within people of all cultures? Properly navigate Tibet's troublesome relationship with the Chinese government? 
 
. . . Read complete story, click here: A Female Dalai Lama?

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 06/11/2010 10:43:27
Forbes puts pope in top 10 most powerful people
by Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service
November 5, 2010
 
VATICAN CITY — Forbes magazine doesn’t mind searching far and wide for compiling its roundup of the world’s most powerful men and women.
 

Pope Benedict XVI is seen with Russia's President Vladimir Putin during a meeting at the Vatican 2007. Forbes magazine ranked Putin and the pope the 4th and 5th most powerful people in the world. ( CNS photo/Andrew Medichini, Reuters)

Pope Benedict XVI made #5, behind Chinese President Hu Jintao, U.S. President Barack Obama, Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz al Saud, and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.
 
Last year, the pope placed 11th on the list, right behind Bill Gates III.
 
Forbes cast a wide enough net this year to include people who use their power for unjust and immoral ends like Osama bin Laden, who made #57, and, at  #60, the head of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, which is the largest cocaine supplier to the U.S.
 
Here’s the magazine’s rationale for how and why they chose who they did.
 
http://cnsblog.wordpress.com/2010/11/05/forbes-puts-pope-in-top-10-most-powerful-people/


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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 08/11/2010 05:06:54
Alina Treiger to become First Female Rabbi to Be Ordained in Germany Since War 
by Kate Connolly in Berlin 
The Guardian 
November 3, 2010 
 


Alina's Treiger's ordination prompts interest in first woman ordained as a Rabbi, Regina Jonas, who died in Auschwitz. 

  
Alina Treiger is due to take up her rabbinical post in Oldenburg. 
Photograph: Odd Andersen/AFP/Getty Images   

Alina Treiger only has to look at the portrait of her predecessor to realise the importance of the role she is about to assume. Regina Jonas made history when she was ordained as Germany's first female rabbi – but that role ended in her death in Auschwitz. 

Now, Treiger is about to become the first female rabbi ordained in the country since before the second world war.  


. . . Read complete story, click here:  Ecumenism, Inter-Religious Dialogue


Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/11/2010 01:23:23
Pontiff blesses condom use
Pope says in some cases it’s justified to stop spread of HIV
By Jessica Fargen and Marie Szaniszlo
Sunday, November 21, 2010
 
What about a woman who talks a rapist into wearing a condom. Or a woman who asks her husband infected with AIDS to wear a condom. Isn’t that being socially responsible to the woman’s own life as well as any infected baby that may result?
 
Why do we only care about the lives of men?
Am I the only Catholic outraged by this?

Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/11/2010 10:01:45
No. It is bothering me, too.

The cynical side of me wondered if the oddity was initiated because of men in the Vatican who use male prostitutes.

These guys in the Vatican just don't have women on their radar screen.

Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 30/11/2010 04:28:38
Pope says ordaining women is not the church's choice to make 
By Rita Fitch  
Catholic News Service  
November 30, 2010  

 
(CNS/Paul Haring) 

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- In his latest book, Pope Benedict XVI reaffirmed that the church has "no authority" to ordain women as priests and rejected the idea that the rule was formed only because the church originated in a patriarchal society. 

The pope said that man did not produce the form of the church, and does not have the power to change it. Christ gave the form of the priesthood when he chose his male Apostles, he said in the book-interview, "Light of the World: The Pope, the Church and the Signs of the Times." 

"The church has 'no authority' to ordain women. The point is not that we are saying we don't want to, but that we can't," he said. This requires obedience by Catholics today, he added. 

"This obedience may be arduous in today's situation, but it is important precisely for the church to show that we are not a regime based on arbitrary rule. We cannot do what we want," the pope said. 

In the book, the pope responded to the argument that ordination was restricted to men only because priestesses would have been unthinkable 2,000 years ago. 

"That is nonsense, since the world was full of priestesses at the time," the pope answered. "All religions had their priestesses, and the astonishing thing was actually that they were absent from the community of Jesus Christ." 

The pope said there can be no question of discrimination in the church because women perform so many meaningful functions. 

"Women have so eminent a significance that in many respects they shape the image of the church more than men do," he said, noting famous religious figures such as Blessed Teresa of Calcutta. 

http://www.catholicnews.c...tories/cns/1004890.htm 

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 30/11/2010 04:36:45
Pope, in book, says homosexuality incompatible with priesthood
By John Thavis
Catholic News Service
November 24, 2010

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- In his new book, Pope Benedict XVI strongly reaffirmed church teaching that homosexual acts are "disordered" and said homosexuality itself is "incompatible" with the priesthood.

The pope's comments came in his new book-interview, "Light of the World: The Pope, the Church and the Signs of the Times," which was published Nov. 23. 

 
Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, holds a copy of the pope's book as he speaks about it during a press conference at the Vatican Nov. 23. (CNS/Paul Haring) 

The interviewer, German journalist Peter Seewald, asked the pope whether the church's teaching that homosexuals deserve respect isn't contradicted by its position that homosexual acts are "intrinsically disordered."

The pope answered: "No. It is one thing to say that they are human beings with their problems and their joys, that as human beings they deserve respect, even though they have this inclination, and must not be discriminated against because of it."

