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Friday, January 18, 2019

"Ordaining women deacons is ‘about ministry,’ not ‘power,’ says speaker", Women Deacons May Be Coming Soon, but full equality of women must include women priests, Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP

http://catholicphilly.com/2019/01/news/national-news/idea-of-having-women-deacons-about-ministry-not-power-says-speaker/

The full equality of women in the Church  must embrace women priests in a renewed model of egalitarian ministry within the community of the baptized. This is the vision of the international movement of  Roman Catholic Women Priests. Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP, https://arcwp.org, sofiabmm@aol.com


By Beth Griffin • Catholic News Service • Posted January 17, 2019
NEW YORK (CNS) — Ordaining women to the permanent diaconate now, when the church is “crying for ministry,” is a logical way to fulfill its obligation to bring the Gospel to all people, according to panelists at a Jan. 15 event at Jesuit-run Fordham University in New York.
There is incontrovertible evidence that women served as deacons in the early church, they said.
Two speakers at the event on “The Future of Women Deacons” are members of a commission on the diaconate of women established in August 2016 by Pope Francis to review the theology and history of the office of deacon. The group met over a two-year period and submitted its report to the pope in late 2018.
Phyllis Zagano said women served as deacons until the 12th century in the Western church and somewhat longer in the Eastern church. Zagano, a member of the papal commission, is an author and senior research associate-in-residence at Hofstra University.
“While there is no doubt that women deacons existed, there are differing opinions about the nature of their ordination,” Zagano said. The terms “ordained” and “blessed” were used interchangeably in reference to both 

deacons and priests, she said.
Zagano’s research included examination of church manuscripts from the fourth to 16th centuries that are housed in the Vatican Library. She said the liturgical ceremony used by bishops to create women deacons included all the elements of sacramental ordination according to the criteria established by the Council of Trent.
“If a bishop is laying hands on a woman, invoking the Holy Spirit, putting a stole on her, giving the chalice for her to self-communicate and calling her a deacon, I don’t know what else to say,” Zagano said. “As I say to many people, ‘If she wasn’t a deacon, he would call her something else.'”
“Self-communicate” refers to the reception of holy Communion without the assistance of a minister. Those who are not ordained may not self-communicate.
Zagano said men and women deacons performed different duties in different places. Women deacons baptized people and anointed the sick, but men deacons did not, she said. If a woman accused her husband of beating her, a woman deacon examined the bruises and “gave testimony to the bishop, who could render a judgment of nullity. To me, that’s an annulment,” she said.


