Women’s Ordination Advocates March to the Vatican asking: Pope Francis, How Long Must Women Wait for Equality? 05 October 2023

Women’s Ordination Advocates March to the Vatican asking: Pope Francis, How Long Must Women Wait for Equality?

05 October 2023
For Immediate Release
Rome, Italy

On October 6, the Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) will lead a procession through Rome toward the Vatican calling upon the Catholic Church to open all ordained ministries to women.

Activists from around the world will assemble on the steps of the Roman church that contains a relic of Saint Mary Magdalene’s foot. The inscription by the reliquary reminds us that her’s was ‘the first foot to be entered into the tomb of the risen Christ.’ Recognised by the Vatican as the ‘Apostle to the Apostles’, Mary Magdalene is the model of priesthood for women, empowered by Jesus to 'go and tell’ his followers the Good News of his Resurrection. The women of WOW walk in her footsteps, urging the church to listen to the voices of women calling out for equality’.

In the spirit of Pope Francis’ ongoing Synod on Synodality, a meeting to discern and attend to the needs of the church today, the demonstration will make visible the injustice of women’s exclusion from full participation in the life of the church.

If the church is truly listening, it must walk with women—especially those who have discerned a sincere call to priesthood— throughout the synodal process and recognize the vibrant and necessary gifts they bring to the church. If the church is to attend to larger issues of oppression, violence, and injustice in the world, it must begin with affirming women’s equality.

When: Friday, October 6th. Activists will gather at 2.30pm and begin to march at 3pm.

Where: Route begins at San Giovanni dei Fiorentini (Via Acciaioli, 2). We will proceed to Lungotevere Castello (where we have a permit to demonstrate) and some will attempt to process toward St. Peter’s Square, risking police interference.

What: “Walk with Women” is a witness organized by Women’s Ordination Worldwide, calling the institutional Catholic church to walk with women as equals and open all ordained ministries to people of all genders.

Who: Founded in 1996, Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) is an international network of organizations and groups whose mission is the inclusion of Roman Catholic women in all ordained ministries. Founded on the principle of equality, WOW opposes all discrimination. ‘There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.’(Galatians 3:28)

Press Contacts:

Kate McElwee
+ 1 607 725 1364
or + 39 393 692 2100
kmcelwee@womensordination.org

Miriam Duignan
+ 44 7970 926910
miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com


Background: Women’s Ordination Worldwide has actively and faithfully engaged with the discernment of the Synod, encouraging broad and hope filled participation by women in the process, despite the Vatican’s minimal credibility in truly listening to the voices, vocations, and concerns of women.  Yet against these odds, synod reports from all corners of the church have lifted up the call for women’s ordination, both as a pastoral need and as a matter of justice.  WOW is hopeful that the inclusion of women in ordained ministry is clearly high on the agenda, and prays that the Holy Spirit is not constrained by misogyny, clericalism, or fear.


Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW): Founded in 1996, WOW is an international network of groups whose current mission is the inclusion of Roman Catholic women in all ordained ministries. Founded on the principle of equality, WOW opposes all discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'. (Galatians 3:28)

WOW currently  includes representatives from Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Canada, Colombia, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Ireland, Poland, Portugal, South Africa,  and the United States.

Campaigners mark the start of the Synod with women-led liturgy in Catholic Basilica and demonstration outside the Vatican 04 October 2023

Campaigners mark the start of the Synod with women-led liturgy in Catholic Basilica and Demonstrating Outside the Vatican

Press Release
For Immediate Release

Rome, Italy

Today marks the beginning of an unprecedented four-week long Synod where bishops and lay people will discuss the formerly taboo issue of women’s ordination and the need for women’s full participation in the life of the church. For the first time ever, Catholic women will be able to vote alongside men in an attempt to respond to the needs of the church today.

On October 3rd, the eve of the synod, Women’s Ordination Worldwide, an international group that advocates for the opening of all ordained ministries to women, gathered in the Catholic Basilica of St. Praxedes in Rome to pray for the radical inclusion of women in the church. Through personal testimonies, prayer, and preaching, women spoke of the heartbreak and  injustice of being barred from ministry on account of their gender.   (Link here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Dy3Lm56Qow)

As Pope Francis’ Synod on Synodality opened at the Vatican this morning, nearly forty women from across four continents opened a large purple banner with the message, “Ordain Women,” in the shadows of the Vatican. A symbolic reference to the synod’s preparatory document urging the church to “Enlarge the space of your tent…” (Isaiah 54:2), women’s ordination advocates called upon the synod assembly to make room for the voices and vocations of women called to ordained ministry.

“Our presence is a witness to the global calls for women’s ordination, both as a pastoral need and a matter of justice,” said Kate McElwee, the executive director of the Women’s Ordination Conference, and one of the coordinators of the action. “We ask that the synod attend to the painful injustice of women’s exclusion from ordained ministry with fierce urgency, making room in the ‘synodal tent’ for the living reality that God calls women to serve the church as priests and deacons.”

“Last night, we stood on holy ground, resuming women’s rightful place at the altar and sending a strong message to the Vatican that women can no longer be silenced and excluded from their own church.” said Miriam Duignan, member of the leadership team for Women’s Ordination Worldwide.