"At the same time, though, sexuality has an intrinsic meaning and direction, which is not homosexual," he said. "The meaning and direction of sexuality is to bring about the union of man and woman and, in this way, to give humanity posterity, children, a future."

The pope said the church needs to hold firm on this point, "even if it is not pleasing to our age."

He said it was still an open question whether homosexual inclinations are innate or arise early in life. In any case, he said, if these are strong inclinations, it represents "a great trial" for the homosexual.

"But this does not mean that homosexuality thereby becomes morally right. Rather, it remains contrary to the essence of what God originally willed," he said.

When Seewald said that homosexuality exists in monasteries and among the clergy, even if not acted out, the pope responded: "Well, that is just one of the miseries of the church. And the persons who are affected must at least try not to express this inclination actively."

"Homosexuality is incompatible with the priestly vocation. Otherwise, celibacy itself would lose its meaning as a renunciation. It would be extremely dangerous if celibacy became a sort of pretext for bringing people into the priesthood who don't want to get married anyway," the pope said.

The pope cited a 2005 Vatican document that drew a sharp line against priestly ordination of homosexuals. He said the document emphasized that homosexual candidates cannot become priests because their sexual orientation interferes with "the proper sense of paternity" that belongs to the priesthood.

The pope said it was important to select priestly candidates very carefully, "to head off a situation where the celibacy of priests would practically end up being identified with the tendency to homosexuality."

http://www.catholicnews.c...tories/cns/1004842.htm



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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 01/12/2010 09:46:31
Creepy Christian Patriarchy Movement Shackles Daughters to Their Fathers and Homes
The stay-at-home-daughters movement encourages young girls and single women to forgo college and employment in favor of training as "keepers at home."
by Gina McGalliard
Alternet.org   
November 29, 2010    

“Daughters aren’t to be independent. They’re not to act outside the scope 
of their father. As long as they’re under the authority of their fathers, fathers have the ability to nullify or not the oaths and the vows. Daughters can’t just go out 
independently and say, ‘I’m going to marry whoever I want.’ No. The father has 
the ability to say, ‘No, I’m sorry, that has to be approved by me.’”

There’s a lot of talk in American mainstream media lately 
about the diminishing role of men -- fathers, in particular. Have feminism and reproductive technology made them obsolete? 
Are breadwinning wives and career-oriented mothers emasculating them?  No such uncertainty exists in the mind of Doug Phillips, the man quoted above. The San Antonio minister is the founder of Vision Forum, a beachhead for what’s known as the Christian Patriarchy Movement, a branch of evangelical Christianity that takes beliefs about men as leaders and women as homemakers to anachronistic extremes. Vision Forum Ministries is, according to its Statements of Doctrine, “committed to affirming the historic faith of Biblical Christianity,” with special attention to the historical faith found in the book of Genesis, when God created Eve as a “helper” to Adam. According to Christian Patriarchy, marriage bonds man (the symbol of Christ) to woman (the symbol of the Church). It’s a model that situates husbands and fathers in a position of absolute power: If a woman disobeys her “master,” whether father or husband, she’s defying God. Thus, women in the Christian Patriarchy Movement aren’t just stay-at-home mothers -- they’re stay-at-home daughters as well. And many of them wouldn’t have 
it any other way. 


The stay-at-home-daughters movement, which is promoted by Vision Forum, encourages young girls and single women to forgo college and outside employment in favor of training as “keepers at home” until they marry. Young women pursuing their own ambitions and goals are viewed as selfish and antifamily; marriage is not a choice or one piece of a larger life plan, but the ultimate goal. Stay-at-home daughters spend their days learning “advanced homemaking” skills, such as cooking and sewing, and other skills that at one time were a necessity -- knitting, crocheting, soap- and candle-making. A father is considered his daughter’s authority until he transfers control to her husband. 

It probably won’t surprise you to learn that the CPM shares much of its philosophy with the Quiverfull movement [See “Multiply and Conquer,” Bitch no. 37], which holds that good Christians must eschew birth control -- even natural family planning -- in order to implement biblical principles and, in the process, outbreed unbelievers. Although the CPM has been around for the past several decades, with its roots in the founding of the Council of Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, and the teachings of religious leaders like Bill Gothard and Rousas J. Rushdoony, the stay-at-home-daughters movement seems to have gained traction in the last decade. Kathryn Joyce, author of the 2009 book  Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement, estimates the CPM population to be in the low tens of thousands, but the rise of evangelical and fundamentalist Christianity over the past several decades makes it difficult to predict how large the CPM following could eventually become. 

Vision Forum, for its part, is fully dedicated to turning back the clock on gender equality.

Its website offers a cornucopia of sex-segregated books and products designed to conform children to rigid gender 
stereotypes starting from an early age. The All-American Boy’s Adventure Catalog shills an extensive selection of toy weapons (bow-and-arrow sets, guns, swords, and tomahawks), survival gear, and books and DVDs on war, the outdoors, and science. The Beautiful Girlhood Collection features dolls, cooking and sewing play sets, and costumes. There’s no room for doubt about the intended roles these girls will play later on in life. Indeed, the Vision Forum catalog brims with yearning for a simpler, supposedly more secure, and presumably more pious time, with a number of items relating to Western frontier living, a “Grandfather’s Classic Toys” collection, manuals on medieval chivalry, and centuries-old titles about manners and modesty.

