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True Catholic Femenist
A Woman's place is in the Church.
I have,
for years, followed the “Why don’t women have a larger role in the
Church?” debate. Honestly, I’m not too sure which Church they’re talking
about. Couldn’t be the Catholic Church I know — the one I serve forty,
fifty, sixty hours a week. And, as far as I know, I’m still a woman.
Of course, they’re talking about institutional roles. Male ushers.
Male lectors. Altar boys. And let’s not even talk about the exclusively
male priesthood. All of it adds up, they say, to a “patriarchal” Church,
run by men, with no room or real role for women.
I have a theory about all this. It first came to me while visiting
relatives in Italy. A lot of food, a lot of wine, a lot of broken
English. (My limited-English-speaking cousin thought “hello” was the
equivalent of “ciao,” which can mean “hello” or “good-bye.” Every
time we left his home, he would wave, smiling, and call out, “Hello!
We will see you later! Hello!”)
On Sunday morning, my mother went to one of my cousins and said, “It’s
Sunday. We’ll be needing to go to Mass.” He looked at her incredulously
and said, “You mean, all of you?” You see, in Italy (and most of Europe),
religion is the exclusive domain of women. Men don’t much participate.
They loiter around outside the church, smoking cigarettes and playing
“bocce” as they wait for their wives to emerge from Mass. That got
me thinking. I really do believe that worship is a more naturally
feminine activity. Look at the differences in our basic nature.
Women are more relationship-oriented, more intuitive, more nurturing.
Men are more accomplishment-oriented, more empirical, more conquering.
What is religion? It’s essentially about relationship — with God and
with each other. It’s based largely on faith, which is a far more
intuitive than rational process. And it’s about submitting rather
than asserting.
Those characteristics seem to come far more naturally to women than
to men. Not to say that men aren’t or can’t be religious. But it doesn’t
seem as natural to them.
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Should
women refrain from activity in the Church? Of course not.
Women’s gifts are very important and are given to be used in
the service
of the Church. But the goal is the service of the Body of Christ.
When we
begin to seek roles simply because we want to assert our womanhood
in a
traditionally masculine domain, we lose the entire point of
ministry.
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So how do we encourage men to become more religious? Do we encourage
them to give up their basic masculine nature? No. That nature is God-given,
and put there for a reason. We don’t want to take it away. (Believe
me, single Catholic women looking for a spouse are well aware of the
phenomenon of the de-masculinized Catholic man. Not an attractive
sight.)
The solution is much simpler. We encourage them to be active. When
men are ushers, lectors, or Eucharistic ministers, their urge to accomplish
something is satisfied.
Of course, those roles aren’t the only reason they stay. Once in “the
fold,” they pray, receive the sacraments and, we hope, enter into
a relationship with Christ, finding the fulfillment that He alone
can give. But I think men, more than women, need a little bit of a
“hook” to bring them in.
What happens when we take that away? The Church becomes, to a large
extent, again a “woman’s domain.” The men start hanging outside, not
wanting to enter into the “girl’s club” inside. And they lose out.
Should women refrain from activity in the Church? Of course not. Women’s
gifts are very important and are given to be used in the service of
the Church. But the goal is the service of the Body of Christ. When
we begin to seek roles simply because we want to assert our womanhood
in a traditionally masculine domain, we lose the entire point of ministry.
Yeah, I am woman. And I’m fine with that. Now let’s get on with what’s
best for everybody.
Mary Beth Bonacci can be reached at
Real Love, Inc.,
PMB 190, 9457 S. University Blvd.,
Littleton, CO 80126.
Visit her website at www.reallove.net
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