The diaconate was affirmed and restored as a permanent sacramental ministry by the Second Vatican Council. Pope Benedict XVI later revised canon law to clarify that the permanent diaconate is distinct from the transitional diaconate that is a step toward priestly ordination.
“Many scholars never questioned the received wisdom that women had never been ordained,” said panelist Jesuit Father Bernard Pottier, a member of the papal study commission and a permanent member of the Vatican’s International Theological Commission.
Research has provided “more and more evidence that it was so” and as more scholars and laypeople learn about the new findings, the argument that women were never ordained “is not sustainable anymore,” he said.
“It’s a slow reflection together to get evidence that it’s possible,” Father Pottier said.
The Jesuit traced the disappearance of women deacons to the schism between the Eastern and Western churches in 1054 and the Gregorian reform, which began toward the middle of the 11th century and continued into the first decade of the 12th.
The diaconate as a permanent state first lost ground to the transitional diaconate in the Western church, whose “canonists wanted to define sacraments with clear words” and “wanted a simple process” to priesthood, he said.
Father Pottier said of the 45,000 deacons worldwide, more than 18,000 are in the United States. He said the diaconate also is strong in Germany and Belgium, his home country.
Zagano said the church in some countries “is so poor it cannot train any deacons.”
Dominican Sister Donna Ciangio is chancellor of the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey, and the principal and founder of Church Leadership Consultation, an organization that specializes in mission advancement, training and pastoral planning.
People in the pews are open to accepting women deacons, she said. They already experience women in many roles in the parish.
“This is not a step toward priesthood, but a permanent rite restored by the Second Vatican Council. It’s a vocation, a calling” that is consistent with the Christian mission to witness Christ to all people, Sister Ciangio said.
“This is not about power. It’s about ministry,” Zagano said.
Zagano said the papal study commission on the diaconate of women was the first to include equal membership of men and women. Of its 12 members, Zagano said she was the only one who traveled from North or South America to participate.
“We were six men and six women working in the office of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the building didn’t burn down. This is historic,” she quipped.
While working on the commission, Zagano lived at Casa Santa Marta, the Vatican guesthouse and residence of Pope Francis. She said interacting with other guests, many of whom were cardinals and bishops, was “a humbling experience.”
They engaged her in conversation and offered “very little pushback” to her research, she said. “They knew I didn’t mean women priests and they knew the history of women deacons.”
Asked if the church has a moral obligation to ordain women deacons, Zagano said, “The church. That’s us. We have the right to call forth people to service. It’s our obligation to do whatever it is to bring the Gospel to the people of the world.”
She said friends of Pope Francis told her he wants the matter of women deacons discussed.
Although it is unclear when the pope will respond to the commission’s report, Zagano said, “I have a great sense he will know the time to say something. … The pope is a man of consensus in hearing what the church needs. I am not afraid. My hope is the pope will do for the church what he thinks best.”
The symposium was organized by the Fordham Center on Religion and Culture and moderated by Basilian Father Thomas Rosica, president of Salt and Light Media in Toronto, Canada.

Thursday, January 17, 2019

Will Pope Francis Affirm Women Deacons? Yes because pastoral need will prevail!


Deacons_226.jpeg


Dominican Sr. Donna Ciangio, Jesuit Fr. Bernard Pottier, Phyllis Zagano and Basilian Fr. Thomas Rosica (l-r) at a panel discussion at Fordham University Jan. 15 on the future of women deacons. Pottier and Zagano served on the Study Commission on the Women's Diaconate, initiated by Pope Francis in 2016. (Fordham University/Leo Sorel)

