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.

 

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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

WOW responds to the Amazon Synod conclusion that women’s ministry requires further study

Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) is disappointed but not altogether shocked to learn that the Amazon Synod has concluded some married men will get the green light to be ordained as priests while women’s ministry will remain marginalised and requiring of yet further study.

We are told that opening up the ordination of married men in the Amazon region is a recognition of sacramental leadership that emerges from the community. But the church community also includes women and it is women who are currently present in the majority of ministerial roles and are already recognized as leaders by the people they serve.

Why must the Church re-open a commission on women deacons when the historical evidence of women deacons is abundant and the call for women deacons, even within in the Synod Hall, is overwhelmingly clear. Why must the Church pursue the ‘creation of new ministries for women’ as if to treat women as a sub-group requiring exceptional paths and distinct categories for their work without confronting the fact that women live both priestly and diaconal vocations already and should be ordained. This blatant disparity in the treatment of male and female vocations and ministry is a reinforcement of age old prejudice and is a blow to the majority of Catholics who dared to hope that this time might be different.

Adding married men to sacramental ministry in the Amazon will further push aside the women the Synod recognised are currently doing the work. This reinforces prejudice and signals the supplanting of women whose spiritual leadership will be sacrificed in the name of God but is for the sake of men.

Press contacts:

Kate McElwee: +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

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

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

Timeline of Work for Women’s Ordination

WOW at the Amazon Synod to demand that women are finally recognized as equal church leaders

Date & time: Tuesday, October 22nd at 15.00

Location: Prayer vigil @ Piazza Adriana (corner via Triboniano) followed by procession to St Peter’s

A group of international delegates from the Women’s Ordination Worldwide campaign group (WOW) are gathered in Rome to remind the hierarchy that women are already serving in priestly roles and to demand that they too are recognized as equal leaders of the Church.

Whilst the all-male voting delegates behind the Synod Gate discuss the priest shortage in the Amazon region, we will process to the closed gate to remind them that women are already leading sacramental ministry across Amazonia and around the world. Their vocations are recognized by the communities they serve. Why does the institutional church continue to discredit their ministry? As momentum to ordain married men increases, WOW cautions against adding yet more men to an already imbalanced church without addressing the injustice of excluding women.

WOW is encouraged by the new Pact of the Catacombs, signed by 40 Bishops from the Synod on October 20, demanding that the church: ‘Recognize the services and real diakonia of a great number of women who today direct communities’ and for ‘an adequate ministry of women leaders of the community’.  Without women, the Catholic Church would not exist in the Amazon and it is a matter of justice that they too are finally empowered as equals rather than being supplanted by local men whilst women continue to do the work of serving the communities.

WOW calls on Pope Francis to publicly acknowledge that a majority of attendees of the Synod support women deacons and witness their ministries daily in the Amazon region. We are calling on the church to open their eyes to the reality that women live both priestly and diaconal vocations already. WOW asks that the Synod take a first step towards equality and justice by restoring women deacons in the same rite as men. The church and the environment are in crisis. It is time to stop quibbling over technicalities and man-made medieval rules when women and sacraments are at stake.

We are joining the call for ecological justice which cannot be separated from the call for spiritual and sacramental equality. Our message to the Synod is:

 "Empowered women will save the Earth, Empowered women will save the Church"

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Press contacts:

Pat Brown: +44 7950048628; pat@patbrown-at.co.uk
Kate McElwee: +39 393 692 2100; kmcelwee@womensordination.org

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

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

Timeline of Work for Women’s Ordination

Le pape François et le diaconat pour les femmes

Publié le 17 mai 2019 par WOW Women’s Ordination Worldwide

Réponse de la Women’s Ordination Worldwide [WOW] au retard du pape François
concernant le diaconat pour les femmes

La Women’s Ordination Worldwide [WOW] s’étonne que le pape François ait une fois de plus retardé le rétablissement du diaconat ordonné pour les femmes et ce, en raison de ce qu’il dit être un manque de clarté quant aux racines historiques du rite sacramentel.

Théologiquement et historiquement, il n’y a pas de raison valable pour une prêtrise exclusivement masculine ou un diaconat qui ne soit que masculin. Non seulement la diacre Phoebée est-elle évoquée dans l’Écriture majoritairement androcentrique, mais nous savons, par le travail de nombreux spécialistes et des manuscrits anciens qui ont conservé les rites d’ordination au diaconat, qu’ils étaient identiques pour les hommes et pour les femmes.

Non seulement l’histoire montre que, au coeur de la révélation, des femmes étaient là, des femmes étaient des leaders et des femmes étaient ordonnées, mais elle montre aussi que:

  • le ministère sacramentel pour les hommes s’est développé progressivement et a eu la porte ouverte à travers l’histoire de l’Église;

et inversement,

  • la misogynie et les préjugés non chrétiens ont fermé cette porte aux femmes de sorte que leurs responsabilités ont été diminuées et sont restées figées depuis.

