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Friday, September 13, 2019

Ireland, Day 3- Conversation and Coffee with Ana Bermingham- Doran

Ana Bermingham Doran with Mary Theresa Streck and Bridget Mary at Bunratty today

Thursday, September 12, 2019

Melinda Gates Endorses Women Priests in the Roman Catholic Church In her new book, The Moment Of Lift, A Review by Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP




It is a joy to discover the enthusiastic endorsement of women priests by Melinda Gates in her new book, The Power of Lift!  Empowering women not only changes the world but is also changing the Roman Catholic Church. Our movement is one example of the power of lift by the Holy Spirit that is propelling the Church to new places of love and inclusion. 

The Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests ordains women for public ministry to promote equality and to challenge discrimination against women as a man-made rule which negatively impacts women's lives in every area. One example is the Vatican ban on artificial contraception that keeps millions of women and their dependent children in poverty. Women priests are sharing their interpretation of the Gospel and its impact on women's empowerment and social justice issues today. We  invite all to the Banquet Table to celebrate sacraments- not just those who keep the rules. There are women priests in 13 countries, (Austria, Germany, France, Spain, Scotland, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Philippines, South Africa, Colombia, Venezuela, Canada and the United States and in 34 States in the United States. I close my eyes and dream of what we could do to spread our movement with the help of philanthropists like Melinda Gates!  New movie about our women priests movement https://youtu.be/9716xzTs_DE
 Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP https://arcwp.org 



Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests:We believe we can do it, and we did it!
(We have the spiritual authority to ordain women priests as leaders in a new model of inclusive, egalitarian ministry in Catholic communities.)


Pages 196-199

“I believe without question that the disrespect for women embodied in male-dominant religion is a factor in laws and customs that keep women down. This should not be surprising, because bias against women is perhaps humanity’s oldest prejudice, and not only are religions our oldest institutions, but they change more slowly and grudgingly than all the others—which means they hold on to their biases and blind spots longer. 

My own church’s ban on modern contraceptives is just a small effect of a larger issue: its ban on women priests. There is no chance that a church that included women priests—and bishops and cardinals and popes—would ever issue the current rule banning contraceptives. Empathy would forbid it. An all-male, unmarried clergy cannot be expected to have the empathy for women and families that they would have if they were married, or if they were women, or if they were raising children. The result is that men make rules that hurt women. It is always a temptation when you’re making rules to put the burden on “the other,” which is why a society is more likely to support equality when “the other” is not just sitting next to you at the table as you write the rules, but actually writing them with you. 

The Catholic Church tries to shut down the discussion of women priests by saying that Jesus chose men as his apostles at the Last Supper, and therefore only men are allowed to be priests. But we could as easily say that the Risen Christ appeared first to a woman and told her to go tell the men, and therefore only women are allowed to bring the Good News to the men. 

There are many possible interpretations, but the Church has said that the ban on women priests has been “set forth infallibly.” Putting aside the irony of leaving women out of the leadership of an organization whose supreme mission is love, it’s demoralizing that men who make rules that keep men in power would be so unsuspicious of their own motives. Their claims might have been more convincing in past centuries, but male dominance has lost its disguises. We see what’s happening. Some parts of the Church come from God, and some parts come from man—and the part of the Church that excludes women comes from man. 

One of the weightiest moral questions facing male-dominated religions today is how long they will keep clinging to male dominance and claiming it’s the will of God. 

Encouraging the voices of women of faith is not an explicit part of my philanthropic work. But the voice of male-dominant religion is such a cause of harm—and the voice of progressive religious leaders is such a force for good—that I have to honor the women who are challenging the male monopoly and are amplifying female voices to help shape the faith. 

But women can’t do it alone. Every successful effort to bring in outsiders has always had help from insider activists who do the work of reform from within. Women need male allies. They know this, and so in every religion where men have unequal influence, women are raising questions that make men uneasy. Who are the men who will stand with the women? And who are the men who will keep quiet out of obedience to rules they know are wrong? 

The number of Catholic priests I’ve talked to who support ordaining women, combined with the institutional Church’s absolute opposition to women priests, convinces me that morally, in some cases, institutions are less than the sum of their parts. 

