Credit Yoselis Ramos / WUSF
Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan (center) stands with two newly ordained priests, Maureen McGill (left) and Marina Teresa Sanchez Mejia (right).
Catholic Women Priests Ordained in Sarasota
The sun shone
like a beacon through the windows of the St. Andrew
United Church of Christ in Sarasota. It started off like a regular
Catholic mass but instead of men wearing the deacon slashes as they walked down
the aisle it was women.
This is not a
regular mass. It is a ceremony for ordaining women priests and deacons. Two
women were joining the more than 145 women priests around the world. They are
members of the Association of Roman Catholic Women
Priests. It’s a part of a movement that
started in 2002 with the ordination of seven women at the Danube
River in Germany. They were ordained by an episcopal male bishop whose own
ordination was not considered valid by the Roman Catholic Church.
Actually, the Vatican punishes women who seek ordination with excommunication. It’s a crime against the church and excommunication is the most severe penalty. But that does not intimidate this group of women. Maureen McGill of Pensacola is one of them. She was ordained a priest in Sarasota.
Actually, the Vatican punishes women who seek ordination with excommunication. It’s a crime against the church and excommunication is the most severe penalty. But that does not intimidate this group of women. Maureen McGill of Pensacola is one of them. She was ordained a priest in Sarasota.
McGill found the
association through the internet after leaving the Catholic Church for a few
years.
"At that
point, nobody in the family was going to church. We were just done with
church," McGill said. "We had a bad experience at my mother's funeral
and we just left."
To McGill, this
community felt right.
“I was home
but there was none of the rigidity, there was openness to women, openness to
birth control, openness to divorced Catholics, openness to gay, lesbian,
transgender, bisexual people," McGill said. "It was a totally open
experience and I think that’s what I had been looking for for 67 years.”
But this group is
not recognized by the Roman Catholic Church.
“The
Diocese of Venice does not recognize them at all. It’s just a group of people
making a claim that’s just not valid within our church," Frank Murphy,
spokesman for the Diocese of St. Petersburg,
said.
A recent poll
conducted by Bendixen & Amandi for the Spanish-language network Univision,
showed Catholics internationally are split on a variety of issues including gay
marriage, divorce, and abortion. Specifically, 59 percent of the Catholics
surveyed in the United States believed women should be ordained into
priesthood.
Pope Francis has
said the door of allowing women in the priesthood is closed. McGill understands
that doors close…
“But they open,
they do open. And if you knock loud enough and hard enough and keep going at
it, that door might open," McGill said.
Some folks like
Murphy don’t see that door opening anytime soon.
“I think
that the ordination of a woman to priesthood, I think it involves a teaching of
the church which is for men only at this point in time," Murphy said,
"and I think it will continue to be that way.”
Even so, McGill
holds out hope as she jokes often with her husband.
“He said
the other day, ‘you’ll never live to see women completely accepted in the
church’ and then he looked at me and he says, ‘given your genes, you probably
will live to see it,’" she said, "and I will crawl to the Vatican
with my walker if I have to on that day if they do accept us.”
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