Bishop Andrea Johnson (left)
presents newly ordained woman priest,
Linda Spear to Congregation in historic Quebec ordinations

| Maxime Massé |
"Linda Spear, originally from Winnipeg, became the sixth woman in Canada to defy Rome and become unofficially ordained, and just like the five women before her, Spear now faces excommunication..."
"...She said she will perform the sacraments — such as baptism, marriage and confession — even though they won't be recognized by the Vatican, which limits the priesthood to men..."
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/montreal/story/2010/10/10/quebec-woman-ordained-priest.html#ixzz124KAD6G3
October 9, 2010 - The Sydney Morning Herald
..."Recognition of the
"...The
"There have been whistleblowers, but they were often ostracised, even excommunicated (as with Mary MacKillop)..."
"...What the current Pope does not seem to get is that no expressions of personal anguish over the abuses committed on his watch can substitute for what is needed: an acknowledgement that he and many bishops covered up crimes — and a commitment to change...."
"We are not leaving the church, we are leading it into living Jesus's example of Gospel equality. Jesus called men and women to be disciples," Meehan said.
"We are disobeying an unjust church law that prohibits women's ordination and is rooted in discrimination," she explained. .."
Read more:
The following article was written by VOTF’s Sean O’Conaill and appeared in the Irish Times.
With the Vatican-appointed Church inspectors due in Ireland this autumn, Sean O'Conaill wonders if the patriarchs will announce the failure of patriarchy.
How many in Ireland believe that the pending visit to Ireland of nine Vatican-appointed inspectors, or visitators, can reverse the rapid decline in the authority of the Irish Catholic hierarchy?
So far, scant enthusiasm for the visit has been shown by Ireland's bishops themselves. It was left to the Irish Catholic to strike a tentative note of optimism in its headline of June 3rd: “Could this be the renewal we have been waiting for?”
For that to happen the visitors will need to do something quite sensational and unprecedented. They must announce that the patriarchal governing system of the Catholic church has been finally exposed as anachronistic, stifling and dangerous—and call upon the Pope to reform it...."
Bridget Mary's Reflection:
"Quebec will soon have its first female Roman Catholic priest.
Linda Spear, a former Montreal teacher originally hailing from Winnipeg, will become the sixth Canadian woman ordained as a catholic priest.
The ceremony is presided by the group Roman Catholic Women Priests. It's been around since 2001 and includes about a hundred women priests in Europe and 75 in the U.S. Spear said she'd prefer to wait until after she's ordained before doing an interview..."

PORTLAND, Ore. — It's been three years since Toni Tortorilla was ordained in the Roman Catholic Womenpriests movement, and the Vatican's decision to label both pedophilia and women's ordination as grave offenses, she says, is an insult to clerical abuse victims and women seeking ordination.
"The sexual abuse of children is morally reprehensible by any possible standard," Tortorilla, 63 said. "The ordination of women has been happening for decades in many denominations."
Pairing the issues in one statement "shows how out of touch with reality the Vatican really is," said Tortorilla, who serves the Sophia Christi Catholic Community in Portland and Eugene, Ore., where between 30 and 40 people attend monthly services.
http://ncronline.org/blogs/essays-theology/church-crisis-reflects-lack-pastoral-leadership
"...Our church today, Curran insisted, is in serious trouble, and not just in Europe and the United States, although the problems there are great and need to be recognized as such and addressed."
"Indeed, the second largest religious denomination in the United States today consists of Catholics who are no longer active in the church. The sense of alienation from the church is especially acute among women. "
“Our love for the church and our role as Catholic moral theologians call for all of us to address these issues no matter what our positions are....We are called to put flesh and blood on the ancient axiom, “In necessariis, unitas; in dubiis, libertas; in omnibus, caritas.” (“In necessary matters, unity; in doubtful matters, freedom; in all things, charity.”
"What Curran did not provide is a basic reason for this crisis. It is a crisis, after all, of pastoral leadership..."
Bridget Mary's Reflection
The basic reason for the alienation of women from the church is that women are treated as second class citizens in their own church. Roman Catholic Womenpriests are leading the way toward a new era of justice and equality for women in the church. Why wait? The time is now. Join us! For more information, visit http://www.romancatholicwomenpriests.org
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By Jay Lindsay, Associated Press Writer | October 1, 2010
BOSTON
..."The parishioners say chancellor James McDonough told them in a meeting that the archdiocese is aiming to downsize to 150 parishes. But McDonough on Friday denied saying that and added, "We are not looking to close churches."