Au lieu d’une évolution pour les femmes, comme cela fut le cas pour les hommes, le patriacat a choisi, comme on pouvait s’y attendre, de réprimer le développement naturel de la collaborationsacramentelle des femmes. La phobie des menstruations et la croyance erronée que les femmes étaient impures, inférieures, qu’elles étaient des hommes défectueux ne font pas partie de la révélation divine, mais des preuves montrent que c’est pour cela que les hommes ont finalement exclu les femmes du sacrement de l’ordre.

L’Église catholique est capable de développer et de transformer un grand nombre de ses enseignements et de ses pratiques, mais quand il s’agit des femmes, le Vatican trouve toutes les excuses pour gagner du temps. Ceux et celles qui se tournent les pouces quand l’égalité des femmes est en jeu nuisent à toute l’Église.

Les structures humaines défectueuses ne sont pas du Christ et ne sont pas des raisons acceptables de refuser à l’Église les prêtres et les diacres que Dieu appelle pour nous. Pourquoi les catholiques devraient-ils se voir refuser les pasteurs que Dieu appelle pour nous juste parce qu’elles arrivent dans un corps de femmes?

Nous sommes une Église vivante capable de favoriser la croissance des femmes tout autant que celle des hommes. Nous devons rouvrir les portes et accueillir les dons et les vocations des femmes comme on l’a fait si facilement pour les hommes.

Si la volonté du pape François est d’encourager la discussion, nous lui demandons de rendre publiques les résultats complets de la Commission pour l’étude du diaconat féminin afin que les gens puissent voir les raisons non valables qui font hésiter les hommes.

Le 11 mai 2019

Contacts :
Miriam Duignan: (UK & Ireland) +44 7970 926910 miriam.duignan@wijngaardsinstitute.com
Therese Koturbash: Canada (+1) 204 648 5720 t.m.koturbash@gmail.com
Kate McElwee: (USA & Italy): +39 393 692 2100 kmcelwee@womensordination.org

Source :
http://womensordinationcampaign.org/press-releases/2019/5/11/womens-ordination-worldwide-responds-to-pope-francis-delay-of-women-deacons

Traduction : Pauline Jacob

Timeline of Work for Women’s Ordination

Women's Ordination Worldwide responds to Pope Francis' delay of women deacons

For Immediate Release: 11 May 2019

WOW is astonished that Pope Francis has again delayed restoration of the ordained women’s diaconate, now on account of what he says is a lack of clarity as to historical roots of the sacramental rite.  

Theologically and historically, there is no valid reason for an exclusively male priesthood or a male only diaconate. Not only is woman deacon Phoebe commemorated in the predominantly androcentric scripture, we know from the work of many scholars and ancient manuscripts preserving the ordination rites to the diaconate, that they were identical for men and women. 

Not only does history show that, in the kernel of revelation, women were there, women led, and women were ordained, it also shows that:

  • Sacramental ministry for men developed progressively with an open door through Church history; and conversely,

  • Un-Christian misogyny and prejudice closed that door to women so that their roles were diminished and it has remained bolted shut ever since.

Instead of growth for women, as has been the acceptable standard for men, patriarchy has unsurprisingly opted to suppress the natural development of women’s sacramental partnership. Phobia against menstruation and the wrong belief that women were unclean, inferior, misbegotten men are not part of divine revelation yet evidence shows that this is why men eventually excluded women from the sacrament of ordination.

While the Catholic Church is able to develop and transform many of its teachings and practices, when it comes to women, the Vatican finds every excuse to stall. Those who twiddle thumbs when women’s equality is at stake harm the whole Church.

Faulty, man-made structures are not of Christ, and not acceptable reasons to refuse the Church the priests and deacons God calls for us.  Why should Catholics be denied the pastors God calls for us just because they happen to come packaged as women?

We are a living Church capable of growth for women just as much as men. We must re-open doors and welcome the gifts and vocations of women that have been so readily welcomed for men. 

If Pope Francis's will is to encourage discussion, we call on him to make public the complete findings of the Commission on Women Deacons so that the people can see the frivolous nonsense it is that causes these men to dither.

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

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

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

Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW): Founded in 1996, WOW is an international network of groups whose current mission is the inclusion of women in all ordained ministries in the Roman Catholic Church. 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

Women’s Ordination Advocates Call for Votes for Catholic Women

For Immediate Release 21 September 2018

Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) acknowledges the Vatican took a significant step toward building a more synodal church by replacing the 1965 Synod of Bishops’ constitution, "Episcopalis Communio,” to officially allow non-ordained persons to participate as voting members. Yet, even when the letter of the law is changed to be more inclusive, the culture and practice of gender inequality maddingly persists.