Our actions continue on Friday, October 6th at 3pm with a women’s march. Route begins at San Giovanni dei Fiorentini (Via Acciaioli, 2) processing via Lungotevere Castello (where we have apermit to gather) and will conclude at St. Peter’s Square

Contact:

Kate McElwee
+1 607-725-1364
or  +39 393 692 2100 
kmcelwee@womensordination.org

Miriam Duignan +44 7970 926910
miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com


Background:

Women’s Ordination Worldwide has actively and faithfully engaged with the discernment of the Synod, encouraging broad and hope filled participation by women in the process, despite the Vatican’s minimal credibility in truly listening to the voices, vocations, and concerns of women.  Yet against these odds, synod reports from all corners of the church have lifted up the call for women’s ordination, both as a pastoral need and as a matter of justice.  WOW is hopeful that the inclusion of women in ordained ministry is clearly high on the agenda, and prays that the Holy Spirit is not constrained by misogyny, clericalism, or fear.

The men are talking, the women are walking! Advocates for women’s ordination launch prayerful demonstrations in Rome and respond to the dubious dubia

The men are talking, the women are walking! Advocates for women’s ordination launch prayerful demonstrations in Rome and respond to the dubious dubia: 03 October 2023

Press Release
For Immediate Release

Rome, Italy
03 October 2023

As Women’s Ordination Worldwide launches a series of demonstrations to mark the opening of the Synod on Synodality, senior clerics remain fixated on silencing and excluding women.

Five cardinals have submitted a new set of five dubia (doubts) to Pope Francis focusing on women’s ordination, as well as the blessing of same-sex unions and the authority of the synod to issue binding teaching.

Their concern about women is: Could the Church in the future have the faculty to confer priestly ordination on women, thus contradicting that the exclusive reservation of this sacrament to baptized males belongs to the very substance of the Sacrament of Orders, which the Church cannot change?

This fearful reaction is no doubt a response to the synodal listening sessions where the majority of parishes around the world raised their own question for the Catholic hierarchy, namely: How long must women wait for equality? The call for women’s ordination was heard around the world as both a pastoral need and a matter of justice.

In his response to the dubia, Pope Francis stated that Pope John Paul II’s teaching that the ban on women’s ordination to the priesthood must be definitively held is not a dogmatic definition, and yet it must be adhered to by all. Francis said no one can contradict it publicly, and yet it can be a subject of study.

To this, WOW, responds: women do not need to be the subject of further study. If the synodal process has revealed anything to the global church so far, it is that women must be protagonists in the collective discernment of the movements of the Holy Spirit. The days of Catholics being silenced are over, and such treatment, especially of women, does not align with the collective call of a synodal church to attend to the urgent injustices in our church.

Those five cardinals are right to be worried: Pope Francis has now confirmed that the ban on women priests is not dogma. We recognise that further study is a stalling tactic but trust that the ever increasing calls for justice will lead to the restoration of women’s equal ministry sooner rather than later.

And we will not stop, we will not be silenced. WOW will continue to publicly demonstrate to send a clear message that our church can no longer be ruled over by a small but influential minority of hard-line clerics who have an unhealthy fixation on maintaining an all-male hierarchy despite the fact that this is clearly contrary to the intentions of Christ, the practise of the early Church and the will of the people they are supposed to serve.
# # #

Press Contacts:

Kate McElwee
+ 1 607 725 1364
or + 39 393 692 2100
kmcelwee@womensordination.org

Miriam Duignan

+ 44 7970 926910
miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com


WOW’s Synodal Demonstrations:

As Pope Francis convenes the historic Synod on Synodality this October, Women’s Ordination Worldwide, and global partners, will host several events on the prophetic edges of the Vatican with the simple message for Pope Francis and the synod assembly: walk with women as equals.  Details below.


Tuesday, 3rd October - 4:30 pm GMT +2

Prayer vigil: Let Her Voice Carry
Live-Streamed: https://www.youtube.com/ordainwomen

Location of the vigil not widely publicised due to security concerns. Any media who would like to attend should contact us directly.

We will host a prayer vigil featuring the stories and testimonies of women worldwide praying for the courageous inclusion of women’s voices during the synodal gathering. Following the prayer service, WOW invites attendees and press to a drinks reception. (For details please contact us)


Wednesday, 4th October -  7:30- 8:30 am GMT +2

Widen the space of your tent action and delivery to Synod Office

Lungotevere Castello (Angolo Largo dei Mutilati ed Invalidi di Guerra)

On the opening day of the Synod, advocates for women’s ordination will offer a visual display of the synodal tent in a message that reflects the Synod’s official mission statement to Enlarge the space of your tent (Isaiah 54:2). We will then process to the Synod office and deliver more than 1000 symbolic squares of extra material for the Vatican to enlarge the space of their tent to include the voices of those who support opening all ordained ministries to all genders. Each piece of fabric represents a person from the grassroots calling for a larger, colorful, wide-open tent where all are included.


Friday, 6th October - 3 pm (activists gather at 2:30) GMT+2

Walk with Women: March to the Vatican
Route begins at San Giovanni dei Fiorentini (Via Acciaioli, 2) via Lungotevere Castello

and concludes at St. Peter’s Square

At the Opening Mass of the Synod in 2021, Pope Francis said: ‘The Holy Spirit always surprises us, to suggest fresh paths and new ways of thinking.’ Let’s make our Walk with Women a fresh path to full equality in the church.

Global advocates for women’s ordination will process from the site of a relic of the foot of St. Mary Magdalene, Apostle to the Apostles, and walk peacefully to St. Peter’s Square. Inspired by US suffragist movements, advocates will carry messages such as: Pope Francis, How Long Must Women Wait for Equality? and Resistance to Patriarchy is Obedience to God.


