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Monday, March 9, 2015

Rita Lucey, ARCWP: Her Story on WFTV in Orlando-Join the Conversation on Facebook!

https://www.facebook.com/AngelaJacobsTV?ref=hl
In this wonderful interview, Rita shares  her journey to priesthood. Join the conversation on facebook.  Share your opinion with Florida Television!

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Homily for 3rd Sunday of Lent: "Upheaval and Protest" by Silvia Brandon Perez, ARCWP

https://silviantonia.wordpress.com/2015/03/08/homily-for-the-3rd-sunday-of-lent-upheaval-and-protest/

Homily for the 3rd Sunday of Lent: Upheaval and protest

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Today is the third Sunday of Lent and also International Women’s Day. We see Jesus the Jewish errant sage on a rampage, throwing the moneychangers out of the temple, an angry Jesus who is acting in a very disagreeable fashion. In our “politically correct” society, we have been brought up to achieve niceness at all costs. We want everyone to love us. This is what society has decreed is the most important thing to achieve, after, of course, amassing money in abundance. But Jesus is knocking over tables and breaking furniture, more than likely using curse words that we don’t associate with this man whom we have been taught is our consoler, and he is spilling precious coins to boot!
We have seen throughout our Lenten meditations that Jesus was anything but a conflict-avoider as we have been taught to be. His public ministry is a ministry of confrontation. If, as we saw last Sunday, we are to obey God’s command to listen to him, we cannot avoid confrontation either. We will have to be up front and center about injustice, and to subvert and disrupt the current situation of our society, where greed is enshrined and Mammon is our God.
International Women’s Day, which this year falls on this third Sunday of Lent, has been celebrated throughout the world for more than a century, and commemorates, among other things, the death of over 146 young female workers in the Triangle Waist Factory Fire of March, 1911. It is not what we make of it in the United States, where it has been mostly ignored; it is not about women’s achievements, or not primarily. Historical data makes it clear that this celebration is very much the story of the work of thousands of women (and men) attempting to obtain better working conditions and the right to “bread and peace,” or “bread and roses.” Let us never forget the sexual strike instigated by Lysistrata in ancient Greece in order to end war, or Parisian women’s march on Versailles to demand women’s right to vote during the French Revolution, to the call of liberty, equality and fraternity.
On March 8, 1857, women from clothing and textile factories held a protest and general strike in New York City against low wages and poor working conditions. They sought a reduction of the working day to ten hours, equal pay for work done, and time off to breastfeed their young. They were attacked and made to disperse by the police, but two years later, also in March, they established their first labor union. More protests followed on March 8 in other years, including 1908 when 15,000 women marched through New York City demanding shorter hours, better pay and voting rights.
In 1910, the first international women’s conference was held in Copenhagen by the Socialist International and an International Women’s Day established, intended to honor a global movement for women’s rights and suffrage. The conference had over 100 women delegates from 17 countries, and the proposal for an international day of celebration was greeted with unanimous approval. Women’s rights and suffrage was the call of the day. More than a century later, they are yet to be achieved and honored, as they surely should be by now, in every corner of our planet.
The Triangle Waist Company, in New York City, was typical of the sweatshops of the day, herding workers together and forcing them to work long hours under unsanitary and dangerous conditions. In 1909, an incident at the factory had caused 400 employees to walk out. The Women’s Trade Union League, a progressive association of middle class white women, had helped the young women workers picket and fence off thugs and police provocation. At a historic meeting at Cooper Union, thousands of garment workers from all over the city followed young Clara Lemlich’s call for a general strike. A historic agreement established a grievance system. Unfortunately, most of the sweatshops, which then as now employed immigrant workers, were not unionized.
On Saturday, March 25, 1911, a fire broke out on the top floors of the Asch Building where the Triangle Waist Factory was located, and within minutes the factory, locked by the owners so the women could not leave work, had claimed the lives of 146 girls. Girls jumping out of 9th floor windows to their death changed working conditions in New York forever. These girls were mostly Italian, German, Russian and Irish immigrants, aged 15 to 23. The building had only one fire escape and there is no question that the doors leading out of the factory had been locked by the owners of the factory, later acquitted in a criminal trial for the death of the women.
All subsequent IWD celebrations commemorate the senseless death of these young girls. It was made official by the United Nations in 1975. It is vitally important as a day to remember all that has taken place, the struggles, the victories, as well as to take stock of all that must still take place before we can consider ourselves part of a sane, just world.
In 1995 in Beijing, member nations of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women met to come up with guidelines for measuring progress on achieving gender equality. At Beijing +5, in 2000, they met again to review achievements and explore strategies to accelerate action. This year, the 20th year since the Beijing Platform was signed, although much progress has been achieved, there is still much work to be done in areas such as human rights, violence against females, health, unpaid work, poverty and women’s diversity. We should note that our government refused for many years to sign the Platform, although it finally agreed to withdraw an amendment it had required concerning women’s rights to reproductive health services. UNWB20logoen gif
Thus, International Women’s Day is the story of all women in the struggle for equal participation in society. At a time when more and more women, in the United States and other countries, live increasingly in poverty, and continue to suffer from unequal working conditions, from sexual discrimination and crimes of violence specifically directed at women, we must all stand together to bring about equal rights and an equal voice to all inhabitants of this planet, no matter their gender or sexual orientation.
Our modern corporate society preys on the weakest in our society, and that includes mothers and their children, the elderly and the disabled. More and more, what little was achieved in earlier days is being taken away in what is probably the largest recent transfer of wealth from the poorest to the richest. The Occupy Movement worldwide brought that out: the 1% versus the 99%. But in our country, using Orwellian doublethink and doublespeak, politicians that were elected to represent all members of the society, engage in orgies of misogynist legislation. We mouth platitudes about the protection of the family, and then deport the strangers among us, whose homelands have been scorched by our military and economic policies. We discriminate, as a nation, as a matter of course.
We are at war everywhere, the new Pax Americana making and selling weapons to all countries, and frequently to both sides in a conflict. We term people fighting for their freedom as terrorists, and have policies and programs, such as those exemplified by the School of the Americas, that target the so-called subversive among us, those who are willing to fight injustice wherever it may appear. Dissent, a cornerstone of our early existence, is daily criminalized.
What would Jesus do? What did he do? He broke the furniture, threw out the merchants of greed, subverted the social order of empire, and was crucified, the punishment meted by the Empire to subverters and revolutionaries, as a consequence of his incredible ministry. I like to think that if he walked the earth today, he would be on strike at Pelican Bay or Guantanamo, or doing time for protesting nuclear weapons. As people of faith, we who were told last Sunday in the transfiguration, that we were to “listen to him,” must stand up and protest our national sins, and they are many. We are not called upon to agree but to disagree. We are not called upon to be nice, but to resist, to object, to shout out or to stand up for human rights and justice, for peace, and today, for women. For today and tomorrow, we must all be our sister’s keeper.
Let us rephrase Donne’s meditation to include women: No woman is an island, entire of herself; every woman is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. (…) Any woman’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in womankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.