https://www.ncronline.org/news/parish/members-papal-commission-womens-diaconate-make-first-public-comments
My Response: I think Pope Francis will affirm women deacons because  they ministered in many places in the first century of the Church and because of the great pastoral need as well as the negative fallout from the sexual abuse scandal. If Pope Francis affirms women deacons , it could be a first step toward women priests and the full equality of women in the Church. I hope a new model of an inclusive, egalitarian community of equals model of Church does not take another 1000 years! No matter, Roman Catholic Women Priests will continue to lead the way to a renewed model of ministry that reflects equality and justice for all the  baptized in an inclusive community.  Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP, https://arcwp.org
NEW YORK — A study he commissioned on the possibility of ordaining women deacons is complete and now on the desk of Pope Francis.
Phyllis Zagano and Jesuit Fr. Bernard Pottier, two members of that commission, told a packed auditorium at Fordham University's Lincoln Center campus here that the evidence indicates women deacons have a long history in the church and that they are needed in ministry worldwide.
"History alone is not dispositive. It can't answer the question one way or another," said Zagano, author of numerous books and articles on the topic of women deacons and senior research associate at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York. But, she said, the ministry need is there.
Zagano, an NCR columnist, has long studied the diaconate in the ancient church and is involved in current discussions. "I would like to think of women's deacon future. But I have no promises for you," she told the audience of more than 300 at the seminar sponsored by the Fordham Center on Religion and Culture.
The commission, founded two years ago and led by Cardinal Luis Ladaria, is a Vatican first. Comprised of 12 members, it includes an equal number of men and women. Their task was to study the history of the diaconate of women.
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"We are better, men and women coming together," said Pottier, a permanent member of the Vatican's International Theological Commission, making the point that the commission modeled what a mixed-gender clergy could accomplish.
The permanent diaconate was reinstituted in the church after Vatican II. There are currently 45,000 permanent deacons in the world, men who serve in various ministries and can preach and witness marriages and perform baptisms, among other duties. They include both married and single men, with some 18,000 serving in the United States.
Transitional deacons have long served in similar ministerial roles as a stepping-stone to priestly ordination.
Zagano spent months over the two-year span at the Vatican researching the topic and participating in discussions. She said that cardinals and bishops she met from all over the world, even in places such as Asia, Africa and Latin America, where there are few deacons, were supportive of the diaconate and opening ordination to it for women.
One Latin American archdiocese has 400 priests to minister to more than five million Catholics. In one Venezuelan parish, 14 different chapels are served by two priests. The need for ordained ministers is great, said Zagano.
"Our moral obligation is to bring the Gospel to the people of the world," she said.
Much of the discussion here focused on the long history of women deacons, which dates to St. Paul's reference to Phoebe, a woman who served as a deacon. The tradition of women deacons continued through church history, being suppressed in the church in the West as the rites of ordination became perceived as closely connected to the all-male priesthood.
Pope Benedict XVI emphasized, however, the different vocation of priesthood and diaconate. That distinction has emboldened supporters of ordaining women deacons because it separates the issue from the ordination of women, which was categorically ruled out by Pope John Paul II.
Dominican Sr. Donna Ciangio, chancellor for the Archdiocese of Newark, said that people in the pews are ready to ordain women. Some even assume that active women ministers in their parishes are already ordained deacons and want to hear women preach, a ministry that is open to deacons, she said.
The panel emphasized that they were discussing women deacons, not women priests. Audience member Karen Gargamelli-McCreight pressed the panel on women's ordination to the priesthood but was rebuffed and told that was a topic not on the evening's agenda.
"It has nothing to do with what we are doing tonight," said Zagano.
Zagano said she has confidence that the pope would make the right decision about ordaining women deacons, keeping in mind the ministry needs of the church.
She cited Francis' plea for people to make noise about issues in the church that concern them. "He is a man of deep prayer," she said. "This guy is for real."
[Peter Feuerherd is a correspondent for NCR's Field Hospital series on parish life and is a professor of journalism at St. John's University, New York.]

Imogene Rigdon's Memorial Service at Bay Village on January 18, 2019





Opening Prayer: Chaplain Chuck

Hymn: On Eagle's Wings: Cheryl Smith

Scripture: 1 Cor. 13 Bridget Mary (Message translation)
Text of 1 Corinthians 13 from The Message


If I speak with human eloquence and angelic ecstasy but don't love, I'm nothing but the creaking of a rusty gate. 

If I speak God's Word with power, revealing all his mysteries and making everything plain as day, and if I have faith that says to a mountain, "Jump," and it jumps, but I don't love, I'm nothing. 

If I give everything I own to the poor and even go to the stake to be burned as a martyr, but I don't love, I've gotten nowhere.

So, no matter what I say, what I believe, and what I do, I'm bankrupt without love. 

Love never gives up.
Love cares more for others than for self.
Love doesn't want what it doesn't have.
Love doesn't strut,
Doesn't have a swelled head, 
Doesn't force itself on others,
Isn't always "me first,"
Doesn't fly off the handle,
Doesn't keep score of the sins of others,
Doesn't revel when others grovel,
Takes pleasure in the flowering of truth, 
Puts up with anything,
Trusts God always,
Always looks for the best,
Never looks back, But keeps going to the end. 
Love never dies.

Inspired speech will be over some day; praying in tongues will end; understanding will reach its limit. 

We know only a portion of the truth, and what we say about God is always incomplete. 
But when the Complete arrives, our incompletes will be canceled.

When I was an infant at my mother's breast, I gurgled and cooed like any infant. When I grew up, I left those infant ways for good.

We don't yet see things clearly. We're squinting in a fog, peering through a mist. But it won't be long before the weather clears and the sun shines bright! We'll see it all then, see it all as clearly as God sees us, knowing him directly just as he knows us! 