Background:

Women’s Ordination Worldwide has actively and faithfully engaged with the discernment of the Synod, encouraging broad and hope filled participation by women in the process, despite the Vatican’s minimal credibility in truly listening to the voices, vocations, and concerns of women.  Yet against these odds, synod reports from all corners of the church have lifted up the call for women’s ordination, both as a pastoral need and as a matter of justice.  WOW is hopeful that the inclusion of women in ordained ministry is clearly high on the agenda, and prays that the Holy Spirit is not constrained by misogyny, clericalism, or fear.


Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW): Founded in 1996, WOW is an international network of groups whose current mission is the inclusion of Roman Catholic women in all ordained ministries. Founded on the principle of equality, WOW opposes all discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'. (Galatians 3:28)

WOW currently  includes representatives from Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Canada,  France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Ireland, Poland, South Africa,  and the United States.

Women's Ordination Worldwide Responds to Voting Rights for a Handful of Women

Women’s Ordination Worldwide Responds to Handful of Voting Rights for Women

Press Release For Immediate Release
28 April 2023:

The Vatican has taken a step in the right direction with its decision to grant a small group of non-ordained people, including women, voting rights in the October 2023 Synod General Assembly,

This breakthrough is the result of decades of unrelenting advocacy by people who believe in the teachings and leadership modelled by Jesus. The shift signals rising awareness in Church leadership that our all-male priesthood amounts to a rejection of women’s baptismal equality. The exclusively male priesthood and hierarchy continue to stand today as an exemplar to the world of an international bastion of sexism.

If our Church is to become the discipleship of equals that we are called to be, we must go much further. While Pope Francis' decision to appoint a small number of women to the voting ranks contributes to the painfully slow grinding down of anti-woman practices that corrupt the official Church, it is not enough. The continuing exclusion of women from priesthood is an injustice that undermines our Church’s moral authority around the world.

We note how eager Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich was to stress this announcement constituted an important change but 'not a revolution.' He sought to reassure his clerical colleagues that the synod itself would continue to have a majority of bishops making decisions: 'Change is normal in life and history. Sometimes there are revolutions in history, but revolutions have victims. We don't want to have victims.'

We urge caution in expecting radical inclusivity anytime soon without putting further pressure on the Vatican to recognise that it is Catholic women who suffer the consequences of institutional sexism and not the priests and Bishops who fear becoming ‘victims’ by virtue of a handful of women sharing in decision making.

Women's Ordination Worldwide will continue to work for the day when the conscience of Church leadership is moved to open doors to women, as it has to men, who long to be heard and to serve their church as equals in Christ.

Until then, we will carry on.

# # #

Women’s Ordination Worldwide Media Contacts:

Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW): Founded in 1996, WOW is an international network of groups whose current mission is the inclusion of Roman Catholic women in all ordained ministries. Founded on the principle of equality, WOW opposes all discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'. (Galatians 3:28)

WOW currently includes representatives from Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Ireland, Poland, South Africa, and the United States.

Women's Ordination Worldwide Responds to Death of Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI

Women's Ordination Worldwide responds to death of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI


PRESS RELEASE: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 31, 2022

Today, Women’s Ordination Worldwide marks the death of Joseph Ratzinger, an academic who understood church history better than most and began his clerical life as a liberal theologian knowing  full well that women were equal founding leaders of the Roman Catholic Church. However, as head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office for decades, and later as pope, Benedict XVI caused immense harm through his fixation on the ‘crimes’ of  Catholics seeking equality, inclusion and justice.


We lament the fact that Pope Benedict died without apologizing for silencing his fellow theologians and women's ordination campaigners who dared to question his increasingly extreme positions on women’s ordained ministry. In particular, we call to mind Pope Benedict’s 2010 decision to classify the “attempted ordination of a woman” as a grave crime, on a par with the sexual abuse of a child, but with the punishment of automatic excommunication for women.


We extend our sympathy and solidarity to the survivors of abuse by clergy and note that Pope Benedict’s tolerance for the crimes of male priests was in sharp contrast to his determination to punish those who challenged his absolute intolerance for the equality of women.


We pray for the repose of the soul of Pope Emeritus Benedict and for the healing of divisions that his intransigent theology deepened within the church.
 

# # #

Women’s Ordination Worldwide Media Contacts:

Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW): Founded in 1996, WOW is an international network of groups whose current mission is the inclusion of Roman Catholic women in all ordained ministries. Founded on the principle of equality, WOW opposes all discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'. (Galatians 3:28)

WOW currently includes representatives from Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Ireland, Poland, South Africa, and the United States.

Pope Francis Nudges Canon Law in the Right Direction - 11 January 2021

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) welcomes what we consider to be a small step in the right direction that Pope Francis has taken by changing Canon law to formally permit women’s service as lectors and acolytes. This change means that women will now officially stand shoulder to shoulder with lay men as ministers of communion and lectors at mass and girls can be altar servers. Until now, official installation in these roles has been reserved for men and any instances where women have been lectors and acolytes and girls serving on the altar, they have done so because it was permitted as an exception and always at the sole discretion of the local Bishop or priest.

Therefore, while this may not seem like a change of substance in places where women have, for several decades, been permitted to serve in these roles, in many parishes, this has not been the case and women and girls have remained essentially banned from the altar at the say-so of a misogynist man.

