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Saturday, October 16, 2010

Linda Spear/Quebec Woman Ordained a Roman Catholic Womanpriest/Article in French



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

Sutton - L'unité pastorale s'oppose à l'ordination d'une prêtre

http://cowansville.enregion.ca/

Friday, October 15, 2010

Janice Sevre-Duszynska: "Serving the Ministry of Irritation "by Gregory Flannery


http://streetvibes.wordpress.com/2010/10/13/serving-the-ministry-of-irritation/

Streetvibes: Advocating Justice, Building Community

"The issue of women’s ordination isn’t Sevre-Duszynska’s only criticism of the contemporary Catholic Church.
“It’s not just adding women and stirring,” she says. “We’re worker priests. We’re about reforming and transforming.”
She believes the church has strayed from its founder’s mission, reflected in the absence of people whom, she says, Jesus would welcome.
“Where are women?” she says. “Where are homosexuals? Where are street people? The God of Jesus is full of compassion, walking with us, a fierce defender of the poor and marginalized.”

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Roman Catholic Womanpriest, Linda Spear, First Woman To Be Ordained in Quebec// Article in French


(left to right)
Roman Catholic Womenpriests:
Kim Sylvester, British Columbia,
Bishop Andrea Johnson, USA/East
newly ordained priest,
Linda Spear, Quebec,
and Marie Bouclin ,
Ontario, Canada



Bishop Andrea Johnson Presents
newly ordained Roman Catholic
Womanpriest,
Linda Spear, to Assembly

http://www.cyberpresse.ca/la-voix-de-lest/actualites/201010/12/01-4331633-linda-spear-ordonnee-pretre.php?utm_categorieinterne=trafficdrivers&utm_contenuinterne=cyberpresse_B13b_en-region_661151_section_POS2


Maxime Massé
La Voix de l'Est

"(Sutton) Pour la première fois au Québec, une femme a été ordonnée prêtre samedi après-midi devant une centaine de personnes réunies à l'église Grace anglicane de Sutton. Malgré l'opposition du Vatican, Linda Spear, une enseignante à la retraite originaire de Montréal, a reçu le sacerdoce catholique qui accorde traditionnellement tous les pouvoirs aux prêtres..."

Monday, October 11, 2010

"A Saint for Our Time" /America /St. Mary Mackillop, an excommunicated nun/ Patron Saint of Sex Abuse Survivors


"The news that a soon-to-be-saint had once been excommunicated for her order’s part in urging the church to act against an accused sex offender is a reminder of the virulence and long history of crimes of abuse by members of the Catholic clergy."

"...But the fuller story is that Mother Mary MacKillop was excommunicated partially out of revenge for her order’s part in pointing to a case of abuse by a Father Keating. ..

"What might this episode mean for contemporary Catholics? First, it is no surprise that a saint found herself at odds with the church hierarchy. Joan of Arc, to take an extreme example, was burned at the stake in 1431 after being convicted of heresy by an English ecclesiastical court. Thomas Aquinas found his own writings under censure in the 13th century. The most recently canonized American saint, Mother Theodore Guérin, the independent-minded founder of the Sisters of Providence of St.-Mary-of-the-Woods, was instructed in 1847 by the bishop of Vincennes, Ind., to resign from her religious order. (The bishop was later removed from his post by the Vatican.)"

..."The prophet faces dismissive attitudes, hostile denials or, as in the case of Blessed Mary MacKillop and the Josephite Sisters, outright punishment. Only recently has the church begun to see whistleblowers in its own ranks as necessary—and sometimes holy.And what is more heroic than standing up for a victim when advocacy costs you membership in the church that you love?
Like all saints, she is a model for all Catholics. But at this time, abuse victims and their families especially need all the help they can get—from heaven as on earth."

Bridget Mary's Reflection:
Let us praise God for courageous women like Mother Mary Mackillop, who will be canonized a saint on Oct. 17th, 2010 by Pope Benedict. She is the patron saint of Survivors of Sexual Abuse and of Advocates for Justice for Survivors of Clergy Sexual Abuse in our Church. St. Mary Mackillop, pray for us that we may all work together for justice and equality for all especially for victims of clerghy sexual abuse and for all those who are marginalized and ostracized in our church.


