Why Can't Women Be Ordained in the Catholic Church?

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  • čas přidán 24. 05. 2020
  • Women can be ordained in many Protestant denominations, but not in the Catholic or Orthodox Churches. Why is this, and will it ever change?
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Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @veronika4606
    @veronika4606 Před 4 lety +1997

    Mother Theresa said to this topic: "Mary was the most holy person on earth and no one would have been more worthy of being a priest than her. But nevertheless Jesus didn't make her a priest because she had another assignment: Being the mother of the church." God has another assignment for women which does not mean, that this is any less important! Holy Edith Stein said:"If you manage to become a bride of Jesus you don't have the wish to become a priest any longer" which refers to the mystical way of becoming a bride of the Lord which is a way for women. God has great plans for women as well which are equally important as the tasks for men.

    • @TheRennDawg
      @TheRennDawg Před 4 lety +23

      Mary was not holy.

    • @GratiaPrima_
      @GratiaPrima_ Před 4 lety +51

      Kiwi Ananas that’s beautiful!

    • @JM-740
      @JM-740 Před 4 lety +187

      Mathew Renner she never sinned and was saved from sin. Why do you speak Ill of your spiritual mother?

    • @dansedevie123
      @dansedevie123 Před 4 lety +194

      @@TheRennDawg But the angel Gabriel said she was "full of grace".

    • @donjon2023
      @donjon2023 Před 4 lety +19

      Jess I. Most people don’t understand that statement

  • @Degeasofficial
    @Degeasofficial Před 3 lety +636

    I'm from Indonesian and I was converted to Catholic Church in 2009. I Proud to being a Catholic.

    • @josemariademanila677
      @josemariademanila677 Před 3 lety +24

      Welcome to the family of God!

    • @neocrusader736
      @neocrusader736 Před 3 lety +18

      I joined in 2013 my brother.

    • @vincenzorutigliano5435
      @vincenzorutigliano5435 Před 3 lety +18

      Amen, God bless Indonesia 🇮🇩🇻🇦

    • @HJKelley47
      @HJKelley47 Před 3 lety +4

      De Gea's Official: Now that you are Roman Catholic, how do you plan on
      serving?

    • @thomashogan16
      @thomashogan16 Před 3 lety +12

      God open His arms to you! In blessings from your brother Catholic in far away California.

  • @goodbanter4427
    @goodbanter4427 Před 3 lety +474

    Keep your back straight, Roman Catholics. Blessings from an Orthodox brother

    • @flordemaga8497
      @flordemaga8497 Před 3 lety +13

      Thank you 🥰

    • @TradRaider
      @TradRaider Před 3 lety +18

      As with you my brother

    • @ullupdrost4740
      @ullupdrost4740 Před 2 lety +17

      Salve Brother. May Rome and Byzantium rise again.

    • @DavidBustamanteda-bu-sa
      @DavidBustamanteda-bu-sa Před 2 lety +6

      Females wanting to become Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christian priests are just female supremacists that want us males to be second-class citizens, especially straight males.

    • @jritte1968
      @jritte1968 Před 2 lety +7

      @@DavidBustamanteda-bu-sa You nailed it my brother!

  • @DoctorLazertron
    @DoctorLazertron Před rokem +12

    Being equal to men does not mean being exactly like men or to become men. The feminine spirit is special and has infinite value in our lives. Different does not mean better or worse!

    • @awuriefnejqwjmnwn4960
      @awuriefnejqwjmnwn4960 Před rokem

      Finally someone gets it.

    • @ranitafeliz2987
      @ranitafeliz2987 Před rokem +1

      Doesn't equality to men mean equality of opportunities (dignity) though?

    • @DoctorLazertron
      @DoctorLazertron Před rokem

      @@ranitafeliz2987 As a man I don’t have the equality of opportunity to be a nun. That does nothing to my dignity.

    • @awuriefnejqwjmnwn4960
      @awuriefnejqwjmnwn4960 Před rokem

      @@ranitafeliz2987 people are treated according to gods law and the circumstances of reality. Before god we are all the same, that is crucial

    • @ranitafeliz2987
      @ranitafeliz2987 Před rokem

      @@DoctorLazertron There are roles equal in power as a nun, not in the other way though

  • @tereselittleflower
    @tereselittleflower Před 4 lety +752

    Priesthood is not a gift which God will give me. He has given me the gift of being a woman, and I could not ask for more. Without women, we would not have priests in the first place.

    • @magisterhpp
      @magisterhpp Před 4 lety +30

      What a great gift it is......

    • @deaconbilcarter5210
      @deaconbilcarter5210 Před 4 lety +25

      Succinct, and perfectly worded.

    • @JohnDoe19991
      @JohnDoe19991 Před 4 lety +45

      Men don't have the gift of being a mother ..... Why don't people understand this

    • @Ignasimp
      @Ignasimp Před 4 lety +49

      So woman's greatness always comes from who they relate with? I dislike today's feminist movement a lot, but this is a sexist mindset.

    • @Ignasimp
      @Ignasimp Před 4 lety +14

      @@JohnDoe19991 not all women have that gift and a lot of men have the gift of being a father.
      Edit: spelling

  • @miliniumo147
    @miliniumo147 Před 4 lety +850

    Interesting thing a Priest once told me. Back in the day, when there were a lot of nuns, most church's not only had a Father (Priest), but also a Mother (the leader of a group of nuns). The Mother was not only in charge of a group of nuns, but she helped the Father with a number of duties and helped run the church. Unfortunately, there aren't many nuns nowadays, so we don't see the influences of a Mother in most churches.
    (Interesting how the church was set up as the House of God and has Fathers, Mothers, Brothers, and Sisters.)

    • @aje2366
      @aje2366 Před 4 lety +70

      I've actually heard of that! I think the exact position is called "Mother Superior". Pretty powerful title.

    • @aje2366
      @aje2366 Před 3 lety +88

      @@TheSaraManal It is a modern misconception that the lack of Nuns is because of the lack of respect for them as there is also a 'shortage' of Priests in the West as well. (Which I can only imagine reflects our culture). The Church has always held them in high regard and so have we. They are not consecrated Priests, they are special Lay people who have taken an Oath to God and the Church, and they do not need to serve every function of a Priest to be respected.
      Because respect and power is not the goal of becoming a Nun, nor a Priest. It is Humility, Chastity, and Servitude for Christ, and his One True Church.

    • @aje2366
      @aje2366 Před 3 lety +32

      @@f9054 I don't know where you got that. But while I'm sure such a thing has happened, it is definitely not scandal after scandal. And a Priest alone does not have that type of Authority over Nuns. Second of all, you are correct. Nuns do not recieve Salaries. This is because of a Vow of Poverty they PERSONALLY take. If they did not feel comfortable not recieving a Salary, they have more than enough opportunities to back out. Years infact. First they take Temporary vows, and then they decide if they want a permanent vow. That is their decision to make. Priests have that too. 8 years to decide if they want to take a vow of Chasity. So, that has nothing to do with respect. There are some Priestly fraternities with the Vow of Poverty as well.
      And finally, most Priests are Misogynists? Really? I think you have the picture of Priests demanding Nuns around like maids, but that is not reality. They answer to their own respective leaders who are Women, not men.