First in 2015, and again at the upcoming Synod on Youth, Faith, and Vocational Discernment, religious brothers (non-ordained men) are named as voting members of the Synod. While theologically and canonically “equal” to their brothers, women religious are still denied a voting role. Why are women still excluded from voting? Why are the laity, including young people, sidelined and voiceless?

The reason? Bishop Fabio Fabene, undersecretary of the Synod of Bishops, offered this explanation: “For now, that is how it is."

“It is how it is,” is the logic of a frightened patriarchy. The practice of sacralized gender discrimination within the Catholic Church not only erodes its credibility, it sends a clear message to women: stay silent, stay invisible, stay in your place.

With new revelations of sexual abuse in the Church, we are facing the deep failures and sins of the current clerical system, a structure that risked the safety, faith, and trust of children and vulnerable people to protect itself. This kind of “boy’s club” clericalism cannot be trusted to lead a global discussion on Youth, Faith, and Vocational Discernment, where only 10% of participants (“observers,” “consultors,”) will be women.

We refuse to accept “it is how it is” in cases of sexual abuse, and we refuse to accept “it is how it is” in cases of gender discrimination. These crimes must be stopped. Catholic women must vote.

WOW stands with survivors of sexual abuse and harassment by clergy, and all those who are silenced, dismissed or rejected for sharing their stories, or daring to advocate for equality. We believe that only when women have equal opportunity to make decisions, respond to their vocations, and hold meaningful leadership positions, can our Church begin to heal from its sins.

In the current climate of increased oppression against women and other marginalized groups, Catholics need justice, action, and transparency. A closed-door session of bishops and clerics discussing young people is not the solution we need, rather, it is the root of the problem.

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Kate McElwee: (Italy & USA) +39 393 692 2100 / +1 607-725-1364 kmcelwee@womensordination.org

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

Pat Brown: (UK) +44 7950048628 pat@patbrown-at.co.uk

Colm Holmes: (Ireland)  +353 86 606 3636 colmholmes2020@gmail.com

Kathleen Gibbons Schuck (USA) +1 215-872-1096 kschuck55@gmail.com

Timeline of Work for Women’s Ordination

Women’s Ordination Worldwide to gather in Dublin to mark the Pope’s visit

Media Advisory: for immediate release

First event: Saturday 25 August 2018, 9:45-10:05am

Halfpenny Bridge, Dublin

The Gardai (police) have granted permission for members of We Are Church Ireland and Women’s Ordination Worldwide to offer Pope Francis a special message as he lands in Dublin. We will be on the east side of the Halfpenny Bridge and will raise 50 umbrellas with the words, “Women Priests” and the LGBT rainbow flag. This is a special photo opportunity where we are allowed to gather on the bridge for just 5 minutes at 10am.  

 

Second event: Sunday 26 August 2018, 1:30 - 2:45 pm

Queen Street Bridge, Arran Quay, Dublin

Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) will witness outside the Papal mass for women’s inclusion and ordination in a renewed Catholic Church. We have been issued with a permit to congregate as crowds walk towards Phoenix Park. We aim to draw attention to the absence of women on the altar and encourage mass goers to ask themselves and Church leaders: how long must we tolerate this injustice?

Although WOW secured tickets to the papal mass, after the witness, our group will walk in solidarity with the Stand4Truth activists at the Garden of Remembrance.

Press contacts:

Pat Brown: (UK) +44 7950048628 pat@patbrown-at.co.uk

Colm Holmes: (Ireland)  +353 86 606 3636 colmholmes2020@gmail.com

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

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

WOW call on Pope Francis to dialogue with women called to priesthood

For Immediate Release: June 22, 2018

Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) is deeply disappointed by Pope Francis’ reiteration of the “closed door” stance on women’s ordination.  We call on Pope Francis to lead by example and dialogue with the many women who are called to priesthood. 

 The Vatican's repeated attempts to limit God’s priestly call to celibate men causes great pain to the women who have discerned their vocation to the priesthood, as well as to the people of God who are deprived of women’s gifts and sacramental leadership. WOW stands with women who are alienated and dismissed by his discriminatory remarks as their call from God to priesthood is repeatedly denied by the Church hierarchy.  


In the same interview, Pope Francis, referring to Vatican relations with China, is quoted saying, “Dialogue is a risk, but I prefer risk rather than the certain defeat that comes with not holding dialogue.” Pope Francis has encouraged fearless dialogue throughout his pontificate. We expect the same fearless dialogue in other contexts of the Church's life, including women's priestly vocation and equality in the Church.
 
Pope Francis continues: “There is no Church without women.” We pray that Pope Francis comes to realize that there is also no credibility in the Church without equality for women.  If dialogue is a risk, we must call our Church leaders to find the courage to listen to women as equals in Christ. Without further dialogue on women’s ordination, sexism will remain undefeated.