"Latest female priest is Montrealer"/ Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/montreal/story/2010/10/10/quebec-woman-ordained-priest.html

"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

Sunday, October 10, 2010

"The Case of the Pope" by Juliette Hughes/Sydney Morning Herald

October 9, 2010 - The Sydney Morning Herald


..."Recognition of the Vatican as a state has privileged Roman Catholicism over all other religions but ordinary people have not benefited."

"...The Vatican has exploited its position not only to hamper the UN's contraceptive programs and the use of condoms against AIDS in Africa but also to indulge in money laundering and other activities that subvert the laws of countries where its adherents live. The most egregious of these transgressions has been the Vatican's refusal to respect the anti-paedophile laws of other countries. It developed a culture of concealing crimes and a widespread practice of transferring criminal clerics from place to place to commit more."

"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...."

Juliette Hughes is a practising Catholic.

Bridget Mary's Reflection:
Two thoughts:
1) Pope Benedict will canonize Mother Mary MacKillop, an excommunicated nun. Perhaps, this pope is offering hope to the many thousands of Catholics who have been excommunicated, including women priests. Excommunication is not a barrier to canonization.

2) We should ask ourselves what other religion would get away with acting like a crime family- transferring criminals from place to place in violation of civil law as this article points out!
It is ironic that Roman Catholic Womenpriests who love the church and are serving the people of God in grassroots in inclusive communities are excommunicated. The Vatican categorizes our ordinations as "crimes"; yet the Pope has not excommunicated the pedophiles nor has he punished the bishops who have kept clergy abusers in ministry or transferred them from place to place . Something is wrong with this picture!

"Women Fight Exclusion in Catholic Priesthood

http://itwouldbefunny.blogspot.com/2010/10/women-fight-exclusion-in-catholic.html

Engendering a firestorm of criticism, their new canonical guidelines for handling and punishing the most "grave crimes" in church law revealed just how enraged the hierarchy is at women who dare to challenge them. Along with the crimes of sexually molesting children and developmentally disabled adults, and of using and distributing pornography, the Vatican listed: "the attempted sacred ordination of a woman."

"In other words, the two greatest problems the Catholic hierarchy faces are women and children..."

"In reality, this action is yet another desperate response by the Catholic hierarchy to the small but highly visible movement by Catholic women -- sisters and lay women -- to defy the church's ban on women's ordination. .."

Quebec's 1st" Female Catholic Priest Ordained"/Montrel Gazette

http://www.montrealgazette.com/life/Quebec+female+Catholic+priest+ordained/3649972/story.html

..."The group Roman Catholic Womenpriests ordained Linda Spear, a retired teacher from Quebec, in an Anglican church in Sutton..."

"Spear is the first Quebecer but the sixth Canadian woman to become a Catholic priest this way. She was symbolically ordained by U.S. bishop Andrea Johnson. Spear can celebrate the sacraments such as marriage, but they will not be recognized by the Vatican, which limits the priesthood to men."

"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:

Saturday, October 9, 2010

"High time for Vatican to Signal End of Patriarchy" by Sean O'Conaill/Irish Times

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:
Well said, Sean! The Vatican needs to come to grips that the end of patriarchy is already a reality. The institutional church has lost its moral credibility. It must reform and renew to survive. Jesus showed us how to live as the beloved of God. Both men and women were his disciples and called to be the Good News as well as to share the Good News. The Roman Catholic Church is one of the last bastions of male clerical privilege and gender apartheid. Structural change is the only solution. As Archbishop Desmond Tutu once said 16 years before the the demise of apartheid in South Africa: "... our God... is a God of justice and liberation and goodness. Our cause...must triumph because it is moral and just and right. .." Reflecting recently on the collapse of apartheid, Tutu told TIME, "The texture of our universe is one where there is no question at all that good and laughter and justice will prevail." (TIME Oct. 11, 2010) So too the time for the full equality of women in our church has come. No more excuses, please, from the prelates in the Vatican.

"Quebec Gets First Female Priest"/ Montreal Headlines Examiner

http://www.examiner.com/headlines-in-montreal/quebec-gets-first-female-roman-catholic-priest

"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..."