Happy International Women's Day! The Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests (ARCWP) is Living Gospel Equality Now and "Making It Happen"

On International Women's Day, the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests rejoices that we are living Gospel equality now in local grassroots communities. Our vision is a renewed priestly ministry in a community of equals. The photo below is of Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community (MMOJ) celebrating a liturgy in Sarasota, Florida. In our inclusive liturgies all are welcome to receive Communion. At MMOJ we have dialogue homilies to honor the Spirit of God speaking through the people of God.  We gather in a circle around the altar even when we have over 60 people to pray the Eucharistic Prayer.  www.marymotherofjesus.org

There are inclusive Catholic Communities in many places in the United States, Canada, and South America  where women priests and married priests  minister in an egalitarian, empowered communities.  We are living the theme of Internatioanl Women's Day as we "make it happen," in the Catholic Church, in diverse interfaith ministries , and in prophetic witness for peace, justice and equality in our world. 

Is God calling you to be a priest? Do you feel passionate about  creating a more just and egalitarian church that lives Jesus' message today?  Would you like to be a supporter of our movement? If so, contact me at sofiabmm@aol.com and visit our website: www.arcwp.org, You can "make it happen!"  
Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP 
Priest Katy Zatsick, ARCWP  in vestments and  Deacon Kathryn Shea, ARCWP, in stole co-preside at Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community Liturgy in Sarasota, Florida
All around the world, International Women's Day represents an opportunity to celebrate the achievements of women while calling for greater equality.
Make It Happen is the 2015 theme for our internationalwomensday.com global hub, encouraging effective action for advancing and recognising women.
Each year International Women's Day (IWD) is celebrated on March 8. The first International Women's Day was held in 1911. Thousands of events occur to mark the economic, political and social achievements of women. Organisations, governments, charities, educational institutions, women's groups, corporations and the media celebrate the day.
Various organisations identify their own International Women's Day theme, specific to their local context and interests. Many charities, NGOs and Governments also adopt a relevant theme or campaign to mark the day. For example, organisations like the UN, Oxfam, Women for Women, Care International, Plan, World Association of Girl Guides & Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) and more - run exciting and powerful campaigns that raise awareness and encourage donations for good causes. The UN has been declaring an annual equality theme for many years.


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Saturday, March 7, 2015

Women of Faith Mark International Women's Day on Sunday March 8, 2015 in Global, Interfaith Fast and Social Media Campaign for Gender Justice

Women of faith will mark International Women's Day on Sunday March 8, 2015 by joining together in a global, interfaith fast and social media campaign (#EqualinFaith) for gender justice and the equality of women in their faith communities. The day-long fast and social media campaign will culminate in interfaith prayer services and regional gatherings in more than 20 cities, in three countries.

Equal in Faith organizers embrace the official theme of International Women's Day 2015, "Make it Happen," as a call for all people of faith to stand with women everywhere in the struggle for equality.
Kate McElwee, WOC co-executive director

"When women are denied equitable leadership positions in their faith, it is part of a larger culture of sexism that not only silences women's vocations and voices, but implicitly gives permission to the rest of the world to discriminate against women," stated Kate McElwee, of WOC.

"Equality shouldn't stop at the doors of our churches, synagogues or mosques," asserted Lorie Winder, of Ordain Women. "We refuse to tolerate discrimination against women in our secular institutions.  Why, then, do we accept it in our religious institutions?  Since religion significantly impacts the broader culture, the marginalization of women in our faith communities affects all of us." See the full media release

How to take action:
  • Attend an event near you: See Map
  • Share your solidarity or a photo on social media using the hashtag: #EqualinFaith
  • Pray or Fast: Equal in Faith Prayer Resources
  • "Like" and share the Equal in Faith Facebook page
  • Watch and share the 2015 Equal In Faith Video

Equal in Faith organizers include representatives from Ordain Women (Mormon), the Women's Ordination Conference (Roman Catholic), and Ordain Women Now (Lutheran Church Missouri Synod). Launched on U.S. National Women's Equality Day in 2013, we call attention to the marginalization of women in faith communities and foster solidarity across faith traditions in the struggle for gender justice in religion.

Priest Lee Breyer Celebrates 50th Anniversary of Ordination and Shares Homily Starter at Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community on March 7, 2015


The first reading from Exodus is basically the "rules of the road" for those folks going together to new lands/places...i.e. here it is the Jews headed to the Promised Land.  It laid down pretty clearly that there is one leader and identified those behaviors that everyone would do to keep peace on the way. 


John's gospel piece takes place at a time when Passover (and the passion) were near. John tells a temple story (mentioned in every gospel) of what Jesus actually did (if historical) or could have done (if made up from a number of lesser occasions.  The story is either explanatory of why the arrest/killing took place (“it was the worst sort of blasphemy”) or descriptive of the culmination of the increasing number of serious ‘disagreements’ between Jesus' behavior and what was acceptable to the Jewish leaders ("it was the last straw").    Side note: Mark 11:18 says that when "the chief priests and the teachers of the law heard of [the temple business], they began looking for some way to kill Jesus."


