LCWR: Why are we not surprised?

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Robert McClory on Apr. 24, 2012 NCR Today

The attitude toward women that prompted the Vatican crackdown on the LCWR was there in the beginning and it’s never been exorcised from Catholicism. It even got into the New Testament, in 1 Corinthians, for example, where the writer declares that women “should keep silence in the churches for they are not permitted to speak but should be subordinate. … If there is anything they desire to know, let them ask their husband.”

Today, we are assured by every credible Scripture scholar that this was inserted by some scribe after Paul’s death; it totally contradicts his attitude toward women and his acceptance of women as co-workers. In Romans, he commends an entire list of women, including Junia, whom he calls “prominent among the apostles.” Nevertheless, several putdowns of women got placed in the texts and have remained as stumbling blocks for the unwary.

The paintings in the catacombs from the first centuries give witness that women, portrayed in the garments of priests and deacons, even presiding at the Eucharist, shared in the radical equality of the Gospel. But soon the declarations of bishops and synods warn that women should not be ordained and the practice is to be snuffed out wherever it has taken root. The hierarchy alone, they reminded the people (just as they told LCWR), are the deciders.

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