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Saturday, March 28, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests:Clips of Liturgy/ Liturgical Dance at Mary, Mother of Jesus Inclusive Liturgy



Sheila Carey, performs liturgical dance

at meditation after Communion:

Mary, Mother of Jesus Catholic Community

Liturgy at St. Andrew Church in Sarasota, Fl.
March 28, 2009




Bridget Mary Meehan, co-presider with
Married priests: Michael Rigdon and Lee Breyer

On March 28, 2009, Mary of Mother of Jesus Catholic Community celebrated a liturgy that we would like to share with the world. In the following clips that up on youtube, you will get glimpses into our open, inclusive, enthusiastic, faith-filled community worship at St. Andrew Church in Sarasota, Florida. (UCC) Sheila Carey performed a beautiful liturgical dance at the meditation time after communion. Married priests Michael Rigdon and Lee Breyer co-presided with me/Bridget Mary Meehan, Roman Catholic Womanpriest. Our community prays together the consecratory prayers of the Eucharistic prayer and participates in a dialogue homily. Jack Meehan, my Dad, played a rousing edition of "When the Saints go marching in" as our recessional. Enjoy!!

Offertory Prayers

Communion

Liturgical Dance/Communion Meditation: Sheila Carey
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwvUKAsHxZ8

Recessional: Jack Meehan plays "When saints go marching in"

Friday, March 27, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat

Another lovely poetic prayer inspired by Hildegard of Bingen by Mary Malone in Praying with the Women Mystics
p. 93

I Want Radiance

What Mary says to me is clarity;
I am muddled, confused, mumbling.
Mary, free me from my destructive ways;
I want your radiance.

What Mary says to me is “Be radical”:
Root yourself in the rich soil of humanity;
Your body, like that of a lily, is the container of joy.
Be deeply green and dazzlingly white.
Be radiant.

What Mary says to me is flight,
The soaring flight of birds in song.
Look up, listen, drink it in.
Go is overflying the world
From beyond the furthest stars.
In Mary’s arms God comes,
Greeting us eternally
With a kiss of heavenly peace.
Be flight.

Martyr or heretic? Bishop Morlino fires church employee over her beliefs

http://www.madison.com/

Link to "Why I am not a nun: an Open Letter to Apostolic Visitor, Mother Mary Clara Millea" by Kate Childs Graham

" Why I am not a nun: An Open Letter to Apostolic Visitor, Mother Mary Clare Millea, ASCJ "

by Kate Childs Graham

http://ncronline.org/blogs/young-voices/why-i%E2%80%99m-not-nun

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat


Ordinations in Chicago 2008

To our RCWP USA sisters and brothers,

Good -Morning, Regina,
Thankyou for the list of our 6 incarcerated living saints and thousands martyred
Father Luis Barrios Presente
Therese Cusimano Presente
Sister Diane Therese
Pinochet OSA. Presente
Sister Dorothy Kazel (requescat in pace)
"Raped and murdered by soldiers
in el salvador who were trained at SOA"
Sister Dorothy Presente
Thousands of others Presente

Al Simmons Presente
Louis Wolf Presente

Thanks Regina. I will act by following the links you provided today.

Let us pray that our bishop-elect Regina Nicolosi and all of us have the courage of these saints with us. That we are willing to lay down our lives for the injustices we encounter and whose outcomes we embrace as we resists and protest for change. May we we recognize how deep and wide violence is within our church and worldwide throughout many systemic pathological constructions..Let us also remember that people often have choices and that we hold them accountabe as we hold ourselves accountable for how we will address the terrors of our times.

Let us pray that in RCWP we stand in solidarity together at all times so that we may become an empowered priesthood of women and men who bring transformative change in joy. Let us stay with our God and our Cloud of Witnesses from all time-- time past, present and in the future, and in the name of Jesus Wisdom Sophia embrace our holy destinies.

The music we start with first today, since we are honoring these saints is Johann
Sebastian Bach's "Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben

Most of us will recognize this as Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring.

As today is the Feast of the Annunciation you can expect a few more entries from the Cloud of Witnesses and more music as the day and evening goes by.

Much love,
RCWP Canada and Europe-West

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

An Open Letter to Ruth M. Kolpack and to all the women who have been or are being abused by Church Hierarchy

An Open Letter to Ruth M. Kolpack,
and all the women who have been or are being abused by Church Hierarchy

Dear Ruth,

You and I have never met. But I post this letter experiencing a profound sorrow and anger over the treatment that you received from the leader of your diocese, Bishop Robert Morlino. I know that many other Catholics and people of good will feel the same sorrow and anger.

Your Bishop summoned you for a 10 minute meeting in which you were never given an opportunity to defend your paper, indeed the philosophy which underlined the concepts of that paper. You were instead, told to denounce (renounce?) the ideas expressed in your paper and to take an oath of loyalty and orthodoxy.

But a request to denounce (renounce) the concepts expressed in your paper is in itself, an affront to orthodoxy. It would require you to renounce your freedom of conscience. That freedom of conscience is a gift from God, not from the Church. It is a gift given to all women and men---regardless of their race, color, gender, or creed (or lack of a creed). It is a gift that is your birthright as a human being. To denounce your paper (and your freedom of conscience) would be to deny your basic rights as a human being, the right to express your thoughts, in freedom, and as your life experience has formed them.

As far as orthodoxy is concerned, your Bishop should have known that freedom of conscience has always been defended in the Church. In the Decrees and Declarations of Vatican Council II, there is a document entitled “Declaration of Religious Freedom.” Paraphrasing from the document: ‘No one should ever be forced to act in a way that is contrary to his or her beliefs. No one is to be forced by other individuals, by social groups or by any other human power, to act against those rights. This right should be written into civil law as a basic human right everywhere on earth.’except in your diocese—and many others.

As experienced by many people, many women, and by you, Ruth, Primacy of Conscience is rarely preached by the hierarchy, and seldom if ever defended as a God-given right.

Our Church leaders preach a gospel of social justice, but always for the vast multitude, nameless and faceless. They preach for the people “out there.” It certainly is not applied to those who work within the Church---for those who have names and faces. It is not for the people who give so much of their time, energy, love and life to their ministries. For people like you, Ruth, there is none of that Justice that the Church preaches and proclaims so proudly, and practices so poorly. That is why church teaching on social justice rings hollow; It is not practiced at home.

Unlike your Bishop, Ruth, I read your thesis completely and I also noted your sources. I do not believe that your Bishop fired you on the basis on the thesis. The ideas you expressed did not spring up there a week ago Thursday, nor in 2003 when you submitted your work to St. Francis Seminary. The expressed concepts have been spoken in the Church for many years. And unless Bishop Morlino is a mental and theological Rip Van Winkle (asleep for 25 years) he has heard them before. The people who wrote the books and articles that you used for sources are theologians and scripture scholars who have not been silenced by the Church---they are still writing books. Elizabeth A. Johnson (one of the authors you used for source material) just completed another book before the end of 2008.

Instead, Ruth, your Bishop was prompted by frightened people (from your parish?) who have heard you speak or express comments that startled them, that shook their beliefs about God and how they think about God.

You wrote that, “the very celebration that invites us into communion with God and one another is adulterated with exclusive language.” These are scary words, terrifying ideas for those who want to cling to certitude and find security in conformism. Your anonymous ‘spies’ are fear-full.
They cannot control the events of their world, their nation, their economy, their city, and their front street, maybe not even in their families. But by golly, they will do all that they can to control superficial beliefs to which they have clung all of their lives, never having grown beyond conventional wisdom.

There is a sense of security in being a conformist—albeit a false one. Your pastor listened to these people and so did your Bishop, mistaking conformity with orthodoxy. The very concept of describing God as a woman, of using feminine words to describe God threatens the male chauvinistic model of hierarchical Church. God couldn’t possibly have feminine attributes! Not when the Church, whose leadership is comprised of men who use only masculine terms to describe God, tells us that the only correct pronoun to use in speaking of God is HE!

But the language that we use over and over again reveals our deepest held beliefs, values, and working principles. Ruth, as you have believed, written, and experienced it; Our Church does not value women very much. They can clean the church, cook for church dinners, decorate the church, keep house, mother children, visit the sick, and teach---but not be Church leaders. The Hierarchy does not view women’s ideas, experiences, their hopes and dreams as being as valuable as men’s. We certainly saw this in Africa as the Pope visited the bishops, priests, and leaders of the Muslims. He spoke about women’s rights but did not even consider speaking to the women, to the women who work in the parish churches, or to the women who are consecrated religious. After all, who are women?