While we (i.e. the MOJO community) try to follow "the rules of the road," "love God and one another," but there may be times when we protest (in some way) against those rules and those actions (like Jesus and the temple unrest).  And those activities might not be peaceful or popular (as Jesus' protest wasn't.)  And some people might have limits on the “amount or type” of protesting that is considered acceptable.  In all of this we need to remember the saying that "true peace is not merely the absence of tension; it is the presence of justice" and “if you want peace, work for justice.” But many times, justice can be or seem to be pretty subjective.

Question:  Today society looks to "the rules of the road" (the law), hoping that it will establish and maintain peace.  But there are times when parts of society feels it must protest about the injustice that it experiences. 

How do we understand the peaceable Jesus and the angry and destructible Jesus?  How do we understand our following the "rules of the road" while engaging or participating in "peaceable protests"?
www.marymotherofjesus.org




"Dying Catholic Priest Records Videos Declaring Women Should Be Ordained" /Fr. Bill Brennan Co-Presided at Liturgy with Janice Sevre Duszynska, ARCWP

http://www.wisn.com/news/dying-catholic-priest-records-videos-declaring-women-should-be-ordained/31663242
 Bridget Mary's Response: Jesuit Bill Brennan presided at liturgy with Janice Sevre Duszynska ARCWP at SOA Watch Vigil in Colombus, GA.  Janice, Milwaukee native, has co-presided with three priests at Catholic liturgies.  All three priests were at the receiving end of the wrath of the institutional church. Fr. Roy Bourgeois was thrown was out of Maryknoll, Fr. Jerry Zawada was told he could not celebrate Eucharist in public - the same punishment as Fr. Bill Brennan.  ( Dates of  Eucharistic Liturgies with Janice were: Aug. 9, 2008 with Roy Bourgeois at her ordination in Lexington Kentucky, Nov. 2011, with Fr. Jerry Zawada at SOA Watch Vigil in Colombus, GA. and Nov. 2012, Fr. Bill Brennan at SOA WAtch Vigil in Colombus, GA.)
 Bill and Janice were good friends active in peace and justice  witnesses for years. On one occasion they were arrested in a non-violent witness to close the School of the Americas. Bill is a prophet who continues to advocate for women priests and will do so for all eternity. Thanks Fr. Bill Brennan! 
Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, www.arcwp.org 

"Take all of this out of here" by Judy Lee, RCWP: Homily for 3rd Sunday in Lent March 8, 2015

https://judyabl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/take-all-this-out-of-here-rev-judys-homily-for-3rd-sunday-in-lent-march-82015/