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Contact WOW Leadership: 

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

Pat Brown: (UK) +44 7950048628 pat@patbrown-at.co.uk

Colm Holmes: (Ireland)  +353 86 606 3636 colmholmes2020@gmail.com

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

Ill-informed arguments are to blame for any “confusion” about women's ordination

May 30, 2018

Archbishop Luis Ladaria, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith recently published an article in the Vatican’s L’Osservatore Romano, claiming that “there are voices that put into doubt the definitive nature” of the ban on the women’s priestly ordination, and "sowing these doubts creates serious confusion among the faithful." 

The international umbrella network, Women’s Ordination Worldwide (founded in 1996 at the First European Women’s Synod), observes that it is ill-informed arguments such as Archbishop Ladaria’s that are to blame for any “confusion” of the faithful.

While the Vatican continues to defend policies that consider women inferior, limiting the reaches of God’s call to ministry, and maintaining a male-only hierarchy, women and young people are walking away.  

The Christian solution to the “virus of misogyny” is equality.

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Contact WOW Leadership: 

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

Pat Brown: (UK) +44 7950048628 pat@patbrown-at.co.uk

Colm Holmes: (Ireland)  +353 86 606 3636 colmholmes2020@gmail.com

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

The Holy Spirit is calling Women and Men to serve in a renewed priesthood

For Immediate Release: May 24, 2018

Pope Francis voiced alarm (21 May 2018) at the “vocational sterility” and “haemorrhaging” of nuns and priests in Italy and Europe.

The day after Pentecost Pope Francis is missing the signs of the Holy Spirit amongst the people of God. Insisting on only celibate male candidates to serve as priests means excluding all women and most men.

Shortage of vocations to the outdated forms of the priesthood or religious life does not mean there are no vocations, as we can see many Catholics, both women and men, being involved as lay ministers or pastoral associates, or even taking steps toward ordination in movements such as the Roman Catholic Women Priests.  New times require new models to fulfill God-given vocations.

Truly, the most obvious “haemorrhaging” in the Church today is the generations of talented and educated women who are leaving the Catholic Church to answer their call to priesthood or find equal rights and dignity in another faith. The People of God are following these women to communities that model equality and inclusion.

WOW recently launched a series, “Catholic Women Called,” documenting short videos of women called to priesthood, women the institutional Church tries to discredit and dismiss.

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Contact WOW Leadership: 

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

Pat Brown: (UK) +44 7950048628 pat@patbrown-at.co.uk

Colm Holmes: (Ireland)  +353 86 606 3636 colmholmes2020@gmail.com

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

Führende Deutsche Politikerin steht für das Priestertum der Frau

Die internationale „Women Ordination Worldwide“ (WOW), die sich auf der ersten Frauensynode 1996 in Gmunden/Österreich gegründet hat und die sich in der weltweiten Römisch-Katholischen Kirche für das Diakonat und Priestertum der Frau einsetzt und deren Berufungen bezeugt und dokumentiert, begrüßt die explizite und klare Stellungnahme der neuen Generalsekretärin der Christlich-demokratischen Union (CDU) Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer für das Priesteramt der Frau, die aus eigenem Impuls heraus erfolgt ist. Die katholische Politikerin aus dem Saarland, die als mögliche Nachfolgerin von Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel gilt, hat dabei auch persönlich bekundet, dass sie selbst sich zum Priestertum berufen gefühlt hat. Mit ihrer Äußerung, gibt sie auch zu verstehen, dass sie ihrer Römisch-Katholischen Kirche heute auch zutraut sich über diese Frage sich nicht zu spalten, sondern im Gegenteil positiv zu wachsen und bestärkt zu werden. 

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

Colm Holmes: (Ireland)  +353 86 606 3636 colmholmes2020@gmail.com

Leading German politician supports Women Priests

Statement from Women's Ordination Worldwide:

The International Women's Ordination Worldwide (WOW), which was founded at the first Women's Synod in 1996 in Gmunden, Austria, and is committed to women in the diaconate and priesthood in the worldwide Roman Catholic Church, confirming and documenting their vocations, welcomes the explicit and clear statement of the new General Secretary of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer in support of the priesthood of women, a statement which she made on her own initiative.

This Catholic politician from the Saarland, who is considered a possible successor to Chancellor Angela Merkel, has also personally stated that she has felt herself called to the priesthood. With her statement, she also makes it clear that today she trusts her Roman Catholic Church not to split itself on this question, but on the contrary to grow positively and to be strengthened. 

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Contact WOW Leadership: 

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

Pat Brown: (UK) +44 7950048628 pat@patbrown-at.co.uk

Colm Holmes: (Ireland)  +353 86 606 3636 colmholmes2020@gmail.com

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