Ruth, you ideas are considered dangerous by the head of your diocese, whose leadership style is replete with paranoia, is reactionary, and is adversarial. He apparently believes that acting as a bully is part and parcel of his God bestowed authority as an ecclesial leader. He is a pathetic example of the type of leadership that Jesus DID NOT encourage in his apostles. “Do not be as the great ones of the earth who lord it over those assigned to them….”

The ecclesial environment in your diocese is not peaceful, just, or a place for creative energizing. But it is selective, exclusive, and filled with suspicion. And women who are educated, who think, who act, who have the courage to believe that God can be proclaimed in a new way---are considered most dangerous.

Yet, in spite of all the degradation foisted upon women over the centuries, in the name of God, your paper concludes with the hope that women, women like you, Ruth, “will (continue to) expose the incongruity between what the Church says and what it does, and challenge it to take the next step to embrace the full dignity of all people.”

Ruth, never lose hope! Never lose hope for the future, because if hope for the future is lost, there will be no effort, no energy to do the hard work of the present, now.

May God, SHE WHO IS, be your support, your Mother, your Comfort, your Courage in the days, months and years ahead.

Love,
John Chuchman, MA
Pastoral Bereavement Educator and Companion
(Published with John Chuchman's permission)
poetman@torchlake.com and www.torchlake.com/poetman

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat

Today let us continue our reflections and prayer and focus on Joan of Arc as one of our great saints. Here is an intercession that I found in Joan Chittister's book, Life Ablaze, A Woman's Novena. (pg. 13)
"God of Strength, may the spirit of fortitude that filled Joan of Arc fill the women [and men] of our day as well so that your will may come to pass whatever the situation and wherever the evil that seeks to deter it. Give us the courage to persist in the face of defeat and to continue in the face of weariness so that what you will for creation may, in the end, triumph over lesser goals."
Please enjoy this contemplative piece of music, and may the grace and love of our Creator God inspire you and our bishops elect with the same courage of Joan of Arc. Amen.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dtu2h-BROHQ&feature=related
Blessings and Light,
Jim Lauder
RCWP Canada West

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat

Today let us continue our reflections and prayer and focus on Joan of Arc as one of our great saints. Here is an intercession that I found in Joan Chittister's book, Life Ablaze, A Woman's Novena. (pg. 13)
"God of Strength, may the spirit of fortitude that filled Joan of Arc fill the women [and men] of our day as well so that your will may come to pass whatever the situation and wherever the evil that seeks to deter it. Give us the courage to persist in the face of defeat and to continue in the face of weariness so that what you will for creation may, in the end, triumph over lesser goals."
Please enjoy this contemplative piece of music, and may the grace and love of our Creator God inspire you and our bishops elect with the same courage of Joan of Arc. Amen.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dtu2h-BROHQ&feature=related
Blessings and Light,
Jim Lauder
RCWP Canada West

Monday, March 23, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat

To my sisters and brothers, as we continue our reflections, prayers and blessings in our Cloud of Witness I am honored to offer you some history of a most important saint, St. Joan of Arc. Joan of Arc was steadfast in her belief in her calling and she endured betrayal from clergy, coercion, and intimidation as well, that culminated in her most horrible death. Her story, reminds me that most of us in our communities have experienced forms of intimidation, rejection and certainly a great deal of mocking, but thankfully not horrible deaths! I believe Joan of Arc is an example of a courageous woman so resolute in her faith that we have much to learn from her.
Here is an overview of herstory.

“St. Joan of Arc was born at Domrémy, France circa 6 January 1412. Citing a mandate from God to drive the English out of France, she was eventually given an escort to bring her before Charles of Ponthieu (later known as King Charles VII). After gaining the approval of the Church scholars at Poitiers in March of 1429, she was granted titular command of an army which quickly lifted the siege of Orléans on 8 May 1429, captured Jargeau, Meung-sur-Loire, and Beaugency in mid-June, and defeated an English army at Patay on June 18. After accepting the surrender of the city of Troyes and other towns, the army escorted Charles to the city of Rheims for his coronation on July 17. An unsuccessful attack was made on Paris on September 8, followed by the successful capture of St-Pierre-le-Moutier on November 4. As a reward for her service, Charles VII granted her noble status along with her family on 29 December 1429. She returned to the field the following year, despite predicting her own defeat. Captured at Compiègne on 23 May 1430 and transferred to the English, she was placed on trial in Rouen by a selected group of pro-English clergy, many of whom nevertheless had to be coerced into voting for a guilty verdict. Convicted and executed on 30 May 1431, she was subsequently declared innocent by an Inquisitorial court on 7 July 1456 after a lengthy re-trial process which was initiated shortly after the English were finally driven from Rouen, thereby allowing access to the documents and witnesses associated with her trial. The presiding Inquisitor, Jean Bréhal, ruled that the original trial had been tainted by fraud, illegal procedures, and intimidation of both the defendant and many of the clergy who had taken part in the trial, and she was therefore described as a martyr by the Inquisitor. After the usual lengthy delay associated with the sluggish process of canonization, she was beatified on April 11, 1909 and canonized as a saint on 16 May 1920.”
http://www.joanofarc.info/


One of St. Joan’s replies to the ecclesiastical judges of Rouen:
"Everything I have said or done is in the hands of God. I commit myself to Him! I certify to you that I would do or say nothing against the Christian faith." Virginia Frohlick stjoan@nmia.com

A Prayer for Bishop Elect Joan Houk
Creator God we give you thanks for Joan, a woman of great courage, compassion and dignity called to be a bishop in our prophetic community. Keep her strong and give her every grace as she continues to offer her many gifts in service to all the people of God. Like St. Joan she has endured much, and as a result held firm in her faith and determination when she said, “we need to take a stand for women” who “are the image of God”. She said with conviction around the time of her ordination, “this is really why I have to do what I am doing.”
During this most sacred season of Lent help us remain firm in our faith and resolve to endure the challenges before us, as we like Joan Houk lead with boldness, not with blood and sword, but with love, non-violence and compassion in service to the all the People of God. Amen
Please enjoy this lovely ballad that honors Joan of Arc and also reminds us of the courage and leadership of Joan Hoak.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHcSxeVFAPE
Blessings and light to you Joan, and all our sisters and brothers on the Holy Road.
Jim Lauder, RCWP Canada West

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Report from Janice Sevre-Duszynska-United Nations 53rd Session of the Commission on the Status of Women- March 2-13, 2009


Janice Sevre Duszynska's ordination to the priesthood on
Aug. 9, 2009 in Lexington, Kentucky, USA
Link to interview with Janice Sevre-Duszynska on radio;
http://www.weku.fm/tib.htm

Dear Community,

Finally a chance to reflect about the UN experience (53rd session of the Commission on the Status of Women - March 2-13, 2009). Dorothy Irvin and I were designated reps of St. Joan's International Alliance, a 98-year old Catholic feminist group. There were 2,000 registered participants and 5,000 gave input into the process.

The primary topic was "equal sharing of responsibilities between women and men, including caregiving within the context of HIV/AIDS."

We attended meetings of the CSW in which statements were given by the 45-member states that are part of the Commission as well as many parallel events held across the street at the Church Center. The latter were informative talks given by permanent missions at the UN as well as NGO organizations from around the world. Some of the talks we attended included the relationship between religion and reproductive rights, disarmament, research on HIV/AIDS, caregiving in the context of HIV/AIDs, gender equality, preventing violence against women, human trafficing and engaging men in sharing responsibility. What I want to emphasize is that many NGOs (women and men) are making the connections between sexism and religion and violence.

It was important to attend morning briefings, NGO caucuses and evening coordinating caucuses. Our days started very early and ended quite late. We organized and reviewed our efforts during our morning conversation on the bus, sometimes at lunch at the UN or at dinner.

