Category: Women’s Ordination

May 22nd, 2018

Charged Silence

The music is not in the notes, but in the silence between.                                                  ~ Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Initially I had a problem with the women’s ordination movement. Perhaps you did, too. As a child and even as a teen and young adult participating in a Catholic Mass, I never felt “less than” nor marginalized nor…
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May 15th, 2018

An Ordination Day Witness for a New Church for a New Day

We are there every year and will be again this Saturday, May 19 at 9:30 a.m. Twelve or more of us. Definitely a minyan.  Apostles in so many ways. Saying our Mass. Led by an ordained woman priest. Outside the Cathedral of Saints Peter & Paul while an “officially ordained” ordination takes place inside. One…
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May 8th, 2018

Care to Cast Your Vote? For What It’s Worth, I Did

When I was in my “Protestant phase” as I call it, I attended an experimental progressive branch of a very conservative denomination, allowed only because it was supposed to bring in those, especially young, people disaffected by the traditional church and probably because it was, after all, the Sixties when many such fresh breaths were…
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May 5th, 2018

Optics

“Optics” seems to be used more and more to describe “how things look,” which is what I guess from the context. Like any jargon, it’s annoying. So I’ll focus on it and find things I like the look of. What about those teachers? I am amazed by statewide teacher actions. Here in Pennsylvania, teachers in wealthy…
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May 1st, 2018

Holding the Shell to Your Ear

Doesn’t this say it all? In a recent Letter to the Editor in the New York Times, a reader, commenting on a Ross Douthat take on Pope Francis as a way too progressive and, therefore, dangerous leader, included this anecdote: He and some of his fellow students at an all-male Catholic high school had noted…
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April 28th, 2018

In the News

Exiled from my condo by asbestos remediation, I am sitting in my local Starbucks. My famous – or infamous – Starbucks. There are six marked and unmarked police cars outside. I recognize them from endless SEPA WOC demonstrations. No protesters yet. Today in here there are more white than black people, but nobody is denied…
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April 24th, 2018

Sexism Can Kill Body and Spirit

Imagine my surprise when I read about the women who were shooed out of the sumo wrestling ring in Japan when they tried to save a man’s life. What sounds like “news of the weird” is a serious story about traditions and how harmful they can be. It made me think of Roman Catholicism’s ban…
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April 21st, 2018

The Long Haul

Our Joan of Arc is inspiring me again this week (see March 31 post). Emma Gonzalez is quoted by Joan Walsh in The Nation: About the flurry of inadequate but promising gun-safety measures passed [into law] since Parkland, she says: “It feels like: they tried to take a giant step—and then they tripped. I’m not…
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April 17th, 2018

Taking Over the Narrative

In the admittedly progressive Catholic Church I attend, parishioners have, for years, stood as they and other people received communion and remained standing until all have received and the bread and wine has been put away. The narrative behind this action focused on our being Easter people rejoicing in the once whole, then broken bread…
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April 10th, 2018

Yay, Team! Go!

Okay, I’m a grandma, so please bear with me! I think this grandchild-being-irresistably-funny anecdote does have a point for us. No, trust me, really. My two year old grandson was being potty trained and doing quite well, thank you. One day, he and his family were at a restaurant. Mom denied him some treat and…
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