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Papal Theologian Explains Why No Women Priests

VATICAN CITY (CNS) – In October, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith dismissed Roy Bourgeois from the priesthood because of his participation in the invalid ordination of a woman.

Since then, a Jesuit in Wisconsin has had his priestly faculties suspended after he celebrated a liturgy with a woman purporting to be a Catholic priest; and the Redemptorist order has confirmed that one of its members is under Vatican investigation for alleged ambiguities “regarding fundamental areas of Catholic doctrine,” apparently including the question of women’s ordination.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states that only men can receive Holy Orders because Jesus chose men as His apostles and the “apostles did the same when they chose collaborators to succeed them in their ministry.” Blessed John Paul II wrote in 1994 that this teaching is definitive and not open to debate among Catholics.

Yet some Catholics persist in asking why, as traditional distinctions between the sexes break down in many areas of society, the Catholic clergy must remain an exclusively male vocation and what this suggests about the Church’s understanding of women’s worth and dignity.

Few are as well qualified to answer such questions as Dominican Father Wojciech Giertych.

As the theologian of the papal household, Father Giertych has the task of reviewing all speeches and texts submitted to Pope Benedict XVI to ensure they are free of doctrinal error. Though his office was not founded until the 13th century, the Dominican claims St. Paul the Apostle, who corrected St. Peter on important questions of Church teaching, as his original forerunner. (A copy of Rembrandt’s portrait of St. Paul in prison hangs on a wall in Father Giertych’s apartment in the Apostolic Palace.)

“In theology, we base ourselves not on human expectations, but we base ourselves on the revealed word of God,” the theologian told Catholic News Service. “We are not free to invent the priesthood according to our own customs, according to our own expectations.”

Father Giertych rejects the idea that the all-male priesthood is a relic of obsolete social norms, as if such norms could have been binding on Jesus.

“Christ was courageous with respect to the local social customs, he was not afraid to be countercultural,” Father Giertych said. “He didn’t follow the expectations of the powerful, of Pilate, of Herod. He had his own work, his own mission.”

According to Father Giertych, theologians cannot say why Jesus chose only men as His Apostles, any more than they can explain the purposes of the incarnation or the Eucharist.

“In the mystery of faith, we need to be on our knees toward something that we received,” he said.

Nevertheless, he said, theology can help illuminate the “internal coherence and beauty of the mystery which has been offered to us by God.”

“The son of God became flesh, but became flesh not as sexless humanity but as a male,” Father Giertych said; and since a priest is supposed to serve as an image of Christ, his maleness is essential to that role.

Reflecting on differences between the sexes, Father Giertych suggested other reasons that men are especially suited to the priesthood.

Men are more likely to think of God in terms of philosophical definitions and logical syllogisms, he said, a quality valuable for fulfilling a priest’s duty to transmit Church teaching.

Although the social and administrative aspects of Church life are hardly off-limits to women, Father Giertych said priests love the Church in a characteristically “male way” when they show concern “about structures, about the buildings of the church, about the roof of the church which is leaking, about the bishops’ conference, about the concordat between the church and the state.”

Father Giertych acknowledged that a Catholic woman might sincerely believe she is called to the priesthood, but he said such a “subjective” belief does not indicate the objective existence of a vocation.

None of which means that women hold an inferior place in the Church, he said.

“Every baptized person, both male and female, participates in the priesthood of Christ through the sacrament of baptism, drawing the fruits of the paschal mystery to one’s own soul,” he said. “And maybe in some sense we could say that, in this, women are more apt to draw from the mystery of Christ, by the quality of their prayer life, by the quality of their faith.”

3 thoughts on “Papal Theologian Explains Why No Women Priests

  1. Really, then, there should only be twelve priests and they should be waiters. After all when he said this is my body and blood he said he was their meal, the actual food they were going to eat for dinner that night. At this age it seems to me he was saying, to love by being companions, by actually feeding and sheltering each other. Why we came to have a largely etheric meal of love–and a disk of small dry bread–rather than an actual meal of love is a matter of male intellectualization, I believe.

  2. Fact is feminism whose origins are in atheistic liberalism has infected every aspect or Western culture to the point that populations in the U.S. and Europe are at below replacement level — not to mention the churches are empty.

    The level of discourse in the Church has descended to the low level of abortion and gay marriage as negotiables within the Catholic Church and this can only be seen in the context of feminism and culture of atheistic liberalism whose basic worldview is at odds not only with the Gospel but the Natural Law.

  3. This statement needs clarification: “Every baptized person, both male and female, participates in the priesthood of Christ through the sacrament of baptism, drawing the fruits of the paschal mystery to one’s own soul,” he (Giertych) said.

    Pius XII taught in “Mediator Dei” encyclical on this very point:

    40. Only to the apostles, and thenceforth to those on whom their successors have imposed hands, is granted the power of the priesthood, in virtue of which they represent the person of Jesus Christ before their people, acting at the same time as representatives of their people before God.

    This priesthood is not transmitted by heredity or human descent.

    It does not emanate from the Christian community.

    It is not a delegation from the people.

    It comes from God. “As the Father hath sent me, I also send you [40]. . . he that heareth you heareth me [41]. . . go ye into the whole world and preach the gospel to every creature; he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved.”