Each day during the session, I gave out and posted information about RCWP and our book, the Fact Sheet on Women's Ordination and Top Ten 10 reasons to Ordain Women from Women's Ordination Conference (WOC), the postcards in which people pledge not to contribute another dollar to our Church until it ordains women and the address list for Church leaders. While I am familiar with the UN's legal efforts to promote women's rights as human rights and have had discussions about it over the years, the article by Kate Childs Graham in WOC's latest New Women/New Church about women's ordination, gender equality and international law was helpful as a summary of the process. RCWP Michele Birch Conery has also followed the advancement of gender equality and universal rights at the UN and is knowledgeable about the connections. Archaeologist and theologian Dorothy Irvin, a longtime member of St. Joan's International Alliance -- which has had NGO status at the UN since 1951 -- has repeatedly talked about the importance of women's groups to become NGOs at the UN to challenge the Vatican's discriminatory practices against the ordination of women and other critical issues affecting women, children and men.

Whenever the opportunity arose, I took the mike to speak about the movement. The response was enthusiastic. People clapped, some hugged me and asked for material -- which I always carried with me. (I made copies several times). When the women at the Latin American caucus did not show up, I started talking about the movement to the women who were gathering. They told me to take the mike. I spoke for about 10 minutes, answered a couple of questions and they all wanted the handouts.

At the Sunday Ecumenical Church service I waited until after the women who were scheduled to tell their stories had finished. Then before the song, "We got big ovaries," I hurried up to the front, took the mike, asked forgiveness for my big ovaries, and told the people gathered that I was an ordained RCWP and that the movement for women priests in the Roman Catholic Church had begun. I kept it short; people clapped enthusiastically and many asked for information. At the reception I walked around to chat and give out information. The women were eager to talk about our church and RCWP, ask questions and take the handouts.

On two occasions two different African women told me I was not a Roman Catholic because I was not following the Pope. I said I was not following the Pope because he does not follow Jesus. I also talked with a couple of women from Europe who asked why I would want to be a priest in the present Church. I explained to them that our movement didn't just add women and stir but rather that we incorporated the reforms we had talked about for so many years: We don't take vows of obedience to a bishop like male priests do but rather try to live with an informed conscience. We practice a servant priesthood (not a cult); we are worker priests. All are welcome at our table. We are a discipleship of equals and make our decisions in a circle. We are not a hierarchy.

I met reps from the School Sisters of Notre Dame, the Maryknolls, Sisters of the Good Shepherd, The Grail, and others. We exchanged email addresses with many NGOs At lunch we talked with UN government employees from all over the world..

Julianne from Belgium (originally from Belgian Congo) arrived for the second week. She will be the new president of St. Joan's International Alliance. She has prior experience with the UN at conferences in Geneva and in New York. She talked about what has been happening over the years in the Congo, the Sudan and elsewhere in Africa. She and a number of the European women are in in communication with African-based NGOs and are aware of what is happening to the people at the grassroots level. As she talked I asked myself why we in the U.S. are not as in touch with what is happening with our South American sisters and brothers.

Dorothy, Julianne and I held a preliminary caucus and then a regular one during the second week entitled "Religions (starting with your own) and Violence Against Women." We had a good gathering for each session: Presbyterians, Anglicans, Methodists, Roman Catholics and others. We shared stories and they expressed their support for RCWP. We were interviewed by UN Radio.

Dorothy and I learned the CSW process by asking questions and going through the experience as we were unable to be at the March 1st Orientation Day, which some of the women attended. Next year we will be better prepared to do advocacy with the U.S. Caucus as well as work on the draft outcomes document. In its final form, it is called the Agreed Conclusions and contains a set of recommendations for Governments, intergovernmental bodies, civil society actors and relevant stakesholders to be implemented at the international, national, regional and local levels. I hope others from our community will be with us at the next session in March 2010. To acquaint yourself with this process, visit
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/53sess.htm .

By the way, on the first day I collected many UN publications which have the latest research on women's issues.These were offered to us free. I got a box, filled it up and mailed it home from the U.S. Post Office at the UN. These documents will be useful as references.

While I did not get to read my 3-minute statement to the entire CSW Commission, I did read it to several hundred NGO delegates at our morning briefing. They clapped and came up for copies of the statement which follows. Another version is up on the WEKU. FM website for Women's History month and their "This I believe" program. Bridget Mary's essay is also up on their website.

Since he was out of the country, I did not meet Miguel d'Escoto, friend of Roy Bourgeois', suspended Maryknoll priest and President of the UN General Assembly. However, I did make contact with his assistant and had delivered to him a letter for d'Escoto with our various materials in the envelope, including SOA Watch's newspaper, "Presente." On p. 14 Roy speaks to the people of the SOA Watch Movement about his trouble with the Vatican and his support for women priests -- which he says is as important to him as closing the School of the Americas.

Many thanks to Gabriella Velardi Ward for all of her thoughtfulness. She introduced us to her community at a Saturday workshop she invited Dorothy and me to give. Dorothy showed photos on her computer from her calendars and spoke about the archaeological evidence for women's leadership in our church and I talked about my journey to the priesthood. Dorothy has asked Gabriella to be the St. Joan's rep in New York and she has accepted. This means she will be able to attend monthly meetings at the UN and affect the Economic and Security Council. This is an important opening for us.

Before I arrived in New York, I was in correspondence with Catholics for Choice and received an informative and useful press release from their president, Jon O'Brien. In it he points out the Holy See's status at the UN as a Non-member State Permanent Observer and how "the Holy See's claims to statehood change depending on the circumstances." (See O'Brien's essay on Bridget Mary's blog for further information especially in regard to the sex abuse cases in the United States). "This status allow the Holy See to have some state privileges at the UN, such as being able to speak and vote at UN conferences. No other religious body is granted this elevated status; instead other religious bodies participate at the UN as nongovernmental organizations."

What this means, as we well know, is that the hierarchy represents its views at the UN which do not reflect the views of the world's billion-plus Catholics. Said O'Brien: "The Holy See's opposition to policies that promote reproductive health, including especially its opposition to the use of condoms to prevent the spread of HIV, overshadows the work that many members of the church do. The impact of these policies is enhanced by the political role that the Holy See plays in the world."

I made a point of sitting in the Holy See's seat in Conference Room 2 at the UN, where we gathered for morning briefings. While in the General Assembly, I also took note of their seat. Plenty of thoughts ran through my mind, especially the figure that came up often in discussions of the predicted 25 million African children with HIV/AIDS by 2015.

O'Brien calls for the "United Nations and other bodies to start treating the Vatican for what it is: the government of a religious institution."

As we were working on the draft outcome document, I read two paragraphs that were added by the Holy See. That day at the meeting of the U.S. Caucus I took the mike, identified myself as an RCWP and said that the Holy See does not speak for Roman Catholic women...we speak for ourselves. To be emphatic I asked a question: "Isn't this the 53rd Session of the Commisssion on the Status of Women"?

I strongly urge our community to apply for NGO status. (I am willing to do the paperwork). Our presence and voice at the UN is crucial to connect the dots for women's leadership in our Church and to end the discrimination of the Vatican. The 1979 Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and the Beijing Platform for Action are laws which connect women's decision-making and leadership as human rights issues.The latter also points out the horrific consequences of patriarchal religions that affect us all:

"Religion, spirituality, and belief lay a central role in the lives of millions of women and men...The right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religions is inalienable and must be universally enjoyed...However, it is acknowledge that any form of extremism may have a negative impact on women and can lead to violence and discrimination."

What is crucial now is to contact our senators and representatives to get CEDAW passed. Only eight of the 192 UN member states have not ratified CEDAW, including the U.S. We must campaign for this important ratification.

Peace and All Blessings,
Janice

------
Here is the statement I read at the UN. The first web publication of this statement adapted for a general audience can be found at http://www.weku.fm/tib.htm as part of Women's History Month, "This I believe" program.

The connections between sexism in the Roman Catholic Church and violence in our world.

We are the people of God. However, if you are a Roman Catholic woman, the Mystery of God never looks like you: "He" doesn't have a body like yours. "He" doesn't give birth or breastfeed. God is always referred to as "He", "Him" or "Father". The people who interpret what "He" is about -- who celebrate the sacraments -- who interpret the meaning of the Gospels and who preach the Word from the altar, are males.

As Mary Daly said: "If God is male, male is God." The results: Men become empowered, women marginalized and oppressed. Dominance and militarism prevail and our world community -- of women, children and men -- suffers.