Integral to Vision Forum’s belief about female submission is making sure women are not independent at any point in their lives, regardless of age; hence the organization’s enthusiasm for stay-at-home daughterhood. The most visible proponents of this belief are Anna Sofia and Elizabeth Botkin, sisters and authors of the book So Much More: The Remarkable Influence of Visionary Daughters on the Kingdom of God (published by Vision Forum), and creators of the documentary film Return of the Daughters, which follows several young women staying home until marriage, and details how they spend their time serving their fathers. One woman, Melissa Keen, 25, helps put on Vision Forum’s annual Father-Daughter Retreat, an event that’s described on Vision Forum’s website in terms that are, in a word, discomfiting. (“He leads her, woos her, and wins her with a tenderness and affection unique to the bonds of father and daughter.”)

Another, 23-year-old Katie Valenti, enthuses that her father “is the greatest man in my life. I believe that helping my father in his business is a better use of my youth and is helping prepare me to be a better helpmeet for my future husband, rather than indulging in selfishness and pursuing my own success and selfish ambitions.” (A video of Valenti’s 2009 wedding to Phillip Bradrick shows her father announcing into a microphone that he is “transferring my authority to you, Phillip.”) 

In So Much More, the Botkin sisters claim women were much happier before being legally considered men’s equals, although, unsurprisingly, they reference no studies, scholarship, or evidence for this. They do, however, quote extensively from girls described as “21st-century heroines of the faith,” or “the young heroines of the underground feminist resistance 
movement,” who claim following submission teachings changed their lives. A stay-at-home daughter named Sarah, for instance, aspired to be an attorney before realizing that her career ambitions displeased God; Fiona left home for college at 18, only to return five years later having experienced much “grief and depression.” 

Many of the Botkins’ fellow believers have taken to the web to extoll the virtues of the stay-at-home- daughter life, spreading their archaic views via the most modern technology. On stayathomedaughters.com, which recently ceased operating, Courtney, one of the authors of the website’s blog, describes herself as “learning to run and care for a home while under the training of my dear parents.” The section “What We Believe” states that “Stay-at-home daughters are defying cultural standards by purposing to fulfill their role at home, with their family, and under their father’s roof and authority until marriage. We are anti-feminism, and we are counter-cultural.” 

Another blog, Ah the Life, is written by “Miss Kelly and Miss Andrea,” who list among their interests “homemaking, theology, hospitality, and femininity.” Their favorite movies include Return of the Daughters and The Monstrous Regiment of Women, the latter a film that inveighs against feminism via soundbites from, among others, Phyllis Schlafly. (On Hillary Clinton: “She’s angry about a lot of things.”) And the blog Joyfully at Home was until recently maintained by Jasmine Baucham, daughter of preacher Voddie Baucham, whose 2009 patriarchy primer,What He Must Be If He Wants to Marry My Daughter, has chapters titled “He Must Be Prepared to Lead” and “Don’t Send a Woman Out to Do a Man’s Job.” Jasmine, who was featured in Return of the Daughters, wrote on her blog that she “chose to forgo the typical college experience so that I could live under the discipleship of my parents until marriage,” but her bio nevertheless notes that she is completing a degree in English literature. 

The number of these blogs and their followers may be surprising to mainstream women, who would likely find the tenets the bloggers live by disturbingly retrograde, if not just plain disturbing. For instance, stay-at-home daughterhood means, among other things, subsuming one’s own identity into the family unit. The Botkin sisters write inSo Much More that loving your parents means agreeing with all their opinions. “When your parents have your heart you will truly ‘delight in their ways,’” write the sisters in one blog post. “You will love what they love, hate what they hate, and desire their approval and company and even ‘think thoughts after them.’” 

The Botkin sisters aim to validate living a life of confinement with staunch, if unfounded, opinions and beliefs regarding college. “College campuses have become dangerous places of anxiety, wasted years, mental defilement and moral derangement,” they write. Although neither of the sisters has attended college, they also claim universities are hotbeds of Marxism that forbid a free exchange of ideas and seek to indoctrinate students in leftist thinking. Elsewhere, they quote a document from the pro-patriarchy website Fathers for Life that states that the “prime purposes of feminism are to establish a lesbian-socialist republic and to dismantle the family unit,” echoing Pat Robertson’s notorious statement that feminism is a “socialist, anti-family political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism, and become lesbians.” 

Learning critical thinking and immersion in a diversity of viewpoints and opinions -- a chief goal of the college experience -- seems to be what the Botkin sisters truly fear. Well, that and Satan -- the sisters use the age-old image of women as helpless to resist temptation as another argument against a college education: “Recall that Satan targeted a woman first, too. God’s enemies have recognized that women are not only the weaker vessels, and consequently more easily led, but they are incredibly influential over their husbands (think of Eve again) and children, and they make excellent and loyal helpers,” claim the sisters [italics theirs]. The story of one misled college attendee, the providentially named Evangeline, is instructive. A homeschool graduate attending a Christian college away from home, Evangeline recalls, “I will never forget the night I sat on my bed reading [So Much More] until 4 in the morning, weeping over it.” She continues, “My heart had ached for a protected mission, a biblically sound mission, an ancient mission. And here it was! What joy! What relief! I was not designed to be an independent woman, but rather a part of a man’s life, a helper.” 