    • @miliniumo147
      @miliniumo147 Před 3 lety +29

      @@f9054 Scandal after scandal? I think not, but the church certainly has them. Plenty of them. The church is made up of people, do you really expect them to be so perfect that there are no scandals or bad decisions? Scandals are everywhere and every profession has them. Teachers, doctors, priests, managers. Just because there are scandals, doesn't mean there isn't any respect, it means there's humans. Believe it or not, priests go to confession too, so yes they sin, yes they make mistakes, and yes, there are scandals.

    • @rudybernal7735
      @rudybernal7735 Před 3 lety +1

      FATHER is GOD only! mother/father anyway you chose.

  • @varianeng9668
    @varianeng9668 Před 3 lety +43

    Very insightful. I'm not a Catholic but I find much of what you teach, preach and practice to be very sound, even if I don't always agree with it.

  • @mertmolina8312
    @mertmolina8312 Před 3 lety +18

    A great discussion about the Deacons. Thankyou for taking the time to explain the churches position

  • @Garbanzo884
    @Garbanzo884 Před 4 lety +318

    No woman can be a father just as no man can be a mother.

    • @Ashey1690
      @Ashey1690 Před 4 lety +6

      No statue of Mary can be worshipped but yet roman catholics pray to Mary, statues, saints, dead popes etc
      Timothy 2:5
      For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus,

    • @Garbanzo884
      @Garbanzo884 Před 4 lety +67

      @@Ashey1690 I don't know how to get you to understand but Catholics and Orthodox worship God alone. The Saints, including the Most Holy Theotokos and Ever Virgin Mary are in Heaven praying for the whole world.

    • @Garbanzo884
      @Garbanzo884 Před 4 lety +42

      @@Ashey1690 you ask your friends on Earth to pray for you, why not ask our friends in Heaven?

    • @Ashey1690
      @Ashey1690 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Garbanzo884
      Yes I do, to pray to God for me. The power of prayer it's called. Praying to The Only One who can actually answer. How hard is it just to pray to God through the one and ONLY mediator, Jesus. Praying to anyone/anything else is idolatry

    • @Ashey1690
      @Ashey1690 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Garbanzo884
      Popes over the centuries have taken books from the Holy Bible and even manipulated the Ten Commandments. God wants our prayers directed at Him through the One and ONLY mediator Christ Jesus, Mary or anyone else can not mediate on our behalf.

  • @Elijah_Al-Naysaburi
    @Elijah_Al-Naysaburi Před 4 lety +127

    Pray for me my friends today , so I can spread god words among my family, my name is suhail =su+hail and I live in dubai ( U.A.E) blessings 🌷🌷🌷

    • @Ssookawai
      @Ssookawai Před 4 lety +6

      Be careful.
      I'm muslim myself and I have nothing against converting to another religion but don't forget the laws of the land.
      There are some countries that forbid proselytism as the state religion is different (like my own country and also UAE) and the rulers want to keep it the only powerful one. If you're foreigner, you might also risk extradition to your home country.
      Keep your faith, learn more about it and avoid talking about it in a public space. That's a sincere recommendation from me. I personally have a bible in my home despite the fact that I'm muslim and I'm not against christianity.
      Good luck.

    • @rudybernal7735
      @rudybernal7735 Před 3 lety +4

      Suhail, read THE BIBLE ! Following or reading it in someone’s presence makes a difference! 🙏

    • @Perririri
      @Perririri Před 3 lety +2

      Israel is not Christian.

    • @nbayoungboyneverbrokeagain6520
      @nbayoungboyneverbrokeagain6520 Před 3 lety +2

      Do not be afraid and become a martyr if you must, spread the word of Jesus Christ!

  • @TheShereen1964
    @TheShereen1964 Před 3 lety +37

    Iam a woman am very happy being one a d I don’t to compete with men am made by God he knows best
    His will not mine 🙏🏽

    • @patricksoares6253
      @patricksoares6253 Před 3 lety +1

      And I wish you the very best of the world, sister. I always feel sad and in revolt when good women like you get mistreated by irresponsible men who forget their duties towards women.
      May the Lord always guide and bless you!

    • @canadiankewldude
      @canadiankewldude Před 3 lety

      God bless.

    • @r.j.whitaker
      @r.j.whitaker Před 3 lety +3

      Priesthood is not a competition.

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Před 3 lety +2

      Sad weak and subservient doormat to probably a violent husband

    • @animayz7706
      @animayz7706 Před rokem

      Except it's not his will. In book of revelation, it's the only time priest, an equivalent to the word, is mentioned in the new testament and it says almost the first resurrection people will be priests. Do you really only believe men are a part of the first resurrection?

  • @hiderunbride8431
    @hiderunbride8431 Před 3 lety +49

    I won't skip the ads. Consider this my contribution in your ministry.

    • @BreakingInTheHabit
      @BreakingInTheHabit  Před 3 lety +87

      Thanks! But a better contribution, honestly, is watching the whole video. CZcams will promote my videos more if people watch them for longer.

    • @hojoinhisarcher
      @hojoinhisarcher Před 2 lety +2

      yourfaith has nothing to do with knuckling under to crass commercialism.Get Adblock.Its free as your mind should be.

  • @lowenwelle1044
    @lowenwelle1044 Před 4 lety +342

    We have a so called "catholic women`s rights movement" here in Germany.
    They call themself "Maria 2.0" (second version of Mary) and they are on average very old ladies.
    Of course they want female priests.
    You know, what they don´t want at their 'catholic' gatherings?
    Holy Mass with the eucharist. They prefer a 'word service' ("Wortgottesdienst") without the eucharist.
    And there is a counter-movent too, called "Maria 1.0" (first version of Mary) and ironically they are wayyyy younger and they want a stable catholic church.
    They have Holy Masses at their gatherings.
    Guess who is attacking these fine young women and call them "medieval"?

    • @TrollsFormers05
      @TrollsFormers05 Před 4 lety +95

      This Maria 2.0 are just protestant boomers

    • @setarita
      @setarita Před 4 lety +58

      Wow. I pray for the Church in Germany.

    • @dansedevie123
      @dansedevie123 Před 4 lety +28

      I think it is possible to have a discussion on the role of women in the Church, without starting a group, breaking away, and protesting, no?

    • @flyingdutchman3860
      @flyingdutchman3860 Před 4 lety +12

      Wortgottesdienst is just a service held when no priest is available I thought? In principle "pre-consecrated" communion can be received during this, assuming that a priest has consecrated the bread beforehand. I don't mind this so much, since where I am from we only have 3 priests for 11 churches. I do not like when it turns into a form of secular activism like what you are describing in Germany. It is nice that our generation is trying to make the mass more reverent.

    • @nieves8160
      @nieves8160 Před 4 lety +22

      Löwen Welle why can’t they just go anglican or lutheran. I doubt they care for theology

  • @hannahawbrey2294
    @hannahawbrey2294 Před 4 lety +211

    Based on my understanding of this video, it seems as if priests must be men largely because of the apostles’ gender. I have a few questions about that. I ask this not to argue against the point of the video, but to further my own understanding. First of all, if priests must be men in order to remain obedient to Christ’s decision for the apostles, why don’t they have to be like the apostles in other ways as well? The apostles were of a different race, age, marital status, social class, and lifestyle than many priests today. Why is it that we copy their gender but not other important things about them? Also, how do we know that Christ specifically chose them because they were men? According to the information in the video, women are equally capable of doing the spiritual job of a priest. So couldn’t it be possible that all the apostles happened to be men because of the way women were treated back in Jesus’s day? Would it have been realistic for a woman to safely travel, preach, and have the same social influence that the male apostles did? Again, I’m not trying to argue. I’m sure there are reasonable Catholic answers to my misunderstandings, and I would really appreciate help finding them. Thanks and God bless!