Although theologians say we have had women priests, deacons and bishops through the 12th century, the Vatican says if we are women, we do not and cannot image the Sacred -- the imago Dei -- on the altar. Yet our world cries out for us women to interpret the meaning and significance of the Gospels from our everyday lives -- from our womanly living and dying.

Sexism, like racism, is immoral.

In the sinfully sexist Roman Catholic Church, the voices of women are not named. Therefore, our needs are not heard and the world suffers.

We women of Saint Joan's International Alliance say here today that the Roman Catholic Church, the men at the Vatican and our male bishops do not speak for Roman Catholic women -- or any women.

We speak for ourselves. We are making the connections between sexism and religion. Sexism and militarism. Sexism and nationalism. Sexism and racism. Sexism and colonialism. Sexism and capitalism. Sexism and homophobia. Sexism and disrespect for Mother Earth. Sexism and violence of all kinds.

We as women choose to live with an informed conscience and choose to control our own bodies.

How can we counter patriarchal religions, including the Roman Catholic Church?

We need our children -- including our boys -- to be taught in schools every day from kindergarten on, in classes that teach non-violence, mediation, equality, and sexual responsibility as well as parenting.

For men to mature spiritually into adulthood, we need media campaigns to teach equality, shared responsibility and decision making between women and men, and people in relationships.

The 1979 UN Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, especially Articles 5 and 7, grants women equality in decision-making and leadership of governmental bodies and non-governmental orgnizations. I ask all of you who work here at the UN to help us. Women's freedom and women priests are a human rights issue.

My name is Janice and I am an ordained Roman Catholic Womanpriest.

http://www.romancatholicwomenpriests.org/

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat

Today, with our Celtic Pilgrimage we have words with a few tangents of consideration related in the way of conrete side stories. One is a story told me by this compassionate man who contributes our "Anam Chara" reflections He is currently an important teacher for us in our RCWP Canada West and one with us in our Cloud of Witnesses initiative for you.

A former Oblate, he served in the far northern regions of British Columbia, in icy outposts
you could say and, if you examine your map of Canada, you should look for Fort St. James and Fort McMurray but I know that he was in further isolated places, "far from bishops" he has been known to repeat.. When he says that, he means that he had to invent and to do what was best in the situations with the People of God, mostly aboriginals. I atttribute his free spirit and forward looking vision of today as having first arisen from the way he engaged with people who especially required respect and adaptation to their cultures. He was that kind of pastor and it took him far ahead of his times and the times elsewhere even though to all appearances, certainly in urban areas, all would have seemed backwards.

He was just off in "the mssions" others might say. When we think of it, here in BC , just about everywhere except Vancouver and Victoria is still "the missions" in many respects because of distances, scattered resources, rural populations, but this does not mean backwardness in thought and practice, necessarily. Certainly less so in today's advancing technologically globally networked world.

I asked him what Sacrament of Penance was like for him prior to Vatican 2 and then how he experienced the shifts and changes and how he now understands Sacrament of Reconciliation?

"I sat on a sled in a snowbank," he replied. regarding the first part of my question. Then he told the story about how he sat there with his back to the building that was the Church. No pews. Nothing in it really and the people sat on the floor on cedar branches.

The people were very sensitive about respectful approach but they were not secretive. They liked to speak face to face so there was nothing about being in a shut box confessional that they would have appreciated or accepted.

So there Chris waited, in the snowbank, for the penitents to approach one by one without being seen but then they would come in front of him and they would have their conversastion of the Sacrament of Penance,
face to face.

I found this an incredible story that told me about the compassionate heart of this priest and his understanding of the necessity of respecting and honoring, of validating his congregants personally within their cultural context.I He also told me of the tenacity of the aboriginal people in expressing their needs and expecting that they would be honored.
As we know, often they were not, but that is not this story.

In other stories he tells, Chris describes his rush and dash in travel much as in the Acts of the Apostles. He traveled by boat or unlke Paul ,by plane as he moved amongst mission bases. His journeys were no less dangerous.--just in case we think St. Paul's acts in his time were only for the early Christian communities..

Today Chris says, just say I am Chris Diamond from Cobble Hill.. But signifigantly for our purposes he is Irish to the core .Now he lives in a sizeable home pressed against a mountain high enough to be eye level with the eagles of our Vancouver Island. Right now it is mating season and the eaglet eggs should be hatching around April 22nd. Chris and his spouse Naomi would see all fo this seasonal activity of nature. Across most of the front of their home they have panel windows stretched high and wide.

They are blessed by the eagles' flights right in front of them or from nearby, daily. and in all seasons..

What I am tellling you is signifigant for another reason. We are in the greening season as we have noted regarding Hidelgard of Bingen and Brigit of Kildaire and now Rose Mewhort recently completed a painting of the eagles in their nesting with their nestlings and we will be sending it to you soon as a jpeg.

Here is what Chris wrote me for Anam Cara (Chara) as I requested whether he would share his understanding with some reference to the recently deceased and well known and loved Irish priest John O'Donohue.

Chris writes:

The Anam chara has a long history, so long, in fact, that it has given rise to mystical,
mythical. romantic, and I'm sure spurious explanations of its origins. Literally,
it means Soul Friend and it indicates the
interconnectedness of life that played a major
role in the old pre-christian and christian Gaelic outlook on life. Today it is used by members of serious spiritual associations and by quacks as well; its use received a great impetus from Joh O'Donohue's book by that name.

(People often do no notice the dot over the C in the title indicated in modern spelling buy the 'h' after the C which softens the pronunciation
from the hard 'k' to the throaty 'ch' sound).

O'Donohue rightly explains "The Celtic mind was not burdened by dualism It did not separate what belongs together. The Celtic
imagination articulates the inner friendship that embraces Nature, diviniity, the underworld, and human world as one. The dualism that separates the visible from the invisible, time from eternity, the human from the divine, was totally foreign to them.
Their sense of ontological friendship yielded
a world of experience imbued with a rich texture of otherness, ambivalence, symbolism, and imagination. For our sore and tormented separation, the possibility of this imagination and unifying friendship is the
Celtic gift...(which finds its inspiration in the sublime notion of the anam c(h)ara."

A soul friend inspires creative love in the other and acknowledges the innate dignity of each person. There is no shame in its honour system; imagination and mystgery are other ways of knowing the previously unknown:
"Your forgotten or neglected inner wealth begins to reveal itself. You comne home to yourself and learn to rest within...(and ) bring
out the mystery of the inner landscape...Time is eternity living dangerously."

O'Donohue quotes from "The Bright Field" by Welsh poet R.S.Thomas" "Life is not hurrying/on to a receding future nor hankering after/an imagined past. It is the turning/aside like Moses to the miracle/ of the lit bush."

"Friendship is the naure of God. The christian conept of Gld as Trinnity is the most usblime articulateion of otherness and intimacy, an eternal interflow of freindship. Jesus is the secret anam chara of everuy indivicual."

With your anam chara you will go beyond religious experiences to the divinity of firiendship. to the koinonia that Paul and John speak of in their understanding of God, Jesus , and all of us,
together.

Prayer:
Today I ask our Godde that in RCWP international, we recognize each other for the valildity of our deep anam chara relationship with Jesus

Spirit Holy Wisdom Sophia your who infill us within the Divine in the Universe Divine in the universe bring us more deeply into the soul space of anam chara. Gift us with such blessings of soul mate friendship with each other as we build our community and prepare futher for how we will emerge with our communities we astor and serve.

Spirit Holy, light our imaginations and our trust of symbolism anew while integrating the gifts of our minds and our knowledge with our hearts.

We ask this in the name of our Loving Mother and Father God, of Jesus our Brother, and of
Holy Spirit Wisdom Sophia.

RCWP-Canada
Chris Diamond of Cobble Hill
Michele Birch-Conery of Parksville
Rose Mewhort of Galiano Island
and the Eagles of the West Coast
who know no borders

Friday, March 20, 2009

Rome Catholic Church faces challenges in Africa -Roman Catholic Womenpriests offer hope for church renewal



In a report on the state of the Roman Catholic Church in Africa, men who have affairs and father children return to active ministry while nuns are thrown out of their orders. This is yet another example of the institutional Roman Catholic church's double standard, and hostility toward women. Priests receive a slap on the wrist and nuns are shown the door. Sounds like patriarchy's centuries old deeply-embedded hatred of women continues to reign in the Roman Catholic church . Shame on the hierarchy for unjust treatment of women! Jesus who called women and men to be disciples and partners, equals in proclaiming the good news of the Gospel, would be angry at such despicable treatment of women in our contemporary church. Like Jesus who cleansed the Temple and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, we, the community of believers, are called to rid the church of outdated clerical structures that foster sexism. Pope Benedict could begin by asking forgiveness from women who have been treated so shabbily by church leaders, and follow it up with a sincere repentance that restores Jesus' vision and the church's ancient tradition of partnership and equality for women, including ordination to a renewed priestly ministry.