But not all stay-at-home daughters accept their lot so unquestioningly. A young New Zealander named Genevieve, profiled on the Botkin sisters’ blog, decided to live at home until marriage after trading in her dreams of becoming her country’s first female prime minister for ambitions to become a Christian homeschooling wife and mother. Now the author of the Isaacharican Daughters newsletter, Genevieve exemplifies how young women in this lifestyle are encouraged to subsume their own thoughts and identities into those of whichever male figure in their lives currently acts as the authority. In writing about the process of swapping her father’s “vision” for her new husband’s, she notes that a woman having independent thoughts is evidence of Satan gumming up the works.
My loyalties have had to undergo a change. I was used to thinking Dad knew best. Now I needed to learn to think that Pete knows best. I used to do things and invest my time in projects according to what I knew Dad would want me to do. Now I needed to be guided by what Pete wanted me to do. When faced with a problem or option I couldn’t think “What would Dad have done in this situation?” Now I had to think “What would Pete do in this situation?” These were exciting times and difficult as during this state of flux -- learning to replace one man’s vision with another -- the devil would come around and say, “But what about what you want? What about what you think?” 
[Italics hers.] 
Genevieve’s words are worth noting because most stay-at-home daughters can’t truly be said to have chosen this lifestyle -- they are often brought up in homes where feminism, college, and a woman’s independent choices are vilified, and they rarely interact with those who think differently. One has to wonder if Genevieve, with her childhood dreams of national politics, bought into the myth that feminism is antimotherhood and antifamily, and thus feels she must choose between having a family and her own personhood, something most would consider a false choice.   

Although submitting to either your father’s or your husband’s authority may seem like perpetual childhood -- or indentured servitude -- to modern, first-world women who value their ability to do things like vote, go on dates, and determine the course of their lives, the Botkin sisters have a different take. “The sign of our maturity and our adulthood is when we willingly submit ourselves to God-given authority and therefore to God Himself,” they write in one blog post. “This is a struggle, and it requires strength, wisdom, responsibility and spiritual maturity.” And though one presumes these women’s enthusiasm for submission means they come from safe, loving, and abuse-free homes, there are potentially chilling consequences to the spread of their beliefs to those who may not be 
so lucky. 

Furthermore, the stay-at-home-daughter movement holds that girls are only ready to marry when they’ve completely tamed individualistic traits -- when, as the Botkins put it, they’ve learned to “submit to an imperfect man’s ‘whims’ as well as his heavy requirements. To order our lives around another person. To esteem and reverence [sic] and adore a man whose faults we can see clearly every day.” Fathers are never to be criticized or even teased: “When you speak of him to others, you shouldn’t talk about his mistakes, but of the good things he’s done. When you speak of him,
 instead of criticizing and nagging him for his faults, you should tell him how much you admire his strengths,” say the Botkins. Stay-at-home daughter Ruth says she honors her father by finding out his favorite colors and wearing them; Kelly says she finds that her father’s convictions “are becoming my convictions, his passions my passions.” Although it’s likely that many women would find such an existence frustrating and unhappy, if not completely infantilizing, within the context of the Christian Patriarchy Movement it’s not difficult to see the appeal. After all, women raised in the CPM are brought up to believe that the world outside their community is sin-filled, godless, and dangerous; opting for stay-at-home daughterhood represents a lifetime of safety. 

Still, they’re not safe from everything. Although the Botkins and their stay-at-home sisterhood believe that women have a duty to be obedient, if men fail in their endeavors -- their work, their marriages, their faith -- guess who’s responsible? “If our men aren’t successful, it largely means that their women have not made them successful. They need our help,” the Botkins write. Wives, claim the Botkin sisters, have the ability to “win” over their husbands with respectful and submissive behavior, for when the husbands observe this, they will become “ashamed and repentant.” (The sisters are strangely silent on what to do if this isn’t effective.) And daughters have the same responsibility: “Before you can accuse your father of being unprotective, ask yourself: ‘Do you make it clear to him that you are a woman of virtue, worthy of his special protection? If your behavior was more gentle, feminine, respectful and lovely would he be more inclined to be protective of you?’” Relationships with mothers, by contrast, get little consideration within the literature and blogs of the stay-at-home-daughters movement. Mother-daughter dynamics are mentioned in the Botkins’ book and film only in the context of readers becoming future mothers. 