    • @Ignasimp
      @Ignasimp Před 4 lety +35

      The thing is that I also thought there were reasonable explanations about this. But i've been asking them for years, and still haven't found them. Not even from bishops.

    • @francismlelwa5766
      @francismlelwa5766 Před 3 lety +34

      The most important point why woman can not be ordained to Priest they can not act in " Persona Christo" during consecration of Eucharist.

    • @rawr7022
      @rawr7022 Před 3 lety +9

      @David Ohlhaut Thank you so much! Though I am a Catholic, I still have so many things to learn. Your explanation has definitely helped me understand better.

    • @robertj.4152
      @robertj.4152 Před 3 lety +4

      Phoebe in Revelations was a Deacon, ordained by Christ.

    • @rodrigohuaman4912
      @rodrigohuaman4912 Před 3 lety +11

      "Would it have been realistic for a woman to safely travel, preach, and have the same social influence that the male apostles did?"
      Yes. The Bible specifically mentions that women traveled with Jesus. Had Jesus wanted only women to become apostles, he could've done so. You also said it yourself about the apostles having different ethnic and marital backgrounds compared to modern day bishops and priests, but also amongst themselves, and that is because they were chosen as jewish men to behold the fulfilment of the Davidic prophecy. The issue with race was resolved once it was revealed that gentiles could partake in the plan of salvation of the Gospel, so naturally they needn't follow rules about only middle eastern jewish males being allowed to be ordained, though the very clearly implicit rule of all ordained being men persisted.
      Keep in mind jews back in the day weren't "ethnically pure" so there is some chance the apostles varied somewhat in hue. From there it's only logical to accept that gentiles of more contrasting skin tones could also be ordained.

  • @mariannamycroft2611
    @mariannamycroft2611 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for this, that was what I was looking for and it actually calmed me down about the issue. Keep it up!

  • @renato4183
    @renato4183 Před rokem +24

    Greetings from an Orthodox to our Catholic brethren ! I love it when I see the catholics stand firm against all these worldly whims and trends in priesthood but would love it more if they had done the same with the heresies and trends of the past and would love it the best if they return to the origins so that we can become one again !!!

    • @jaqian
      @jaqian Před 9 měsíci +1

      Greetings brother, we pray for the day when we are reunited but I think you need to take the beam out of your own eyes first 😉

    • @renato4183
      @renato4183 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jaqian it is not my own eyes !!! We all know the faith of the first millennium, lets go back to the first millennium!! All isuues can be settled then one by one !!! We check : was there a filioque or wasn’t in the first million etc etc etc

    • @Milkman12345
      @Milkman12345 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I pray we can reunite one day. I think that compromises can be made maybe, like getting rid of filoque but keeping the catechism

    • @renato4183
      @renato4183 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Milkman12345 we need unity

    • @steffski1946
      @steffski1946 Před 4 měsíci +1

      We can and should work this out as followers of Jesus, putting His thoughts above our thoughts

  • @YardenJZ
    @YardenJZ Před 4 lety +181

    I'm disappointed.
    You warned that this video will be disappointing, but I was disappointed to not be disappointed.

    • @LuisReyes-sm7kc
      @LuisReyes-sm7kc Před 4 lety +6

      Hahaha

    • @isaiah3872
      @isaiah3872 Před 4 lety +4

      Oy vey 😂

    • @roryocallaghan8395
      @roryocallaghan8395 Před 4 lety +6

      It's a pretty standard defence. Expedient rationalising to justify holding on to old ways.

    • @Marysservant
      @Marysservant Před 4 lety +17

      @@roryocallaghan8395 Catholism is based on Scripture and Tradition

    • @erincassidy-cernanec9755
      @erincassidy-cernanec9755 Před 4 lety +3

      Tammy Osborne how is tradition made if not taking into consideration the theologizing of the present?

  • @Gabilondia12345
    @Gabilondia12345 Před 4 lety +71

    Fr. Casey, I am a woman and I believe in tradition. Tradition is the cornerstone of why Catholicism is true and strong. Why would we want to change that? I was hoping you would've also explained and emphasized the importance of women's roles in the church. Our mother Mary, is the queen of the church...if anything, that is by far one of the most important roles ever existed! And her example is enough to represent what a woman's role in this world should be and what an honor it is to be able to even become an inkling of what our mother is. Why don't we just focus and emphasize the importance of the roles of women in our church now? There are so many, and one of them being a mother. Why change that? When it is the most beautiful role ever!

    • @kimthetruthofit6965
      @kimthetruthofit6965 Před 4 lety +6

      Mary Magdallen was accepted by Jesus Christ as an equal to the other disciples . Why do we discrimate now.

    • @gregorybrian
      @gregorybrian Před 4 lety +12

      Stoning, polygamy, and slavery were also traditions. Tradition is not synonymous with righteousness, as was evidenced by the Pharisees. Traditions change over time. Life is change. The only condition in which nothing changes is death.

    • @logicallyfallacious4151
      @logicallyfallacious4151 Před 4 lety +4

      gregory brian heresy.

    • @_MysticKnight
      @_MysticKnight Před 4 lety +4

      @@gregorybrian You are committing the sin of Modernism. Please, I hope you realise this before you go to Mass and partake in the Eucharist in the future.

    • @derekr1013
      @derekr1013 Před 4 lety +6

      @@kimthetruthofit6965 I anxiously await your scriptural evidence of Mary Magdalene administering the sacraments.

  • @bcg7752
    @bcg7752 Před 3 lety +6

    Brilliant! Inspiriing! Very educational! It all make sense to me now.. Thank you.

  • @gillianc8106
    @gillianc8106 Před 3 lety +108

    I understand that one of the reasons for excluding women from the priesthood is due to the biblical example set by Jesus in choosing only male apostles. But didn’t he also only choose middle-eastern apostles? It’s easy to argue that this wasn’t by way of excluding, say, blond men or Caucasian men from ordination, and was more due to the circumstances of the time - that the world was less easily travelled so the available men would naturally be from that geographical area. However, the same could be said of the choice of men over women. In that period, women had less freedom, were taken less seriously and were less likely to be available to take on evangelistic or discipleship work. Perhaps the choice of men as apostles was as non-prescriptive as where they came from.
    How do we know that when those middle-eastern men were made apostles, Jesus meant to indicate that their gender was definitive, but not their heritage? Or even their colouring (since it’s likely they all had, say, dark hair)?
    I’m genuinely curious here. Why was the line drawn at their gender, rather than any of their other characteristics?

  • @andresarpi1143
    @andresarpi1143 Před 4 lety +159

    JPII does sound definitive, no matter how liberal theologians want to slice it.

    • @polemeros
      @polemeros Před 4 lety +20

      If he had used the very same language but decided that women COULD be priests, liberal theologians would want you excommunicated even for asking a question about it. The culture war in the larger society exists in exactly the same way within the Church.

    • @michaelmonsoon3919
      @michaelmonsoon3919 Před 4 lety +7

      You are correct Andres and it might be why he wrote it. He knew the " winds of change" for the worse was rising and had bee percolating for several decades prior.

