The meanings of
words change over time. For example, the meaning of awful went from ‘amazing’, to ‘terrible’; decimate, from ‘reduce by one-tenth,’ to ‘destroy’; and, cell from ‘a small unit’ to ‘mobile
phone’.
So too has the
word, “ordination” changed over centuries. Jesus never ordained anyone. In the
early Church, “ordination” meant ‘to confer a role in a community.’ Records
exist of ‘ordinations’ of doorkeepers, people committed to the care of books,
sacristans, abbesses, etc. While women and men served at the altar as priests
and deacons, they were not necessarily ‘ordained’ to do so.
Not until the
12th century did ‘ordination’ acquire it’s present meaning of ‘bestowing
authority.’ Thus, to talk about early Church ‘ordination’ as we think of it
today, is to impose a definition developed in the 12th century onto an earlier
period. [Gary Macy, The Hidden History of Women’s Ordination.]
So what,
really, was going on in the Church all those hundreds of years?
The 9th to 14th
centuries were a time of great upheaval, and women became a scapegoat for
Church troubles. Papal wars with the Italian States created threats to papal
authority as the Church became bolder in its claims for power. Other events
that expanded the Church’s cruel and misogynistic practices include:
---The Church had become immensely corrupt. Parish priests were
illiterate and immoral; high ranking clergy were appointed by and served,
powerful lords
---Married priests gave away Church land as inheritances. To end
this practice, clerical celibacy was demanded; to ensure celibacy, women were
villified
---In its attempt at reform, the Church worked to remove women
from service at the altar
---Crusades put the Church in contact with Aristotle’s faulty
reasoning about women
---The Church became centralized and asserted Papal supremacy
---Witches (benevolent healers,) once denied as ‘real’ by the
Church, were used to defame women. The Church depicted witches as the Devil’s
consorts
---Pope John XXII authorized the Inquisition to prosecute
witchcraft
---Church infighting created two popes who ruled simultaneously:
Urban in Rome; Clement at Avignon
---Pope Innocent VIII authorized inquisitors to persecute
witches. Their manual was published and reprinted for 200 years.
Tracts against
women reflected the tortured souls of men who mendaciously claimed women had
sex with Satan and lustfully tried to corrupt men. Through a deliberate,
methodical effort, Church hierarchy erased the memory of women priests.
Yet
archaeological evidence in Rome, Italy and Africa shows women were ordained as
deacons, priests and bishops.
“Women as well as men functioned as prophets
and priests. Among ancient mosaics paintings,
statuary, dedicatory inscriptions and funerary epitaphs, scholars have found
evidence for women’s leadership. In the
writings of the New Testament, letters, sermons and the theological treatises
of the early Church, women’s leadership is well attested. Where women leaders played prominent roles,
male authors muted their contributions by the way they wrote their stories.
[Karen Jo Torjesen. When Women Were Priests.]
For example,
the Virgin Mary prophesied in “The Magnificat” (Luke 1:47-55) “He has put down
the mighty from their thrones and exalted those of low degree; he has filled
the hungry with good things and the rich he has sent empty away.” This resounds
across centuries as a prophecy, yet Luke does not call the Virgin Mary a
prophet.
Inscriptional,
canonical, literary and epigraphical evidence validate the fact that there were
clearly female deacons and priests in the early Church. Well into the 12th
century, women were considered as fully ordained as male clergy. [Gary Macy, The
Hidden History of Women Priests.] Even condemnations of women priests by
the Church (as in the Synod of Nimes,
or Letter of Gelasius,) are
ironically, testament to women priests. [Kevin Madigan and Carolyn Osiek, Ordained
Women in the Early Church.] They show women priests did exist and they were
hated by the institutional Church. Thus the claim that women have never
functioned as priests in the Church is simply not true.
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