This change opens a door. It means that bishops and pastors around the world can no longer refuse women the right to these ministries on account of Canon Law. Bishops can now be held accountable and not given impunity to discriminate against women even more than the wider Church already does.

Today’s announcement contributes to a slow chipping away at the wall of anti-women exclusion that still lingers and corrupts the official church. Today’s shift signals a growing awareness of what has been the rejection of women’s baptism in Christ. Today women are one step closer to being part of officially mediating the sacred. Slowly but surely, we will keep pushing for full equality and WOW is confident more change must come.

###

Women’s Ordination Worldwide Media Contacts:

Kate McElwee (USA and Italy): +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

Miriam Duignan (Ireland and UK): +44 7970 926910; miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com

Therese Koturbash (Canada): +1 204 648 5720; t.m.koturbash@gmail.com

Alicja Baranowska(Belgium & Poland): +32 488 67 60 20  alicja.baranowska@wp.pl

Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW): Founded in 1996, WOW is an international network of groups whose current mission is the inclusion of Roman Catholic women in all ordained ministries. Founded on the principle of equality, WOW opposes all discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'. (Galatians 3:28)

Le pape François baisse les bras concernant les femmes dans son exhortation apostolique sur l'Amazonie - Le 13 février 2020

Le pape François baisse les bras concernant les femmes dans son exhortation apostolique sur l'Amazonie

Communiqué de presse du Women's Ordination Worldwide [WOW]

Le 13 février 2020

wow+logo.jpg

À la lecture du document postsynodal, WOW conclut que c'est au détriment du Christ crucifié représenté sur le visage des femmes que le pape François se propose de continuer à diriger le spectacle mâle catholique romain [Roman Catholic man show]. Renonçant à une occasion importante de faire une avancée pour les femmes, François a choisi de perpétuer le scandaleux club fermé réservé aux hommes lequel, comme il le souligne impudemment dans le document, est soutenu par des femmes ayant un statut de deuxième classe tout en faisant la plupart du travail sans aucune reconnaissance.

Malgré son souci de l'environnement et de la catastrophe climatique mondiale, François ne parvient absolument pas à relier le peu de considération pour l'environnement au peu de considération du féminin dans le monde et en particulier dans notre propre Église. Étonnamment, François défend la prêtrise masculine sur la base intenable de l'image conjugale qui affirme que le prêtre représente l’époux et l'Église l’épouse. Concrètement, cette pratique souligne de façon inimaginable la façon dont les hommes peuvent remplir tous les rôles grâce à une pansexualité fluide de genre accordée aux prêtres masculins. Alors que le prêtre mâle remplace l’époux, il remplace également l’épouse. Dans cette vision tordue, les femmes ne sont que des réceptrices passives à la source et au sommet de notre foi. Les femmes sont absolument inutiles dans le fonctionnement de l'Église, sauf pour faire des enfants et pour soutenir le spectacle mâle catholique romain. Cette vision des choses démontre une croyance aveugle en un concept appelé complémentarité, concept utilisé par le Vatican pour prétendre que les femmes et les hommes ont par nature des rôles différents. Mais, en réalité, cela signifie simplement que les hommes peuvent tout faire et que les femmes ne peuvent faire que ce que les hommes veulent qu’elles fassent et que cela leur sert.

Son rejet des femmes du service ministériel n'est rien de moins qu'une trahison de toute la communauté des croyants et des croyantes qui attend désespérément des prêtres enracinés dans leur culture. Dieu appelle des femmes à la prêtrise et au diaconat. Lorsqu'on examine en connaissance de cause les efforts déployés par le Vatican pour justifier l'exclusion des femmes des ministères ordonnés, il est clair que :

  • il n'y a aucune raison dans les Écritures, dans la théologie ou dans la tradition de l'Église de soutenir une prêtrise exclusivement masculine. C’est ce qui ressort du vaste corpus d'études disponibles sur le site Web universitaire womenpriests.org;

  • pendant des siècles, la hiérarchie a entretenu chez les fidèles, comme si c'était la vérité, un préjugé envers les femmes. Ce préjugé est à la base de la justification officielle du Vatican pour exclure les femmes du sacerdoce et du diaconat. Par son exhortation apostolique postsynodale sur l’Amazonie, le pape François insiste pour la perpétuer.

Pape François, il est grand temps que votre club « pour hommes seulement » reconnaisse que les femmes ne sont pas « autres » mais qu'elles sont pleinement humaines. L'exclusion continue de la femme de la prêtrise est une injustice flagrante qui nuit à l'Église et signale au monde qu'il est acceptable de continuer à traiter les femmes comme des moins que rien. Dans ce scénario, on ne peut guère éprouver de sympathie pour un leadership qui compose maladroitement avec le fait que les bancs d’église se vident et qu'un nombre croissant d'églises catholiques soient désaffectées.

Dans l'état actuel des choses, l'Église demeure une Église d'hommes où les femmes sont autorisées à pratiquer leur culte, à fournir des biens et des services et à être estampillées avec quelque chose de moins que les icônes du Christ. Pourtant nous le sommes pleinement, entièrement, véritablement et complètement.

Contacts pour la presse

Kate McElwee (USA/Italy): +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

Miriam Duignan (UK/Ireland): +44 7970 926910; miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com

Alicja Baranowska(Belgium & Poland): +32 488 67 60 20 alicja.baranowska@wp.pl

Therese Koturbash (Canada): +1 204 648 5720; t.m.koturbash@gmail.com

Merci à Pauline Jacob pour la traduction.