Friday, October 8, 2010

"Female priest says Vatican 'out of touch' "By Nancy Haught/Religious News Service


Ordination in Portland, Oregon
Toni Tortorilla/ center
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/life/religion/7236969.html

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.


Thursday, October 7, 2010

"Church Crisis Reflects Lack of Pastoral Leadership"/ Richard McBrien/ National Catholic Reporter

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


Tuesday, October 5, 2010

"There is no one to watch Vatican watchmen" by John Cooney/ Irish Independent/ People of Ireland leading the way


(left, Marie Collins, Andrew Madden (dark suit),
Irish Survivors of Sexual Abuse, right Bridget Mary Meehan
Castlebar, Ireland at Humbert Summer School)
http://www.independent.ie/search/?q=there+is+no+one+to+watch+the+vatican+watchmen&eceExpr=there+is+no+one+to+watch+the+vatican+watchmen
By John Cooney
Monday October 04 2010
"Behind the closed Vatican portals Roman officials and "apostolic visitors" will "offer assistance" to the Irish "as they seek to respond adequately to the situation caused by the tragic cases of abuse perpetrated by priests and religious upon minors".
The sparse wording clearly implies that Rome is not yet satisfied that the Irish bishops have adequately repaired the basket. Overseeing them in its remaking to Roman specifications will be two cardinals, three archbishops, two male religious and two nuns.
So the Irish visitation bears all the hallmarks of being a Roman affair with the imprint of pontifical secrecy...
The ultra-loyal collaboration of the four Irish church leaders with the apostolic visitation is a sad sign that they are more intent on being Roman courtiers than leaders of their Church in Ireland.
Veteran commentator TP O'Mahony hits the nail on the head in his new book, 'Why the Catholic Church needs Vatican III', when he writes that the Irish visitation "is just Rome-speak for a group of enforcers who, with the Pope's full approval, will camp out here and seek to reinforce the Vatican's system of centralised control".
"Will we get an explanation, for example, as to why two Irish bishops, Eamonn Walsh and Raymond Field, who resigned after being named in the Murphy report into clerical sexual abuse, had their resignations rejected by the Vatican? Or hear any apology for the Vatican's past failure to communicate with the Murphy investigation?
Irish priests and Catholics deserve explanations for decisions which further wounded and alienated victims such as Andrew Madden, Marie Collins, Michael O'Brien and Christine Buckley.
Will the four Irish churchmen have the moral courage to say to Rome: "Physician, heal thyself."
- John Cooney

Bridget Mary's Reflection:
John Cooney raises important questions that the Vatican needs to answer. Until Pope Benedict demands the resignation of bishops who kept pedophiles in ministry, he will have little credibility. Indeed, our pope needs to explain his decisions to delay the dismissal of well-known pedophiles when he was head of the CDF. Why did protection of a corrupt clerical system so often trump the protection of children? Again, the visitation of Ireland by outside prelates appears like another exercise of Vatican power and control when what is needed is a top-down shakeup and reform of the Roman Catholic Church. What do you think Jesus would say to Pope Benedict , the Vatican, the Irish bishops, and survivors of sexual abuse? Are the people of Ireland leading the way, including the new Association of Irish Priests and courageous women, who are calling for equality? Perhaps, they are the prophetic voice of God to the Vatican.


Monday, October 4, 2010

"Patience Running Thin for Church in Ireland" by Daniel O'Carroll /It is time for Womenpriests in Ireland

http://www.irishcentral.com/story/news/danny_boy/patience-running-thin-for-church-in-ireland-104235494.html

"The writing is well and truly on the wall that the female ordination issue will be a major bone of contention between the Church and its faithful in Ireland, and opposition to the stalemate now seems to be springing from within the ranks of the Church and the faithful itself. The Irish Examiner reports yesterday that a campaigning nun from Fermoy (Co.Cork) is challenging the Church's no-go stance on ordaining female priests. "People are looking for change now," wrote Sr Louvenagh Heffernan in the Cork-based daily, "and that means the priesthood has to change." But Sister Heffernan is just the latest figure within 'the fold' to criticize the way the modern Roman Catholic Church is run, and to take issue with the notion that the issue of female ordination isn't up for discussion. "