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Take All This out of Here!
The cleansing and clearing of the Temple in Jerusalem that we read about in our Gospel for Sunday (John 2:13-25) is one of my favorite Gospel readings. In the synoptic Gospels it takes place just after Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem that we celebrate as Palm Sunday, the start of the last week of Jesus’ life.   In this account from John it may take place earlier in Jesus’ preaching career although Passover in Jerusalem is still the context. All four Gospels record an account of this event in the Temple that shows Jesus’ passion and courage, and righteous anger as he speaks truth to power with his words and strong actions.  But, what is the truth that he is speaking here?
“There he found people selling cattle, sheep and pigeons, while moneychangers sat at their counters. Making a whip out of cords, Jesus drove them all out of the Temple…Then he faced the pigeon-sellers: ‘Take all of this out of here! Stop turning God’s house into a market! “  
The account in Matthew (21:13) adds “My house shall be called a house of prayer (for all people/nations) and not a den of thieves”. Matthew describes Jesus as overturning the tables of the moneychangers and the benches of those selling doves (21:12).   In commenting on the den of thieves, Jesus echoes Jeremiah 7:11 which is in the context of the entire seventh chapter of Jeremiah where the prophet describes the myriad ways the people cling to the Temple but do not follow God’s laws. The prophet tells them to “Reform your ways and your actions….if you (do this) and deal with each other justly, if you do not oppress the alien, the fatherless or the widow, and do not shed innocent blood in this place….you will live….Will you steal and murder, commit adultery and perjury….and then come and stand before me in this house that bears my name ….Has this house, which bears my Name, become a den of robbers?….”(Jer 7; 1-11).  These offenses include many of the ways the religious leaders and people reject God’s law while saying they “love” God’s house.  The Law is a relational guideline for our relationship with God and with one another. At its heart is justice, especially for those who are on the margins, like aliens and widows and orphans who are impoverished. According to the prophets, and to Jesus we cannot love God’s house if we do not love and KEEP God’s law. That is the point of including the Ten Commandments in Exodus20:1-17 in our readings for this Sunday. It is a review of what those who love God’s house/temple ought to be doing-living in truly just relationships with one another and loving God above all.
Most interpretation of Jesus’ actions in the Temple settle primarily upon the words “moneychangers” and “market place” and miss the full meaning of what Jesus is doing here. This is the last week of Jesus’ life. He knows his fate. In Luke’s account (Luke 19:45-48) before his actions in the Temple he weeps over Jerusalem because they did not recognize “the time of God’s coming to them” (Luke 19: 41-44).  He is defining his mission one last time and with greater passion and energy than ever before. Like the prophets before him, Jesus is saying that the Temple has come to represent religion gone wrong-caught up with animal sacrifices and all of the economic business around it instead of living the Law with all of its compassion and justice for the neediest and most outcast among us. In Matthew 9: 13 when Jesus is speaking to the Pharasaic critics after choosing Matthew the tax collector as a disciple, Jesus tells them to “Go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice’”.  Here he is quoting Hosea 6:6 where the prophet Hosea clarifies what God wants from a people who have broken the covenant- not followed the laws of love, inclusion and justice: “For I desire mercy, not sacrifice, and acknowledgement of God rather than burnt offerings”.