"The archdiocese has already endured a brutal round of church closings after a reconfiguration that began in 2004 and reduced the number of parishes from 357 to 291. Five churches have since been occupied by parishioners who protested the closures by refusing to leave the buildings."
"On Friday, McDonough said in a statement that he was asked about future closings at the meeting. He said he responded that one-third of the parishes are losing money and a third are at a break-even point and feeling financial pressure. He said he also explained that only 17 percent of Catholics in the archdiocese attend Mass and "that in 10 years there would only be approximately 150 priests available."
Bridget Mary's Reflection:September 28, 2010
"More than 600 members of a Roman Catholic parish in Oak Park signed a petition that expresses "solidarity" with "those who support women and married men who are called to ordination."
Among those to sign: the pastor, the Rev. Larry McNally, who delivered the signatures to his boss, Cardinal Francis George, earlier this month.
The Catholic Church only ordains men -- almost always unmarried men -- as priests. Women who go through "unofficial" ordination ceremonies are ex-communicated.
Earlier this year, the Vatican included the "attempted sacred ordination of a woman" in its updated list of "more grave crimes" against church law. The document also included changes the Vatican said were designed to crack down on pedophile priests.
Many Catholics were outraged by both issues being included in the same document, believing the church saw both as equal offenses. However, a Vatican official told reporters the document did not ''assign them the same gravity.''
The petition signed by members of Ascension Parish takes aim at that notion, saying "we take great offense that good faith struggles for gender equality could be misunderstood as a sacrilege and placed on a par with the sexual abuse of children."
Bridget Mary's Reflection:
The revolution has begun, Men in the Vatican watch out! Women in the church in Ireland in the U.S. and around the world will no longer accept second class status in the church, 300 priests in Ireland have put women's equality in the church on their agenda, now more U.S. priests like Fr. Larry and their parishoners are standing up in solidarity with women priests, making an official statement and signing a petition. Grassroots Catholics are rising up to claim our baptismal equality in Christ. The voice of God in our time is the full equality of women. Roman Catholic Womenpriests are leading the church into a fuller awareness that sexism is a sin and that it is time for women priests. Bridget Mary Meehan, sofiabmm@aol.com, 703-505-0004
"The bishop of Bruges -- whose predecessor stepped down in April after admitting to sexually abusing his nephew, sparking a crisis in the Belgian Catholic Church -- waded into the debate at the weekend.
"I think the Church must ask itself the question of whether it is appropriate to keep the mandatory character of celibacy," said bishop Jozef de Kesel.
"We could say that there are celibate priests, but that people for whom celibacy is humanly impossible should also have the chance of becoming priests," he told VRT radio.
The bishop of Hasselt, Patrick Hoogmartens, also strayed from the official line, declaring in remarks reported by Het Belang Van Limburg, a Flemish newspaper, that requiring celibacy was "useless."
"I don't think it would be stupid for married men to also become priests," he said, citing the positive role played by deacons, assistants during mass who can marry.
Public opinion in the Catholic country leans heavily in favour of doing away with celibacy. A January poll showed that 69 percent of Belgian back marriage for priests -- a figure that even rises to 73 percent among Catholics.
The Belgian Catholic Church, which last week vowed to listen to victim"
Bridget Mary's Reflection:
Peter was married, early church bishops and priests were married up until the 12th century. 39 popes were married. In the Celtic church, married and celibate, women and men served Christ in double monasteries. St. Brigit of Kildare, who was ordained a bishop, according to her Irish Life, co-administered the monastery at Kildare with Conleth, a male bishop. Roman Catholic Womenpriests have married women who are priests. Finally, the hierarchy is breaking with the official, rigid, Vatican line. Hopefully, we are reaching a tipping point. Mandatory celibacy should not be a requirement for priestly ministry. Priests come in both genders and whether one is married or not, gay, lesbian or transgendered, should not matter in living a call to serve God's people in priestly ministry. Bridget Mary Meehan, sofiabmm@aol.com, 703-505-0004
"Yesterday, the Association of Catholic Priests said it acknowledged that the position of women in the Catholic Church was a difficult and often divisive issue.
