Pope Francis on women deacons: ‘Holy orders is reserved for men’
Put that in your pipes and smoke it Pinko Liberals.
GENE
Rome Newsroom, Oct 25, 2023 / 12:35 pm
Pope Francis reaffirmed the impossibility of women
becoming priests, or even modern Church deacons, in an interview for a book
released Tuesday in Italy.
The question of whether some women in the early
Church were “deaconesses” or another kind of collaborator with the bishops is
“not irrelevant, because holy orders is reserved for men,” the pope said.
The pope’s answers to questions about
women’s roles in the Church were included in a book published in June in
Spanish as “El Pastor: Desafíos, razones y reflexiones
sobre su pontificado.”
The book, whose title means in
English “The Shepherd: Struggles, Reasons, and Thoughts on His Papacy,” was
released in Italian on Oct. 24.
The Italian edition is titled “Non Sei Solo: Sfide, Risposte, Speranze,"
or "You Are Not Alone: Challenges, Answers, Hopes."
About the possibility of women deacons, Francis
pointed out that the diaconate “is the first degree of holy orders in the
Catholic Church, followed by the priesthood and finally the episcopate.”
He said he formed commissions in 2016 and 2020 to
study the question further, after a study in the 1980s by the International
Theological Commission established that the role of deaconesses in the early
Church “was comparable to the benedictions of abbesses.”
In response to a question about why he is “against
female priesthood,” Francis told Argentine journalist Sergio Rubin and Italian
journalist Francesca Ambrogetti, the authors of the book, that it is “a
theological problem.”
“I think we would undermine the essence of the
Church if we considered only the priestly ministry, that is, the ministerial
way,” he said, pointing out that women mirror Jesus’ bride the Church.
“The fact that the woman does not access
ministerial life is not a deprivation, because her place is much more
important,” he said. “I think we err in our catechesis in explaining these
things, and ultimately we fall back on an administrative criterion that does
not work in the long run.”
“On the other hand, with respect to the charism of
women, I want to say very clearly that from my personal experience, they have a
great ecclesial intuition,” he said.
Asked about women’s ordination bringing “more
people closer to the Church” and optional priestly celibacy helping with priest
shortages, Pope Francis said he does not share these views.
“Lutherans ordain women, but still few people go to
church,” he said. “Their priests can marry, but despite that they can’t grow
the number of ministers. The problem is cultural. We should not be naive and
think that programmatic changes will bring us the solution.”
“Mere ecclesiastical reforms do not
serve to solve underlying issues. Rather, paradigmatic changes are what is
needed,” he added, pointing to his 2019 letter to German Catholics for
further considerations on the issue.
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