In the context of Matthew 21 the “multitude” shouts Hosanna! meaning Save! As Jesus enters Jerusalem. He then acts to save God’s house and God’s people from a false understanding of what God is all about. As he said earlier in Matthew 9, God does not want animal sacrifice or burnt offerings, but mercy and compassion and justice. Jesus is freeing the animals that were awaiting their sacrificial deaths, the cattle and sheep and the little doves, pigeons, the poor person’s sacrifice. He is decrying the sacrificial cult perversion of the religion of the times as well as the money making that relies on cultic sacrifice. The priests stand to lose the most if the people follow Jesus and no longer adhere to live animal sacrifices-they lose money, status, and food. The core of their job centered on animal sacrifice.  It was the chief priests and the elders of the Temple that challenged Jesus to say who gave him such authority? (Matt 21: 23). Jesus was clearly taking on the Temple leadership.  And he also alienated the occupying Roman government as he put love of God as central to the Jews in a time when Julius Caesar claimed to be both God and the Son of God and “gospel’, good news, meant any news about Caesar. Clearly Jesus changed what the Good News was. For the people, he heals, includes, loves, feeds and teaches and calls for new hearts-he is the fulfillment of the prophecies and preaches adherence to the spirit and not the letter of the Law.  His strong actions in the Temple and their meaning to the religious leaders are probably a major reason for his crucifixion.  He throws out those who profit from animal sacrifice and sets the sacrifices free even while decrying those who make money off the poor instead of caring for them in the ways the Law prescribes.  This is Jesus the Liberator of the poor and of all “innocents” including the animals. This is the Savior of God’s message to us and God’s actions in history. This is the Savior of all who break God’s Law and repent, of those seek to serve and love God and the least among us. As 1 Corinthians 1:22-25,our epistle for the day says; Christ is the power and the wisdom of God!  Wow! Or as it says in the Psalms “Selah”-pause and think that over.
What do we do to preach the good news to the people and to the powers that be? How do we take on the Government or even the Church to enact compassion and justice? I am humbled to be a Roman Catholic woman priest. I think of over two hundred of us who in simple faith and  commitment to justice within and outside of the church for women who are courageous enough to sacrifice our good standing in the church to answer God’s call and risk ordination with “automatic excommunication” and the kind of criticism from church leaders that Jesus also endured.   I think this takes the strength of Jesus in the Temple.  I think of Frederick Douglas, Sojourner Truth, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,Rosa Parks, Fannie Lou Hamer, Viola Liuso, Andrew Goodman,James Earl Chaney and Michael Schwerner, Episcopal Seminarian Jonathan Myrick Daniels and all of those people of faith who challenged segregation and the laws of the land that kept black people, and eventually all poor people, down without equal rights and equal pay. I think of Harvey Milk and the gay activists who gave their lives for the life of the LGBT community. I think of the Plowshare Nein peace activists including our co-pastor Judy Beaumont and presently Sister Megan Rice who chose prison rather than silence or inaction in the face of nuclear proliferation and drone warfare. I think of Greenpeace and animal activists who fight for the least of these. I think of all the parents of poor and minority students who go up to the Principals and Boards of schools to safeguard the learning experience of their students.  I reflect on our own neighborhood Good Shepherd community riddled with gang violence and drive by shootings.  I think of those brave souls who tell the truth about what is happening and make the sacrifices needed to identify and stand against the evil. I pray for the majority who just accept things as they are and thereby cooperate with the horror of violence and the threat of death that plagues the neighborhood. I pray for wisdom and guidance in proclaiming the Good News in this context as it must include naming the evil of drug, gun and gang violence no matter who likes it or not. I have had to say, even as Jesus and the prophets did, “don’t come and sit and smile in this church and go out to break God’s precious law with guns and violence.”
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May we look to Jesus, Jesus cleansing the Temple,  Jesus the Christ ,the author and finisher of our faith as we seek to cleanse the wrongs that plague our church, our world and our families and communities. Amen!
Rev. Dr. Judith Lee, RCWP
Co-Pastor Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community,
Fort Myers, Florida
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Friday, March 6, 2015