But it said the issue needed to be faced and discussed as openly and calmly as possible.
“Jennifer Sleeman’s initiative this past weekend did not meet with universal approval, even among women. But it did receive substantial support,” the association said.
“We believe that neither of the hierarchy’s statements over the weekend was helpful.”
It said Saturday’s statement regarding women’s involvement in the church missed the point that women are at present excluded from many ministries and from all forms of decision-making.
“Unless we acknowledge the reality progress will not be made. Yesterday’s statement, saying that Mass attendance had not been affected, bordered on triumphalism,” the association said...."
Bridget Mary's Reflection:
Hooray for the Women who are standing up for justice in the church and for Associaiton of Irish priests who are speaking truth to their own hierarchy! You give us all hope that Ireland may be leading the way in confronting the issue of the second class status of women in the church.
Decision-making in the Catholic Church is tied to Holy Orders according to Church law.
Either the law will have to be changed or women will have to be ordained if significant reform is to take place.
You go, Ireland.
Bridget Mary Meehan, sofiabmm@aol.com, 703-505-0004
PÁDRAIG COLLINS in Sydney
"THE FOUNDER of the Sisters of St Joseph, who will be canonised as Australia’s first saint next month, was excommunicated from the Catholic Church in 1871 after exposing a paedophile Irish priest, it has been revealed.
Australian television has reported that Sr Mary MacKillop discovered that children were being abused by Fr Patrick Keating in the Kapunda parish near Adelaide in south Australia.
She told Josephites director Fr Julian Tenison-Woods about the abuse. It was then reported to the vicar general and Fr Keating was sent back to Ireland, where he continued to serve as a priest.
Fr Charles Horan, a Galway man who was a colleague of Fr Keating, swore revenge on Sr MacKillop and her order. After only four years as a nun, she was excommunicated by Adelaide’s bishop Laurence Shiel, who was originally from Wexford.
She was turned out on the street with no money and nowhere to go...
..."In 2009, 100 years after Sr MacKillop’s death, Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide publicly apologised to the Sisters of St Joseph for her wrongful excommunication.
“On behalf of myself and the archdiocese, I apologise to the sisters . . . for what happened to them in the context of the excommunication, when their lives and their community life was interrupted and they were virtually thrown out on the streets . . . This was a terrible thing,” he said.
After being reinstated by the Catholic Church, Sr MacKillop became known for her work with disadvantaged children, female ex-prisoners and prostitutes.
She was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1995 following a Vatican decree that in 1961, a Sydney woman was cured of leukaemia through Sr MacKillop’s intercession. The second miracle required for sainthood occurred in the mid-1990s when a woman sent home from hospital to die due to inoperable lung and brain cancer was cured.
The family of Cork man David Keohane, who was beaten almost to death in Sydney in 2008, said his waking from a coma in Cork University Hospital in March last year was due to their praying to Sr MacKillop."
..."Sr MacKillop, who was born in Melbourne to Scottish immigrant parents in 1842 and died in Sydney in 1909, will be canonised by Pope Benedict in Rome on October 17th."
Bridget Mary 's Reflection:
Sister Mary Mackillop of Australia and Sister Theodore Guerin of the United States both were nuns who were excommunicated for standing up and speaking truth to the church authorities and were rewarded for their courageous behavior by excommunication! Mother Theodore was canonized by Pope Benedict in 2005 and now Sister Mary Mackillop will be canonized on Oct. 17,2010. Now there is a lesson for Catholics today. Follow the example of these role models of holiness, peak truth to power, stand up for justice for all God's people, do not fear excommunication. It could put you on the fast track to canonization! So take heart, Roman Catholic Womenpriests and nuns under Vatican inquisition, you could be next on the saints-to-be list! Who says that God does not have a sense of humor!!Bridget Mary Meehan, sofiabmm@aol.com, 703-505-004
Associated Press Writer
Related
"It's a life regimented in excruciating detail, down to the way they eat an orange. Silence is the norm, information is limited, e-mail is screened, close friendships are discouraged and family members are kept at bay - all in the name of God's will.
Known as consecrated women, they are lay Catholics affiliated with a conservative religious order who dedicate their lives to the church, making promises of chastity, poverty and obedience similar to the vows taken by nuns.
