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Friday, April 9, 2010

Feminine Genius in the Catholic Church

I read an amazing post by Elizabeth Scalia over at The Anchoress called The Myth of Held Back Catholic Women. It was very inspiring. Especially considering the media's attack on the Church in recent weeks. Not that these attacks are anything new, but they have been quite intense recently. The Anchoress was responding to the Lisa Miller piece at Newsweek which she called "staggering nonsense on several levels". Amen sister! People who are attacking the Church about not ordaining women do not understand Catholic teaching at the most fundamental level. This is not the post to go into what the Church teaches (look for that sometime in the future) about why in her wisdom, given by Christ, women are not ordained. I am very thankful that God created men and women to complement eachother, not to compete with eachother. There are God-given gifts and abilities women have that men do not, and God-given gifts and abilities men have that women do not. This does not negate our equal dignity, but in fact is a grace that helps us to fulfill our potential and become all we are meant to be.

Here's an exerpt from the Anchoress refuting the myth about oppression of women in the Catholic Church:

The fact is, for all of the talk about how oppressive the church has been for women, there has been no other institution in history which has given women such free reign to create, explore, discover, serve, manage, build, expand, usually with very little help from the coffers of the diocese in which they worked, and often with little to no intrusion on the part of the male hierarchy.

And these have not been mealy mouthed “sheeplike” women, but educated, accomplished women who have chosen their lives because they could do nothing greater with their gifts. Rose Hawthorne, daughter of Nathanial Hawthorne, founded the Hawthorne Dominicans, an order of nuns who take care of cancer patients – free of charge – and who subsist entirely on donations. The Grand Duchess, Elizabeth left her royal privilege behind to serve the poorest of the poor and suffered a 20th century martyrdom. The daughter of General Patton joined forces with a nun, Mother Benedicta, in France after WWII to come to America and form the Abbey of Regina Laudis, an abbey that is still attracting educated women, sculptors, writers, linguists, musicians – creative women – to use their gifts in the praise of God and for the good of us all. Did I mention that Mother Benedicta, before she became a nun,
was a medical doctor who helped to hide and treat Jews who were being hunted by
the Nazis?

I can go on…Mother Theresa built an international order of women which thrives, doing work no one wants to do, wouldn’t do in a million years. For that matter, she might seem quite mad – she probably is – but there is in Alabama an extraordinary and strange woman named Mother Angelica, the media-mogul you never heard of, who founded a Franciscan monastery and church in (of all places) the hottest bible belt in the deep South, and then – with two hundred dollars ($200.00) and no help from her bishop – was inspired to build a television station (and a radio station), which has become EWTN, a global Catholic network – also founding an order of friars – while hobbling around on crutches, yet.

Extraordinary, mad women, all of them! And I cannot think of a single institution on the face of the earth other than the Catholic Church which would have allowed them to run with their madness, BE who they were and accomplish great things.

The church gets a bad rap in this area. She has fostered literally thousands of great, great women, whose accomplishments are unjustly overlooked because they were done in a habit and a wimple. Compare them with the ‘ideal’ of today’s “smart, educated, successful” woman, like . . . Maureen Dowd, who only yesterday was whimpering about how difficult it is to be a celebrated woman in a position of prestige and power because – you know – men are so mean! The contrast could not be more
stark.



Do go read it.





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