[MR] Reply Pt. 1 (women priests)
EoganOg at aol.com
EoganOg at aol.com
Mon Mar 4 11:28:14 PST 2002
I had some trouble getting this through the list due to length. I've cut it
into two portions.
--
Rosine has some interesting points. However, let me just emphasise that when
attempting to challenge a widely accepted historical fact for which there is
ample evidence (such as the male only preisthood of the Church), then any
evidence that you provide to the contrary must be held to a very high level
of scrutiny. The burden of proof in cases such as this lies with the one who
is challenging the upheld fact.
> The chief document brought forth by Otranto is an Epistle 14: 26 of Pope
> Gelasius, dated March 11, 494. The essential part as translated by Rossi (p.
> 81) is this: "Nevertheless we have heard to our annoyance that divine
> affairs have come to such a low state that women are encouraged to officiate
> at the sacred altars, and to take part in all matters imputed to the offices
> of the male sex, to which they do not belong."
>
I am not familiar with this reference cited, so all I know about it is from
the part quoted here. But just from what is presented it is apparant from
the Pope's writing that someone, somewhere in Christendom is encouraging
women to officiate during mass ("at the sacred alters").
What it does not say is that these women were actually ordained priests. It
simply says that women are being encouraged to do things that should be
reserved for priests alone. It also does not say that these women are even
willing participants in this, only that they are being encouraged. So to
read into this that women are actually being ordained priests is to assume
something that the evidence does not support.
Furthermore the Pope's reaction to this news is obviously not favorable. He
is "annoyed" at these abuses and makes it clear that such roles are not to be
assumed by women. If anything, this source should be used as evidence to
support that the Church in the fifth century most definitely taught that
women could not be ordained priests.
> and...
> Otranto adds (p. 85) that we have evidence from St. Irenaeus of heretical
> Gnostic women priests and also of some in other erroneous sects, as shown by
> Firmilian of Caesarea and St. Epiphanius of Salamis. But they are called
> heretical sects by Irenaeus and Firmilian.
>
You hit the nail on the head. They are heretical sects. Here is the actual
content of what Irenaeus wrote in his _Against Heresies_ in 189 AD:
---
"Pretending to consecrate cups mixed with wine, and protracting to great
length the word of invocation, [Marcus the Gnostic heretic] contrives to give
them a purple and reddish color. . . . [H]anding mixed cups to the women, he
bids them consecrate these in his presence. When this has been done, he
himself produces another cup of much larger size than that which the deluded
woman has consecrated, and pouring from the smaller one consecrated by the
woman into that which has been brought forward by himself, he at the same
time pronounces these words: ‘May that Charis who is before all things and
who transcends all knowledge and speech fill your inner man and multiply in
you her own knowledge, by sowing the grain of mustard seed in you as in good
soil.’ Repeating certain other similar words, and thus goading on the
wretched woman [to madness], he then appears a worker of wonders when the
large cup is seen to have been filled out of the small one, so as even to
overflow by what has been obtained from it. By accomplishing several other
similar things, he has completely deceived many and drawn them away after
him" (Against Heresies 1:13:2 [A.D. 189]).
---
By looking at what Irenaeus himself wrote, it is evident that the reference
to "women priests" comes not from a ligitimate Church source, but from a
Gnostic heretic who was using slight of hand to decieve women whom he was
encouraging to take on priestly roles. Again, there is no mention of women
actually recieving ordination, and the context here is one of a heretic sect,
which in no way represents the teaching of the universal Church.
> Given that our history of the early church is written by members, usually
> clerical, who had a firm grasp of "what was correct"for their era and
> reflected that knowledge in their work, this subject comes down to "what do
>
No, it comes down to "what does the evidence support." It is when we read
our modern notions back into historical sources that we fall into error. For
instance, when we take our modern notions of gender issues, feminism, and
equality in the workplace, along with a healthy disregard for spiritual
authority that is rampant in the modern age, and project these views back on
early church documents, what we wind up with is a very skewed vision of
history. It should not be about what one believes but rather what is true,
regardless of personal belief.
For instance, you wrote above that the history of the early church was for
the most part written by clerics who "had a firm grasp of what was correct
for their era." If they had a firm grasp of what was correct, and they are
telling us that women assuming roles reserved for priests is heretical, then
we should assume just that.
To assume from this evidence that the early church ordained women priests is
to willingly use our modern prejudices to blind ourselves to what the
evidence actually is telling us.
> Any expression of Christianity not sanctioned by the Pope of Rome was
> considered heretical and in some cases, "heathen" - just reading the history
> of missionaries in Greater Europe can bring that home, as many of the Roman
> missionaries were reported as "ministering to the heathens" which included
> the Arian (and a few other more obscure sects) Christians along with the
>
Yes. Catholicism (not yet called "Christianity") was and is one faith
teaching one truth. If what you taught was contrary to what the Church
taught then you were a heretic. And some of the early heresies were
radically different from the Catholic church. What they taught and what they
practiced cannot and should not be taken as evidence of what the early Church
taught.
> That being the case, early accounts of women priests cannot be totally
>
So far the accounts presented have not given any evidence for women being
ordained priests. No need to dismiss them.
> (and somewhere I just read a paper on the writings of Sts. Pauland Peter,
> which have phrases in them which in translation read "deaconess"
> rather than "holy women", along with listing some of these womens first in
> the "order of precedence" in their churches, which are now being reexamined
> in light of the possiblity that they did, indeed, acknowledge women helping
> to celebrate the Eucharist during the time of the Apostles, such practise
>
A few points. A deacon is not a priest. And therefore a deaconess is not a
priestess. And "helping to celebrate the Eucharist" is not celebrating the
Eucharist on your own as a priest does.
Now, more specifically to the point. There is ample reason to believe that
the term "deacon" (and by extension "deaconess") did not have the connotaion
in the early church that it does now. That term evolved in meaning, just as
the term "saint" was originally applied to any Christian, and later came to
be applied specifically to those souls believed to be in heaven.
Today, a deacon is an ordained man. He is not ordained to the priesthood,
but it is recognized as a level of ordination. Because of the controversy in
certain areas of the church over women in the priesthood, it is the opinion
of the Magesterium that ordaining women as deacons would only mislead the
faithful into believing that women would one day be ordained as priests,
which the Pope has specifically declared an impossibility. The Church has
not denied that there have been deaconesses in the past, and it does not rule
out the possibility of deaconesses being ordained in the future.
That being said, it is apparant from contemporary evidence in the early
Church that these "deaconesses" were not ordained in the way that deacons are
ordained today. According to the Council of Nicea (325 AD), they were
considered laity.
---
"Similarly, in regard to the deaconesses, as with all who are enrolled in the
register, the same procedure is to be observed. We have made mention of the
deaconesses, who have been enrolled in this position, although, not having
been in any way ordained, they are certainly to be numbered among the laity"
(Canon 19 [A.D. 325]).
---
These references to early deaconesses in no way can be considered evidence of
women being ordained priests.
End pt. 1
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