The good news is that Roman Catholic Womenpriests is now a reality. We are following the example of Mary, Magdalene, Phoebe, Junia and the twelve hundred year tradition of women priests in the church. The people are calling forth women to serve in a renewed priestly ministry. Find our more about this vibrant new movement that is renewing the Catholic Church in grassroots communities in our book "Women Find a Way" and by visiting our website;
Bridget Mary Meehan
Roman Catholic Womenpriest

EXCERPT: "Priests having affairs is rampant in the church" in South Africa, said Velesiwe Mkwanazi, a former Catholic lay leader who co-founded Women Ordination South Africa and says she knows two priests with children."Parishioners blame women, say we seduce the priests, but we are brought up to respect and honor men, and women can't say no to a priest who is held up to us as a fount of knowledge in daily communication with God," she said.Co-founder Dina Cormick said priests who are caught having affairs are sent on retreats or moved to other parishes while nuns caught in sexual liaisons with priests are forced to leave their orders.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Pope Benedict, Listen to Women in Africa, Support Condom Use to Prevent AIDS

Press Release
March 18, 2009
Media Contact: Bridget Mary Meehan
703-505-0004

Roman Catholic Womenpriests call on Pope Benedict to reflect the compassion of Jesus in the Gospels, by supporting condom use to prevent the spread of AIDS in Africa.

The pope, like Jesus, the Good Shepherd, must listen to AIDS victims, especially innocent women. As we know, married women and their children are often the victims of this tragedy. These women did not have a choice, and could not have refused sexual relations.

While it is true that the Roman Catholic Church is actively ministering to AIDS victims in Africa and elsewhere, the institutional church 's prohibition against condoms puts lives needlessly at risk. If we ask ourselves, what would Christ do in this situation ? We might recall that in the Gospel, Jesus chastised religious authorities who made rules that put unfair burdens on God's people. Most contemporary Catholics reflect Christ's wisdom in their attitudes to church rules today. Recent worldwide polls report that Catholics support condoms to prevent AIDS. Now is the time for the Roman Catholic church to embrace the vision of fullness of life and justice at the heart of the Gospel by taking realistic steps to help prevent the spread of AIDS by reversing the ban on condom use.

The Pope is Wrong on Condoms/Media Release/Catholics for Choice

For Immediate ReleaseMarch 17, 2009
Media Contact:David Nolan+1 (202) 986-6093
www.catholicsforchoice.org

The Pope Is Wrong on Condoms

Jon O'Brien, president of Catholics for Choice, issued a response to Pope Benedict's statement on condom use."As the pope traveled to Africa, he chose this moment to make what appears to be his first unequivocal statement opposing condom use. In an interview on the papal plane to Cameroon, the pope acknowledged the HIV/AIDS crisis but claimed that the distribution of condoms would not resolve the problem. In fact, he said, condom use "increases the problem.""The pope will find that few Catholics and even fewer medical personnel agree with his stance. Several bishops in Africa, including especially Bishop Kevin Dowling of Rustenburg in South Africa, have been outspoken in their support of the use of condoms. Anecdotal evidence also suggests that many people who work with Catholic relief agencies distribute condoms to those at risk of infection."While condoms are not a panacea for the problem, they are a critical part of the campaign to reduce the impact of the virus. Medical experts agree that the condom is a life-saving device: it is highly effective in preventing HIV transmission if used correctly and consistently, and is the best current method of HIV prevention for those who are sexually active and at risk."For the Catholic hierarchy to deny the role that condoms play in preventing the further spread of HIV is irresponsible and dangerous. Not only that, the Catholic hierarchy has lobbied governments in the global north against the inclusion of funding for condoms in development aid programs. The result is to deny the poorest of the poor in the global south the chance of protecting themselves by using condoms."According to a recent poll commissioned by Catholics for Choice, which interviewed Catholics in Ghana, Ireland, Mexico, the Philippines and the United States, support for condom use among Catholics is overwhelming. When asked if "using condoms is prolife because it helps save lives by preventing the spread of AIDS," 90% of Catholics in Mexico, 86% in Ireland, 79% in the US, 77% in the Philippines and 59% in Ghana agreed. Unfortunately, the Catholic hierarchy's position holds the most sway in the countries least able to deal economically and medically with the disease."Catholics the world over unequivocally state that using condoms is prolife and disagree with the Vatican's ban on condoms. Now is not the time for the pope to be dismissing the importance of condom use. As he travels to Africa, he will face the realities of the epidemic. Let us hope and pray that he reconsiders and reverses his position, and in doing so, adopts the truly prolife position that ordinary Catholics have already embraced: using condoms saves lives."

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat/St. Brigit of Kildare


For winter's rains and ruins are over,
And all the season of snows and sins;
The days dividing lover and lover,
The light that loses, the night that wins;
And time remembered is grief forgotten,
And frosts are slain and flowers begotten,
And in green underwood and cover,Blossom by blossom the spring begins.
Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837–1909)
Atalanta in Calydon (1865)

Dear Friends of RCWP USA,
We are continuing to pray for all of you as the episcopal ordinations draw ever closer, and today we do so in the spirit of the Celts, on this feast day of St. Patrick. This feast of all things green also brings to mind our Wisdom Sister, St. Brigid of Kildare (whose feast day was Feb. 1), and indeed another Sister in Spirit/Sister of the Green, Hildegard, and the beautiful blessing from Patricia a couple of weeks ago.
We would also like to begin, this week, to pray for each of the bishops-elect individually, as well as collectively, so today I offer this "witness prayer" in particular honour and upholding of Bridget Mary, who shares the heritage as well as the courage and wisdom and industry of her namesake, St. Brigid of Kildare.

PRAYER TO ST. BRIGID OF KILDARE:
Brigidine Prayer for Peace Brigid,You were a woman of peace,You brought harmony where there was conflict.You brought light to the darkness.You brought hope to the downcast.May the mantle of your peaceCover those who are troubled and anxious,And may peace be firmly rooted in our heartsAnd in our world.Inspire us to act justly and to reverenceAll God has made.Brigid, you were a voice for the woundedAnd the weary,Strengthen what is weak within us,Calm us into a quietness that healsAnd listens.May we grow each day into greaterWholeness in mind, body and spirit.Amen. (Source: prayer card from the Brigidine nuns of Kildare.)

Green is often used to represent the fourth chakra, the chakra which hums around the human heart, and it is in the heart where, it is said, heaven and earth meet. In that coming together of matter and spirit, divine and human, Love is created and set free, to manifest inwardly and outwardly, in beauty, power and infinite possibilities. Green is also the colour of the power and delight of Nature, the natural world, a world of instinct and intuition, of creaturely kinship and interdependence. Green is the colour sunlight becomes once it has passed through plant matter with its gifts of warmth and light.
Bridget Mary, may the vigour and wisdom of St. Brigid pour through you with holy abandon! May you be strengthened and guided by the Spirit's movement within your being every step of the way, with every turn of the heel, as every new note in the dance comes to life; may the gifts of the holy ground upon which you are walking and dancing and praying grow up around you in abundance and offer themselves for your ministry.
Bridget Mary, Joan, Andrea and Regina, we bless you and claim you as leaders in our dreaming/visioning/caring/enacting community of God's renewing presence on Earth. As true community, we see ourselves in you, and you in us.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
I offer now a scripture meditation, if you like -- on one of the following passages (or any other). A way of doing so would be to begin by lighting a candle and praying using Celtic author J. Philip Newell's language:

"I light a light
in the name of God who creates life,
in the name of the Saviour who loves life,
in the name of the Spirit who is the fire of life."
1. Lead me in your truth and teach me,
for you are the God of my salvation. (Psalm 25:5)
or
2. Jesus said: 'Out of your heart shall flow rivers of living water.' (John 7:38)
or
3. With my whole heart I seek you O God; I treasure your word in my heart. (Ps. 119:10-11)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
In closing, let us celebrate the gifts of Green-ness and verdancy and Springtime, of Ireland, of St. Brigid and St. Patrick, and of Bridget Mary, and all the bishops-elect. May each of you, in your giftedness and uniqueness, be blessed with courage and confidence as you walk the path the Spirit of New Life is laying out before you. May you know how much you are valued by all whom you shall guide and all whose needs shall guide you in your pastoring. May the God of Audacious and Visionary Loving inspire your minds, encourage your hearts, and give you the energy of the surging Spring-time creeks, that you might take your new place, with alacrity and joy, in our growing community of Friends of God and Prophets. Amen.