But the cult-like conditions they endure so alarmed Pope Benedict XVI that in May he ordered an extremely rare full Vatican investigation of the obscure group, which operates in the U.S., Mexico, Spain, the Philippines and a dozen other countries. The inquiry is expected to begin in the coming weeks. "
While there have been no sex abuse allegations within Regnum Christi, the problems uncovered in the Legion - abuse of authority, suppression of dissent and a power structure built on unswerving obedience - are also rampant in consecrated life.
Former consecrated members told of having their lives manipulated by strict rules that occupied nearly every waking minute of their day and by an endless search for new recruits... "
Bridget Mary's Reflection:
I entered the IHM community with 90 other young women on Sept. 15, 1966. the feast day of the Blessed Mother's sorrows. We joked sometimes that we were the 90 sorrows of Mary!!When we entered as postulants and then later as novices, was regimented. Our mail was censored, we spent most of the day in silence, and our visits with family were limited, TV and Movies were limited to special occasions.
We were not allowed to speak with "externs," outsiders without permission and we had to have permission for almost everything, even the religious habit we wore.
But, to be honest, religious life, in its pre-Vatican form, engaged in a form of "brain-washing." Independent thinking was not encouraged and strict obedience was part and parcel of "Nunhood 101."
On the other hand, while we were educated in traditional theology and spirituality, we also discovered a sense of community, (had lots of fun together and have many cherished memories ) , we learned self-discipline, and were given many opportunities to serve others. I look at the time spent as basic training!
After a period of prayerful discernment, I knew that God was calling me out of this form of religious life and into a new form of consecrated life.So I left the IHM Sisters after ten years and joined the Sisters for Christian Community Here with other daring visionaries, we were birthing a new understanding of religous life . We are women rooted in the gospel -nurturing mutuality, equality and justice in Chrisitan community. Our motto is the prayer of Jesus, "that all may be one." The Gospel is our rule of life. SFCC is an independent religious community, (approximately 500 members in U.S. , Canada, Europe, Pacific Rim, Africa) non-canonical and not under Vatican control. Four of my Sisters attended my ordination. Sister Regina Madonna Oliver, also a former IHM and at the time a Sister for Christian Community, presented me before the community. Regina and I wrote several books on prayer and spirituality together including Praying with a Passionate Heart, Affirmations from the Heart of God, Praying with Celtic Holy Women, A Promise of Presence, Heart Talks with Mother God. Regina died the year after I was ordained. feel sure that she now supports our movement from her heavenly home!

Jennifer Sleeman called for boycott of Mass on Sept. 26th.
"Empty pews might make the power that be think again"
Opinion Piece: Jennifer Sleeman Speaks Out:
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/opinion/2010/0921/1224279367336.html"...I had often questioned the fact that only men could be ordained. There was also the rule of celibacy. I discovered that many women and men were also concerned and working towards having their voices heard.
It seemed there were organizations and people protesting all over the place, and the idea came to me of a boycott of Mass for one Sunday (September 26th) to draw all these voices together. Let empty pews give the powers-that-be in the church the message that women are no longer happy to be second-class citizens.
The support for the equality of women in the church has been massive: lovely letters and cards, and phone calls have come from Ireland, Australia, the US and Canada, from men and women.
...One compelling reason for the ordination of women is the shortage of priests. The average age of priests in Ireland is 65, and as far as I know very few young men are entering the seminaries.
Already there must be tired, lonely and aging men celebrating Masses, attending to weddings, funerals and Baptisms, with no time or energy for visiting their parishioners – or indeed for themselves. There are wonderful priests out there ministering with courage and compassion, some of whom have given me their support. They are heroic, but how long can they last?
There are nuns doing demanding and sometimes difficult work, brilliantly. Why is the church so afraid of women, and especially their ordination? They constitute half the population of the world and at least 60 per cent of Mass-goers. They minister very well in other churches, for example in the Church of Ireland.
I see celibacy as another way of keeping women out. Is the fear that the church might become gentler, more in touch with the reality of family life in the 21st century, a safer haven for the scared? I think the church has changed since children grew up in fear – and I hope it has the courage to change again.
My hope is that empty pews on September 26th will move the hearts and minds of those in charge, that change will happen, and that the church will emerge invigorated by the equality of all."
