| Fwd: [Hidisc] Vatican Scrambles to Clarify Church Laws on Women Priests - The Daily Beast | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
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From: Robert Tapp (tappx001 |
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| Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2010 08:23:21 -0700 (PDT) | |
Begin forwarded message: > From: Robert Tapp <tappx001 [at] umn.edu> > Date: July 18, 2010 10:17:54 AM CDT > To: Humanist Institute Discussion Group Discussion Group <hidisc [at] > humanistinstitute.org> > > > Useful summary by Michelle Goldberg, a major researcher on the rights of > women. > > Bob > http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-07-18/vatican-scrambles-to-clarify-church-laws-on-women-priests/?cid=bs:archive1 > > Vatican Scrambles to Clarify Church Laws on Women Priests - The Daily Beast > > The > Right Reverend Kay Goldsworthy, one of the first women bishops. (Photo: Paul > Kane / Getty Images)Rome's scrambling to undo damage from changes to church > law that lumped ordination of women priests with child sex abuse. Michelle > Goldberg on the church's other shameful legacy. > > The Vatican has now clarified—ordaining women is not quite as grave a crime > as raping children. > > On Thursday, the Vatican issued revisions to church law making it easier to > punish pedophile priests, a welcome development. Yet it shocked much of the > world by including, in its list of “more grave delicts,” not just the sexual > abuse of children and the possession of child pornography, but also the > attempted ordination of women priests. At the same time, the new rules have > nothing to say about priests who fail to respond adequately to reports of > sexual abuse. (If they did, writes Thomas Doyle in The National Catholic > Reporter, they “would obviously nail the majority of U.S. bishops, both > retired and active.”) > > The church treated protecting its own norms about sex and gender as more > important than protecting the children under its care. > > On Friday, amid widespread outrage, Monsignor Charles Scicluna, who helped > formulate the new rules, tried to walk back any suggestion of equivalency > between female ordination and pederasty, telling Reuters that while both > canonical crimes are listed in the same document, “this does not put them on > the same level or assign them the same gravity.” > > Hidden in all the uproar was an unfortunate truth. It would actually be a > step forward if the church were to assign the same gravity to the sexual > violation of children as it has to violations of its rigid doctrines on > gender. Compare the church’s sluggish, defensive, obfuscatory record on sex > abuse with its zealous prosecution of dissent against the all-male celibate > priesthood. It’s been quite clear for a long time where its priorities lay. > > Throughout the last two papacies, even as pedophile priests were coddled and > protected, clergy and theologians who drifted away from church orthodoxy, > particularly on sexual matters, have been hounded. “From the very beginning > of his pontificate John Paul II decided to systematically crush dissent by > Catholic theologians and to marginalize critics so they would no longer stir > up unwanted discussion within the Church,” wrote Carl Bernstein and Marco > Politi in their biography of Pope John Paul II, His Holiness. “With the > appointment of Joseph Ratzinger”—the current pope—“as prefect of the > Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in November 1981, it became clear > that this was official policy.” > > Father Charles Curran, a professor at the Catholic University of America, was > removed from his post and barred from teaching theology as a result of > questioning church teachings on contraception, divorce, and homosexuality. > Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen of Seattle came under investigation for > allowing the gay Catholic group Dignity to celebrate mass, among other > infractions. As Bernstein and Politi reported, Hunthausen was subjected to a > two-year investigation, which included interviews with 70 witnesses from his > diocese and a 13-hour interrogation. He eventually retired early. The > Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is currently engaged in a sweeping > investigation of American nuns, apparently because they’re seen as > insufficiently conservative. > > Had similar inquisitorial energy been spent on rooting out abusive priests, > far fewer children’s lives would have been blighted. But it wasn’t—perhaps > because conservatives worried that sex abuse scandals would call priestly > celibacy and the exclusion of women into question. As the historian Garry > Wills wrote in his book Papal Sins, “For a priest to be a pedophile raises > the question whether the celibate discipline for a whole class of men (not > just for the spiritually gifted individual) is a false, because unrealizable, > ideal.” Thus the church treated protecting its own norms about sex and gender > as more important than protecting the children under its care. > > Though the church denies it, the ban on women priests is deeply rooted in > misogyny. “Since any supremacy of rank cannot be expressed in the female sex, > which has the status of an inferior, that sex cannot receive ordination,” > declared Thomas Aquinas, the 13th-century Catholic theological giant. Women, > Wills reminds us, were long seen as too profoundly impure to come near the > church altar. Hence the tradition of castrating boys to sing soprano in > Catholic choirs, a tradition that lingered into the beginning of the 20th > century. > > The case of the castrati is instructive, since it demonstrates the Vatican’s > historic willingness to sanction true perversity in the interest of male > supremacy. There is, as yet, not much indication that that has changed. > > Michelle Goldberg is the author of The Means of Reproduction: Sex, Power and > the Future of the World and Kingdom Coming: The Rise of Christian > Nationalism. She is a senior correspondent for The American Prospect, and her > work has appeared in The New Republic, The Nation, the Los Angeles Times, > Glamour, and many other publications. > > Get a head start with the Morning Scoop email. It's your Cheat Sheet with > must reads from across the Web. Get it. > > For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial [at] > thedailybeast.com. > > > > _______________________________________________ > Hidisc mailing list > Hidisc [at] humanistinstitute.org > http://humanistinstitute.org/mailman/listinfo/hidisc_humanistinstitute.org
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