Bridget Mary's Reflection:
Right on Daniel O'Carroll. Thank you Sister Louvenagh for speaking up for women's ordination. May our Church practice the equality that Jesus modeled to embrace all women and men whom the Holy Spirit has called for sacramental service. Now is the time for courageous Irish women who are unafraid to embrace their vocation for priestly ministry. Do it in the name of Jesus who called Mary Magdalene and Junia as apostles, and Phoebe as deacon, Theodora and Brigit of Kildare as bishops. Join the growing movement of ordained women serving the People of God in egalitarian, inclusive Catholic communities. The full equality of women in the church is the voice of God in our time. For more information, visit
www.romancatholicwomenpriests.org
Bridget Mary Meehan, RCWP
sofiabmm@aol.com
703-505-0004

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Homily for the 27th Sunday – Cycle C – 03 October 2010/Roberta Meehan, RCWP

Homily for the 27th Sunday – Cycle C – 03 October 2010

Habakkuk 1:2-3; 2:2-4
Psalm 95:1-2, 6-9
2 Timothy 1:6-8; 13-14
Luke 17:5-10

“How long, O God! I cry for help but you do not listen!” (Habakkuk 1:2)

I wrote a homily on this passage in 2001. When I began writing that homily, my internet server was down. I laughed. After all, “How long, O God, can I go without my connection to the outside world? Do you not understand, God? I want my server back and you are not reconnecting me!”

This week (2010), the IRS is after me. And I am screaming once again. “How long, O God, can I go on until the IRS stops hounding me?”

Absolutely shocking – screaming at God that way – particularly about something as mundane as an internet provider or the IRS….

But, the Israelites were always screaming at God. Habakkuk’s rendition is nothing new. The Israelites screamed as individuals and as a nation – and not just on one occasion. And what are Lamentations if not a series of protracted screams at God – screams lasting sometimes 40 years. (If my internet server back in 2001 – or even today – shows any signs of being out that long, I’ll get a new server. Can I scream at God about that? What about the IRS? Can I scream about God about that?)

Forty years, God? This is 2010 and 40 years sounds like such a long time in our instant gratification society.

Laugh, I suppose. Our reliance on the material world is funny – from computers to the IRS. But, the real question has to do with FAITH. FAITH is the entire theme of today’s liturgy.

Can I be a person of FAITH and still scream at God? Or does FAITH somehow involve blind and silent submission?

Interestingly, Jesus does not provide a direct answer in today’s gospel. The apostles make a demand on Jesus. “Increase our faith,” they say. Jesus tells them something silly – or seemingly silly – about having faith the size of a mustard seed. That is a very small seed – not the tiniest known today but still very small and definitely one of the most minute known in the time of Jesus. What does this have to do with acquiring FAITH? That seems to be a statement about the quantity of FAITH rather than instructions on how to increase FAITH.

To repeat: Can I be a person of FAITH and still scream at God?

YES. And I am screaming now. In 2001 did I have FAITH that my petulant purveyor of pixels would return? Yes! If I had not had FAITH that I would soon be reconnected with the world, I would not have been screaming at God, would I? And today, if I did not have FAITH that the IRS could be beaten, I would not be screaming at God, would I? Maybe that is part of the answer. Maybe the louder I scream at God, the more assured I am that God is listening! But, of course God listens -- regardless. I have known that since I was a child, at least in theory. The question is, do I believe it? Even as one who is no longer a child, do I believe it? Maybe screaming at God is an indication that I do believe.

Belief? FAITH? How are these two related? Are they the same thing? No, not exactly, but in one way, they are. We won’t worry today about how FAITH and belief are un-related. Let us look at the way they are identical – the way they are really the same thing. Do I truly believe that if I scream loudly enough at God that God will help me? Do I have the FAITH to scream?

Can I let go of my own struggle long enough to scream loud enough for my FAITH to grow to the size of a mustard seed? Do I believe that God will hear me?