Fondée en 1996, la Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) est un réseau international de groupes dont la mission actuelle est de s’assurer que les femmes catholiques soient admises dans tous les ministères ordonnés dans l’Église. WOW s’appuie sur le principe évangélique d’égalité et s’oppose donc à toute discrimination. « Il n’y a ni Juif ni Grec, il n’y a ni esclave ni homme libre, il n’y a ni mâle ni femelle, car vous ne faites qu’un dans le Christ Jésus (Ga 3, 28).

womens ordination worldwide logo.png


Querida Amazonía: El Fracaso Del Papa Francisco Hacia Las Mujeres - 13 de febrero de 2020

QUERIDA AMAZONÍA: EL FRACASO DEL PAPA FRANCISCO HACIA LAS MUJERES

13 de febrero de 2020

Para publicación inmediata.

womens ordination worldwide logo.png

Contactos de prensa:

·         Kate McElwee (EE.UU./Italia): +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

·         Miriam Duignan (Reino Unido/Irlanda): +44 7970 926910; miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com

·         Alicja Baranowska(Bélgica y Polonia): +32 488 67 60 20  alicja.baranowska@wp.pl

·         Therese Koturbash (Canadá): +1 204 648 5720; t.m.koturbash@gmail.com 

Gracias a Mónica Trevino Alvarez por la traducción

Al leer el documento post-sinodal Querida Amazonía podemos concluir que el Papa Francisco propone continuar dirigiendo el espectáculo del hombre católico, mientras que en la parte posterior de un Cristo crucificado se siguen encontrando las miradas de las mujeres. Francisco prefirió darle la espalda a la oportunidad de generar avances significativos para las mujeres. En cambio, ha optado por seguir perpetrando al vergonzoso Club de Toby. Como se señala descaradamente en el documento las mujeres, quienes realizan gran parte del trabajo en las parroquias, siguen siendo tratadas como ciudadanas de segunda clase.

A pesar de la preocupación de Francisco por el medio ambiente y la catástrofe medioambiental, no logra conectar la marginalización de éste con la vida de las mujeres dentro y fuera de la Iglesia. Impresionantemente, Francisco recurre al matrimonio de sacerdotes con la Iglesia para afirmar que la ordenación es exclusiva para hombres. En la práctica esta idea afirma que los hombres pueden cumplir todos los roles a través de una pansexualidad y género fluido otorgado a los sacerdotes. El sacerdote sustituye tanto al novio como a la novia. Ante este roto panorama, las mujeres son vistas como receptoras pasivas de fe. Son simplemente innecesarias para el funcionamiento de la iglesia, exceptuando a la maternidad y el apoyo al teatro de los hombres. Esta teoría revela la creencia ciega en la complementariedad, concepto acuñado por el Vaticano para afirmar que mujeres y hombres están destinados a distintos roles. Sin embargo, en realidad significa que ellos pueden hacer todo y que ellas sólo pueden hacer lo que se les manda.

El rechazo al servicio ministerial de las mujeres es una traición a toda la comunidad de fe que espera desesperadamente la ordenación de mujeres y hombres culturalmente competentes. Dios llama a las mujeres al sacerdocio y al diaconado. Al realizar un examen informado de los esfuerzos del Vaticano para justificar la exclusión de las mujeres del ministerio ordenado, queda claro que:

  • no hay ninguna razón en las escrituras, teología y tradición de la Iglesia para afirmar el sacerdocio exclusivo de hombres. Esto se encuentra evidenciado en una inmensa cantidad de estudios disponibles en: womenpriests.org;

  • durante siglos la jerarquía se ha dedicado a alimentar los prejuicios hacia las mujeres. Este prejuicio es la justificación oficial del Vaticano para excluir a las mujeres del sacerdocio y del diaconado. A través de Querida Amazonía Francisco busca reafirmarlo.

Papa Francisco, ya es hora que su Club de Toby reconozca que las mujeres no son “otras”, sino completamente humanas. La constante exclusión de las mujeres en el sacerdocio es una injusticia que perjudica a la Iglesia y le indica al mundo que está bien discriminar a las mujeres.

Tal como están las cosas seguimos teniendo a la Iglesia de un hombre. En donde a las mujeres sólo se les permite adorar, entregar bienes y servir. No olvidemos que nosotras, las mujeres, somos plenamente, completamente y verdaderamente imagen de Cristo.

womens ordination worldwide logo.png

Papież Franciszek zawodzi w odniesieniu do kobiet w swojej apostolskiej adhortacji o Amazonii - 13 lutego 2020 r.

Papież Franciszek zawodzi w odniesieniu do kobiet w swojej apostolskiej adhortacji o Amazonii

13 lutego 2020 r.
Do natychmiastowej publikacji:

Kontakty dla prasy:

womens ordination worldwide logo.png

Po przeczytaniu dokumentu postsynodalnego WOW dochodzi do wniosku, że papież Franciszek proponuje kontynuację rzymskokatolickiego męskiego spektaklu na plecach ukrzyżowanego Chrystusa odzwierciedlonego w twarzach kobiet. Odwracając się plecami od znaczącej okazji, aby dokonać przełomu dla kobiet, Franciszek wybrał utrwalenie niechlubnego elitarnego męskiego klubu, który, jak sam bezczelnie wypunktowuje w dokumencie, jest podtrzymywany przez drugorzędny status kobiet – które wykonują większość roboty, która nie jest doceniana.