    • @deaconbilcarter5210
      @deaconbilcarter5210 Před 4 lety +11

      Very true. The language used by St. John Paul II in Ordinatio Sacerdotalis (1994) is unmistakably infallible, but for reasons we can only guess, he used the vehicle of an Apostolic Letter to convey this teaching. Normally, such a definitive statement would come in the form of an Apostolic Constitution. For example, Ineffabilis Deus (1854) and Munificentissimus Deus (1950) are both infallible papal teachings. Respectively, they promote the dogmatic teachings of the Immaculate Conception of Mary and her Assumption into Heaven. Both of them are in the form of Apostolic Constitutions, lending weight to the papal pronouncement in each. Because of this, many have opposed the infallibility of Ordinatio Sacerdotalis.
      However, a year later, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (the Vatican's chief theological authority), then led by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, who would later become Pope Benedict XVI, declared that Ordinatio Sacerdotalis, irrespective of the form of the letter, contained teaching that was "ordinary to the universal magisterium", that is, infallible due to its universal adherence by the Church. It further added that this teaching was intrinsic to the Deposit of Faith. In other words, they were saying that John Paul II's teaching was not his own idea, but a reflection of the teaching of the Holy Spirit throughout the life of the Church. In practical terms, that essentially makes it infallible, even if Pope John Paul II didn't explicitly say so.

    • @andresarpi1143
      @andresarpi1143 Před 4 lety

      @@deaconbilcarter5210 thanks for that extra info!

    • @jaredxtian1
      @jaredxtian1 Před 4 lety +1

      @@deaconbilcarter5210 perhaps it is because infallibility only applies to matters of faith and morals. the ban on women priests falls under the category of church discipline and therefore cannot be declared infallible,

  • @walterhigo7658
    @walterhigo7658 Před 4 lety +26

    Women do have a role and a MISSION in the Catholic Church. Just think of all the wonderful mysteries the world have come to know, almost exclusively through various saintly women. St. Faustina, St. Teresa of Avila, St. Clare of Assisi, St. Teresa de Lisieux, St. Bernadette, Sister Lucía of Fatima, Mary Magdalene and so on and so forth.

    • @adinameyer6716
      @adinameyer6716 Před 2 lety +3

      Walter, have you ever read The Story of a Soul by St. Therese of Lisieux? She says she felt a call to priesthood from a young age. Because girls were not allowed to be priests, she decided her vocation would be to pray for priests. But she seriously felt God calling her to be a priest and the Church standing in her way.

    • @walterhigo7658
      @walterhigo7658 Před 2 lety +2

      @@adinameyer6716
      She may have "FELT it", that doesn't mean that was God calling her to Priesthood. She was a little girl when she felt that calling to a RELIGIOUS life that she may have confused with the priesthood.

    • @adinameyer6716
      @adinameyer6716 Před 2 lety +4

      @@walterhigo7658 She was literally one of the greatest saints who ever lived. She is revered as a Doctor of the Church. And you're saying she may not have known what God was saying to her? That she was "confused?" Or that you know better than she did?

    • @walterhigo7658
      @walterhigo7658 Před 2 lety +2

      @@adinameyer6716
      GOD would not call you to do something that goes against Church Doctrine. Only men can be "IN PERSONA CRISTI" because Jesus Christ was a MAN. GOD in his infinite wisdom decided from all eternity that the second person of the Holy Trinity would come to this earth as a MAN, and that for all eternity He would be a MAN. Women are equally important in the Church, but they play other SACRED & IMPORTANT ROLES. Think of the VIRGIN MARY, the pinnacle of GOD's creation (including the Angels). As spiritually elevated as St Therese was, she was still a human being affected by original sin, so it is completely possible that she may have made a mistake. Even Abraham "mis interpreted" God's will for him at one point.

    • @adinameyer8367
      @adinameyer8367 Před 2 lety +3

      @@walterhigo7658 actually that was the old argument from Inter Insegnores that was overturned by the church. The most recent argument is from Ordinatio Sacerdotalis- where JP II wrote that the reason women can’t be priests is not because they can’t stand in persona christi but because Jesus only appointed men as His apostles. Therefore the Church can’t go against that.

  • @Slovakson1
    @Slovakson1 Před 3 lety +7

    Ooooh, that's a tough one. Amazingly, Suprisingly well handled. Your humility on the issue was the key.

  • @kevinmahernz
    @kevinmahernz Před 2 lety +7

    Great video, Father. Having lived in a rural area and having seen a gradual reduction in the number of priests available, it wouldn't surprise me if one day we do see female priests for that reason among others.
    A different question now: can you please tell me why Exorcist is listed as the second from the bottom of the list? Is there some far more tame thing an Exorcist can do at mass that's nowhere near as well known as dealing with demonic possessions?

    • @jaqian
      @jaqian Před rokem

      We will never see women priests

    • @josephesquivel4066
      @josephesquivel4066 Před rokem +1

      No, Even in the case of rural areas is not a women's ordination acceptable option.

  • @sallybartholomew8470
    @sallybartholomew8470 Před 4 lety +168

    The parish secretary runs everything

    • @ryanleclaire3948
      @ryanleclaire3948 Před 4 lety +9

      LMAO it's true

    • @michaelcraig9427
      @michaelcraig9427 Před 4 lety +11

      As a Protestant minister I can say we also have that experience! What a blessing. Great channel this.

    • @sassulusmagnus
      @sassulusmagnus Před 4 lety +6

      I wonder who the parish secretary is at St. Peter's in Rome?

    • @jaredxtian1
      @jaredxtian1 Před 4 lety +6

      @@sassulusmagnus HIS name is Fr. Gonzalo Aemilius from Uruguay. (personal secretary of his holiness Pope Francis)

    • @dawnlapka2433
      @dawnlapka2433 Před 4 lety +3

      That's right. And sometimes to the point of hurting fellow women due to jealousy of the priests they serve. It's a slippery slope and priests need to be careful who they hire....

  • @keithe3227
    @keithe3227 Před 4 lety +38

    By the same token, neither can men become nuns.

    • @Ignasimp
      @Ignasimp Před 4 lety +16

      Nuns and priests are not equivalent. Nuns and monks and friars are.

    • @TheLT704
      @TheLT704 Před 3 lety +1

      Why would a man want to become a nun ??? He is supposed to marry one...

    • @emmaduerstock3794
      @emmaduerstock3794 Před 3 lety

      @@TheLT704 No. Nuns don't marry.

    • @TheLT704
      @TheLT704 Před 3 lety +1

      @@emmaduerstock3794 it's an old joke... nun last week..nun this week.. perhaps next week...???
      See my new comment...

  • @judylindstrom2100
    @judylindstrom2100 Před rokem +3

    If women’s ordination is closed even into the future, doesn’t this mean that the Church isn’t open to the promptings of the Holy Spirit who might surprise us?

  • @paulb3507
    @paulb3507 Před 3 lety +13

    I’m sorry Father, you can spin it any way you like, it’s still anti-woman. Doesn’t St. Paul say that there is no longer woman or man for we are all one in Christ?

    • @paulb3507
      @paulb3507 Před 3 lety

      @Al Strider Thank you. I’ll pray for you, please pray for me.

  • @Jay_v.7
    @Jay_v.7 Před 4 lety +71

    Man I'd like to sit down and have a nice conversation with you about many things.

    • @Jay_v.7
      @Jay_v.7 Před 4 lety +6

      I'm only 17, and I have many questions that I don't to just ask anyone. My parents try to explain along with showing me another priest but many things still don't make sense, and I know there are many things that take faith because its not always going to make sense, but I still want a solid explanation. A lot of the times I feel like I don't get one about any of my questions, like its not the full explanation that's there's more to everything.