How absurd! Why would God care about my internet provider? Or about my struggles with the IRS? What kind of FAITH or belief system is that? Maybe God doesn’t really care about my internet provider or the IRS; maybe what God really cares about is ME. Maybe God won’t turn the server back on or the IRS off. But, the louder I scream, the more God will hold me and give me what I really need. And when I can surrender that, my FAITH can grow. When I can believe that my God will take absolute care of me, then the FAITH of a mustard seed can move mountains. Maybe not the mountains of planet earth, but definitely the mountains of my mind.

To repeat: Does FAITH somehow involve blind and silent submission?

I think not. God does not tell me to check my humanity at the door when I come into the Almighty’s presence! Not at all! I am human. I scream, I am not blind, I cannot be silent and submit until I have told God what I believe and until I have been told – and until I believe – that I have everything I need.

“How long, O God! I cry for help but you do not listen!” (Habakkuk 1:2)

No, that prayer should be: Here I am, God! I just want my problems solved! My voice shrinks to silence – no, what I really want is my God holding me. I can scream from the depths of my soul until there is no room for anything but that mustard seed of FAITH. And then I can believe that my God truly loves me and that my God will take absolute care of me – regardless of the problems that need to be solved.

-- Roberta M Meehan

"Defying the Vatican, Catholic Women Claim Their Priesthood" by Tim Padgett/TIME


Judy Lee Presiding at Liturgy at
Joshua House for Homeless in Ft. Myers, Fl.
By Tim Padgett/TIME/Sept. 27, 2010
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2019635,00.html
"Like any good priest, Judy Lee knows how to use a Bible story. One of the readings for Roman Catholic Masses on a recent Sunday, from the Book of Wisdom, recounts how the Hebrews defied the pharaoh by worshipping God "in secret." That passage resonates at the house in Fort Myers, Fla., where Lee is conducting Mass for 25 Catholics gathered in front of a coffee-table altar in defiance of the Pope. "Rome says you'll be thrown out of the church for being here," says Lee, "because I'm a woman."
"Lee, 67, considers herself a validly ordained Catholic priest. ..She and the more than 100 other women who claim to be Catholic priests in the U.S. and abroad can thank the church for one thing: its hysterical response to their movement — in July the Vatican branded female ordination a delictum gravius, or grave crime, the same label it has given pedophilia — has elicited enough attention to lift their profile out of the catacombs. .."


"....We're the Rosa Parks of the Catholic Church," says Bridget Mary Meehan, a Womenpriests bishop and former nun. "We no longer accept second-class status in our own religion." Meehan, 62, once did ministry work that included "everything a priest does," she says — except saying Mass. ...Like Meehan, most of the almost 80 Catholic women ordained in the U.S. hold advanced religious degrees and have logged years of lay work in the church, from premarriage counseling to serving Communion. Many are married — another doctrinal no-no, since Catholic priests, with rare exceptions, must be celibate — and they often have outside jobs to make ends meet. Mary Magdalene Apostle's pastor, Jane Via, is a San Diego County prosecutor... "

Friday, October 1, 2010

Boston archdiocese disputes fewer parishes planned/What if women priests could staff these parishes?

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/10/01/boston_archdiocese_disputes_fewer_parishes_planned/

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:
What if women from these communities were called to serve as priests? What if married priests who have left are willing to serve these communities? What if the people in these parishes take their rightful role as a community of believers and continue to function as Catholic Communities and call forth their own priests, married or celibate, male or female?
Then instead of decline and closings, we could witness new life and mutual ministry in vibrant Catholic Communities . A new day for our church is dawning...call on the women in your communities to serve as priests. It is time. Contact:www.romancatholicwomenpriests.org

"Oak Park priest joins parish in pushing for female priests"/ Chicago Sun Times

http://www.suntimes.com/lifestyles/religion/2752048,CST-NWS-priest28.article

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

"Belgium Bishops Question Celibacy"

http://www.expatica.com/be/news/local_news/belgian-bishops-question-celibacy-after-abuse-scandal_97684.html

"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

EQUALLY BLESSED UNITES CATHOLIC VOICES FOR MARRIAGE EQUALITY, JUSTICE

For Immediate Release
September 30, 2010

Media Contact
Jim FitzGerald, CTA Executive Director, 773.404.0004 x262
Nicole Sotelo, CTA Communications Director, 773.404.0004 x285

EQUALLY BLESSED UNITES
CATHOLIC VOICES FOR MARRIAGE EQUALITY, JUSTICE

WASHINGTON, DC., Four longstanding Catholic organizations announced today that they have formed Equally Blessed, a coalition of faithful Catholics who support full equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people both in the church and in civil society.