Rita Lucey, ARCWP "Catholic Priest Defies Church Doctrine" on NPR

http://www.wmfe.org/rita-lucey-catholic-priest-defies-church-doctrine/

Photo by Rob Bartlett: Rita Lucey, orlandoweekly.com
Photo by Rob Bartlett: Rita Lucey, orlandoweekly.com
Rebel is not a word that leaps to mind when you first meet Belle Isle resident Rita Lucey. Nor does the word radical or revolutionary or agitator. Not even troublemaker. In fact, the words that do come to mind to describe the 80-year-old with wispy gray hair and vibrant eyes, are ones you might use to describe your favorite aunt or a kindly neighbor. Bubbly. Charming. Warm.
But Lucey is also a bit of a maverick – she was arrested in 1998 for protesting outside the controversial School of the Americas and served six months in federal prison as a result. She’s an active member of Amnesty International. On Jan. 17, despite strict Catholic Church rules that forbid women from joining the clergy, she became ordained a priest.
She joins a group of about 200 women around the world who are defying church teaching that only men should serve as priests. The women say the church’s stance on the subject is not only outdated, but also unjust and hurts the church in the long run because it refuses to treat women as equals and it closes the door on many devout women willing and able to serve. The first women priests were officially ordained by a Catholic male bishop in Europe in 2002, and the movement to bring more women on board has been growing ever since. The church has excommunicated the women, as well as the men who helped ordain them, and Lucey faces the same potential consequence. But she’s not afraid.
“This is ridiculous and an injustice, and injustices have to be addressed,” she says when asked whether she has any misgivings about her decision. “I have a right to be a priest as much as any man, because God created us equal. Men and women are equal in the sight of God.”

The Miracle Pope:Pope Francis and Women by John Allen, Response by Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP

http://time.com/3729904/francis-women/

"The first pope of the Catholic Church to have had a woman as a boss is steadfast in his defense of the status quo when it comes to women and Church leadership."

 Bridget Mary's Response: I appreciate the story of the wonderful relationship that Pope Francis had with a woman boss. But, I do not understand his defense of the status quo when it comes to women and Church leadership. May I suggest that when he comes to the U.S. that he schedules a lunch with a group of  women including women priests and our supporters. It could be an eye-opener and lots of fun too!
 One of the gifts that women priests bring to the table is that in a church where half of the members are women,  the church needs the Gospel preached from women's experiences and women's lives in order to grow in holiness and to minister to half of the world's population.