It may strike you as a little odd that a chapter that opens with gender in farming would close with a discussion of religion, but we have a duty to trace women’s disempowerment up the stream to its source. Women around the world who are trying to reshape their faith, who are wresting the interpretation of scripture from the grip of a male monopoly, are doing some of the most heroic work for social justice and economic opportunity in the world today. They’re on the edge of a new frontier.  reform inside ancient institutions, deserve our gratitude and our respect.  These women and their male allies, especially the men working for reform inside ancient institutions, deserve our gratitude and our respect.

Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP and Dr. Mary Theresa Streck ARCWP in Ireland for Conversations on Women in Inclusive Leadership in a Renewed Roman Catholic Church


Women in Ireland interested in conversations contact us.
703-505-0004 or email: sofiabmm@aol.com
We are in Ireland from Sept. 11th -24th.
https://arcwp.org


Sept.14th Panel with Angela M. Hanley, Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, and Mary Theresa Streck, ARCWP, Liturgy on Sept. 15th Sunday at St. Andrew Community Center in Rialto, Dublin at 10:00AM

Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP

Come join us for an open dialogue in naming the challenges and creating strategies for empowering women in a discipleship of equals.

Maldron Airport Hotel, Dublin, Ireland
Room: Fitzmaurice 1
September 14, 2019
2:00pm – 4:00pm                                          
Free - donations gratefully accepted
Dr. Mary Theresa Streck, ARCWP














About the Presenters:

Angela M. Hanley is a theologian and author with particular interest in issues of equality in the
church, especially for women and the LGBT community. Her latest book is due for publication on 3rd October and is entitled: What happened to Fr. Sean Fagan? It is the story of an Irish theologian who was punished by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). Angela Hanley is the author of Whose à la Carte Menu?: an Exploration of Catholic Themes in Context, Justified by Faith: an Irish Missionary Experience in Malawi, and co-editor (with Dr David Smith) of Quench not the Spirit, a book of essays to honour the late Fr Seán Fagan.

Bridget Mary Meehan is an ordained bishop with the Association of Roman Catholic Women priests (www.arcwp.org). She is the author of numerous books including: The Healing Power of Prayer, Praying with Visionary Women, and Praying With Celtic Holy Women. Bridget Mary Meehan is one of the founding members of Mary Mother of Jesus inclusive Catholic Community in Sarasota, Florida USA and the co-founder of People’s Catholic Seminary (https://pcseminary.org).

Mary Theresa Streck is an ordained priest with the Association of Roman Catholic Women priests. She currently serves as the lead program coordinator for new candidates to the priesthood. Mary Theresa Streck is one of the founding members of the Upper Room Inclusive Catholic Community in Albany, NY USA and the co-founder of People’s Catholic Seminary (https://pcseminary.org).

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Mary Sue Barnett ARCWP , The Feminist Voice, New Journal/Periodical Dedicated to Feminist Spirituality

Mary Sue Barnett, ARCWP priest and founder of Louisville Coalition for CEDAW, and Yvonne Hileman, assistant editor for Presbyterian Women PC (U.S.A.), have launched the biannual periodical The Feminist Voice. 

The periodical is dedicated to writings at the intersection of feminist spirituality and women’s human rights. Writers from diverse disciplines and perspectives will contribute to future issues of the publication. The first issue features the contemplative writings of Mary Sue. 

Copies are available at Carmichael’s Bookstores (Highlands and Crescent Hill) on the magazine racks where they shelve other literary journals and periodicals.


Monday, September 9, 2019

Women Play Outsized Role in missionary Activity In Amazon


  • Eduardo Campos Lima
    Sep 9, 2019

Saturday, September 7, 2019

Homily - Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests (ARCWP) Ordination of Julie Corron and Denise Hackert-Stoner as Deacons on Sept. 7, 2019 in Albany, New York


Ordination of Julie Corron as deacon on right and Denise Hackert-Stoner as deacon on left, Albany, New York


















Bridget Mary: Today we rejoice as we celebrate the ordination of Julie Corron and Denise Hackert- Stoner as deacons in the Upper Room Community in Albany, New York. This is our 8th ordination here in this sanctuary with 10 ordained members in the Upper Room Inclusive Catholic Communiy!