Pomimo trosk o środowisko i globalną katastrofę klimatyczną Franciszek zupełnie nie łączy marginalizacji środowiska z marginalizacją kobiecości w świecie, a w szczególności jej marginalizacją w naszym własnym Kościele. Zdumiewające jest, że Franciszek podtrzymuje obronę wyłącznie męskiego kapłaństwa w oparciu o niemożliwą do obrony podstawie wyobrażenia relacji oblubieńczej, które stwierdza, że kapłan reprezentuje Oblubieńca, a Kościół Oblubienicę. Przy zastosowaniu ta praktyka dramatycznie podkreśla, w jaki sposób mężczyźni mogą spełniać wszystkie role poprzez płynną płciową panseksualność przyznaną kapłanom płci męskiej. Podczas gdy kapłan reprezentuje pana młodego, reprezentuje także pannę młodą. W tym ułomnym poglądzie kobiety są jedynie biernymi odbiorczyniami w źródle i szczycie naszej wiary. Kobiety są kategorycznie niepotrzebne do funkcjonowania Kościoła z wyjątkiem rodzenia dzieci i wspierania męskiego spektaklu. Ta teoria zdradza ślepą wiarę w koncepcję zwaną komplementarnością używaną przez Watykan do tego, aby twierdzić, że kobiety i mężczyźni są przeznaczeni do innych ról, ale co w rzeczywistości oznacza po prostu, że mężczyźni mogą robić wszystko, a kobiety mogą robić jedynie to, czego chcą od nich mężczyźni i co tym mężczyznom służy.

Jego odrzucenie dla idei kobiet w posługach nie jest niczym innym jak zdradą całej wspólnoty wierzących, która oczekuje w rozpaczliwej potrzebie kompetentnych kulturowo kapłanów. Bóg powołuje kobiety do kapłaństwa i diakonatu. Gdy przeprowadzi się świadomą analizę watykańskich wysiłków, aby uzasadnić wykluczenie kobiet z posługi sakramentalnej, staje się jasne, że:

  • w Piśmie Świętym, teologii czy tradycji nie da się znaleźć uzasadnienia dla wsparcia wyłącznie męskiego kapłaństwa. Zostało to udowodnionie w olbrzymiej ilości badań dostępnych na akademickiej stronie internetowej womenpriests.org;

  • przez wieki hierarchia karmiła wiernych uprzedzeniami wobec kobiet tak, jakby były one prawdą. Te uprzedzenia stanowią podstawą dla watykańskiego uzasadnienia wykluczania kobiet z kapłaństwa i diakonatu. Poprzez swoją postsynodalną adhortację apostolską o regionie Amazonii papież Franciszek nalega na ich podtrzymanie.

Papieżu Franciszku, już najwyższy czas, aby wasz klub chłopców rozpoznał, że kobiety nie są „innym”, ale są w pełni ludźmi. Kontynuowanie wykluczenia kobiet z kapłaństwa jest rażącą niesprawiedliwości, która szkodzi Kościołowi i daje światu sygnał, że jest akceptowalne traktowanie kobiet jako mniej ludzkie. W tym scenariuszu nie może być wielkiej sympatii dla przywództwa, które zmaga się z nieuniknionym pustoszeniem ławek i dekonsekracją coraz większej liczby katolickich świątyń.

W obecnej sytuacji Kościół pozostaje Kościołem mężczyzny, gdzie kobietom pozwala się czcić, dostarczać towary i usługi i nosić piętno czegoś mniejszego niż obrazy Chrystusa, którymi w pełni, całkowicie, prawdziwie i kompletnie jesteśmy.

Kontakty dla prasy:

Women's Ordination Worldwide,założona w roku 1996, jest ekumeniczną siecią, której podstawową misją jest obecnie przyjęcie kobiet rzymskokatolickich do wszystkich święceń. WOW oparta jest na ewangelicznej zasadzie równości i w związku z tym sprzeciwia się jakiejkolwiej dyskryminacji. „ Nie ma już Żyda ani poganina, nie ma już niewolnika ani człowieka wolnego, nie ma już mężczyzny ani kobiety, wszyscy bowiem jesteście kimś jednym w Chrystusie Jezusie.” (Ga 3,28).

womens ordination worldwide logo.png

Pope Francis Drops the Ball for Women in his Apostolic Exhortation on the Amazon -February 13, 2020

womens ordination worldwide logo.png

February 13, 2020

For Immediate Release.
Press Contacts:

  • Kate McElwee (USA/Italy): +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

  • Miriam Duignan (UK/Ireland): +44 7970 926910; miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com

  • Alicja Baranowska(Belgium & Poland): +32 488 67 60 20  alicja.baranowska@wp.pl

  • Therese Koturbash (Canada): +1 204 648 5720; t.m.koturbash@gmail.com


Reading the post-synodal document, WOW concludes that it is on the back of a crucified Christ imaged in the faces of women that Pope Francis proposes to continue running the Roman Catholic man show.  Turning his back on a significant opportunity to make a breakthrough for women, Francis has opted to perpetuate the shameful elitist man club that, as he so brazenly points out in the document, is held up by the second class status of women who do most of the work with none of the recognition.