The stay-at-home-daughters movement has inevitably inspired controversy and dissent, much of it among dedicated Christians who consider the movement to be a dire misconstruction of their religion. According to Cindy Kunsman, a survivor of what she terms “spiritual abuse” and the author of the blog Under Much Grace, stay-at-home daughters who have exited the lifestyle are -- despite what the rest of us might presume -- usually well prepared academically, but lack certain key skills for success in life. “Those young women who received excellent training have an easier time acquiring job skills when pursuing college and healthcare training, as many of them have done quite successfully,” said Kunsman in an interview. “However, because [these young women] were required to abdicate all significant problem-solving to another agent while in their families of origin, they lack skill and practice in critical thinking and planning... They must work to build integrity, self-reliance, autonomy, and trust in themselves, which they were taught to derive from the identity of the family.” 

One of the most outspoken counter-CPM blogs is Quivering Daughters -- the name a play on the phrase “Quiverfull” -- authored by Hillary McFarland. “Increasing numbers of women in their late twenties and thirties remain ‘safely’ at home, patiently waiting for husbands to find them,” writes McFarland in her book  Quivering Daughters: Hope and Healing for the Daughters of Patriarchy. “As unmarried adult daughters continue to perfect the art of homemaking, help to mother and school young siblings, and learn to be a godly helpmeet, many through spiritual discipline strain to cauterize wounds made tender with disappointment.” 

Despite the assertion of stay-at-home daughters that they are “protected” (albeit in a country where they have every legal right to walk away from their families and churches), it’s difficult not to view them as being extremely vulnerable. After all, men who grow up 
believing that women were created to serve their whims are generally the ones who are just as likely to abuse the women they see as “theirs” as to protect them from others. 

Such sexist views of women’s roles are certainly not limited to the Christian Patriarchy Movement. But unlike other extremely conservative religious groups such as the Amish or fundamentalist Mormon polygamists, which are typically closed off from the rest of society, the stay-at-home-daughters movement and the CPM might be capable of seeping into the already-booming populations of evangelical and fundamentalist churches and Christian homeschoolers, which already advocate a less-rigorous version of female 
submission. In this sense, stay-at-home daughters might feel that they are the most pure, and most righteous, of Christians. 

In a complex world where women have more choices than ever, perhaps the appeal of this lifestyle for both men and women is perpetual female childhood. Men make all decisions and are never told they are wrong, always getting their way, while women are free of any decision-making: a markedly different, albeit less complicated relationship than one between two equals. Only time will tell how far this new movement will spread. In the meantime, those of us who were lucky enough to have fathers who delighted in our accomplishments and growth as individuals -- rather than believing our existence was to serve their own needs -- should count our blessings. 

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 

Gina McGalliard is a San Diego–based freelance writer whose work has appeared in @UCSD, Sport Diver, Conscious Dancer, Dance Studio Life, San Diego City Beat, San Diego Family Magazine, and the San Diego Union Tribune. She would like to give a shout-out to her feisty Italian grandmother, who spent the 1970s and ’80s breaking down barriers for women, for raising her to be a good feminist, and introducing her at a young age to the writings of Gloria Steinem.


http://www.alternet.org/r...hers_and_homes/?page=1




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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 02/12/2010 11:06:54
Justice
 
From Richard Rohr's Daily Meditations

Gender Justice

Sexual issues are clearly in the “shadowlands” for almost everybody, resulting in either too much repression or destructive expression.  I hope just saying this much will give us all courage to begin to name and recognize our own issues with the opposite sex, with gender roles (which are cultural and never from God), with gay, lesbian, and bisexual people (who are not going to disappear because we are uncomfortable with them), with transgender folks, and people with ambiguous genitalia and sexual identities.
 
God has clearly created, allowed, and blessed them all with existence, so we had best move into God’s big house “where there are many mansions” (John 14:2), and learn to love and respect and grant justice to one another as embodied people.  We all learn to love God and our neighbor with and in our bodies too, and thus the body is hated or denied only at great peril.
 
Resources of Fr. Richard’s that address this topic include A Lever and a Place to Stand (CD) and  Contemplation in Action (book) 

 
Starter Prayer:
 
And what does the Lord require of you?
 
To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God (Micah 6:8).
 

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/12/2010 12:26:59
Dear friends,

Heads up to a new section on our homepage (www.womenpriests.org) that creates space for featuring recent news highlights. Periodically, I'll share them here, too.  Here is what we are featuring now.

