Theologian at Synod on Synodality: There’s ‘too much emphasis’ on women priests
Rome Newsroom, Oct 17, 2023 / 14:10 pm
Spending too much time on the “niche issue” of
women priests or deacons distracts the Church from addressing what women really
need, a theologian participating in the Synod on Synodality said Tuesday.
“As a woman, I’m not focused at all on the fact
that I’m not a priest,” Renée Köhler-Ryan, one of 54 women delegates to the
Synod on Synodality, said at a press briefing Oct. 17.
“I think that there’s too much emphasis placed on
this question,” the Catholic professor added. “And what happens when we put too
much emphasis on this question is that we forget about what women, for the most
part, throughout the world, need.”
Köhler-Ryan is head of the School of
Philosophy and Theology at the University of Notre Dame in Sydney, Australia.
She participated in the Church in Australia’s plenary council and
is writing a forthcoming book on St. Edith Stein’s “Essays on Woman.”
Paolo Ruffini, president of the synod’s information
commission, told journalists that synod discussions on the afternoon of Oct. 16
focused a lot on the role of women in the Church, including whether women
should be able to preach the homily at Mass and the “reinstatement of the
female diaconate.”
Another topic of discussion, he said, was “how to
overcome clerical models that impede communion or that can impede the communion
of all the baptized.”
Köhler-Ryan said “some people are very focused on
this idea that only if women become ordained will they have any kind of
equality.”
But, equality is “not a one for one thing” in the
Church, she said, pointing out that the Synod on Synodality has focused a lot
on the idea of unity in diversity.
“Well part of that diversity is that there are
realities of motherhood and fatherhood that are both spiritual and biological
and that are really important for understanding what is going on across the
whole Church,” the wife and mother added.
She said the issue of women’s ordination
“distracts” the Church from what it could be doing to help women in other ways,
like offering greater support to families and working mothers.
“I think that’s a far more interesting conversation
for most women than what I tend to think of as a kind of niche issue,”
Köhler-Ryan said.
Köhler-Ryan’s comments came shortly
after another delegate described women’s participation in the Synod on
Synodality, where they are full voting members for the first time, as “setting the stage for future
changes.”
Sister Maria de los Dolores Palencia Gomez, a
Sister of St. Joseph of Lyon, led the Synod on Synodality assembly Oct. 13 in
her capacity as one of Pope Francis’ 10 president-delegates. She described the
experience of sitting with the pope “as a symbol of this opening, this wish
that the Church has … for something that places all of us at the same level.”
Another synod participant, one of 13 people tasked
with helping put together a summary document of the Oct. 4–29 assembly, told
the National Catholic Reporter last week that he would be open to a female
diaconate.
“The question of the ordination of women is clearly
something that needs to be addressed universally. … And if it were to be that
the outcome was for ordination to the diaconate to be open to women, I’d
certainly welcome that,” Bishop Shane Mackinlay of Sandhurst, Australia, said
in a podcast interview.
Ruffini said Monday’s discussions
also included requests for “greater attention to an inclusive language in the
liturgy and ecclesial documents” and that the word “cooperate” in canon 208 of
the Code of Canon Law, which says all Christians “cooperate in the building up
of the Body of Christ according to each one’s own condition and function,” be
changed to “co-responsibility.”
On “the possible reinstatement of the female
diaconate,” Ruffini said there was reference to first studying the exact nature
of the diaconate.
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About women deacons, Köhler-Ryan said what the
synod is “identifying at the moment is where there needs to be more theological
consideration of different issues, and I think I can safely say this is one
where there needs to be more consideration, knowing that this has been an issue
that has been looked at before.”
During his pontificate, Pope Francis has formed two
temporary commissions to study the question of women deacons.
The first, in 2016, examined the historic question
of the role of deaconesses in the early Church. In 2019, it was announced that
the 12-person commission had not reached any consensus on the question.
In April 2020, the pope formed a second commission after
the topic of female deacons was discussed at the Amazon Synod the prior
October, together with a request for the 2016 commission to be reestablished.
At the end of the October 2019 meeting, synod
members recommended to Pope Francis that women be considered for certain
ministries in the Church, including the permanent diaconate, which is an order
within the sacrament of holy orders.
But in his apostolic
exhortation on the Amazon,
published in February 2020, Pope Francis called for women in the South American
region to be included in new forms of service in the Church, but not within the
ordained ministries of the permanent diaconate or priesthood.
The subject of women deacons has
previously been studied by the Church, including in a 2002 document from
the International Theological Commission (ITC), an advisory body to the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
In the document, the ITC concluded that female
deacons in the early Church had not been equivalent to male deacons and had
neither a “liturgical function” nor a sacramental one. It also maintained that
even in the fourth century, “the way of life of deaconesses was very similar to
that of nuns.”
Women priests? Why on earth spend any time discussing women priests? It's never going to happen.
ReplyDeleteEddie Broadawl