"As Catholics, we believe that all human beings are beloved children of God," said Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, an Equally Blessed member. "We are called to do our part in bringing about justice in the church and the world, and Equally Blessed will allow us to do that together."

The coalition also includes Call To Action, DignityUSA and Fortunate Families. Together the four groups have spent a combined 112 years working on behalf of LGBT people and their families.

"Equally Blessed proclaims what most U.S. Catholics already believe," said Marianne Duddy-Burke, executive director of DignityUSA. "The laws of our land and the policies of our church should mandate fairness, justice and equality for all."

Leaders of Equally Blessed said they decided to work together in the wake of several recent civil and church situations that demonstrate the need for a faithful pro-equality Catholic voice:

· The Knights of Columbus have mounted an expensive campaign to oppose gay marriage in Minnesota, where it has become a gubernatorial campaign issue.
· Catholic dioceses spent extensively to overturn legalized same-sex marriage in Maine last year.
· In the Archdiocese of Denver last spring, Archbishop Charles Chaput sanctioned the expulsion of a lesbian couple's daughter from a Catholic school.
· In Washington DC, Archbishop Donald Wuerl has recently withheld health benefits from the spouses of newly-hired heterosexual employees so that he could legally withhold such benefits from the spouses of gay or lesbian employees.

"A growing community of faithful Catholics believes that everyone, including LGBT people, are affirmed and welcomed in our church, and these unjust actions do not speak for us," said Nicole Sotelo, coordinator of Call To Action's JustChurch program. "We are called to follow the teachings of Jesus who welcomed everyone and challenged religious leaders when they fell short of that ideal."

"In the wake of these injustices, we particularly urge straight Catholic allies to raise their voices against discrimination that targets our children, our friends, and our communities," said Mary Ellen Lopata, co-founder of Fortunate Families, a ministry for Catholic parents with LGBT children. "The Gospel compels us to spread its message of love for all the children of God."


Equally Blessed is a coalition of faithful Catholics who support full equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people both in the church and in civil society. Equally Blessed includes four organizations that have spent a combined 112 years working on behalf of LGBT people and their families: Call To Action, DignityUSA, Fortunate Families, and New Ways Ministry.






Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Women and their Role: Letters to Editor: Irish Times: My Response


Excerpts from 3 Letters to Irish Times and My Responses

Madam. "...Now, it is time for catholic men to support their sisters struggling for justice especially those who have offered themselves as part of the all male deaconate in the Irish church by renouncing this role until women are accepted as deaconesses. We, as men, should realise that this office of deaconate is being introduced at this time to further reinforce the all-male clerical structures of the church and to keep women in the pews at all costs; that is the reason that I did not offer myself for this role..." Yours, etc, BRENDAN BUTLER,

Bridget Mary's Response:

Dear Brendan:
  • Right on! Thanks for your wonderful statement of support for women's equality in the church! Indeed, I am delighted to report that in our community, Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Community, the men are as outspoken in their support for Roman Catholic Womenpriests as the women are! We are blessed to be living Gospel equality now in our vibrant community where all are welcome to share the Eucharist.
  • Bridget Mary Meehan, sofiabmm@aol.com, 703-505-0004

  • Madam, ..."the Apostolic Letter from the Holy See of May 22nd 1994 needs to be highlighted again, for in this document the definitive answer to the whole matter is set out clearly. Apostolic Letter, Ordinatio Sacerdotalis( Priestly Oration).“Wherefore in order that all doubt may be removed regarding a matter of great importance, a matter which pertains to the church’s divine constitution itself, in virtue of my ministry of confirming the brethren (cf. Luke 22.32) I declare that the church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and this judgment is to be definitively held by all the church’s faithful.” Fr TOM INGOLDSBY SDB,
Dear Fr. Tom,
  • I hope that you don't mean to suggest that God who is all powerful, all-loving, all-just is impotent when it comes to ordaining women. The institutional church's teaching, which you cite above, is an insult to anyone who believes that women and men are created in God's image according to God's Word in Genesis, therefore, both women and men are called to be partners and equals in relationships, in work, in every aspect of life, including ministry in the church. Bridget Mary Meehan, RCWP, sofiabmm@aol.com, 703-505-0004

  • Madam, –
    "To remove the template of male priest presiding at the Eucharist in the place of Jesus whose own maleness was not accidental and who defined his relationship with his church in spousal terms would be as inappropriate as replacing bread and wine by other types of food and drink..."
    Blarney,
    Co Cork.

