On July
31, 2006, Eileen McCafferty DiFranco, Olivia Doko, Joan Clark Houk, Kathleen
Kunster, Bridget Mary Meehan, Roberta Meehan, Dana Reynolds, Kathy Sullivan
Vandenberg were ordained as Roman Catholic priests. Four deacons were also
ordained at the ordination. The ordination took place on a riverboat in
Pittsburgh, PA.
On the
day of the ordination, Joan Houk said she hoped that as priest she would be able
to “Connect with people who are Catholic who have walked away or are not
participating…” Today there are approximately 180 RCWP members worldwide; more
than 150 of these women are located in the United States. Roman Catholic
Womenpriests are ministering in house and parish communities, perform weddings,
baptisms and funerals; are chaplains and offer sacraments to the sick and
elderly, serve the homeless and provide spiritual direction and
retreats.
The
movement within the Church began in Germany with the ordination of seven women
on the Danube River in 2002, by male Roman Catholic Bishops and in 2003 two of
the “Danube 7” were ordained Bishops.
RCWP
rejects Canon law that does not allow women to be ordained priest today. Many
historians and theologians can provide evidence that women were ordained
Deacons, Priests, and Bishops in the early church. In addition, in 1970,
because of the Soviet Bloc, a Czech Bishop ordained women to serve in the
women’s prisons where men could not go.
You can
help us continue to prepare and ordain women by making a donation to RCWP-USA and to www.arcwp.org today.
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