But for right now, until that completeness, we have three things to do to lead us toward that consummation:
Trust steadily in God,
Hope unswervingly,
Love extravagantly.

And the best of the three is love.

Sharing: A Time of Memory and Hope
Family and Friends- Bridget Mary, Chaplain Chuck

Bridget Mary: Comfort, O comfort my people says, our God.  (Isa 40:1-2)

We have felt your comfort through the presence and words of one another.
As we share memories about our beloved Imogene, we laugh, cry, I give thanks for Imogene’s loving presence in our community. I give thanks for her leadership and service to Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community from our earliest days and especially for a new model of inclusivity and partnership that was circular and community oriented. From time to time she reminded us that small was beautiful and that our size or growth in numbers was not her major concern but our faithfulness to living the Gospel with love and passion. She blessed us all and we will miss her. 



Prayer: Chaplain Chuck

Song: Sing to the Mountains- Cheryl Smith


Benediction: 
Loving God, we entrust our beloved Imogene to you this day.
Now it is her time to leave this earthly place for an eternal one.  May the Spirit of comfort embrace us all in our loss.

Go in peace, dear Imogene. We will miss you.  We love you.
We will remember you always. We raise our hands and hearts in loving blessing as you go forth into the fullness of God’s tender embrace. Blessed Be. Let It Be So. Amen.

Piano Postlude: Cheryle Smith

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Elena Garcia ARCWP- Sophia Wisdom Inclusive Catholic Community Baptism of Jesus - January 15, 2019 Presiders: Elena Garcia ARCWP & Community






Elena Garcia ARCWP presides at Liturgy 


THEME: “And this is the marvel of marvels, that He called me Beloved.” (C.S. Lewis)

Introduction and Comments followed by a moment of silence to find our still point where the Holy One calls us to gather in song and prayer to adore Her Divinity.
Opening Song: “Wade in the Water” refrain only 3x

Presider: Let us begin in the name of God, our father/mother, and of Jesus Christ Sophia, and of the Holy Spirit WisdomAll:  Amen.

OPENING PRAYER
Presider:  Spirit of God, you moved over the waters breathing life, freedom and joy into creation. Fill us, bathe us, drench us with your healing, refreshing love. Make us a life-giving river spilling over and splashing justice, truth and love over all.   All:  Amen

Blessing of the Water:
Presider:  May this water remind us of the holiness of earth.  May the Spirit of God move in this water once again and make us a wellspring of love spilling over with compassion for all.   All:  Amen

Blessing of the People:
Presider:  May you be blessed and renewed in your baptismal promises to God, yourself, and the People of God!       (Sprinkle all, including presiders, with blessed water.)

Penitential Expression and Community Forgiveness
Presider:  My sisters and brothers, God is with you!  All:  And also with you.
Presider:  Let us pause to reflect on God’s boundless love and our need for forgiveness and healing.         (Silent Reflection)    (All extend hands and recite prayer of general absolution)
AllOur loving merciful God,  through the death and resurrection of Jesus, has reconciled the world and sent the Holy Spirit among us for the forgiveness of sins.  Through the ministry of the Church, may God give us pardon and peace and absolve us from our sins in the name of Jesus, the Christ, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Presider:  May the God of love, forgive us our lack of trust in God’s Spirit moving within us, in us and through us as witnesses of God’s love for all.      All: Amen.
      
All:  Glory to God in the highest, and peace to God’s people on earth.  O loving God, we worship you, we give you thanks, we praise you for your glory.  O Jesus, Christ Sophia,  You take away the sin of the world,  have mercy on us.  You who are one with our God, receive our prayer.  For you alone are the Holy One; you alone are Messiah.  You alone are the Most High, Jesus, Christ Sophia, with the Holy Spirit, in the glory of God.  Amen.