~Sophie~

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

December 3, 2010 -- In recent news:
  • In the news: Bishop Griselda Delgado del Carpio has become the Diocesan bishop of the Episcopal Church of Cuba. She was consecrated as such on November 28, 2010. Congratulations, Bishop Griselda!
  • Our new quarterly newsletter is out! We've called it Communion because of the ways that word reflects the spirit of our work. It calls to mind our vision of a Church where women and men are one in the Body of Christ -- neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, not male or female... but one in Christ. The fact that women are still excluded from ordained priesthood is a sign of ecclesial resistance to the truth of this oneness in Christ.
  • In a new book, Light of the World, published this week, Pope Benedict says that the Church has no authority to ordain women because Christ never wanted woman priests. He also says that homosexuality and priesthood are incompatible. What do you think? Join us in our CIRCLES forum for discussion here.
  • Support our work through membership! Annual fee is just £15!
  • Learn more about new website developments: Abuse of Authority: A Scourge That is the Root of Many Problems in the Church
  • Alina Treiger is now the first female Rabbi ordained in Germany since WWII. Her ordination prompts interest in the first woman Rabbi, Regina Jonas who died in Auschwitz. Read more here:  First Female Rabbis
  • Woman in Priestly Garb Sounds a Great Echo In Italy The New York Times' Elisabetta Povoledo documents the story of Madre Maria Vittoria Longhitano, the first Catholic woman to be ordained in Italy. Because our Church won't have her, she was ordained in the Old Catholic Church this past May... a critical break through in Italy for women's ordination. See photos of a mass celebrated by Madre Maria in Rome this past June where her guests were Delegates of Women's Ordination Worldwide (in the city for a press conference and vigil for women's ordination at St. Peter's Square.)
  • A Word in Your Ear Holy Father -- The Tablet -- If you had the opportunity for a one-to-one with Benedict XVI, what would you discuss with him? Theologians Mary Grey, Lisa Isherwood and Ursula King would press the case for women’s ordination.
  • In Pulpit and Politics, Canadian journalist Dennis Gruending raises awareness about our work and the Pope's visit to Britain.
  • Belgium's Hon. Sec. Gen. writes an open letter about women in the Church to the Pope. Obligatory reading.
  • Recommended: Speaking Truth to Power is the best of the provocative journalism by Fr. A. Britz, a Benedictine monk and past Editor of the prophetic Catholic weekly, The Prairie Messenger. A visionary fearless in speaking truth to the powerful in church and society, Britz once wrote, 'It is embarrassing to read what the great bishops and theologians of age after age in the church had to say about women . . . We live in a church which, through most of its history, has seen women as being inferior to men. Woman was viewed as the temptress: that justified men in seeking to dominate them for their own good.' Of Britz's work, Joan Chittister, osb writes, 'With great simplicity, with disarming honesty...The ongoing relevance of the situations written about here makes this collection an enduring part of the spiritual literature of our period.'
  • On BBC TV: Catholic Voices speaker's bureau member, Ella Leonard and womenpriests.org International Coordinator, Therese Koturbash discuss the Vatican's new shared crime classification of paedophelia and 'attempted ordination of women.'
Now more than ever, we need your financial support.Donate as you can.
Help keep our work sustainable. Together, we are making a gift for our Church and the world become reality. In hope we struggle!


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oremus pro invicem!

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RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 07/12/2010 01:18:59
By Julian Das, Kolkata
December 7, 2010
Filmmaker Santwana Chatterjee introduces her film at the Short Film Festival in Kolkata A film festival organized by a Jesuit media center is providing a platform for women to showcase their creative talents.
 
Women have produced or directed nearly half the films to be screened during the Seventh Short Film Festival, festival director Jesuit Father Joseph Pymbellikunnel told ucanews.com.
 
The priest heads the 40-year-old Chitrabani (sight-sound) organizing the film festival, together with the West Bengal Film Center Nandan. The event is being held from Dec. 3 to 9 in Kolkata.
Most women directors are young, and a sizable number of them are students of media schools in the country, he said.
 
The festival has selected 94 films for screening, with a total 24 hours of running time, in five Indian languages. The shortest film is 2.30 minutes and the longest 39 minutes, the priest said.
Shoma Banerjee, a woman director, said she makes short films that addresses the issue of borderline psychological disorders. Her 17-minute film, Madhyabarti Olinde (By the by lanes of borderline) in Bengali was screened on Dec. 5.
 
Santwana Chatterjee combined journalistic skills and culture in her fourth film Amar Sonar Bangla (My golden Bengal), screened on the opening day.
 
She said her outlook complements that of other male colleagues. This creates a healthy balancing of content and style, she added.
Subha Das Mallick, who has made over 40 video films, said women find it easier to break through the male domain in short films that involve less investment. She also said women directors handle better themes related to women.
 
http://www.ucanews.com/2010/12/07/film-festival-showcases-creative-power-of-women/


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RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 07/12/2010 01:21:01
Film Festival Showcases the Creative Power of Women
By Julian Das, Kolkata
December 7, 2010

 

Filmmaker Santwana Chatterjee introduces her film at the Short Film Festival in Kolkata A film festival organized by a Jesuit media center is providing a platform for women to showcase their creative talents.
 
Women have produced or directed nearly half the films to be screened during the Seventh Short Film Festival, festival director Jesuit Father Joseph Pymbellikunnel told ucanews.com.
 
The priest heads the 40-year-old Chitrabani (sight-sound) organizing the film festival, together with the West Bengal Film Center Nandan. The event is being held from Dec. 3 to 9 in Kolkata.

Most women directors are young, and a sizable number of them are students of media schools in the country, he said.
 
The festival has selected 94 films for screening, with a total 24 hours of running time, in five Indian languages. The shortest film is 2.30 minutes and the longest 39 minutes, the priest said.

Shoma Banerjee, a woman director, said she makes short films that addresses the issue of borderline psychological disorders. Her 17-minute film, Madhyabarti Olinde (By the by lanes of borderline) in Bengali was screened on Dec. 5.
 
Santwana Chatterjee combined journalistic skills and culture in her fourth film Amar Sonar Bangla (My golden Bengal), screened on the opening day.
 
