Former
US president Jimmy Carter says restrictions on women priests, imams, and pastors
is a misinterpretation of the Bible and the Quran.
By
Margery Eagan
On
Spirituality columnist November
21, 2014
Religious
discrimination against women, including in Catholicism, is largely to blame for
violence and injustice against women around the world. And that violence and
injustice “is the most important and unaddressed and serious affliction of human
rights on earth,” former US president Jimmy Carter said this
week.
Treating
women “as inferior in the eyes of God” gives tacit approval to subjugate them in
all other aspects of life, from the courts to the military to the business
world, Carter said an interview with me this week on WGBH radio. Carter also
spoke at Harvard Divinity School to promote his provocative new book, “A
Call to Action: Women, Religion, Violence and Power.”
“I
wrote the pope a letter after publishing the book,” Carter said, forwarding the
book and urging Francis to rethink the prohibition on women priests. In a “very
nice letter back, [the pope said] women’s involvement in leadership should be
enhanced or increased, but he didn’t say how.”
Carter
called restrictions on women priests, imams, and pastors a misinterpretation of
the Bible and the Quran. This subjugation, he said, has played a role in the
epidemic of sexual assaults on American campuses and in the military, where
cases are often poorly prosecuted or not prosecuted at all; unequal pay for
women, and an unabated sex trade here and worldwide. Some Muslim countries, he
pointed out, bar girls from school and, most horribly, enforce genital
mutilation.
Since
leaving office, Carter, now 90 years old, has won the Nobel Peace Prize and
become a tireless crusader for social justice and human rights. He has written
more than two dozens books; he said he wrote “A Call To Action” to bring more
attention to the abuse of women and girls, calling it “almost beyond
comprehension.”
After
70 years as a member of the Southern Baptist Convention, he and his wife Rosalyn
left in protest about 15 years ago because they could no longer justify its
discriminatory policies. The denomination refuses to allow women to be pastors
or deacons or chaplains in the military. Now he teaches at Emory University in
Atlanta. He also teaches Sunday school at his new church: “a little church in
Plains with a woman pastor, where Rosalyn is a deacon and my sister-in-law is
chairman of the board of deacons.”
No comments:
Post a Comment