LITURGY OF THE WORD
1st Reading: Isaiah 42: 1-4, 6-7                   All: Thanks be to God
Psalm 29  Response: Give praise to the Beloved; Sing of Love’s glory and strength.
2nd Reading: Acts 10: 34 – 38                       All: Thanks be to God
Gospel Acclamation Before and After: Alleluia
Gospel: Story of Jesus’ Baptism             All: Thank you Jesus 
Homily and Community Sharing


CREED:  (Taken from “The Friends in Faith” and shared by Joan Meehan)
ALL: Gathered together as people of faith, we profess our belief in a God who is larger than we can name, unable to be contained, yet present in each one of us. We have come to know this God in the living of our lives, and in the holiness of the earth we share. We believe in a God revealed in all peoples—all genders, religions, and orientations. We embrace a compassionate God, who champions justice and mercy, and is always faithful when we call. Our God gives and forgives, patiently loving without conditions. We gratefully believe in a God who feels our deepest struggles, and celebrates our greatest joys. A God who both dances with us in celebration, and holds us when we cry. This God is not “other” to us, but shares our breath in every moment, and promises we are never alone. We believe in a God who believes in us - believes that we are precious and incredible gifts, worthy to claim image and likeness to the divine. We hold fast to our God who journeys with us, who continually calls us to choose the shape of our days through the choices we make. This God accepts us as we are, and shares each hope we have for our becoming. This is the God in whom we believe, our Creator, our Mother and Father who became human in Jesus, our brother. Our God is the Spirit of Life, the voice that continues to speak love, and asks us to answer. In this God we choose to believe.   AMEN





GENERAL INTERCESSIONS

V: The Holy Spirit hovered over Jesus and a voice declared him the beloved One of God. We pray to him:   
All: Blessed be God who comes to save us.
V: Jesus, servant of God , you listened to the Spirit and were led to the Jordan to be Baptized.
All: Open our minds and hearts to your call to conversion.
V: Jesus, Word made flesh, you listened to the Spirit and were led to the desert to prepare for your mission.
All: Teach us to pray that our ministry may proclaim the good news of the fullness of life.
V: Jesus, savior of us all, you listened to the Spirit and encouraged John in his time of doubt.
All: Help us to live the truth of our baptism so deeply that we may be guides to one another.
V: Jesus, our peace, you listened to the Spirit and were covered with the waters of the Jordan.
All: bless all who are dying and enfold them in your mercy.
V: What other concerns do we pray for at this time?
After each petition all respond: Come Holy Spirit

Presider: Let us pray. Jesus, you were sent by God to save us, and you so loved the world that your every deed was inspired by Holy Spirit. Your mission was God’s mission, and you gave your life to fulfill it. Teach us to listen to the Spirit in our hearts. Help us to love as you have loved us, that we may continue your mission. Loving God, we have spoken of our needs and hopes and some of them remain silently in our hearts. Listen to the fullness of our petitions and help us to effect these changes for the better in our world.  We ask this in your name .  Amen

PREPARATION OF THE GIFTS
Presider:   Blessed are you, God of all life, through your goodness we have bread, wine, all creation, and our own lives to offer.  Through this sacred meal may we become your new creation.  All:  Blessed be God forever.  
Presider:  God dwells in you.                All: And also with you.   
Presider:  Lift up your hearts.      All:  We lift them up to God.   
Presider: Let us give thanks to our God.   All:  It is right to give God thanks and praise.

All are welcome to participate in the prayers of Consecration and receive Holy Communion

EUCHARISTIC PRAYER
Voice: We praise you, Wellspring of Love, in whom we live and move and have our being. You have sent Jesus, Sophia's child, the Wisdom of the Ages, to show us that the heart of religion is worshipping you in spirit and in truth. You revealed your identity to the Samaritan woman at the well. You continue to reveal your identity to us today. You embrace every nation, race, creed and culture as your own.

All: O Divine Companion, you look at each of us with great tenderness. May we see ourselves loved by you totally. God of relationships, you reveal yourself in other people.  Holy One, Compassionate One, Gracious One, your glory embraces heaven and earth. Like sun-drenched waters that sparkle, all human faces reflect your radiant splendor. You love each of us as if we were the only person in the world. Blessed is Jesus who comes in the name of Sophia! Hosanna in the highest.