She said her outlook complements that of other male colleagues. This creates a healthy balancing of content and style, she added.

Subha Das Mallick, who has made over 40 video films, said women find it easier to break through the male domain in short films that involve less investment. She also said women directors handle better themes related to women.
 
http://www.ucanews.com/2010/12/07/film-festival-showcases-creative-power-of-women/

Guest
Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 09/12/2010 08:15:45
The word “God” is a pronoun whose antecedent we do not know.

Sophie
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RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 10/12/2010 02:59:05

Tony Porter
 
Tony Porter makes a call to men everywhere: Don't 'act like a man.' Telling powerful stories from his own life, he shows how this mentality, drummed into so many men and boys, can lead men to disrespect, mistreat and abuse women and each other. His solution: Break free of the 'man box.' Wondering, is there anything here the Vatican can learn? Does the 'man box' underscore our theology about women?
 
The link to his talk is here: http://www.ted.com/talks/tony_porter_a_call_to_men.html

Guest
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 10/12/2010 11:37:46
Sophie



Tony Porter
 
Tony Porter makes a call to men everywhere: Don't 'act like a man.' Telling powerful stories from his own life, he shows how this mentality, drummed into so many men and boys, can lead men to disrespect, mistreat and abuse women and each other. His solution: Break free of the 'man box.' Wondering, is there anything here the Vatican can learn? Does the 'man box' underscore our theology about women? 
 

The problem is that the men in the Church justify their unjust treatment of women by saying God wants it that way.
 

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RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 11/12/2010 02:09:35
CALLED:Women Hear the Voice of the Divine
by Gretchen Kloten Minney

Wonder Why Publications; First Edition October 2010
156 pages
ISBN-10: 1450721265
ISBN-13: 978-1450721264

Foreword by Father Roy Bourgeois M.M.: 'Can a calling to the priesthood be experienced by Catholic Women?   “Yes” say the women who have been ordained through apostolic succession and are practicing priests.

Called - Women Hear the Voice of the Divine provides a brief background and history of ordination within the Catholic Church and tells the stories of the brave women who have been called to the priesthood . . . and who have followed the voice of that calling.

This respectful and thoughtful look at what might be the issue of the century for Catholics sheds new light on a cause whose time has come: the ordination of women priests in the Catholic Church.'

Review by Richard Rohr, OFM:   

"We are assured in the New Testament that we ‘enjoy the glorious freedom of the children of God’! Well here is a woman – and an issue - that takes that freedom seriously, and with the groundedness, scholarship, and courage that the entire church deeply needs today. The issue of ordination of women to leadership in the church will not go away – nor should it.”

Available on Amazon.com

Or order by sending check or money order for $18 USD to:

Wonder Why Publications
P.O. Box 275
Broomfield , Colorado 80038

USA

(Includes US domestic shipping and tax.)


Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 13/12/2010 09:22:43
Vatican Bank Mired in Money Laundering Scandal 
by Nicole Winfield and Victor L. Simpson 
Bloomberg.com 
December 11, 2010   

  
VATICAN CITY (AP) — This is no ordinary bank: The ATMs are in Latin. Priests use a private entrance. A life-size portrait of Pope Benedict XVI hangs on the wall.  

Nevertheless, the Institute for Religious Works is a bank, and it's under harsh new scrutiny in a case involving money-laundering allegations that led police to seize euro23 million ($30 million) in Vatican assets in September. Critics say the case shows that the "Vatican Bank" has never shed its penchant for secrecy and scandal.  


Read complete article, click here: Pope Benedict

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 14/12/2010 08:43:40
Women's Ordination Worldwide Vigil for Women Priests held in St Peter's Square in June 2010 makes TIME Magazine's Top Ten of Everything of 2010!!!  Here is the story!
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Women Priests, In Spite of the Vatican 
by Howard Chua-Eoan
Time Magazine
December 9, 2010


RICCARDO DE LUCA / AP

In July, the Vatican branded the ordination of women as priests a delictum gravius, or grave crime, the same label it has given pedophilia. That may have been in response to the small but increasing number of women who have been ordained priests by rebel Catholic congregations in the U.S. and other parts of the world. For example, Roman Catholic Womenpriests, a group founded eight years ago in Europe, has ordained women in more than 20 American states and Canada. The Pope, in an interview published in late November, remained adamant that the Church has no biblical authority to ordain women as priests because all of Jesus' disciples were women. He did allow, however, that Jesus' friendships with women were revolutionary for his time — and that the first witness to Christ's resurrection was a woman.


http://www.time.com/time/...034971_2034954,00.html



Sophie
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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 20/12/2010 11:19:39
Dear friends,
 
The above article is indeed 'good news!'

