Translate

Friday, January 23, 2026

"Jesus was a male who challenged every patriarchal and androcentric privilege." Tina Beattie's feminist theology - Palatinate

 https://www.palatinate.org.uk/jesus-was-a-male-who-challenged-every-patriarchal-and-androcentric-privilege-tina-beatties-feminist-

By Gussie Coulter

Growing up in a vicarage as the son of a female priest, I have been acutely aware of the joys of – and the issues surrounding – women’s ordination. This likely motivated my keen interest in Latin American Liberation Theology and theologies of gender and sexuality throughout my Religious Studies A-level.

Through a secular lens, religious institutions may appear to be necessarily regressive; the patriarchal dimension to the Catholic magisterium has been in the limelight recently following the political thriller Conclave and the election of Pope Leo XIV shortly after. As reported by the National Catholic Reporter, a letter dated 4th of December by a Vatican commission revealed a “7-1 vote in favor of a statement concluding that the church cannot currently move toward admitting women to the third degree of holy orders, the diaconate”.

Joining me today in this personally meaningful and potent interview is Professor Tina Beattie: writer, broadcaster and theologian, whose wide-ranging work includes research into the relationship between the Catholic tradition and contemporary culture, particularly with regards to gender, sexuality and reproductive ethics. Whilst retaining an element of scepticism towards secular progressive approaches, Beattie’s feminist theology challenges some Catholic teachings about gender and sexuality, and she sees theological grounds for a more prominent role for women, including ordination.”


Tuesday, January 20, 2026

I highly recommend UNITY AND HARMONY: Toward an Ecospirituality Ecology & Justice Series by Victorino Pérez Prieto


 

I am using this book as a deep dive into our ultimate oneness with creation. This book helped me feel again what I have long believed: that all of creation is sacramental, alive with God’s presence, and yearning for relationship rather than domination. As I read, my prayer deepened from words to wonder. I found myself pausing often—not because the text was difficult, but because it awakened a contemplative attentiveness to the web of life in which we live, move, and have our being.

Spiritually, Unity and Harmony renewed my trust that justice, ecology, and mysticism belong together. Pérez Prieto invites us beyond fragmented thinking into a spirituality of communion—with Earth, with the poor, with one another, and with the Holy Mystery at the heart of all that is. This vision strengthened my own commitment to an inclusive, non-clerical priesthood.


“This book serves as an invitation to discover greater cohesion and human solidarity on a resource-depleted planet… We will go into the future as a single sacred community, or we will all perish in the desert.”

Ilia Delio, author of The Not-Yet God