The following was taken from Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan's Blog
"Let’s examine the evidence in the bible and Vatican scholarship,
"Let’s examine the evidence in the bible and Vatican scholarship,
First, Jesus was not a priest, nor did Jesus ordain anyone a
priest. The apostles were not priests or bishops. Jesus called women and men to
be disciples, and treated them as partners and equals. In all four gospels,
Mary Magdalene was the primary witness to the central event of Christianity —
Christ’s resurrection.
Second:
in early Christianity,
scholars conclude that women served as deacons, priests and bishops. (See Gary
Macy, The Hidden History of Women's Ordination and Dorothy Irvin's
archaelogical researach)
Third: in 1976, the Vatican’s own Pontifical Biblical Commission
stated that there is no theological basis to exclude women from the priesthood.
Fourth: according to Vatican II, Gaudium et Spes, #29) “every type
of discrimination … based on sex … is to be overcome and eradicated as contrary
to God’s intent.”
Does a teaching that states women can receive six sacraments
and men can receive seven sacraments indicate that discrimination is a core
issue here?
The bottom line is: the church cannot continue to discriminate
against half of its membership, and blame Jesus for it.
When the institutional church prohibits ordination and fails to
treat woman as spiritual equals at every level, it thereby, gives permission to
the rest of the world to oppress and dominate women. We must make the
connection between discrimination against women in the church and abuse,
violence, and gender injustice the world.
In the church’s recent Synod on the Family, women were not only
missing from the all male, celibate voting bishops, but also, missing in the
final document on church teachings that will affect women’s lives around the
globe.
Journalist Angela Bonavoglia writes the following stinging
critique of the Synod on the Family in an article entitled “Where Are the
Women? “There were passing references to violence against women in the family
and in the world in the final Synod document, but nowhere do the Church fathers
make a moral case for protecting women from such violence in their own homes
and supporting them in leaving such relationships… This omission is doubly
concerning coming from a church that forces childbirth on unwilling women by
supporting laws that block access to birthcontrol…” (Where Are the Women? By Angela
Bonavoglia | November 20, 2014 http://www.womensmediacenter.com/feature/entry/the-synods-final-document-where-are-the-women#.VHKOmUJZXtg.email