"The fundamental reason for the Church’s refusal to admit women to the priesthood is that it’s bound by the example of Christ. Jesus did not include women among his original 12 apostles, so the argument runs, and the Church is compelled to follow that example, restricting the priesthood today to men. "
Bridget Mary's Response: Jesus did not ordain anyone according to the Gospels.  Mary of Magdala was the first witness to encounter the Risen Christ, making her the apostle to the apostles.  In Roman 16:8  St. Paul commends Junia, a woman apostle as a mentor whom he praised for her witness to the Gospel! In Luke 8:3, we read that among Jesus' disciples were Mary of Magdala, Joanna, Susanna and many more who used their considerable means to bankroll the ministry
Since Jesus had women disciples, why can't the Catholic Church have women priests? 
Right now, it is flying on one wing and it is really damaged! 
"Although Francis presumably accepts that teaching, it’s not the basis of his own stance on the issue. For him, the push for women priests is where two forces repellent to him intersect: machismo, "
Bridget Mary's Response: Is Pope Francis refusal to accept women priests rooted in cultural bias? He seems so open in many  other areas. 
 which is an especially resonant concept for a Latin American, and clericalism, an exaggerated emphasis on the power and privilege of the clergy, which is virtually this pope’s personal bête noire.
... "applied to the priesthood, the conclusion is that it’s a fallacy to believe that women will never be equal to men in the Church until they wield the same ecclesiastical power. Instead, the argument runs, real feminism means embracing “complementarity”: the idea that men and women play different but complementary roles in the wider world and inside the Church."
Bridget Mary's Response: Women Priests offer a deep healing of centuries old  sexism in which only men could image Jesus fully at the altar as priests. We are visible reminders that women are spiritual equals. Women's rights are human rights is the basic tenet of feminism. Pope Francis must make the connection between discrimination against women in the church and the oppression , abuse and violence toward women  in the world.  
"Naturally, it’s an argument that’s met with an uneven reception, as many women have responded that it’s rather disingenuous to play down the importance of power when you’re the one wielding it. Moreover, many theologians in Catholicism, both men and women, point out that in all its official teaching on the subject, the Church describes the priesthood in terms of service rather than power. If that’s true, they ask, couldn’t the desire of women to become priests be understood in terms of a call to serve rather than a lust for power? In other words, they wonder, has official papal rhetoric set up a straw man?"
"If anything, Francis recoils from clericalism even more viscerally than machismo. As Francis has defined it, clericalism means two things: first, an over-emphasis on what he called “small-minded rules” at the expense of mercy and compassion; and second, an exalted notion of clerical power and privilege, as opposed to the spirit of service. Francis sees clericalism almost as the original sin of the Catholic priesthood. In informal remarks to leaders of religious orders in late 2013, he referred to the hypocrisy of clericalism as “one of the worst evils” in the Church and memorably said that unless future priests are inoculated against it when they’re young, they risk turning out to be “little monsters.”
 Bridget Mary's Response: I agree with Pope Francis that clericalism is "one of the worst evils." Certainly, the sex abuse cover-up attempted to protect the hierarchy's reputation and status in church and society. 
"Francis believes the demand for women’s admission to the clerical ranks betrays an unconscious clericalism. In a December 2013 interview with the Italian newspaper La Stampa, he was asked about the notion that he might name female cardinals. “I don’t know where this idea sprang from,” Francis replied. “Women in the Church must be valued, not ‘clericalized.’ Whoever thinks of women as cardinals suffers a bit from clericalism.”....
Bridget Mary's Response: The Association of Roman Catholic Priests is living Gospel equality now in the Catholic Church, All are welcome to receive sacraments in our  inclusive, welcoming communities and ministries. We are not clerical, but rather, function within a discipleship of equals.
I think Catholics should challenge Pope Francis on the issue of gender equality in the church. He said he was going to promote women in the Vatican. I really don't see a lot of progress. Where are the prominent feminist theologians in the Vatican? Women theologians need to be more than the "strawberries on the cake." Their research and scholarship should be valued for its own scholarship in our contemporary world. Where are the women in the top jobs in the Vatican Congregations? 
I applaud Pope Francis for all he has done to reform the church. He is moving in the right direction. He has taken on the Vatican Bank, and taken a strong stance for justice for the poor and oppressed as well as criticizing unjust, greedy policies and structures that keep millions in abject poverty. 
 We are beloved sisters and brothers in Christ, and it is my hope that he will  lift the excommunication against women priests and our supporters as well as all in the church who are following their consciences.   Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, www.arcwp.org

Excerpted from THE FRANCIS MIRACLE: Inside the Transformation of the Pope and the Church by John L. Allen Jr., published by TIME Books, an imprint of Time Home Entertainment Inc.