    • @Jay_v.7
      @Jay_v.7 Před 4 lety +3

      @@ruairi_d it would.

    • @Jay_v.7
      @Jay_v.7 Před 4 lety +4

      @@cheeseymanish I don't even know where to begin. I have my own Bible my parents gifted it to me and I enjoy studying it. I love reading it I really want to understand why I'm catholic, why there are certain traditions, I can't speak to my local priest at the moment New York city doesn't seem like it wants to open its churchs at all.

    • @Denise23451
      @Denise23451 Před 4 lety +5

      Jason Valerio I am glad you have questions at such a young age. Apologetics is the route you should take. Patrick Madrid has some great books as well as Scott Hahn. Although, if you ever have any questions? You could post them here, I know anyone on here would be glad to help you with them😃

    • @jeremiahong248
      @jeremiahong248 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Jay_v.7 Perhaps you may like to find out from Catholic Answers?

  • @adaobiezeodum3913
    @adaobiezeodum3913 Před 4 lety +64

    I really don't know too much about other types of ordination, but I see this fight to want to do everything men can do as actually anti-women because it presupposes that a woman's purpose/role is only valid when is taking up the role of a traditionally male role. It's placing the male roles over female roles which I would believe to be sexist??

    • @TuberoseKisser
      @TuberoseKisser Před 4 lety +1

      Agree but at the same time there shouldn't be a limit, It should be based on who's better at the task.

    • @dansedevie123
      @dansedevie123 Před 4 lety +4

      @@TuberoseKisser I think the point is, the Church's reasoning is not that men are better at the task.

    • @dansedevie123
      @dansedevie123 Před 4 lety +5

      I'm not talking about the priesthood and I get where you are coming from-- but lot of roles that are considered male or female can and have changed. Women didn't insist on the right to vote, or go to university, or become doctors, so they could be like men. Not allowing women to do those things really limited them and perpetuated the inequality of women in society. Not being able to work made it hard for single women to support themselves. Not having the right to vote meant women's voices were not considered in law making and government decisions.

    • @flyingdutchman3860
      @flyingdutchman3860 Před 4 lety +4

      I agree in part. I do not think it is anti-woman, but it does presupose that male roles are better than female roles, which is of course nonesense. For example society often times view doctors (a male dominated profession) as more important than nurses (a female dominated profession). I have seen people get upset about artists who draw a female nurse + a male doctor because it instills negative gender stereotypes. The implication of this sentiment is that doctors are better than nurses. I don't think it is true that one is better than the other since the whole system fails if one of the two stopped coming into work.
      Society, including many feminists seem to value male dominated professions more than female dominated professions. It is an easy trap to fall into. After all male dominated professions do offer higher pay and often yield a higher degree of power (trad masculine values btw, which become damaging if they become the goal).

    • @dansedevie123
      @dansedevie123 Před 4 lety

      @@flyingdutchman3860 We also have to wonder... do women just pick lower paying jobs, or are they lower paying because they are female dominated? Part of the reason why we have so many female teachers was because schools decided it would be cheaper to hire women-- back then you could pay them less-- and it became one of the few acceptable jobs for women.
      Computing in its early days used to be a much more female profession- once men started entering it more, wages went up.

  • @jayciethompson2290
    @jayciethompson2290 Před 3 lety +12

    Im part of the church of jesus christ of latter day saints. I found your channel and thought it was interesting to learn about catholics.

  • @thesinfultictac5704
    @thesinfultictac5704 Před 3 lety +9

    My grandma, who part of the Oakland Parish actually was very involved with her Parish, she was an Usher and several other positions. My father said that it was said around her parish that "that she would have became a deacon if it was allowed"

    • @alhilford2345
      @alhilford2345 Před 3 lety +3

      Women can play an important part in parish life, but they cannot be priests or deacons.

    • @ModernEphemera
      @ModernEphemera Před 3 lety +2

      @@alhilford2345 The Church doesn’t currently allow women deacons, but the justification isn’t as strong. There were women deacons (deaconesses) in the early Church (but never women priests). By the Middle Ages, deacon was just a stepping stone to becoming a priest, but again, that was not the case in the early Church. Like Father Casey says, there’s reasons to believe the Church may decide to allow deaconesses while continuing to disallow women priests.

    • @dwightschrute900
      @dwightschrute900 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ModernEphemera They were not sacramentally. They were used to help women get baptized.

    • @dylanstuckey3824
      @dylanstuckey3824 Před rokem

      @@ModernEphemera the permanent diaconate was still around in the Middle Ages and even past the counsel of Trent. But I think it died out by Vatican 1. That’s why Vatican 2 again called for a renewal of the permanent diaconate.

  • @careydepass130
    @careydepass130 Před 4 lety +6

    Ridiculous excuse. Do you think God cares? Human beings care but God doesn't care. I am from the Anglican Church of Canada. We hired our first female priest two years ago. She is doing just fine. A few months later, a woman was selected to be Bishop of our Diocese. Nothing changed other than the leader had a different style. Why do you think God cares about such petty things?

    • @deaconbilcarter5210
      @deaconbilcarter5210 Před 4 lety +3

      You say "she is doing fine". But as the sacraments are "visible signs of an invisible reality", how can you know that? Can you see the ontological change from bread and wine to the Body and Blood of Christ? Of course not. I don't dispute that Christians of all varieties truly love Christ, but we are not free to make up the rules on our own. Scripture gives us all we need to establish the liturgical norms of the Church. Only a baptized man can accept ordination.
      I am not priest, but as a deacon who serves in Mass almost every day and who preaches a few times a week, I certainly know all the words the priest says, I know how to use the Missal, I know all the gestures, and I know where he hangs his vestments. I could certainly put on a priest's vestments, process to the altar and simulate a Mass that would convince anybody I was the real deal. But I'm not. It would be a charade and nothing would be sacramentally consecrated if I said the Eucharistic prayer over it. People might leave Mass thinking I was just wonderful, but all I would have managed to do was lie to them and incur sin upon my own soul. They might think they received the Body and Blood of Christ, but it would just be a cracker and some wine.
      My point is this. Just because it looks good doesn't make it authentic.

    • @kvetamarie
      @kvetamarie Před 4 lety

      And we got a few converts from Anglicans

  • @princepis
    @princepis Před 4 lety +54

    This is a very shallow explanation of why women cannot be priests, even if the reasons Fr. Casey gave are correct. I recommend everyone to search up Ven. Archbishop Fulton Sheen’s explanation.

    • @setarita
      @setarita Před 4 lety +20

      His young and liberal and surrounded by student he probably does not want to trigger. We all know what triggered liberal students can do.

    • @humphreyobanor866
      @humphreyobanor866 Před 4 lety +7

      Please send the link of Fr. Sheen

    • @BattleSword
      @BattleSword Před 4 lety +3

      Potato ....But he loves God and teaches us to love God.

    • @jaredxtian1
      @jaredxtian1 Před 4 lety +2

      @Potato and a liberal priest is.....? be careful. His holiness Pope Francis is considered to be liberal. :)

    • @sideless6706
      @sideless6706 Před 4 lety

      inb4 it turns out Fr Casey is a secret Rad Trad. I am kidding.