    Dear Margaret,
  • The image of Jesus as bridegroom and the church as bride is a metaphor, not to be taken literally. When it is applied to the priest presiding at Eucharist, the metaphor is twisted out of context, literalized and "sexualized". Jesus gave the Eucharist to the whole church, as a sacred memorial meal. In the early church, the community leader presided at Eucharist. Paul mentions in Romans 16, the names of women leaders of house churches, who more then likely presided at Eucharist in their homes.
  • Jesus used many images in the parables including the feminine images of God; the woman who lost a coin, and a "mother hen", to show the nurturing presence of God .
  • The church teaches that God is neither male, nor female, but both women and men are created in God's image. So women priests remind us that women are equal images of God. Therefore, women can take our rightful place at the altar.
  • Jesus was a Jewish male, and the Twelve were Jewish males, most of whom were, more then likely, married. We know for sure that Peter and 39 popes was married. So does that mean, only Jewish, married men should be priests. For the first twelve hundred years of the church's history, women were ordained deacons, priests and bishops. Roman Catholic Womenpriests are reclaiming our ancient tradition and offering the gift of a renewed priestly ministry to our church. According to the Irish Life of St. Brigit, Brigit was ordained by Mel as a bishop.
  • Bridget Mary Meehan, RCWP, sofiabmm@aol.com, 703-505-0004

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Irish Catholic Priests Association Supported Mass Boycott/ Kudos to Irish Priests for taking on Hierarchy

THE ASSOCIATION of Catholic Priests has insisted that a campaign to
boycott weekend Masses received substantial support.

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/0928/1224279828137.html

The representative, Tony Flannery , was on RTE Television news last night about it.

"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



Pope Benedict to Canonize Sr. Mary MacKillop, an Excommunicated Australian Nun on Oct. 17th, 2010/Good news for Roman Catholic Womenpriests


http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/frontpage/2010/0928/1224279829336.html

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


"Vatican Probes Group Tied to Scandal"/ Associated Press Article/My Story of Nunhood 101

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2012992166_apeuvaticancatholiccult.html?syndication=rss

Associated Press Writer

VATICAN CITY —

"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!!

We were a band of idealistic young woman, many right out of highschool. The "ins and outs" still get together for periodic reunions. Utilizing a listserve, we stay connected, sharing prayer requests and offering mutual support.

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!

Monday, September 27, 2010

Mural on Wall of St. John's Episcopal Church in Edinburgh in honor of the Pope's Visit to Scotland





Photo of a mural painted by Artists for Justice and Peace on the wall of St Johns Episcopal Church in Princes Street, Edinburgh. There is always a mural there about a current ethical/justice/peace issue. This was the one they painted for the Pope's visit and he probably saw it, because he passed this church in the Popemobile!

Jennifer Sleeman: A Prophetic Voice for Women's Equality in the Church

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


"Women to the fore as priest urges inclusion"/Irish Times/Women were priests for 1200 years