I especially love the photo that is included with it. For me, it gives symbolic representation to the women from various streams in the movement who come together to stand up together in the call for what is right.  Knowing the identities of the people in the photo will help illustrate this point.  From Left to Right:
  • Madre Maria Vittoria Longhitano.  Maria is a Catholic woman who has long discerned a personal call to priesthood.  This past May, she became the first Catholic woman to be ordained a priest in Italy. Her ordination made international headline news. Because our Church wouldn't have her, she was ordained in The Old Catholic Church. The New York Times story about her is here: Woman in Priestly Garb Sounds a Great Echo In Italy. Her embrace as a priest in Italy represents a critical breakthrough.
    Sidebar: The photo in the Time article was taken when Delegates of WOW (Women's Ordination Worldwide) gathered with her for a celebration of mass in Rome's Anglican Church.
  • Therese Koturbash (ie, me!), International Coordinator of www.womenpriests.org (ie, this website.) We are the organisation that presents the academic, theological, scriptural, 'traditional' and legal case for women's ordination in the Church...(respectfully speaking, the Vatican has no case!)
  • Erin Saiz Hannah, Executive Director of the US based Women's Ordination Conference (WOC ) -- They are a frontline activst activist organisation in the cause.
  • and Katy Zatsik, an ordained priest with RCWP who is now excommunicated because of her ordination.
The photograph is meaningful not only because it portrays a spectrum of the avenues that people are approaching this challenge from, but also because it acknowledges the importance of standing together as community in the work.

pretty darn special!

with love and blessings,
 
~Sophie~

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 20/12/2010 11:28:02
Wisdom from Joan Chittister: Three Choices at a Crossroads
 

Joan Chittister, OSB

At a crossroads, remember, there are three possible options to choose from.

The first choice is simply to quit a road that is going nowhere. We can move out and move on, we can move away from it all, and leave the unfinished mission undone.

The second choice is to give in to the fatigue that comes from years of being ignored — or worse — of being ridiculed or excommunicated — and go silently into oblivion. The second choice is to crawl into a comfortable cave with nice people and wait for the storm to go by.

The third choice is to refuse to accept the decadent present and insist on celebrating the coming of the unknown, but surely holy, future. The third choice is to go steadfastly on following the path of the prophets, of those who spoke before us but were also not heard until long after the fact.

Prophets are those who take life as it is and expand it. They simply refuse to shrink a vision of tomorrow to the boundaries of yesterday.

But never forget as well, that the prophets, like you and I — discouraged by the present, weary from trying—also toyed with all three options. But in the end chose to go on following the spiritual magnet of their lives rather than allow it to wither.

The prophets — everyone of them — when they came to the crossroads, when they came to a chance to settle down there, to quit, to accept what was, chose instead to keep on going.

They chose to go on — despite it all. If not with a sense of total and immediate success, then as sirens in the night, as seeders of far-flung seeds, as eternal agitators in the soul of the nation, as torches in the murk of confusion. They chose to go on illuminating to others, down century after century, the eternal word of God.

They chose to go on shouting the message upon which the future rested and the people depended if they were to find their way out of the darkness to which a failed leadership had condemned them.

You and I know that these people — people just like us: simple and sincere, eager and inspired — these fruit growers like Amos and small business people like Hosea, these priests and sheep masters, these theologians and dreamers like Isaiah and Ezekiel, these struggling lovers and suffering witnesses made no small choices indeed. They chose courage; they chose the expansion of the soul; they chose to stake their lives on what must be rather than stake their comfort on what was.

–from “Prophets of a Future Not Our Own” Joan Chittister’s closing address at the 30th Annual Call To Action Conference, Milwaukee, WI, Nov. 5-7, 2010
 
Click to read "Chittister: One of a kind,"  a candid profile of Joan Chittister, keynote speaker at Call to Action’s national conference in Milwaukee, written by Tom Fox, editor of the National Catholic Reporter

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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/12/2010 08:33:20
Some Burning Questions for the Pope
by Sinead O'Connor
The Huffington Post
December 21, 2010

This is an Open Letter to Pope Benedict on behalf of all victims of child sexual abuse by catholic priests; on behalf of all catholic people, and all honorable catholic clergy; on behalf of every media outlet under the sun; and on behalf of The Holy Spirit.  

Sir,
 
Some burning questions arise from the following statement you made in your Christmas address to your cardinals on December 20th regarding how it came to pass that the house of The Holy Spirit became a haven for criminals of a sexual nature.  

"In the 1970's pedophilia was theorized [by the church] as something fully in conformity with man and even with children." 

  • Please deign to respond to this letter directly and personally and put aside all the pomp and titles and so-called 'proper channels' -- all of which belong not in the 21st century but the 12th and are unbecoming of Christ. 
  • Exactly who held the theory that pedophilia was fully in conformity with man and with children? 
  • Please give us their names. 
  • Exactly when did they hold this theory? 
  • Exactly when if ever did they cease holding the theory?
  • Why was this information not given to victims? 
  • Why was it never given to any commissions of inquiry or civil authorities? 
  • Why in all the years since these scandals broke out was yesterday the first mention of this information? 

It is highly disrespectful of the victims that you would throw this out as an aside remark and not present yourself for questioning on such a very serious piece of information which would be key in the potential recovery of the church. 

 
The Holy Spirit requires you to familiarize yourself with honesty and respect if you retain any desire to salvage the remains of the church which has been ruined by its being allowed to live by its own laws and not God's. 

~ Sinéad 

http://www.huffingtonpost...65_b_799708.html 





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Re:2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/12/2010 09:04:47










Read Pope Benedict's address, click here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.ashx?m=36205

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