Despite his concern for the environment and global climate catastrophe, Francis utterly fails to connect the marginalisation of the environment (a 'she') with the marginalisation of the feminine in the world and in particular, the 'she' who is marginalised in our own Church.  Astonishingly, Francis holds up defense of the all-male priesthood on the untenable foundation of spousal imagery that says priest stands in for groom and the Church as bride. In application, this practice dramatically underlines how men can fill all the roles through a gender fluid pansexuality granted for male priests.  While the male priest stands in for groom, he also and stands in for bride. Women in this broken view are but passive recipients in the source and summit of our faith. Women are categorically unnecessary for the function of the Church except for the production of children and to prop up the man show. This theory betrays a blind belief in a concept called complementarity used by the Vatican to claim that women and men are destined for different roles but which in reality just means men can do everything and women can only do what the men want them to and that serves them.

His rejection of women in ministerial service is nothing less than a betrayal of the entire faith community that waits desperately in need of culturally competent priests. God calls women to priesthood and to the diaconate. When an informed examination is made of the Vatican's efforts to justify excluding women from sacred ministry, it is clear that:

  • there is no reason in scripture, theology, or the tradition of the Church to support a male only priesthood. This is evidenced in the huge body of studies available on the academic website womenpriests.org;

  • for century after century, the hierarchy has fed prejudice against women to the faithful as though it were truth. This prejudice underpins the Vatican's official rationale for excluding women from priesthood and the diaconate. Through his Post Synodal Apostolic Exhortation on the Amazon region Pope Francis insists on perpetuating it. 

Pope Francis, it is long past time for your boys' club to recognise that women are not ‘other’ but are fully human. The continued exclusion of the woman from priesthood is flagrant injustice that harms the Church and signals to the world that it is ok to continue treating women as less than. In this scenario there can be little sympathy for a leadership who fumbles with the inevitable emptying of pews and deconsecration of growing numbers of Catholic churches.

As things stand now, the Church remains a man's Church where women are permitted to worship, to deliver goods and services and to be stamped with something less than the icons of Christ that we fully, wholly, truly and completely are.

###

Press contacts:

  • Kate McElwee (USA/Italy): +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

  • Miriam Duignan (UK/Ireland): +44 7970 926910; miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com

  • Alicja Baranowska(Belgium & Poland): +32 488 67 60 20  alicja.baranowska@wp.pl

  • Therese Koturbash (Canada): +1 204 648 5720; t.m.koturbash@gmail.com

Founded in 1996, Women's Ordination Worldwide(WOW) is an international network of groups whose current mission is to see Catholic women admitted to all ordained ministries in the Church. WOW is founded on the gospel principle of equality and therefore opposes any discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no long male and female for you are all one in Christ Jesus (Galatians 3:28).

Timeline of Work for Women’s Ordination in context of Women’s Ordination Worldwide

womens ordination worldwide logo.png

WOW Statement on Appointment of Dr. Francesca Di Giovanni to Undersecretary for Multi-Lateral Affairs - January 17, 2020

January 17, 2020: After twenty-seven years in the Secretariat of State, Pope Francis has promoted the very qualified Dr. Francesca Di Giovanni to the position of undersecretary for multilateral affairs. While Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) welcomes any step toward recognizing women’s equality in the Church, we insist this must only be the beginning of a long overdue corrective toward pulling the Vatican wagon into the 21st century.

The global Church, and particularly the curia, can only benefit from elevating women into positions of leadership, decision-making, and ordained ministry. However, we long for the day when the bar for celebration is raised. WOW suggest the radical idea that qualified persons are empowered in their work and ministries, regardless of gender.

For as long as the Vatican continues to exclude women from decision-making processes and ordained ministry, our Church continues to endorse the second-class status of women wherever they may be.

###

Women’s Ordination Worldwide Media Contacts:

Kate McElwee (USA and Italy): +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

Miriam Duignan (Ireland and UK): +44 7970 926910; miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com

Therese Koturbash (Canada): +1 204 648 5720; t.m.koturbash@gmail.com

Alicja Baranowska(Belgium & Poland): +32 488 67 60 20  alicja.baranowska@wp.pl

Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW):  Founded in 1996, WOW is an international network of groups whose current mission is the inclusion of Roman Catholic women in all ordained ministries. Founded on the principle of equality, WOW opposes all discrimination. 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'. (Galatians 3:28)

Timeline of Work for Women’s Ordination

March on Vatican to Deliver Petition with Father Roy Bourgeois - October 17, 2011

March on Vatican to Deliver Petition with Father Roy Bourgeois

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 17, 2011

Contact: Erin Saiz Hanna, 401.588.0457     

Fr. Roy Bourgeois and international delegation of women’s ordination leaders hold press conference; march on Vatican to deliver petition signed by 15,000 supporters

 

ROME, ITALY – Today, at 12:00 noon at Casa Del Cinema (Sala Kodak), Largo Marcello Mastroianni, representatives of Catholic organizations from around the world challenged the "grave scandal" of women’s ordination in the Roman Catholic Church, calling for the full and equal participation of women as deacons, priests, and bishops in a renewed church.

 

The remarks came following the Italian premiere of the award-winning documentary film, "Pink Smoke Over the Vatican," during a press conference held by Women’s Ordination Worldwide and other pro-ordination organizations. The activists traveled to Rome with Fr. Roy Bourgeois-an outspoken priest on the issue of women’s ordination-to hand-deliver a petition signed by 15,000 supporters on the issue. After the press conference, the groups staged a vigil in St. Peter’s Square.

