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Evangelisation needs women who are 'proud' to be Catholic

Published: October 11, 2012

New evangelisation will never be possible without women who are proud and happy to belong to the Catholic Church, the president of the Belgian bishops' conference told the Synod of Bishops, reports the Catholic News Service.

"Two-thirds of active members of the church are women," and the primary evangelizers are usually women, "however many women feel discriminated against by the church," Archbishop Andre-Joseph Leonard of Mechelen-Brussels told the Synod on Tuesday.

"It's high time" the church better explain why only men may be ordained, he said. It is not because women are looked upon as being less worthy or able to minister to others, "it's absolutely the contrary," the archbishop said.

The priesthood is open only to men "because the male figure of the priest is a representative of Christ, the groom, who came to wed humanity" through his spouse, the church, he said.

A male priesthood "is only out of respect for this profound symbol of marriage," Archbishop Leonard said. "Let us remember and remind the church of her profound feminine nature as the bride of Christ and our mother."

The archbishop spoke forcefully and with emotion, said Basilian Father Thomas Rosica, who briefed reporters about what occurred in the synod hall. The speech was a bit of a "shocker," said one synod participant, because the archbishop is considered to be very conservative.

Archbishop Leonard asked everyone to give thanks for "the quality and the specificity of the massive contribution of women to evangelization."

"Without joyous women who are recognised for all of their qualities" and who are proud of belonging to the church, "there will be no new evangelisation," he told synod participants.

FULL STORY Church needs witness of women proud to be Catholic, archbishop says (CNS)

 

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Recent Comments

  1. Many of us women are definitely not proud and not happy!

  2. Whether you're a man or a woman, 'hope' in the Church has to be a grace from God.
    I have served in the Church actively for over 20 years, in all sorts of ministries.
    Sure, I have been offended by people of all shapes and sizes, and all ranks and positions, but I have learned that none of these people ultimately give me the excuse to lose hope.
    Hope is my responsibility.
    It is, in my opinion, a supernatural grace - a grace we see embodied and 'made flesh' in our Jesus.
    Jesus, after all hoped when everything in the natural pointed towards disaster.
    This year, the Year of Grace, calls us to 'discover our own well' of grace... and of Hope.
    Until each one of us become a source of hope, in what is in the natural, a time of great trial in our Church, we will not see the change that we hunger for.
    Women are powerful carriers of the Gospel, always have been and always will be.
    We women need to not be paralyzed with 'if only...' and 'only when...' thoughts, that make us resentful and defeated. As we seek personal conversion in our lives, we will become 'powerful' Christians, that is of course, 'powerful' in the same way our Jesus was: sources of life, hope and freedom.
    Blessings.

  3. We should be grateful that a 'consevative Archbishop' made a shocker of a statement about something so obvious.
    However, his explanatory comments detract somewhat from the powerful point that he was making.
    Once we begin to explain things by reference to old and inadequate images, analogies and language (as in Christ being a groom and the Church a bride, and the realtionship being akin to marriage), we quickly slip into a traditional obfuscation.
    This does not help any understanding of what the 'new', as in new evangelization, might imply.
    Part of the challenge of evangelization at any time in the Church's history, is to read the signs of the conntemproray times, and to use language and strategies that speak to the contemporary world which is the subject of evangelization.
    Falling back on irrelevant metaphors to justify something, rather than finding new ways to address new issues, is not a recepie for proclaiming the Good News.

  4. Well said, Cathy. Our hope lies in Our Lord. It is His Church with a mandate to continue His work and we rely on His promise of being with His Church till the end of time!

  5. I really can't see that the Bishop's argument will wash much with many of the women I know who want to see change in the church; male priest because groom to bride!
    Christ to Church - sure; priest to church? Surely not.
    Are we as a church that 'mystical'

  6. Well said, Garry!
    All metaphors are defective.
    Arguments based on metaphors are even more defective.
    Cardinal X was a lion at the Synod.
    But lions can run wild.
    Therefore Cardinal X has to be tamed and pulled into line.
    The church is the Bride of Christ.
    Only married women know what it is like to be a bride.
    Therefore only women can speak with the authority
    of experience when articulating how the church (even though composed of both sexes) should relate to Christ.
    When Genesis says: Then God said 'Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the seas etc' the author is using the metaphor of a craftsman.
    He cannot conceive God as other than a craftsman who works from a blueprint, from an image in his head, of what he is going to create. The Hebrew author has no idea of metaphysics.
    Every being in as much as it is a being is the realisation of an idea in the mind (metaphorically speaking!) of God. Every being, inanimate, animated, or spiritual, is an image of God. Where human beings are superior to rocks and animals is that they can communicate with God. They can share words/thoughts/ideas with God and God with them.
    The supreme communication of God to humankind lies not its creation (wonderful though that is) but in the fact that the Word of God was made flesh and dwelt among us.

  7. Very encouraged to read of the conservative Archbishop in Brussels coming up with a shocker.
    Hope he's not going to be given a hard tie for it.
    I rather agree with Fr Vincent that we are all rather blessed in calmly recognising and believing in the utter mystery at the heart of our faith.

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