  • @beatrizm.4361
    @beatrizm.4361 Před 3 lety +7

    Father, I ask for prayer for the conversion of my family.
    Congratulations on the video. You are very wise.
    God bless.
    (sorry for the english, I am using google translate)

  • @jakebakey1
    @jakebakey1 Před 2 lety +3

    Proud to be your brother and thankful for your wisdom Father. May Christ be with your spirit and the Holy Spirit guide you so that you may guide us to him and for him Amen. Keep up the amazing work for the kingdom!!!

    • @alextopno332
      @alextopno332 Před 2 lety

      You have no right to call a priest a father. He is ordained as a priest and so to be called

  • @marktownsend3586
    @marktownsend3586 Před 4 lety +71

    Mother Superiors are respected. I saw one at my daughters school explaining her annoyance about the standard of workmanship to some contractors. I think they had the fear of God put into them.

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      @fadaoluoma96 Před 3 lety

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  • @michaelcraig9427
    @michaelcraig9427 Před 4 lety +8

    Thank you for this channel brother. It is a blessing to many of us at this time. On this matter I respectfully disagree. But then I am ordained in a branch of the Church that has ordained women to the eldership since the late 1960's and to the ministry of word and sacrament since the early 70's. I have experienced great blessing from these sisters in Christ. I trust that the Holy Spirit was involved. An Anglican sister taught me how to preside at an Anglican altar. I respect those who remain loyal to the Churches teaching on this. And I respect those who remain within the Church who are eager for change. Blessings to you all from Simon's Town, South Africa.

  • @melanietoth1376
    @melanietoth1376 Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you for this very clear and well thought out explanation. It doesnt concern me but I was looking for a good Catholic answer....and this is an excellent answer

  • @mslitchick
    @mslitchick Před 3 lety +12

    Hi Fr. Casey, I'm Catholic but no theologian. Yet this confuses me. Christ appeared to Mary Magdalene first. She was at his Crucifixion and tended his tomb. The apostles were in hiding. Mary told the Apostles Jesus was resurrected. For me that says women can be priests. Jesus didn't seek out his disciples. He appeared originally to Mary Magdalene. She told them Christ has risen.

    • @captainlebowski241
      @captainlebowski241 Před 2 lety +3

      Mary Magdalene wasn’t an apostle, she was a disciple

    • @vincentcoppola9832
      @vincentcoppola9832 Před 2 lety +2

      An Apostle is one who is called AND sent - Jesus commisioned 12 men to spread the gospel. Mary Magdalene was called and did follow Jesus, but she was not sent as the Apostles were.

  • @seashellsscapulars6909
    @seashellsscapulars6909 Před 4 lety +171

    Thank you for the facts. As a woman, mother, cantor and OFS, I beg for MEN to step up and fill these roles. We can’t expect men to lead well if not given the opportunity. I am grateful to priests who have inspired their churches to be led by MEN so my son has role models to inspire him.

    • @jaqian
      @jaqian Před 4 lety +15

      We also need priests and religious people to dress the part. They cannot inspire if they are not seen.

    • @G0TIMAN
      @G0TIMAN Před 2 lety

      xDD

    • @falyoung2784
      @falyoung2784 Před 2 lety +1

      @SlimeKetchup14 quit wallowing in self pity

    • @afiaakos6937
      @afiaakos6937 Před 2 lety +2

      What about your daughters?

    • @seashellsscapulars6909
      @seashellsscapulars6909 Před 2 lety +8

      @@afiaakos6937 I don’t have daughters - but my friends do and they thrive even more when the boys are getting to grow as real men without having all the girls take their roles. The girls are amazing and resourceful and leaders in their own right - they build up the boys and support their brothers. We have many - not several but many girls who are discerning roles as sisters and cloistered. Obviously what our parish is doing is working - I know of 3 boys and 2 girls that submitted requests to join seminary or a convent. Good fruit comes from this❤️.

  • @andersen6422
    @andersen6422 Před 4 lety +4

    No matter the many explanations, many girls grow up believing they are second-rate humans, and they are not made in the image of God because the church and heaven are so male-centric. Also, many boys grow up believing girls are lesser because of the paradigm. Even as an adult, the devil whispers "See? He loves your brothers more because they are made in His image. The men will make decisions and you will make cookies." I wish to believe that the God I love, whom I believe loves me, would not want me to have this deep seated pain in my soul and yet no apologetics lessen it.

    • @claraartnow6645
      @claraartnow6645 Před 4 lety +1

      Also Jesus said that in the Kingdom of God we will there will no longer be male and female, like the angels (when they asked him about marriage and resurrection).

  • @islandbest5837
    @islandbest5837 Před 4 lety +16

    Men and women compliment each others not competing

    • @patricksoares6253
      @patricksoares6253 Před 3 lety +2

      Perfect

    • @deb9806
      @deb9806 Před 3 lety +1

      Not always. Even the difference in what priests can do and how sisters/nuns were set up, wasn't fair. They have more freedom, money and power. Nuns have to ask permission for things, many orders had poor health care and elderly services and they worked their tails off for the priests and schools and public while they priests had much more given to him and freedom to travel and make some rules for his parish. I never saw it complimentary, I saw a hierarchy that wasn't always fair.

  • @DragonBloodShepherd
    @DragonBloodShepherd Před 2 lety +3

    And what about Mary Magdalene being allowed to follow AND was chosen (in a way) to do so by Jesus?
    She was a woman that followed him, am I right? Prove me wrong.

  • @buckfarmer-gregory6400
    @buckfarmer-gregory6400 Před 4 lety +8

    Thanks for this video. Always love your work. Could you point towards some sources (or create a video) on these three follow-up questions?
    1) How does the Church determine the boundaries of its living teaching authority? I think of that authority as primarily being derived from Peter being granted the power to bind and loose, but I can't think of scriptural examples that set limits on that binding and loosing that would put women's ordination on one side of the line and the many other changes over the last two thousand years on the other. Certainly there is a long tradition of decisions made by councils, bishops, and popes in which we might discern a pattern, but given that sacraments like auricular reconciliation don't show up until after the church had existed for many hundreds of years (much less being limited to a priest) I'm not sure how to draw the line so that women's priestly ordination is on one side but not the other nor am I aware of a document that examines the question from this angle.
    2) Is there a requirement that the College of Electors be made up of cardinals? What is the authority for this requirement (doctrine or discipline)? What are the best arguments for limiting the College of Electors to cardinals (including the full history of papal elections)?
    3) How should Catholics think about Canons? As a rule are they part of doctrine or simply a discipline? Is there a doctrinal reason that governance authority should be limited to priests (whether bishops or presbyters).

    • @misha-elministries5246
      @misha-elministries5246 Před 2 lety

      If you not a priest you are not a Christian. This is why Catholics go to see what they perceive to be a priest in a building.