 

Fr. Roy Bourgeois, a Roman Catholic priest, peace activist, US veteran, and founder of the human rights group, School of the Americas Watch, currently faces potential dismissal from his Maryknoll order for his public support of women’s ordination. "I have come to Rome with a basic question for our church leaders at the Vatican: how can we, as men, say that our call from God is authentic, but God’s call of women is not?"

 

"The scandal of demanding silence on the issue of women’s ordination reflects the absolute arrogance of the hierarchy and their tragic failure to accept women as equals in dignity and discipleship in the eyes of God," said Erin Hanna, executive director of the U.S. based Women’s Ordination Conference. Therese Koturbash, lawyer and National Coordinator of Canada’s Catholic Network for Women’s Equality continued: "Even though canon law invites our Church leaders to hear from the faithful, our leaders are silent when we try to engage."

 

Firm in his conscience, Fr. Roy Bourgeois has broken through the Vatican’s culture of fear to stand with the 63% of Catholics who support women’s ordination in the United States. "Increasingly priests around the world are rising up for women’s equality and ordination in the Catholic Church," stated Nicole Sotelo, from Call To Action (USA). "Just this summer in the United States alone, 200 priests signed the Clergy for Conscience letter supporting Fr. Roy and his right to speak his conscience. Together, we are creating a stronger, unified movement that carries high the scriptural mandate to preach the good news, without censure, but rather, firmly rooted in one’s conscience:  ‘there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus’" (Galatians 3:28).

 

"A holy shake-up is taking place here," said woman priest Janice Sevre-Duszynska, "that is challenging the institutional church’s sexism which treats women as second class members of their own church and contributes to violence toward women in society. Women priests remind us that women are equal images of God and therefore worthy to preside at liturgy and the sacred rituals of our church."

 

"We love our family, the Catholic Church," stated Miriam Duignan of Housetop’s womenpriests.org. "We feel obliged in conscience to make our carefully considered reasons known. In doing so, we fulfill our canon law duty to speak out, as our present Pope has encouraged us to do."  

 

In 1976, the Biblical Commission of Pope Paul VI determined there was no scriptural reason to prohibit women’s ordination. Despite the Commission’s finding, the Pope issued a statement later that year declaring the Vatican is not authorized to ordain women. "Christian history documents that women were deacons, priests and bishops in the early church. As a result, we know that Canon 1024, which states that only men can validly receive the sacrament of ordination, is blatantly sexist," concluded Hanna.

 

                                                                          ###

 

Call To Action (CTA) educates, inspires and activates Catholics to act for justice and build inclusive communities through a lens of anti-racism and anti-oppression principles. An independent national organization of over 25,000 people and 53 local chapters, CTA believes that the Spirit of God is at work in the whole church, not just in its appointed leaders. For more information, visit www.cta-usa.org  Contact: Nicole Sotelo, Director of Communications,  nicole@cta-usa.org +1(773) 404-0004   x285

 

Catholic Network for Women’s Equality (CNWE), based in Canada, is a feminist-focused support and advocacy group for women and men in the Roman Catholic tradition, seeking to effect structural change in the institutional church that reflects the mutuality and integrity of a community of co-equal disciples, and to create life-giving alternatives to the present institutional structures. Therese Koturbash shaburtok@yahoo.ca 

                

Housetop’s www.womencanbepriests.org is the largest internet site providing information and documentation on the ordination of women. Though its focus is on the Catholic Church, its work benefits all Christian Churches. Offering thousands of documents in English and 24 other languages, the website covers decrees of councils and synods, the teaching of the Fathers of the Church, medieval theologians, recent papal decrees, contemporary articles and ongoing discussions on scripture, tradition and the teaching authority of the Church. Contact: Miriam Duignan, +44(0)1923 779 446, m_duignan@hotmail.com 

 

International Movement We are Church (IMWAC), Founded in Rome in 1996, is committed to the renewal of the Roman Catholic Church on the basis of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) and the theological spirit developed from it. We are Church evolved from the Church Referendum in Austria in 1995 that was started after the paedophilia scandal around Vienna’s former Cardinal Groer. We are Church is represented in more than twenty countries on all continents and is networking world-wide with similar-minded reform groups. Contact: Nicole Sotelo, +1(773) 404-0004 x285 nicole@cta-usa.org 

 

Roman Catholic Womenpriests (RCWP)/ Association of Roman Catholic Womanpriests, an international initiative within the Roman Catholic Church, advocates for a new model of priestly ministry united with the people with whom they serve.  The movement is an initiative within the Church that began with the ordination of seven women on the Danube River in 2002. Women bishops ordained in apostolic succession continue to carry on the work of ordaining women in the Roman Catholic Church. Contact Janice Sevre-Duszynska, rhythmsofthedance@msn.com or Ree Hudson, reehud@sbcglobal.net  

 

Women’s Ordination Conference, founded in 1975 and based in Washington, D.C., the is the oldest and largest national organization working for the ordination of women as priests, deacons, and bishops into an inclusive and accountable Roman Catholic Church. WOC also promotes new perspectives on ordination that call for less separation between the clergy and laity. Contact: Erin Saiz Hanna, ehanna@womensordination.org +1(401) 588-0457    

 

Women’s Ordination Worldwide, founded in 1996, is an ecumenical network, whose primary mission at this time is the admission of Roman Catholic women to all ordained ministries. Contact: Erin Saiz Hanna, ehanna@womensordination.org +1(401) 588-0457; Therese Koturbash shaburtok@yahoo.ca

Timeline of Work for Women’s Ordination