Even though the ordination of women was one of the things that Julie found most exciting when she was introduced to the Upper Room, she did not immediately feel called herself. It took a trip to the Holy Land, walking where Jesus walked and connecting to his message of love in a new and deeper way, for her to hear the call. She steps forward today in prophetic obedience to the Spirit’s call to live gospel equality in all areas of our lives, including all ministries of the Roman Catholic Church. Julie doesn’t consider herself much of an activist but she fervently agrees with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., that “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” That’s why, as members of the baptized in a discipleship of equals, ARCWP serves God’s people in ordained ministry in communities of faith like the Upper Room, leading the way toward a new paradigm of inclusivity and partnership today.


As a nature photographer, who enjoys extreme closeup, the picturing of small things, Denise is accustomed to looking at the world in detail.  Butterfly wings, Dragonfly faces, Hoverflies—the tiny stitches in the quilt of creation get her attention.  "So it was quite surprising to her that her call came large, in a loving, human voice that simply asked if she felt called to walk the road to priesthood. After a brief period of resistance, Denise took the first steps, and has not looked back.  




In our second reading St. Paul in Romans 16 commends deacon Phoebe and greets prominent woman apostle Junia as well as a list of women ecclesial leaders including, Julia. Women leaders like Phoebe, were not assistants to the apostles, but rather were apostles, missionaries and leaders of communities equal to and independent of Paul.  

Contemporary scholarship today reveals a treasure trove of evidence of women in inclusive church ministry.  Ally Kateusz, in her new book, Mary and the Early Christian Women: Hidden Leadership offers a long list of women apostles, baptizers and preachers. From the beginning of the Jesus movement texts and images show women functioning as priests and bishops. For example, two ancient artifacts depict women and men at an altar table presiding at a gender parallel liturgy inside Old Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome and Hagia Sophia in Constantinople.  

The bottom line is that women did what men did in the early church even though this evidence has been hidden through centuries of censorship. Today we are reclaiming the original spirit of the followers of Jesus as we live inclusivity and partnership in a community of beloved disciples!



Julie’s reflection:
In the gospel, Jesus prays for those he is sending out into the world, “Protect those whom you have given me—Consecrate them….” Today Denise and I officially join that group. And while I can’t speak for Denise, I for one am very glad of the prayers. And yet you don’t need to be ordained to share the message of Jesus with the world, the message of love, the message of peace, the message of justice. That’s one of the first things I learned from the Upper Room community, that we are all consecrated, we are all holy, we are all tasked with carrying Jesus’ message. This life of faith in the world is not a spectator sport. 

How each of us carries that message is as unique as we are. Whether you distribute lawn signs welcoming immigrants; feed the hungry; or sit with those who are learning to hear the still, small voice within, you are all messengers of Jesus’ love. You are the Face of God. And I am so very blessed to know you and witness your good works in the world.


Denise’s Reflection:
In today’s first reading, Mary Oliver asks “Who made the world?” and opens a winding, grassy, meadow trail that eventually leads to the Divine.  The only required skill for following that trail is the ability to pay attention, to really look at things, to take them in, and to see the Holy in them.

In his book “The Universal Christ,” Franciscan theologian Richard Rohr says, “God loves things by becoming them.”  In these six words, he opens our eyes to the Holy all around us. The people we meet, the ones we will never meet.  The grizzly bear lumbering its way through the tundra, the hummingbird sipping nectar in the garden.  The earth beneath our feet today, the cosmos spinning out of the past into the future.  We are all of us at our core, sprung from Divinity. 
The Holy One is here.  The Kin-dom is now.  This is the good news.  The grasshopper eating sugar out of the poet’s hand may or may not have realized it, but she was a full participant.  The first-century Rabbi named Jesus did realize it, and used up every drop of his wild and precious life proclaiming it. 

Bridget Mary Meehan: Let us rejoice that we are recreating a more open, vibrant and  inclusive Roman Catholic Church in Albany, New York as we ordain Julie and Denise women deacons called to serve the community of faith here. Walking with Phoebe and the thousands of women deacons who have gone before us, we proclaim the kindom is now right before our eyes as  justice flows like a river and we rise up to live Gospel equality. Amen Alleluia!