    • @alonsoACR
      @alonsoACR Před rokem

      I know this is an old comment, but I feel the need to reply as best I'm able anyway.
      Let me anticipate so as to not give false hope and quote Pope Francis on the matter: "with reference to the ordination of women, the Church has spoken and says, 'No.' John Paul II said it, but with a definitive formulation. That is closed, that door."
      What he refers is this part of Ordinatio Sacerdotalis: "I declare that the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church's faithful."
      Note the wording: *definitively* i.e. Always
      In the original latin: hancque sententiam ab omnibus Ecclesiae fidelibus esse *definitive tenendam*
      Now to the questions.
      1) The Church has teaching authority on many things, such as Church matters, and theological matters. Ordination of women concerns these both. It's valid.
      2) A Cardinal is just a fancy word for elector or voter. This is like saying, "Is there a way to exclude all voters from the voting booth?" If they weren't at the voting booth, they wouldn't be voters by definition. The proper name for the college is College of Cardinals. Current doctrine stipulates the requirement to be a Cardinal (AKA a voter) is to be a bishop, and if a non-bishop is to be appointed, then he must be ordained bishop before becoming Cardinal.
      3) As Doctrine, but sometimes discipline. Two types of canons exist, Canons of Faith vs. Canons of Discipline. Canons are universal and are often ridiculously difficult, or sometimes quite literally impossible to change.
      But none of this is relevant here. The Church confirmed that that part of Ordinatio Sacerdotalis as part of the deposit of faith. Infallible. Literally impossible to change. No turning back. It's Catholic Revealed Truth that the Church has *no authority whatsoever to ordain women* no matter what Popes come next, this is it.

  • @fbrlajes
    @fbrlajes Před 4 lety +44

    when the Roman pontiff speaks EX CATHEDRA,
    that is, when,
    in the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians,
    in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority,
    he defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole church.
    Look again at JPII definitive statement. It fits in the Ex Cathedra category. Joseph Ratzinger (who became Pope Benedict XVI) was the Prefect of the CDF and issued a clarification saying that JPII exercised the charism of infallibility.

    • @mcmemmo
      @mcmemmo Před 4 lety +2

      Ordinatio sacerdotalis is an Apostolic Letter which is of lesser authority than an Apostolic Constitution like Munificentissimus Deus - so a good case can be made that JP2 wasn't interested in declaring an infallible doctrine, and in his role as head of the CDF, Cardinal Ratzinger wasn't infallible either.

    • @stockscalper
      @stockscalper Před 4 lety

      Who died and left the Bishop in Rome in charge? Certainly not Jesus. The "pope" is nothing more than an instrument of Satan.

    • @davidoneill9244
      @davidoneill9244 Před 4 lety +2

      @@stockscalper Sounds like a good solid Catholic - NOT!!!!!!!!

    • @domo3699
      @domo3699 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mcmemmo Well, Church explains itself. You have no authority.

  • @andrewbrennan8446
    @andrewbrennan8446 Před 3 lety

    I don’t know why I didn’t think of this the first time in watched, but where’d you get this picture? In other words, what church is this from that has the “bread” and women priests

  • @windsongshf
    @windsongshf Před 3 lety +11

    In the secular world, I'm 100% on board for woman to take on any role. But one thing I'm attracted to the Catholic church is the hierarchy and different roles men and women play.
    Perhaps having grown up with a father... I like seeing a "father" as head of his household/church.

  • @cittiavaticano
    @cittiavaticano Před 4 lety +86

    There is SO much more being left out of this about this. The theology of ordination is far more than the 3 reasons presented as though standing alone. not all men can be priests! the body of christ transforms into a perverted deformed figure when an arm tries to be a leg. this should have nothing to do with the 'anything you can do i can do better'. its the wrong starting off point.

    • @Thomasrice07
      @Thomasrice07 Před 4 lety +10

      But why is sex singled out as a defining characteristic? Men can be members of the Bride of Christ (the Church). Why cannot a female be Alter Christus.

    • @jeanrichard5850
      @jeanrichard5850 Před 4 lety +9

      Most of the time his post are very controversial and causes divisions, even to the point of people sinning by saying bad stuff against each other or the Church etc... he knows it and I think he likes it, he should spend more time doing videos of him presiding at Mass, or leading the rosary or even teaching the catechism of the Catholic Church, witch would unite the faithful not divide them, we all know who divides. 😈

    • @JM-740
      @JM-740 Před 4 lety +4

      Thomasrice07 christ wasn’t female. So females cannot by definition be another Christ. I would recommend reading JPII’s encyclical and on ordination and the sacrament itself. It’s quite eye opening.

    • @kimthetruthofit6965
      @kimthetruthofit6965 Před 4 lety

      You are talking of some thing that was brought about by the Church not Christ. How where the disciples ordinated ?

    • @Marysservant
      @Marysservant Před 4 lety +3

      @@kimthetruthofit6965 The apostles were all men, chosen by Jesus and ordained at the Last Supper- Holy Thursday-just before His death.

  • @Zartas17
    @Zartas17 Před 4 lety +9

    I say, whenever one involves a top-down approach towards religion the fallacies are spiraling out of control. If on the other hand, one applies a bottom-up approach, every piece falls safely and logically into place.

  • @PhryneMnesarete
    @PhryneMnesarete Před 3 měsíci +1

    This is why my grandmother walked away from the Church, and taught her children and grandchildren never to go back. I remember her telling us: “The Roman Catholic Church is Roman first, and look how the Romans treated their women.” She was convinced that the Catholic Church barred women from priesthood because its men want sole right of access to God, because women will always be considered lesser and in need to an intermediary because they are not worthy to approach God directly.
    Three generations of atheists because one nineteen year old girl looked up one day and felt angry that there was a door forever closed to her, that she would forever have to obey without ever having any chance of shaping the rules she was expected to live by.

  • @davidnotonstinnett
    @davidnotonstinnett Před 2 lety +2

    But Jesus also chose women. The early church just edited this out.
    This is why I am an Episcopalian, scripture, tradition and reason guiding us towards God’s will. Women make fine priests.

  • @bolblizt
    @bolblizt Před 4 lety +5

    I learn a lot about my faith in your channel. Thank you!

  • @leilanigaston8434
    @leilanigaston8434 Před 4 lety +7

    as a catholic i am thankful because i am being enlighten to some issues being thrown by other religion that now i can simply answer them with certainry in defense of my faith again thank you

  • @zeph6439
    @zeph6439 Před 3 lety +19

    Thank you for the video, and I appreciate your views concerning the rights of women.
    "All things have their back to the female
    and stand facing the male.
    When male and female combine,
    all things achieve harmony"
    ~ Lao Tzu
    Some may also add that whenever male and female work together, power is doubled :)

  • @josephpilkus1127
    @josephpilkus1127 Před 3 lety +10

    Thank you, as always, for the clear and cogent manner in which you define and describe so many things about the faith and the religion of Catholicism. I'm often struck by the number of individuals who thumb down these videos. Clearly, they don't understand or wish not to grow in understanding.

    • @informationyes
      @informationyes Před 2 lety +1

      The explanation is basically jesus said so, its an explanation but not a great one and as for a non believer its a terrible one

    • @josephpilkus1127
      @josephpilkus1127 Před 2 lety +1

      @@informationyes Sadly Daniel, I believe that you think that matters of faith need to subscribe to a greater logic and in short they can't simply be taken at face value. You will thus have an issue with any of the world religions from Judaism's Mysticism to practices of Muslims.

    • @informationyes
      @informationyes Před 2 lety

      @@josephpilkus1127 Basicly yes because im not a beleiver and so to convince me atleast im gonna need some logic otherwise christianity is just as much as shot in the dark as any other religion

  • @mariepositano4366
    @mariepositano4366 Před 4 lety +99

    I was surprised that you didn't mention "in persona Christi"

    • @_MysticKnight
      @_MysticKnight Před 4 lety +24

      @Felipe Parra While we use male pronouns for God, God is not male. He doesn't not have a sex since he does not have a body other than in the person of Jesus Christ. Some passages in the Bible refer to God in a feminine sense like as a mother or as wisdom personified 'sophia' (which is female).

