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Women Vital to Seminaries: Ouellet

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic Register
April 30, 2020

https://www.catholicregister.org/home/international/item/31521-women-vital-to-seminaries-ouellet

Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet has called for having more women on seminary formation teams as professors and counsellors so men can develop “a balanced relationship with women.”

VATICAN CITY -- The Church must “radically change” how priests interact with women, starting by injecting more female voices into priestly formation at seminaries, said Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet.

For some priests and seminarians, “women represent danger, but in reality, the true danger are those men who do not have a balanced relationship with women,” said Ouellet, prefect of the Congregation for Bishops.

The cardinal was interviewed about the role of women in seminaries and seminary formation for the May issue of the women’s supplement to the Vatican newspaper. The interview was published April 24 by Vatican News.

Asked if a lack of women involved in priestly formation programs is to blame for the discomfort some women and priests can experience in each other’s company, the cardinal said, “the problem is probably deeper” than that and begins with how women are treated in one’s family.

“There is awkwardness because there is fear — more on the part of the man toward the woman than the woman toward the man,” he said.

“We must radically change” how priests interact with women, the cardinal said, which is why “during formation it is important that there is contact, discussion, exchanges” with women.

Having women on seminary formation teams as professors and counsellors, he said, also “would help a candidate interact with women in a natural way, including in facing the challenge represented by the presence of women, attraction to a woman.”

Isolating future priests from women is never a good idea, he said, and is no preparation for them entering ministry.

Asked whether he agreed with the notion that if women had been involved in seminary formation long ago it could have helped prevent the sexual abuse scandal, the cardinal said, “there certainly is some truth in that.”

“If interaction between the sexes is missing, there is a risk of developing compensations,” which can “express themselves in the exercise of power or in closed relationships, a closure that becomes manipulation and control ... and which can give rise to the abuse of conscience and sexual abuse.

“I think that for a priest, learning to relate to women in the environment of formation is a humanizing factor that promotes equilibrium in the man’s personality and affectivity,” the cardinal said.

Ouellet said he thought it was better for seminarians to have a priest as their spiritual director, but said seminaries still have not done enough to involve women in the formation process, especially in helping to evaluate candidates for the priesthood, their maturity and their “psycho-social and psycho-sexual identity.”

The Canadian cardinal has often advocated on behalf of increasing the role of women in the Church. At a 2018 Synod of Bishops, he supported further integration of women into ecclesial life to confront the problems of clericalism and an exaggerated sense of masculinity prevalent in the Church.

He agreed with the assertion that the Church can be guilty of failing “to recognize, welcome and foster the creativity of the feminine genius” and said it was necessary “to develop respect for women and the recognition of their charisms, as well as their equal integration in the life of society and the Church.”

 

 

 

 

 




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