Bridget Mary's Reflection:
Thank you Jennifer Sleeman for igniting a fire in the hearts of Catholics around the world for justice and equality for women in the Catholic Church. Roman Catholic Womenpriests are a growing movement, offering the church a renewed priestly ministry in a community of equals. I join you in prayer for our leaders that they may embrace equality for all. Let's break the stained glass ceiling! Bridget Mary Meehan, RCWP, sofiabmm@aol.com
by ELAINE KEOGH and ANNE LUCEY
"They took part at the instigation of Fr Iggy O’Donovan who told the congregation he could not ignore “the elephant in the room” – that it was “women’s boycott Sunday” – and he was welcoming all genders “as we try to be as inclusive as possible”.
"He believed there is “nothing in our tradition that excludes women from the fullness of priestly ministry forever”. It was “appropriate that Senator White who is not only a strong advocate of the rights of our senior citizens but is moreover an avid supporter of the rights of women”, should speak, he said."
"Fr O’Donovan said he wanted “to give women as prominent a part in our liturgy as is possible” and the Communion reflection was written by Muireann McGinty (24) who works in independent media. She said the boycott of Mass yesterday was suggested to highlight inequality and injustice in the church but “I fail to see how an antiquated action such as a boycott can achieve a desired impact. It is regressive in terms of dialogue and adversely advocates a bitter debate as opposed to actively engaging in it . . .”
"Fr O’Donovan said the fact that the Catholic Church did not ordain women 2,000 years ago is still “a milestone round our necks”, and he acknowledged that “full recognition of the equality of women in our church will not come about anytime soon”.
Bridget Mary's Reflection:"Soline Humbert, founder of the organisation Brothers and Sisters In Christ, which argues for the ordination of women priests, said she attended a celebration of the Eucharist in south Co Dublin yesterday, where the celebrant was a woman. There were others who were boycotting their Mass there, she said, including two religious sisters and several women members of a church choir."
"She hoped the call to boycott might serve as a wake-up call to encourage people to see the “sexism” in the church, which she said was anathema to the teachings of Christ and the spirit of the Eucharist."
“We are so used to the sexism in the church we don’t see it. We are excluding one section of the community. If the church said they would not ordain black people would we still go to Mass? It is separating justice from the Eucharist. The Eucharist is about oneness and love. Sexism is about exclusion. It is not the message of Christ.”
Bridget Mary's Reflection:
Soline Humbert hit the nail on the head:
“We are so used to the sexism in the church we don’t see it. We are excluding one section of the community. If the church said they would not ordain black people would we still go to Mass? It is separating justice from the Eucharist. The Eucharist is about oneness and love. Sexism is about exclusion. It is not the message of Christ.”
Sexism is a sin. Jesus called male and female disciples in a time when it was a scandal for a rabbi to have women in his circle. Jesus set the pace for women's equality, the Roman Catholic Church should follow his example of inclusion and partnership. Women priests remind us that women are equal images of God, and therefore should preside at the altar. It is time to break the stained glass ceiling! Catholics, rise up and support equality for women in our church. Bridget Mary Meehan, RCWP, sofiabmm@aol.com
The Irish Times - Thursday, September 16, 2010
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/0916/1224278993367.html
GENEVIEVE CARBERY
"CHALLENGING THE role of women in the church and the treatment of priests falsely accused of abuse are among the objectives which were outlined at the inaugural meeting of the Association of Irish Priests yesterday."
Bridget Mary's Reflection.
This gathering of Irish priests is a breath of fresh air for the church. When 300 priests speak out and stand in solidarity, the Vatican will notice! Surely, they can't fire 300 priests. Who would be left in the priest-short parishes? Now if this band of progressive brothers could only light a fire for other such gatherings of priests worldwide, perhaps, then, all of us who are working for reform and renewal in our church could come together for Vatican 3, the Council of the People of God. Let us pray and dream together that God's power working within the community of faith can move mountains---no matter what the resistance!
On a personal note, tt gives me great joy to think that such a movement is born in Portlaoise where some of my cousins live and not far from where we lived when I was a child. We spent several days there this summer and celebrated our most recent family wedding there last year. Amazing and wonderful, indeed!
sofiabmm@aol.com
703-505-0004