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/0927/1224279760702.html

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:
Bravo to Fr. Iggy O'Donovan for his courageous invitation to women in the church. In August I met Fr. Iggy in Castlebar where both of us were on Humbert Summer School Panel on Church Reform. I commend your courage for publically naming the elephant in the living room of the Catholic Church's house and taking a step toward inclusion in your local church! I hope that many U.S. priests follow your example. and stand together for justice for women in the church, like the 300 priests who met in Portlaoise in Sept. I disagree on one point and that is your comment about exclusion of women in priestly ministry goes back 2000 years. It does not. According to recent scholarship, women were ordained deacons, priests and bishops during the first twelve hundred years of church history. See Gary Macy's book, The Hidden History of Women's Ordination and Ute Eisen's Women Officerholders in Early Christianity as two scholarly works and archaeological evidence of mosaics, frescos, and tomb inscriptions in Rome, Sicily, N.Africa, and Egypt. Dr. Dorothy Irvin has accumulated many depictions of women deacons, priests and bishops ministering in the early Christian community. One example if you visit St. Priscilla's catacomb in Rome.You will see a fresco dated about 350 A.D that depicts a woman deacon in the center vested in a dalmatic, her arms raised in the orans position for public worship. On the left side of the scene is a woman being ordained a priest by a bishop seated in a chair. She is vested in chasuble, amice and holding a gospel scroll.The woman on the right end of this fresco is wearing the same robe as the bishop on the left and is stting in the same type of chair. She is turned toward the figures in the center and left, watching the woman deacon and priest. "These attributes," comments Dr. Dorothy Irvin "indicate that she is thought of as bishop while the baby she is holding identifies her as Mary. In the early church, women's ordination was based on succession from the apostles including Mary, Mother of Jesus, Mary of Magdala, Phoebe, Petronella and others about whose status among the founders of the church could be no doubt. "
This is one of the reasons that I believe that Mary, Mother of Jesus is a strong supporter of women leaders, including women deacons, priests and bishops. In Sarasota, our people-empowered, egalitarian community, is named, Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community. Our Roman Catholic Womenpriest Movement is non-clerical and non-hierarchical. We promote a renewed priestly ministry in a community of equals. Our bishops are not on our leadership circle/and do not make administrative decisions. Our bishop's role is spiritual and pastoral. We have a leadership circle that make administrative decisions. For more information, visit
www.romancatholicwomenpriests.org
Contact: irvincalendar@hotmail.com
Contact: Bridget Mary at sofiabmm@aol.com

"Attendance at Mass strong despite call, says Church"/Irish Times/ Sexism is a sin

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/0927/1224279760727.html

"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

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Issues outlined at priests' gathering of Irish Priests in Portlaoise, Ireland /Irish Times

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."

"Some 300 priests turned out for the meeting of the association which aims to provide a “voice” for clergy. Organisers had expected between 50 to 70 priests to attend the meeting at the parish centre in Portlaoise, Co Laois and had to change venue to accommodate the interest."

"The high turnout showed that the association had “touched a nerve” and that there was a “voice needed” by the Irish clergy, one of the founders, Fr Brendan Hoban, said. The association will be very proactive and will have spokesmen on issues that arise in the church and society, Fr Hoban said."

"He outlined the aims and objectives which he said are based on the teachings of the second Vatican council. The role of women in the church is “in need of a change”, Fr Hoban said."

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!

Bridget Mary Meehan,RCWP

sofiabmm@aol.com

703-505-0004

"Robes for Women: Against Vatican Resistance, the Movement to Ordain Women Gathers Steam" in TIME


Judy Lee, RCWP ministers to
homeless and poor in Ft. Myers, Fl.


Jane Via, RCWP
Mary Magdalene Apostle Community
,
San Diego,CA.

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2019635,00.html

by Tim Padgett/Ft. Myers/TIME magazine

"Like any good priest, Judy Lee knows how to use a Bible story. One of the readings for Roman Catholic Masses on a recent Sunday, from the Book of Wisdom, recounts how the Hebrews defied the pharaoh by worshipping God "in secret." That passage resonates at the house in Fort Myers, Fla., where Lee is conducting Mass for 25 Catholics gathered in front of a coffee-table altar in defiance of the Pope. "Rome says you'll be thrown out of the church for being here," says Lee, "because I'm a woman."
"We're the Rosa Parks of the Catholic Church," says Bridget Mary Meehan,...We no longer accept second-class status in our own religion..." Like Meehan, most of he almost 80 Catholic women ordained in the U.S. hold advanced religious degrees and have logged years of lay work in the church, from premarriage counseling to serving Communion. Mary are married-another doctrinal no-no. since Catholic priests, with rare exceptions, must be celibate- and they often have outside jobs to make ends meet... Mary Magdalene Apostle's pastor Jane Via, is a San Diego County prosecutor. .."

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2019635,00.html#ixzz10gJdrbI4