Dr. Diana Hayes, "Standing In The Shoes My Mother Made"

Dr. Diana Hayes, Womanist Theologian. YouTube: Standing In The Shoes My Mother Made:
http://youtu.be/OLjyfFCSPPM
Dr. Diana Hayes

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Moving from a Theology of Atonement to a Theology of Abundance, Notes by Bridget Mary Meehan from Richard Rohr's book, Eager to Love

Important Insights from Richard Rohr’s book Eager to Love:  From a Theology of Atonement to a Theology of Abundance
By Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP
The Franciscan School of Theology's focus on God's extravagant love and abundance taught by Saint Bonaventure and John Duns Scotus provides an alternative to Atonement Theology taught by St. Anselm and St. Thomas Aquinas.
The Franciscan theological position was never condemned and was always held as an alternative by the institutional Catholic Church.  However, most Catholics were not exposed to Franciscan theology, but this worldview fits well today with the spiritual journey of contemporary mystics an emerging universe.

Franciscan School of Theology emphasized God as Outpouring Love, and  our call is to live love each day.
Bonaventure:  “We come from God reflecting the divine image, our DNA is found in God. Everything in creation is an example and illustration of the one God mystery in space and time. ..We return to the Source from which we came.” P. 166.
“Grace is inherent in the universe from the moment of the “Big Bang”. (implied in Genesis 1:2, Spirit hovers over the chaos) Grace is “the very shape of the universe from the start.” In this view, ‘salvation is not a divine transaction that takes place because you are morally perfect but much more it is an organic unfolding, a becoming of who you are already are, an inborn sympathy with and capacity for the very One who created you….The Christ Mystery, …is plan A for God, and not a Plan B, a mop up exercise after Adam and Even ate the apple.”
“For Scotus and for Bonaventure, the Trinity is the absolute beginning and ending point. Outpouring Love is the inherent shaped of the universe and when we love, only then do we fully exist in this universe.” We do not need to understand what is happening or who God is before we live in love.  The will to love precedes any need to fully understand whatever we are doing , the Franciscan School would say.” p. 182
Almost all seminaries taught Thomas Aquinas . This meant that knowing the truths of the faith, correct doctrine was the most importan thing.
“In short, truth was equated with knowing instead of loving.”
Atonement Theology:
“According to the Christian understanding of the Bible in the first millennium, Jesus “died for our sins to pay a debt to the devil or to pay a debt to God the Father proposed by St. Anselm of Canterbury"  (1033-2209)
The great Franciscan theologian, John Duns Scotus, was not guided by Temple language of  atonement, blood sacrifice or satisfaction for sins  but to “the utterly new world that Jesus offered, where God’s abundance has made any economy of merit, sacrifice, reparation or atonement both unhelpful and unnecessary. Jesus undid once and for all (Hebrews 7:27,9:12, 10:10) all notions of human and animal sacrifice and replace them with his new economy of grace, which as at the heart of the gospel revolution.” P. 187
“In other words, we are all saved by grace and the utter freedom of God to love who and what God wills, without our tit-for-tat thinking getting the way of God’s absolute freedom , and absolute freedom to love. .. we all need to know that God does not love us because we are that good, God loves us because   God is good.  Nothing humans can do will inhibit, direct, decrease or increase God’s eagerness to love… Only great love can handle great truth.”  P.188, (Eager to Love, by Richard Rohr)

I believe that God is extravagant love always loving, healing, empowering and transforming, moving in all beings everywhere and always loving, healing and empowering through us. Now, this is a theology of abundance that speaks to contemporary spiritual seekers, mystics and prophets today. 


Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP,
www.arcwp.org