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Unity Versus Uniformity

Pastor Mike Lambert looks at the idea of unity versus unifromity. Is it truly intellectually honest to sharply separate these two ideas? FIND IT HERE.

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Despite the recent rebranding of the Roman Catholic Church, with the liberal Pope Francis addressing climate change and recognizing the LGBT community, the church continues to ban women from preaching the gospel. But a group of rebel women is defying the rules of the Vatican by ordaining women as priests across the U.S.
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The goal of the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests is to yank the Catholic church out of its time warp and bring gender equality to the priesthood—and the way things are looking, the group may just pull it off.
Since the early 1900s, Christian churches—Lutheran, Methodist, Baptist, and more—have welcomed women to serve as priests or ministers. Just last week, more than 1,000 people gathered to watch the first female bishop ordained in the Church of England. It’s a movement that the Roman Catholic Church needs to take a cue from, according to 68 percent of American Catholics. So what’s the holdup?
“I think it’s sexism. I think it’s misogyny,” said Janice Sevre-Duszynska, an ARCWP member who was ordained in 2008. “Instead of being frightened of us, [the church] needs to be talking to us.”
To drive that message home to the Vatican, the ARCWP is placing women at the altar—front and center. In January, 80-year-old Rita Lucey, grandmother, wife, and now priest, was ordained in a ceremony in Florida. She’s the second woman to be ordained as a Catholic priest in the past month, and one of 165 since 2002. “Either the church will die or this will occur. In my lifetime probably not, but there is always hope,” Lucey told NBC.
For Lucey and these gutsy women, hope is all they need to keep the governing laws of the Catholic church—which state that only a male can be ordained as a priest—from deterring them from their mission. After becoming ordained, these women frequently receive letters of excommunication, and in extreme cases their photos are circulated to eucharistic ministers, who ban them from receiving Communion during mass.
In response, they befriend other churches that will allow them to preach (including Jewish temples), keep ordaining women, and establish a community of equals. Considering the Vatican’s influence on the patriarchal world, the women’s movement is just as political as it is religious.

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