Thank you, all, for your brave coming-forth!
I offer here, in honour and protection of all the current bishops and the bishops elect, an excerpt from the well-known

prayer, the St. Patrick's Breastplate:
[Note: Instead of "I bind to myself today..." some versions read, "I arise today through..."]
I bind to myself todayThe strong virtue of the Invocation of the Trinity:I believe the Trinity in the UnityThe Creator of the Universe..I bind to myself todayThe power of Heaven,The light of the sun,The brightness of the moon,The splendour of fire,The flashing of lightning,The swiftness of wind,The depth of sea,The stability of earth,The compactness of rocks.I bind to myself todayGod's Power to guide me,God's Might to uphold me,God's Wisdom to teach me,God's Eye to watch over me,God's Ear to hear me,God's Word to give me speech,God's Hand to guide me,God's Way to lie before me,God's Shield to shelter me,God's Host to secure me...I invoke today all these virtuesAgainst every hostile merciless powerWhich may assail my body and my soul...Christ with me, Christ before me,Christ behind me, Christ within me,Christ beneath me, Christ above me,Christ at my right, Christ at my left...Christ in the heart of everyone who thinks of me,Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks to me,Christ in every eye that sees me,Christ in every ear that hears me.
I arise today
Through a mighty strength, the invocation of the Trinity,
Through a belief in the Threeness
Through confession of the Oneness
Of the Creator of Creation.
Amen.
Monica Kilburn, Calgary, Canada

Monday, March 16, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat

Today we conclude considerations about St. Katherine Drexel racial justice worker and servant to the poor who also founded the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament.

As a foundress building a new community ,she had words to say that are very profound for us. In terms of her powers of discernment and visioning capacities she has been described as having a joyous spirit with an incisive intellect . She held these powers within the Light of the Holy Spirit and so found the way through or around difficulties such that her work and that of her community with her advanced.

She herself speaks about the difficulties that can come from the outside to thwart the progress or a new work and a founding organization. Here is a quote from THE PEOPLE'S COMPANION BREVIARY FOR March 3, HER FEAST DAY. Consuela Marie Duffy, SBS quotes from Katharine's
retreat notes as follows:

Resolve: Generously with no half -hearted
dread of the opinions of church and [men
or women] to manifest my mission.
To speak only and when it pleases God;
but to lose no opportunity of speaking
before priests and beareded men.
Manifest yourself. You have no time to
occupy your thoughts with that
complacency or consideration of what
others will think. Your business is simply
"What will God think?"(246)

In RCWP, we have many instances where we have to make bold decisions as though called in the moment over against obstacles that can thwart our progress. But we are also not just a single foundress or foundeer. We are already a community of persons in founding time so that much of our advancement is also dependant on communal discernment and understanding and action in solidarity as well as autonomously. What a happy mix in our new model even as we are exploring and just getting the hang of it for ourselves and with the people we serve.

Reference
PEOPLE'S COMPANION TO THE BREVIARY. Vol. 1. Carmelites of Indianapolis, 1997.

It was Judy Lee From RCWP Southern Region who recently drew attention to
St. Katherine Drexel's extraordinary boldness, vision and success in 'manifesting' (as Katherine hereself calls it) in her call and mission.

I asked Judy how it was that she had found herself within the influence of Katherine Drexel's spirit, her spirituality. and her bold accomlishments in social justice and service to the poor. Judy contirbutes to our Cloud of Witnesses knowledge from first hand experience of this woman so recently canonized in the year 2000. A.D.

RC woman priest Judy Lee's story:

I grew up in a multicultural mostly Black,
inner-city neighborhood in NYC. I was baptized, raised and confirmed, very active in and married in a Methodist Episcopal chruch in that neighborhood. It was an anchor fo youth and the community.

Along with traditional theology, our pastors, one black and one white, embraced social gospel imperatives. I learned early that following Jesus meant serving and working for justice. It was on the cusp of the Civil Rights era and MLK Jr. spoke in another
neighborhood church setting. We were all set on fire in the experience of a God who loves justice and the poor. I began to know the Jesus of Liberation Theology as the Jesus who changed and formed our lives in our community.

While a few of the church community were not working class or poor, most were and I was one of them. All of us were inspired to achieve academically and to give back to the community. Pastor Mel, our Black pastor,
explained to me that I was like the Torjan Horse in the Helen of Troy story. My white skin
could gain me entrance where my peers could not go becaue of their dark skins. But my
solidarity with those who are poor and Black would be something that would forever give me a different persepctive to bring to the dialogue, and I must be true to it. It was a wonderful beginning in my formation. Once reaching adulthood I had a hard time finding
a church that set me on fire like that one did.

I came into the RCchurch as an adult in a Black inner-city church in Hartford. CT. The church was on the grounds of a woman's shelter where I, now a Professor of Social Work and a social worker, provided consultation and intervention at the request of its Director, Judy Beaumont, then a Benedictine sister.

There was also a Dorothy Day Catholic Worker House across the street and those residents also worked at the shelter and attended the church. There was a wonderful worker/servant priest named Father Al. I felt
that I had come home. I studied with Father Al and when I made my first "official" Communion my Pastor Mel came from California. Fr. Al invited him to the inclusive Table of Jesus and sonehow I thought that was how the church was -open and inclusive of me, of Mel, of Protestants, and other faiths as well as Catholics. I was happy.

I served by counselling parishioners with and for Father Al in 'tough' situations and by teaching teen CCD. When the time came for my confirmation, we talked about a Saint's name. Father Al sugggested Katherine for Katherine Drexel and Catherine of Siena for his mother.I was moved to accept his suggestion and then studied the lives of the K/Catherines.

I found that Mother Drexel's spirit rested on our people: the black, poor and oppressed of the world and the church. I felt her spirit rested on me as well. Despite her birth in wealth and by my very different life, we were now connected spiritually, forever.

But little did I know then that I would aslo speak back to power within the Chruch as Saint Catherine of siena did. Yes, K/Catherine is a good name for me. I bless them both.
Lee,Judy. "What Would You Like to Hear?"
E-mail to Michele Birch-Conery.
4 Mar. 2009..

Let us today bless them as they bless us and ask tha Sts Katherine Drexel and Catherine of Siena accompany us deeply and powerfully on our RCWP path and that they dwell strongly within the hearts of our Bishops elect, Bridget Mary Meehan, Joan Houk, Andrea Johnson and Regina Nicolosi.

May they dwell in the hearts of our ordaining bishops Dana, Patricia, Ida and Christine.

May they strongly indwell in us all-- women and men internationally in RCWP. May the Jesus they knew as liberating social activist be with us all. May Spirit Holy Wisdom Sophia, who infused them intimately infuse and enlighten us just us intimately.
May the penetrating power of true discernement move us forward always.

From RCWP-Canada. Europe-West and from Judy Lee RCWP USA.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Mary, Mother of Jesus Catholic Community Moves to St. Andrew Church for Eucharistic Celebrations


Pastor Phil Garrison welcomed Mary,
Mother of Jesus Catholic Community

to St. Andrew United Church of Christ
in Sarasota, Florida. Married priest
Michael Rigdon and
Roman Catholic Womanpriest
Bridget Mary Meehan presided at this
historic liturgy.



Jack Meehan led the community songs of praise
on his saxophone and trumpet.

On March 14, 2009, Mary, Mother of Jesus Catholic Community celebrated our first liturgy at 6pm at St. Andrew United Church of Christ in Sarasota, Florida. Pastor Phil Garrison warmly welcomed our community to this beautiful sanctuary. Forty-six people gathered for this historic first! Married Priest, Michael Rigdon and Roman Catholic Womanpriest, Bridget Mary Meehan presided. The community participated in a dialogue homily and recited the prayer of consecration during the Eucharistic Prayer. Jack Meehan, Bridget Mary's father, played the saxophone. We concluded our liturgy by praying for healing with two of our members who are ill.