Voice: O surging Ocean of Grace, you energize us with Spirit and passion, connecting us with all creatures in the depth of your unending love. You wash us clean of resentment and hostility and scrub away the debris that pollutes our spirits. We ask you to make us new as you did in the waters of our baptism. Immerse us in the Love that dances for joy in your presence. We gather to celebrate our sacred stories as we welcome all people around this banquet table. We remember Jesus-Sophia who invites us to come and drink of the waters that will quench our thirst forever.


(please all extend hands as we recite the consecration together)
All:  The night before pouring forth his love for all people, Jesus took bread, broke it and shared it with his beloved companions, saying:
Take this, all of you, and eat it. This is my body which will be given for your healing.  (PAUSE)

All: Then, looking with tender warmth on his friends, Jesus took a cup of wine, praised Sophia, and shared the cup, saying:
Take this all of you and drink from it; this is the cup of my blood, the blood that will satisfy the longings of human hearts for all times. It will be poured out for the healing and wholeness of all creation. Remember always you are a reflection of divinity.

Presider: Let us proclaim the mystery of our dying and rising in Christ:   
All:  Jesus-Sophia comforts us in our losses, cries with us in our sorrow, and promises that our innermost beings will flow with rivers of living water, even in the midst of our suffering and pain.

Voice: As we share this holy meal, we remember the holy men and women who drank from Wisdom's well and showed us how to live as courageous disciples: the prophet Miriam, the woman at the well, Paul of Tarsus, Prisca and Aquila, Clare and Francis of Assisi, Dorothy Day, Ita Ford, Bishop Oscar Romero and all those companions we cherish and who bless and challenge us on our faith journey.

Voice: May the Church be anchored in the still waters of your presence where abundant blessings flow forever. O Holy One who lives in our hearts, we celebrate your radiant image in men and women everywhere. Your creativity flows through our beings. Your joy fills us. Your blessings are the wellspring of grace all around us. Your mercy is fresh, like dew, every morning. Your healing liberates us from all darkness and oppression. Your empowerment bubbles up inside us. 

All:  For you are the Love that dwells in our depths, the Wisdom of the Ages that speaks through us, the Divine Connection that makes us all one  Amen.

THE PRAYER OF JESUS     All:  Our Father and Mother…(Sung)


THE SIGN OF PEACE 
Presider: Peaceful Waters, we share the abundant love that flows among us as we embrace each other with open hearts.  Look on the faith of all and grant us the peace and unity of your kindom where you live forever.  All: AmenPresider: May the peace of Christ Sophia be always with you. All: And also with you.            Presider:  Let us offer each other a sign of peace as we sing “Peace is Flowing Like a River” – Peace, Love, Healing, Alleluia

 LITANY FOR THE BREAKING OF BREAD 
All: Loving God,  You call us to speak truth to power, have mercy on us. Loving God,  You call us to live the Gospel of peace and justice, have mercy on us.  Loving God,  You call us to be Your presence in the world.  Grant us peace.

Presider:  Let us share the Body of Christ with the Body of Christ!   All:  Amen.

PRE COMMUNION CHANT: God prepare me, to be a Sanctuary, pure and holy, tried and true. With thanksgiving I’ll be a living, sanctuary for you. 3x

COMMUNION INSTRUMENTAL

PRAYER AFTER COMMUNION
Presider:  O God, thank you for refreshing us in your sacrament. May we experience your life-giving waters welling up within us as we serve others with glad hearts.   All:  Amen.

CONCLUDING RITE
Presider: Jesus Sophia is with you.  AllAnd also with you.
BLESSING   All:  May the Spirit who moved over the waters of creation renew the earth. May Jesus Sophia satisfy our thirst for living fully. May the God of play fill our hearts to overflowing that we may live in the joy of being
loved                  All:  Amen.

DISMISSAL

PresidersGo in the peace of Jesus Sophia. Let the service begin!     
 All: Thanks be to God.