Sunday, October 28, 2018

Changing Church?

From the DW:
"Vatican summit calls for giving women more Church responsibility"

A four-week summit has ended with a call to give women bigger roles in church decision-making. Only seven nuns were invited to participate in the nearly 300-member synod.  A monthlong meeting of Catholic leaders ended on Saturday with a call to strengthen the role of women in the Church's decision-making. The summit concluded that the Church must embrace "inescapable change" and that it was a "duty of justice" to bring more women to the table. The lack of women in positions of power was highlighted by the fact that only seven nuns were invited to participate in the nearly 300-member synod and were not allowed to vote on the final document produced by the meeting. "It's a duty of justice, that finds its inspiration in the way Jesus related to the men and women of his time, as well as the importance of the role of some female figures in the Bible, in the history of salvation and in the life of the church," a concluding statement read. Pope Francis organized the meeting to discuss how the Church could better minister to youth. It was quickly taken over by issues important to younger Catholics, including women's rights, LGBT rights, and the clergy sexual abuse scandals. An attempt to include language about LGBT Catholics hoping to find "greater closeness and experience greater care by the Church" in a final document was struck down by several conservative bishops. Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput told the synod that he objected to the mention of the LGBT community because "there is no such thing as an 'LGBTQ Catholic' or a 'transgender Catholic' or a 'heterosexual Catholic,' as if our sexual appetites defined who we are." Pope Francis has made tentative attempts to increase acceptance of groups traditionally cast out by the Church, including divorced people and sexual minorities. But his mild attempts at reform have been met with strong pushback from the Vatican's deeply entrenched traditionalist bureaucracy.
^ As a Catholic I believe the Church should be more open to gays and to women, but at the same time I think that priests and nuns should still not be allowed to marry. Women should be given a more central role in the Church (from the Vatican to the local parish.) One of the main appeals to many Catholics is that it has traditions that date centuries while other religions tend to go with what is trendy. There needs to be a balance of tradition with modernity. Having the Catholic Church allow nuns to say mass or to allow gays into their congregations while at the same time keeping the other traditions seem like a could balance. ^

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