MOVIES of Liturgy on YOUTUBE:
Links to youtube video clips of Mary, Mother of Jesus Catholic Community
historic, inclusive Catholic Mass at St. Andrew United Church of Christ.
In this clip, Pastor Phil Garrison welcomes our community to this beautiful sanctuary.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFjIHI7ODKY

Preparation of the Gifts: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBVqy37hc-s

Eucharistic Prayer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G00LMtBVlwU

Communion: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKr5FCrg7oo

Recessional: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zzq8VCmomE

Prayer and Anointing of the Sick: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OENGyGV7vcg


Roman Catholic Womenpriests: More links in major news papers on outrage over Vatican excommunication of Brazilian Mother and doctors

Excommunication of doctor and mother criticised
Irish Times - Dublin,Ireland
In a statement, the Roman Catholic Womenpriests group
called on the Vatican “to reflect the
compassion of Christ to this child, her mother and her doctors”. ...
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2009/0316/1224242907606.html

Martha y Maria: Women's Lives, Women's Rights
Blog by Anne Eggebroten
http://marthaymaria.blogspot.com/

Whom Would Jesus Excommunicate?
Thank you to Bridget Mary Meehan for this letter and
statement from Roman Catholic Womenpriests
in regard to my commentary online today at
Women's eNews, http://www.womensenews.org/,

"Vatican Expulsion Should Start Outcast Honor Roll
http://au.news.yahoo.com/a/-/world/5375029/vatican-defends-brazil-excommunication/

Major News Outlet Links: Time, NY Times, Yahoo
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1883598,00.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/08/world/europe/08vatican.html?ref=world
http://au.news.yahoo.com/a/-/world/5375029/vatican-defends-brazil-excommunication/



Bridget Mary Meehan
RCWPMedia Contact
Press Release: March 12, 2009
Media Contact: Bridget Mary Meehan
sofiabmm@aol.com 703-505-0004
For Immediate Release

Roman Catholic Womenpriests Call the Vatican to Compassion
In response to the Vatican Excommunication of Brazilian Child’s Mother and Doctors

On March 7th, 2009, Archbishop Jose Cardoso Sobrinho announced the excommunication of the mother and doctors who participated in an abortion that saved the life of a nine year old fourth grader.The 80 pound child was brutally and repeatedly raped and finally impregnated by her stepfather.

Cardinal Giovanni Battista, prefect of the Congregation for Bishops and president of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, affirmed the excommunications even though it was the doctor’s professional opinion that the pregnancy could kill the child.

Ironically, on the same day that Pope Benedict spoke about the dignity of women, these top church officials withdrew the sacraments from the child’s mother and doctors who, after all, were trying to save the child’s life while the man who violated the body and soul of a small child remains in good standing with the church.

The church had the opportunity to act in a pastoral compassionate manner. Instead, it perpetuated further violence in a family already torn apart by violence.One can only wonder how Jesus, who walked among us acquainted with grief and suffering would have acted.It was Jesus who told us to remove the beam from our eyes before we judge the actions of others. It was Jesus who directed us to forgive seventy times seven.

In the spirit of Luke 4:18 where Jesus announced his compassionate, justice-oriented ministry, Roman Catholic Womenpriests serve everyone including women and families traumatized by rape and sexual abuse with its life-long sentence of depression and anxiety.In inclusive grassroots communities we are breaking open the alabaster jars of sacramental grace united with those we serve.All are welcome always and no one is left out or sent away.There should be no such thing as excommunication in the house of God.

For many Catholics, the Eucharist is the heart of our faith.This decision made by the prelates contradicts the basic tenets of Catholic social justice teaching.This hypocrisy is the last straw. Roman Catholic Womenpriests call the Vatican to reflect the compassion of Christ to this child, her mother and her doctors.
http://www.romancatholicwomenpriests.org/

Friday, March 13, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat


Rose Mewhort

TO RCWP USA(March 13/09)

St. Katharine Drexel ( our meditation) Part 1:

Since March 3, we in Canada along with Judy Lee(USA) who first drew our attention to St Katharine Drexel , have had a few diverse conversations regarding this extraordinary American woman canonized Oct, 1, 2000 by John Paul 2.

Our 3 way conversation circled around Judy's own pastoral work and knowledge of Drexel but it was also energized by further considerations of Ruth Mewhort'sstained glasswork of the stand of trees she now calls (Paul's painting). I have kept coming back and back to it, and it has riveted me in ways I could not immeidately explain.

For me,(Michele), Ruth's stained glass artwork has strong aboriginal resonance and I feel a kinship between the omages and Katharine Drexel's pastoral work with Native American's and with the Black people. Perhaps, this resonance that has captivated me so is due to the fact that on our West Coast Islands, most of the land belongs to our first Nation's peoples and the spirits of their ancestors are everywhere in nature.

.As well, during the time of the underground railroad ,many black slaves escaped to these islands off the mainland of Canada. Indeed, I have an uncle on Saltspring Island whose ancestors were amongst these liberated people. I have 4 nieces who are black and my aunt, a Conery, who married Uncle Bob, did so when it was entirely unacceptable to marry interracially. I have another aunt who married a First Nation's man, both of them long since deceased. All of this took place out on these islands where Ruth now a painter on Galilano and a newcomer by the standards of the long living and deceased inhabitants, is picking up on what has long been here and lives in the waters, the rocks and the trees, the animal life; (nitice the whales in the stained glass working of the ocean).

So we will once again send this painting in recognition of the long journeys to freedom of our oppressed peoples Canadian and American, natives , blacks, hispanics and all those poor and dispossessed people of any race , ethnicity or gender--and worlwide, Let us remember Bishop Fresen and the justice understanding she has brought to us from Sout Afirica.

In her real life in the USA, and not imagined from Galiano Island, St. Katharine's young life prepared her for her later life's work. When I read that she was the second daughter of Francis Anthony DRexel and Hanna Langstroth, I find out only thatHannah died just over a month after Katharine's birth. This must have been signifigant in its impact on her father and the two girls who were then cared for by an aunt for 2 years.

Katharine's father re-married and so we now have the name of her step-mother Emma Bouvier Drexel who Katharine cared for in the last 3 years of mother's life until she died of cancer at the age of 21.

Katharine's father died in 1885 when Katharine was now herself 27 years old and a wealthy woman. It would seem that all family events had to transpire until she was free to follow her intensive and undeniable call to serve the aborignals she had already seen so destitute, and then later the blacks whose oppression she grieved and whose freedom she fought for.

She attended to needs , you could say, in Maslow's hierarchy. That is food and clothing came first, then schooling and all along she fought for human rights. She was a prophetic witness and justice worker well ahead of our times, and then dying herself, at the age of 97 but in retirement from her mid- 70;'s on due to debilitating heart illness.Imagine though, what she knew living from 1858 until 1955. Many of us were alive then and listening and dancing to The Platters who Rose says, also inspired her stained glass painting.

I liked the Platters version of "Trees"...
I changed the word "Poems" to paintings.

Paintings are maed by fools like me
But only god can make a tree.

Schmalze...but I like it.
(Rose)

Katharine was a benevolent woman who used her wealth to effect public change on a large scale. She started with the small country schools established on the reserves and pushed forward all the way to founding Xavier Collge, the first institute of highe learning for black people. She was a woman ahead of our later Civil Rights movement bought she fought against racial discrimation such that she could be held alongside the best(Matrin Luther King). Just a little ahead of her time we could say but such a life and what we have lived to see teaches us just who our people are in the Cloud of Witnesses. whether canonized or not
(and we question tne system of canonizastion justifiably)-. Neverhteless, they won by faith. By faith they went as far as they could go in their cirucmstances and time.

It will be the same for us in RCWP. and for other committed changemakers whatever their cause. We too take up a justice issue and stand against discrimination of all kinds but particularly for the ordination of women By this, I mean we stand for major discrimination and not just those little discriminations we feel in our personal rights when we are slighted unintentionally or forgotten by others sometimes.

