Perhaps "Carefully consider that when (if) you are given a cure of souls, you will have to work with both men and women" ?what does this say to the seminarians
These offices aren't minor orders anymore, so there's no need to reserve them to the clerical state.
hasn’t budged on the women deacons matter after several golden opportunities to do so
To me, it is a shame. As was noted a few comments up from here, the only reason most if not all bishops had not seen fit to institute acolytes and lectors was precisely because they couldn't institute women. Now that they can do so there will no doubt be a multitude of institutions just because women can now be instituted - and, most of them probably will be women. Certain types are rejoicing at this. To me it is a shameful retreat to please certain relevantist types.
What theological justification has there ever been for reserving these offices to men?
We are tracking our Mass attendance every day, so looking at this latest announcement, it is more of a case of rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.
That doesn't counter the incrementalism argument, it just shows that he hasn't released enough changes yet for that to literally be the next one.
If it means that properly trained instituted lectors will be exercising the role in preference to unprepared, fumbling volunteers, there will be, well, some benefit from this.
On the one hand I get where you're coming from, but on the other hand I earnestly ask: when will people finally start taking liturgical abuses seriously and stop tolerating them?
Each time a commission comes back and says "there's no historical proof for it" he rounds up a new group and tasks them with studying the same thing. One has to wonder why?
AFH, yes well, there's a vast difference between being generous or even giving permission and banning it, the authority of which they were not really give to do.
I am sure that Francis realizes that what he has done is essentially irreformable, in that, unless the next Pope is a man of iron will, spine, and other bits, no future Pope will dare to rescind this
the large number of Sisters of Our Lady of the Pantsuit who will not doubt queue up for this this spring along with the Seminarians, and the Bishops in an awkward position
Either they are clerical or not. If they are, they should be reserved to men only, as instituted minor orders; if they are not, then there is no need for any kind of 'institution', just as for organists, cantors, choir members, DREs, etc., just simply exist, without any kind of institution as a "minister".
theologically correct[ive?]...
what exactly here is wrong
"It should be stated at the outset that John Paul was not inventing theological categories.The underlying problem with this document is that it eviscerates the clear teaching of St. John Paul II in the post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles Laici
So, let’s see what the careful John Paul is saying and how that squares with what Francis is saying." https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2021/01/11/confusion-twice-confounded-on-the-motu-proprio-spiritus-domini/Indeed, one cannot point to a single line in the sixteen documents of Vatican II where the word “ministry” or “minister” was applied to the non-ordained.
There isn't anything exactly correct with allowing females to do anything in the sanctuary or at the ambo, either.
But I don't appreciate the precedent that "if you but persist in your liturgical abuses, we'll eventually cave and change Church Law to accommodate you, rather than drawing you back in from the fray."
I'm sorry for the unattractive attitude, but after dealing with women who play emotionally manipulative cards to get their way, I'm not interested in men taking up their ridiculous cause, either.
If it means that properly trained instituted lectors will be exercising the role in preference to unprepared, fumbling volunteers, there will be, well, some benefit from this.
Indeed it is! I've witnessed numerous remarks from deacons that would have left a third grade theology student scratching his head. I had occasion a number of years ago to attend a 'communion service' which was conducted by a deacon who lamented that he could only give out communion but didn't know why he couldn't celebrate mass. I have been left speechless any number of times by similar utterances from deacons....SO well done.
Prior legislation allowed Bishops to let non-instituted female lectors serve whenever an instituted lector was not present.
This decision brings church policy more in line with our teachings and traditions about the lay state.
on the incorrect actions of specific women you've known. This has not been my experience of lay women and I'm quite frankly disturbed by the frequent pejorative descriptions of women serving the Church in this thread.
Pope Gelasius in his ninth letter (chap. 26) to the bishops of Lucania condemned the evil practice which had been introduced of women serving the priest at the celebration of Mass. Since this abuse had spread to the Greeks, Innocent IV strictly forbade it in his letter to the bishop of Tusculum: “Women should not dare to serve at the altar; they should be altogether refused this ministry.” We too have forbidden this practice in the same words in Our oft-repeated constitution Etsi Pastoralis, sect. 6, no. 21.
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