Posted on 04/12/2007 10:42:39 AM PDT by Antoninus
I didnt realize how much pain I had from growing up in a church that did not permit women as pastors, said Melanie Donohoe in an interview published March 22 in the Oakland Tribune. Donohoe was talking about growing up Catholic.
I was not one of those girls who wanted to be a nun, said Donohoe. I always loved the spiritual, the mystical, and the sacramental, but I did not sit around dreaming of being a priest.
But, today, Donohoe is a priest -- or what some would call a priest. She is an Episcopal minister and associate rector of Transfiguration Episcopal Church in San Mateo. I'm really happy being a priest, she said, and I love my parish.
Twenty-five years ago, Donohoe joined the Episcopal Church because it has, since 1977, allowed women to be ordained. Even as an Episcopalian, she, a television producer, was not interested in ordination. But her call became more apparent. It was a call I could no longer refuse, she told the Tribune. She was ordained in November 2005. I asked God to drop the two-by-four, and she did. Being able to help people celebrate their most holy and sacred moments within the ritual of the church is very much what I felt called to do by God and by people.
The number of female clergy in the U.S. is steadily growing. The U.S. Department of Labors Womens Bureau counted 53,000 female clergy nationwide. They make up 15 percent of the clergy in San Mateo County, according to the Tribune.
Some have said a disproportionate number of Protestant female clergy are made up of former Catholics. Do they leave because the Catholic Church forbids womens ordination? Examining this question, Paul Perl, writing in the Dec. 22, 2005 edition of the journal Sociology of Religion, said, based on the statistics (and the latest were from 1994), it is impossible to judge why, but a significantly larger percentage of female than male converts from the Catholic Church entered the Protestant ministry -- 5.1% as opposed to 2.5 percent.
But the percentages for the Episcopal Church are significantly higher. From 1980 to 1994, 13.7% percent of female clergy were former Catholics as opposed to 9% of male clergy. Over the years, the percentage of formerly Catholic Episcopal priestesses increased: 1980-84, it was 10%; 1985-1989, 13%; and 1990-94, 17%. This, coupled with the fact that the percentage of formerly Catholic Episcopal female converts did not grow in like proportions, led Perl to conclude that it is plausible that the all-male priesthood has caused some Catholic women to convert to the Episcopal Church to be ordained.
Though Donohoe said of the Episcopal Church, were a really cool church, she admitted, Were not perfect. For instance, theres still a couple of dioceses that wont ordain women, one of those being her neighbor, the Diocese of San Joaquin.
Ping.
Check the link to the original article. Some of the comments on CalCath Daily page are good.
I am an ex-Episcopalian, and inquiring into the Catholic Church.
However, I have met practicing Catholics who blithely state they think God is a woman.
Well, it’s L.A., what do you expect? *Smile*
Very first thing that came to mind, after reading the title, was this earlier thread:
The Devil Loves Air-conditioning
Wow..she’s on the fast track..she should make presiding bishop in 10 years or so..(/sarcasm)
there is much scripturally to substatiate males only.
a lot of cool. not a lot of Church.
* ping *
Amen! You should be here when he have to listen to one of his taped “messages” during Mass...*shudder*
when WE have to listen...
That should get you a few years off of purgatory.
Huitzilopochtli.
LOL... Ya think?
Sounds good to me! LOL!
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There’s a lot of gender confusion in that denomination.
To put it mildly.
OK I am going to get flamed for this, however I think it is good that she left the Catholic Church for the Episcopalian Church. We keep saying, on the threads on “woman priests”, for these woman to become Episcopalian. This is someone who did so, and is now an Episcopal priest. Why are we now nagging at her?
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