We have something else in common with St. Katharine Drexel that we might recognize in RCWP .We are sometimes criticized as forgetting women of less privelege and are said to be women of privelege ourselves and here we go again, those uppity white upper class feminists now pushing for this particular change.

But what is benevolence? Few of us are wealthy women and probably none as wealthy as Katharine Drexel was in her time.But what we are doing in this foundational time is to give without holding back what we have of our money, our hospitality, our giftedness to bring forward this very difficult movement. This has no doubt led many of us to adopt a simpler lifestyle already. We are benevolent together in community and not as one alone.

We should resist being pressured to underestimate our empowerment from this nor led to overreach what can be done nor underestimate what we we may eventually accomplish.. We do this by the same faith liverd by St. Katharine Drexel and all in our Cloud of Witnesses and Communion of Saints. We do this..".Yes we can" as Obama would say.. And like him, we cannot do everything all at once. Nor can we address everyone's justice issue and solve their dilemna while at the same time remaining attentive to ours.

The prejudices we must yet come through ourselves will not disappear overnight but in living them through ,the mysteries of changing hearts will be revealed in the People of Godde's quality of faith life.So many of you are describing such experiences already in your communities

We have reason to celebrate and to be joyous and filled with hope and love for how far we have come and for where we are going, for what we can see and not see.

tbc in Part 2 which will include Judy Lee's personal story and knowledge of St.. Katharine Drexel..

Blessings on all,
RCWP/Canada and Europe West
rm

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Cloud of Witnesses Retreat


Image by Rose Mewhort

It is a glass work.I composed it at home on my return from the Mount. The glass pieceswere given to me by a stained glass artist who was a good friend. Hewas in a terrible head on collision and has since died. He lived on the edge all his life. He installed my floor, painted my living room,brought me firewood and helped me in many ways to set up my home on Galiano. I am always thankful for his generosity to me. So the spirit of gratefulness is in that work and gratefully I gave it away. If there is a title it would be "Tribute to Paul"


Rose

Roman Catholic Womenpriests Advise Vatican on Pastoral Approach to a Child's Abortion



Press Release
March 12, 2009
Media Contact: Bridget Mary Meehan
sofiabmm@aol.com 703-505-0004

For Immediate Release
Roman Catholic Womenpriests Call the Vatican to Compassion
In response to the Vatican Excommunication of Brazilian Child’s Mother and Doctor

On March 7th, 2009, Archbishop Jose Cardoso Sobrinho announced the excommunication of the mother and doctors who participated in an abortion that saved the life of a nine year old fourth grader. The 80 pound child was brutally and repeatedly raped and finally impregnated by her stepfather. Cardinal Giovanni Battista, prefect of the Congregation for Bishops and president of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, affirmed the excommunications even though it was the doctor’s professional opinion that the pregnancy could kill the child.

Ironically on the same day that Pope Benedict spoke about the dignity of women, these top church officials withdrew the sacraments from the child’s mother and doctors who, after all, were trying to save the child’s life while the man who violated the body and soul of a small child remains in good standing with the church.

The church had the opportunity to act in a pastoral compassionate manner. Instead, it perpetuated further violence in a family already torn apart by violence. One can only wonder how Jesus, who walked among us acquainted with grief and suffering would have acted. It was Jesus who told us to remove the beam from our eyes before we judge the actions of others. It was Jesus who directed us to forgive seventy times seven.

In the spirit of Luke 4:18 where Jesus announced his compassionate, justice-oriented ministry, Roman Catholic Womenpriests serve everyone including women and families traumatized by rape and sexual abuse with its life-long sentence of depression and anxiety. In inclusive grassroots communities we are breaking open the alabaster jars of sacramental grace united with those we serve. All are welcome always and no one is left out or sent away. There should be no such thing as excommunication in the house of God.

For many Catholics, this is the heart of our faith. This decision made by the prelates contradicts the basic tenets of Catholic social justice teaching. This hypocrisy is the last straw. Roman Catholic Womenpriests call the Vatican to reflect the compassion of Christ to this child, her mother and her doctors.

http://www.romancatholicwomenpriests.org/

Vatican Lipservice to Women in Women's History Month

Women's Ordination Conference Leaders
Aisha Taylor and Erin Saiz Hanna

"This is a prime example of the devastating impact that the hierarchy’s cultural influence often has on women. When it comes to women’s issues, this type of hypocrisy – on a less horrific scale – is the norm in the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church. "



http://ncronline.org/news/women/vatican-lipservice-women-womens-history-month

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Roman Catholic Feminist Theologian Mary Hunt"s Article: "Excommunicating the Victims"

RDPulpit: Excommunicating the Victims

By Mary E. Hunt
Posted on March 10, 2009,
Printed on March 10, 2009

"The Roman Catholic Church stooped to a new low just in time for International Women’s Day. On Wednesday, March 4, 2009, at 10:00 a.m., a nine-year-old girl who was pregnant with twins had an abortion in Pernambuco, a state in the northeast of Brazil. The Archdiocese of Olinda and Recife was preparing to file a legal claim to stall or stop the abortion, but it was over before they were able to. The local arch bishop, Jose Carolos Sobrinho, told the media that God’s laws are superior to human laws in declaring that the girl’s mother, as well as the doctors involved in the abortion, were excommunicated"

http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/humanrights/1206/

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Press Release: The Association for the Rights of Catholics in the Church says: Shame!

Press Release: Immediately
March 8, 2009
Professor Leonard Swidler, S.T.L. Ph.D. LL.D., President,
Association for the Rights of Catholics in the Church
dialogue@temple.edu
The Association for the Rights of Catholics in the Church says: Shame!
When is the last time Cardinal Re of the Vatican, or any Vatican official, or indeed, any bishop, excommunicated a Mafioso responsible for deliberate murders?
But Archbishop José Cardoso Sobrinho of Brazil did excommunicate the mother who permitted an abortion to save the life of her nine-year old daughter who was rape-impregnated by her stepfather!
And this excommunication was defended by Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, head of the Roman Catholic Church’s Congregation for Bishops, as he told La Stampa, an Italian daily newspaper.
According to the report, the abortion was undertaken to save the life of the nine-year old mother. Why was Archbishop Sobrinho not at the side of the little raped child and her agonizing mother spiritually helping them - instead of publicly condemning them?
Perhaps the archbishop and the Vatican wonder why so many tens of millions of intelligent, sensitive Catholics are fleeing the Church? Here is another stunning reason!
Again, ARCC says to Archbishop Sobrinho and Cardinal Re: Shame!
Leonard Swidler, Ph.D., S.T.L., LL.D., LL.D.
Prof Catholic Thought & Interreligious Dialogue
215-204-7251 (Off.) 215-477-1080 (Home) 513-508-1935 (Mobile)
E-mail: http://www.blogger.com/ ; Web: http://www.blogger.com/
Editor, Journal Ecumenical Studies; Pres Dialogue Institute http://www.blogger.com/
Religion Dept Temple Univ Philadelphia, PA 19122 http://www.blogger.com/
Pres, Association for the Rights of Catholics in the Church arcc-catholic-rights.net

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Roman Catholic Womenpriests: Report from Janice Sevre-Duszynska on 53rd session of the Commission on the Status of Women


Janice Sevre-Duszynska presiding at liturgy at
Dorothy Day House in Washington DC

What a place to be, here in New York at the UN for the 53rd session of the Commission on the Status of Women!

With 5,000 registered NGO participants, mainly women from all over the world, I have met women from Iraq, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Argentina, and many other places. I have attended talks on HIV/AIDS; how it is spread, how to prevent it, and the care-giving involved. I have also learned much about disarmament, gun control, human trafficking, engaging men in sharing responsibility, religions and sexual reproductive rights, and about violence towards women. I will have much to share with you all....

Dorothy Irvin and I are staying with Anglican sisters at their Community of the Holy Spirit (on West 113th Street, just up a hill from the Hudson River). Every morning we take an hour-long bus ride to the UN. There we attend discussions of the 45 member states, and we also spend much time across the street at the Parallel Events in the Church Center. This is where organizations meet to give talks on their specialty issues.

I am still awaiting word on whether I will be able to give my 3-minute oral statement. After hearing the talks it is quite apparent that patriarchal religion is a root cause of violence in our world.

This afternoon Dorothy will be giving a talk to Gabriella's community on Staten Island. I must leave now.

Peace,
Janice=