Hi Path —
... the stronger position of women as Abbesses in the UK compared to the more male-dominated Roman Catholic region
I could be wrong, but I think this rather overstates the case, resting on the history of Northumbria and the influence of Hilda (later St Hilda), without doubt a woman of great influence, but 'one swallow doesn't make a summer' as they say. (I also think there's a fair element of pseudoCeltic romanticism in the case that's often made).
There were, and are, women of no less importance and influence in the Roman Tradition.
Nevertheless, within the ecclesial structure of the Church, I think Abbess is the highest a woman can aspire to. There were many successful cases of such in Europe prior to the Reformation, and some after.
My issue is that the higher echelons of the Church administrative body (the Curia) seems confined or closed to members of the priesthood — so an Abbot, for example, could be made a cardinal, as indeed could a priest, but not an Abbess ... and as to achieve such a post invariably demands all manner of administrative skills (not the least being the management of men who often, I'm sure, think they know better), the Curia is wantonly depriving itself of a great source of wisdom here.
I see no reason why an abbess could not be 'red hatted' (made a cardinal) ...
In my time I have had the good fortune to meet
Dame Maria Boulding — who's life rather belies the assumption that women have nowhere to go in the Church.
However, one cannot be a priest and not be celibate, correct? So while it may be a gift extra to ordination, it is also a prerequisite for ordination?
Actually no, as the case of married Anglican priests who transfer to Catholicism, and the Orthodox, of course. In the West it is required for the priesthood, in the East it is required of bishops, but not priests. In time, I feel sure, we will adopt the Eastern model.
I'm not sure, but I think the Catholic Church holds a different ordination 'degree' for those married converts from Anglicanism ... this, I personally think, is a 'flaw' from the Latin tendency to legislate to the nth degree, thus we have what I consider artificial distinctions.
A classic case is a Catholic who marries a non-Catholic, in which case the marriage is not
fully sacramental ... and yet St Paul asserts that in the event of a 'mixed marriage', the partnership
is sacralised, which means, in effect, that God 'honours' the partnership, even if one party does not 'honour' God!
I think the theoretical advantage of celibacy in priesthood would be the capacity to be unfettered and not responsible for a family, enabling more time and energy to spent in service to the congregation.
Quite, and that was the argument from St Paul's time. I know there are many cases of spouses who suffer miserable lives being married to someone who, in effect, belongs to the community at large.
And Anthony Trollope's
Barchester Towers presents us with the wonderful character Mrs Proudie, the wife of Bishop Proudie, a woman who bullies her husband at every turn ...
My view is, however, that considering the number of priests required to serve a global community, to expect celibacy of
all of them is just asking too much. Indeed, if the charism of celibacy was given to all at ordination, I think that would arguably stand as a proof of the existence of God!
However, in the age of birth control ...
Oooh, steady. Recall that all traditions forbids ...
I'm aware that women and girls can bully and abuse also.
I think this is a huge subject ... I have some very firm views, but I do not disagree with anything you've said. What I would say is that it's taken years for the abuse of women by men to come to light, but there are reports that say that abuses by women is still something under the radar, as it were ...
... be that as it may, I very much doubt it's on the same scale as men.
The figures are terrible, and probably of the same order here — but to me this speaks of the inherent faults within contemporary culture, a fault which it is not addressing, and in many ways making worse.
The sexualisation of the body, especially in the UK, has produced, and is growing: record cases of self-harm among girls, and other psychological illnesses to do with self-image; the promotion of 'equality' to mean women can make as big a fool of themselves as men do, rampant teenage pregnancy, rampant spread of Sexually Transmitted Infections ... all of which the medical and social services respond to by: Changing the name of Sexually Transmitted Diseases to Sexually Transmitted Infections, because that sounds nicer and by handing out condoms and other means of birth control.
So you will understandably excuse the Catholic Church if we argue that, since the 'freedom' of women via birth control etc., the status of the feminine in culture has undergone a steady decline.
But hey — excuse the rant — I've got three daughters, and none of 'em made it unscathed through the growing process, neither physically nor psychologically; in fact my 19-year-old had her mobile stolen out of her hand just this weekend ... and my 17-year-old nephew has his mobile nicked by the same guys who don't even bother to beat him up any more, they just walk up and say 'let's make this easy'...
(If they knew his dad half as well as I do, they'd pick on anyone else before they try him again ... but then that's the un-reconstructed male for you ... very protective of his young)
The fact that this happens to a third of women shows it is a systemic cultural issue and not simply a few bad guys out there.
Absolutely ... But on the other hand, when I'm glibly informed that 'all men are potential rapists', or that women are absolutely blameless for what's going on in society, or when I get treated as if I'm some mentally-challenged unfortunate because I don't think or relate like women do, then I tend to get rather un-PC ... but this is a whole other discussion ...
But I think most people, if asked to choose between mean girls saying some nasty gossip about you or being raped, they'd choose the former and recognize it as a lesser offence.
OK. But I'm not talking about that, I'm talking about women who inflict emotional and mental and physical abuse on their children and their spouses on a par with male abuse ... as has been reported here in the UK, such a thing is still 'unthinkable', but it goes on.
... I'm not saying it happens in the same numbers, but it happens.
And suicide in the UK is highest among young men in their late teen early twenties.
There is something deeply rotten in the state, and perhaps those secular voices who clamour for change in the Catholic Church, without understanding why things are the way they are, might better be employed actually trying to change something they can, rather than bleating on about something they won't.
I think it'd actually help the church's standing if more people were up front like this. It would certainly help with healing the wounds some people feel, I would imagine.
Yep. We gotta acknowledge the problem, before we can sort it out ... institutions, byt their (bureaucratic) nature, have a tendency to try and hide the problem.
+++
I don't mean that it is the point of Christian development, but rather that if, as the gospels say, there is no gender in heaven, and heaven is seen as the ideal state of humanity... then the logical trajectory is that a fully developed human being on earth would transcend the non-biological gender differences (that are largely ascribed by society). In becoming whole people, we would become more like what we would be in heaven, which means we would not be bound in gender-defined relationships and roles.
Yes and no ... now here's some ground for an interesting discussion ... not one I intend to pursue, however I'll post some points:
I think there is a metacosmic reason behind gender ...
A 'fully developed human being' is still, I believe, a
biological entity ...
(God has no need of purely spiritual beings — He's already got 'em — angels) ...
Human is 'higher' than angelic because the human is the place where spirit and matter meet. We do actually 'walk between worlds' ...
I believe in the spiritualised, or rather resurrected human being, the relationship of the physical to the spiritual is corrected, and thus reverses the current arrangement, and this relationship will be as staggering to us now, as the discovery of Quantum Physics ... (including 'shape-changing', relocation, etc...) ...
We are not here to transcend the physical, we're here to sacralise it ... we're here to bring it with us, not leave it behind...
I think that when we are whole individuals, we no longer need culturally defined identities, because our identity is wrapped up in our connection to the Divine. This liberates us on many levels, including our reliance on gender roles to define our lives.
And I think it also liberates us from the notion that governs all the others: the notion of the primacy of the 'individual'. This is, as I see it, a fundamental marker of contemporary culture, and what sets it most at odds with the Church.
Thomas