Make Text Larger Make Text Smaller Email this Article to a Friend Print this Article

Comment - Feminist voice emerges in Vatican paper

Published: August 31, 2010

A piece in the weekend 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.

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.”

“Women are basically excluded from important sectors of theological research, such as liturgy and pastoral theology,” Scaraffia writes, “while they are attaining a bit of space in theological anthropology and spiritual theology.”

What Scaraffia is describing, of course, is the situation in pontifical institutions in Rome such as the Salesianum and the Lateran, and other ecclesiastical institutions in Italy. The extent to which it applies to theology faculties in other parts of the world, including the United States, varies from place to place.

FULL STORY A Vatican voice for women theologians (NCR Online)

 

Response to articles is welcome. Simply follow the prompts to post your comment. No posting of more than 250 words will be published. While critical comment on stories and issues is welcomed, postings that descend to personal attacks on or impugn the integrity of other commentators will be blocked. Please use your own name, or initials, eg John Brown, or JB, or JAB, or Johnny. You are also required to add your location - as in, Sunshine, Victoria. Please provide your email address in the line supplied, followed by your contact phone number. These are requested for identification purposes only and will not be published. If you have any problems, please email news@cathnews.com


 


Recent Comments

  1. Sexism is rife all over the globe, and it's about time it wasn't. In Jewish families, over the centuries, this has not been the case; but why should Christians know anything about Jewish family life?
    In Reconstructionist Jewry, theology is the province of men and women. It'd be nice if more people showed an interest in this key subject: not least, because Catholicism fulfils Judaism.

Bookmark and Share

More from this section

  1. Feature - Vocation lessons from Uganda

    The inspiration of Uganda's martyrs has transformed the country into a goldmine for religious vocations. This has important lessons for Australia, says Sydney Seminary Rector Fr Anthony Percy.

  2. Feature - Tim Fischer's Mission Mackillop

    Tim Fischer, Australia's ambassador to the Holy See, is established as our man at the Vatican, and he is charged with overseeing the canonisation of Australia's soon-to-be saint Mary MacKillop, on October 17.

  3. Feature - The Happiest Refugee on humour, adversity and faith

    Comedian Anh Do is a 'boat person' refugee who arrived in Sydney as a small child with his Vietnamese family. The former St Aloysius student has just released his autobiography, He talks about the dramatic twists and turns in his life.

  4. Feature - Book gives new perspective on abuse crisis

    Greg Erlandson decided to write a book on the clergy sex abuse crisis because the secular media kept raising questions about Pope Benedict XVI's handling of cases in their coverage of a new wave of abuse in dioceses around the world.

  5. Feature - Church gives Indian untouchables an education

    Fr Varghese Vithayathil, from the Congregation of Carmelites of Mary Immaculate (CMI), discusses how Church-run schools in north India are key to helping "untouchable" converts to Christianity escape the poverty trap.

Church Resources provides a range of services for the Church and not-for-profit sector, including aggregating buying power for a wide range of products and services used by health, welfare, aged care, education and parish organisations. More »

Subscribe

Receive CathNews headlines in your inbox daily.

News Feed

Subscribe to the CathNews RSS feed to get the daily edition automatically delivered to you.