Today, I celebrate 51 years of consecrated life. On September 15, 1966, I entered the convent as a postulant . It has been an blessed journey of loving service as a Sister Servant of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (1966-1980), a Sister for Christian Community, (1996-2017) and a priest in the Roman Catholic Priests Movement (2006-2017).
Richard Rohr says that prophets are called to dismantle patriarchy from the inside out. Pope Francis says that the only world worth building includes everyone. I believe that the only church worth building is one that affirms women as spiritual equals, which includes women as priests. I also believe that each of us is a beautiful, beloved images of the divine and that we are all Persona Christi, reflections of the Christ Presence. Today, I rejoice in many years of service to the people of God who are living their their prophetic call to promote gender justice on the edge of the inside! Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP, www.arcwp.org
Progressive Catholics from We Are Church Ireland Celebrate Liturgy with Mary Theresa Streck ARCWP and Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP in Ireland in August. |
The Edge of the Inside
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Prophets, by their very nature, cannot be at the center of any social
structure. Rather, they are “on the edge of the inside.” They cannot be fully
insiders, but they cannot throw rocks from outside either. They must be
educated inside the system, knowing and living the rules, before they can
critique what is non- essential or not so important. Jesus did this masterfully
(see Matthew 5:17-48). This is what Martin Luther King, Jr. taught the United
States, what Gandhi taught British-occupied India, and what Nelson Mandela
taught South Africa. Only with great respect for and understanding of the rules
can a prophet know how to properly break those very same rules—for the sake of
a greater purpose and value. A prophet critiques a system by quoting its own
documents, constitutions, heroes, and Scriptures against its present practice.
This is their secret: systems are best unlocked from inside.
Holding the tension of opposites is the necessary education of the
prophet, yet the Church has given little energy to what Paul says is the second
most important charism for the building of the church (1 Corinthians 12:28,
Ephesians 4:11). Prophets must be skilled in nondual thinking, but the
Church has primarily trained people in the simplistic choosing of one idealized
alternative while denigrating the other. This has gotten us nowhere.
After Christianity became the established religion of the Western Empire
in the fourth century, the priestly mentality pretty much took over in both
East and West, and prophets almost disappeared. When the Church held so much
power, prophets were too threatening to the status quo. The clergy were at the
top of the hierarchy in the full company of their patrons—kings and princes—and
even began to dress like them. Emperors convened and presided over the first
seven Councils of the Church. What does this tell us?
For the next 1700 or so years, most of the preaching and interpretation
of Scripture was from the perspective of power, from primarily European,
educated, quite comfortable, and presumably celibate males. I am one myself,
and we are not all bad. But we are not all—by a long shot! Where are the
voices of women, minorities, LGBTQ, the poor, and differently abled? How would
they read the Gospel? Without these voices included, sometimes even central, I
see little future for Christianity.
My spiritual father, St. Francis of Assisi, saw this problem in the
thirteenth century and called people to live on the edge—of the Church, of
economy, of patriarchy, of the “system”—through universal solidarity and chosen
simplicity. [1] Pope Francis is evoking the same Gospel spirit, and I pray for
his success and protection. What a surprise that the ultimate establishment
figure took the name of such a radical saint. It shocked the world because we
do not expect prophecy from popes. There is hope!
References:
[1] See earlier Daily Meditations on Franciscan spirituality, https://cac.org/depth-and-breadth-2017-06-04/.
[1] See earlier Daily Meditations on Franciscan spirituality, https://cac.org/depth-and-breadth-2017-06-04/.
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Adapted from Richard Rohr, Way of the Prophet (Center for
Action and Contemplation: 1994), audio, no longer available;
Prophets Then, Prophets Now (Center for Action and Contemplation: 2006), CD, MP3 download; and
Scripture as Liberation (Center for Action and Contemplation: 2002), MP3 download.
Prophets Then, Prophets Now (Center for Action and Contemplation: 2006), CD, MP3 download; and
Scripture as Liberation (Center for Action and Contemplation: 2002), MP3 download.
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