    • @_MysticKnight
      @_MysticKnight Před 4 lety +12

      @Ian Jesus is male, because Jesus is both human and God. Do not fall into heresy of monophysitism. Strictly speaking, God the Son is not male since God does not have a sex or gender. Remember, "God the Son" is used because it is relational to the Father; that is, Jesus compares his relationship to the Father like a human father and son.

    • @davinciandiversity8823
      @davinciandiversity8823 Před 4 lety +16

      @ian
      From the Catholic and Orthodox perspective, Christ fundamentally maintains two distinct natures. He is both entirely man and entirely God. What this means is that Christ was subject to the entirety of the human condition, meaning he had to work, hunger, face temptation, and yes, have a physical and gendered body. Christ’s nature is quite complicated when you delve into the deep theological components of the classical understanding of who he was, but it can be said that Christ reserved special roles for both men and women and the priesthood and all orders of ordination are reserved for men.

    • @darlameeks
      @darlameeks Před 4 lety +2

      @@davinciandiversity8823 By what you say, women cannot even be saved through God's divine grace, because they are female. Salvation, then, is only for men in Catholicism? All women are designated for hell? Or perhaps we are nothing but beasts who have no sentience and go down to the dust when we die? We know the medieval Catholic theologists held that women have only 1/3 of a soul. Is this your view? This seems more inherited from the Greek pagans, who named women as nothing more than "walking wombs".

    • @_MysticKnight
      @_MysticKnight Před 4 lety

      @Ian That still does not change the fact that Jesus is Christ. Jesus was not just a 'guy who lived on one planet' but he is also God. Christ either refers to Jesus, as a person or the title of 'Christ' which just means messiah or anointed one, which is used almost exclusively as Jesus's title. I can not understand how you can reasonably separate the two.

  • @aye05jaye
    @aye05jaye Před 4 lety +42

    Hello Father Casey!
    I don't believe Women were called to be Priests, Bishops, or even Deacons.
    In my Women of Grace class at Church, I've learned that Women are called by God to be Mothers (in all shapes and forms) so that we can aid society and humankind from falling. Only Women have the ability to bring forth life from our Bodies...something Men will never be able to do. And let us not forget that there is a someone who holds far more Grace, Mercy, and Divine Love than any Apostle, and serves as an Intercessor for us to Christ. She is our Blessed Virgin Mother. A Woman.

    • @emilierose9402
      @emilierose9402 Před 4 lety +1

      I respect your perspective but wonder what you think of women specifically named as deacons in the early Church? Romans 16:1 Phoebe was the only person specifically named as a Deacon in the original Greek New Testament. I'd recommend Phyllis Zengano books. She's serving on the group reviewing female deacons in the Church's history appointed by Pope Francis.

    • @sondoisnotdead
      @sondoisnotdead Před 4 lety +1

      Exactly! They also say "If God want to make some heroic thing He chose Man, if He want to make impossible then He chose Woman" :)

    • @archangelmichael5908
      @archangelmichael5908 Před 4 lety +1

      It is possible that they can be called to the priesthood.

    • @Marysservant
      @Marysservant Před 4 lety +1

      @@archangelmichael5908 Fr. Casey just presented why women cannot. be priest.

    • @jessr1698
      @jessr1698 Před 4 lety +1

      @@emilierose9402 deacons of back then played a completely different role than that of modern day

  • @FrogeniusW.G.
    @FrogeniusW.G. Před 2 lety +16

    Your videos (often/sometimes) are complicated. 😅 They are packed so full of facts, I do often have to look up words/terms. Especially since I'm not a native speaker. 😄
    I love your work & theologically high quality content! ☆ Go on, Fr. Casey. God bless you and all you do. ♡

  • @chelseasorsa5730
    @chelseasorsa5730 Před rokem

    Hello. I'm an Ordained Minister of the Universal Life Church. Question, can one wear their old High School Graduation Gown in place of a Clergy Cassock or Clergy Robe? just temporarily though. you know low budget stuff lol. Also, a Temporary Homemade White and Black Tab. Yes, I'm working on getting the proper Clergy Tab, possibly the Cassock as well. Yet atm I'm unable to.

  • @bernabeorig4920
    @bernabeorig4920 Před 4 lety +7

    I'm a Catholic from the Philippines, Viva Iglesia Katolika Apostolika Romana!

  • @D0csavage1
    @D0csavage1 Před 4 lety +17

    Gen. 3:15; Luke 1:26-55; John 19:26; Rev. 12:1- Mary is God’s greatest creation, was the closest person to Jesus, and yet Jesus did not choose her to become a priest. God chose only men to be priests to reflect the complimentarity of the sexes. Just as the man (the royal priest) gives natural life to the woman in the marital covenant, the ministerial priest gives supernatural life in the New Covenant sacraments.
    Judges 17:10; 18:19 - fatherhood and priesthood are synonymous terms. Micah says, “Stay with me, and be to me a father and a priest.” Fathers/priests give life, and mothers receive and nurture life. This reflects God our Father who gives the life of grace through the Priesthood of His Divine Son, and Mother Church who receives the life of grace and nourishes her children. In summary, women cannot be priests because women cannot be fathers.
    Mark 16:9; Luke 7: 37-50; John 8:3-11 - Jesus allowed women to uniquely join in His mission, exalting them above cultural norms. His decision not to ordain women had nothing to do with culture. The Gospel writers are also clear that women participated in Jesus’ ministry and, unlike men, never betrayed Jesus. Women have always been held with the highest regard in the Church (e.g., the Church’s greatest saint and model of faith is a woman; the Church’s constant teaching on the dignity of motherhood; the Church’s understanding of humanity as being the Bride united to Christ, etc.).
    Mark 14:17,20; Luke 22:14 - the language “the twelve” and “apostles” shows Jesus commissioned the Eucharistic priesthood by giving holy orders only to men.
    Gen. 14:10; Heb. 5:6,10; 6:20; 7:15,17 - Jesus, the Son of God, is both priest and King after the priest-king Melchizedek. Jesus’ priesthood embodies both Kingship and Sonship.
    Gen. 22:9-13 - as foreshadowed, God chose our redemption to be secured by the sacrificial love that the Son gives to the Father.
    Matt. 26:26; Mark 14:22; Luke 22:19 - because the priest acts in persona Christi in the offering to the Father, the priest cannot be a woman.
    Mark 3:13 - Jesus selected the apostles “as He desired,” according to His will, and not according to the demands of His culture. Because Jesus acted according to His will which was perfectly united to that of the Father, one cannot criticize Jesus’ selection of men to be His priests without criticizing God.
    John 20:22 - Jesus only breathed on the male apostles, the first bishops, giving them the authority to forgive and retain sins. In fact, the male priesthood of Christianity was a distinction from the priestesses of paganism that existed during these times. A female priesthood would be a reversion to non-Christian practices. The sacred tradition of a male priesthood has existed uncompromised in the Church for 2,000 years.
    1 Cor. 14:34-35 - Paul says a woman is not permitted to preach the word of God in the Church. It has always been the tradition of the Church for the priest or deacon alone (an ordained male) to read and preach the Gospel.
    1 Tim. 2:12 - Paul also says that a woman is not permitted to hold teaching authority in the Church. Can you imagine how much Mary, the Mother of God, would have been able to teach Christians about Jesus her Son in the Church? Yet, she was not permitted to hold such teaching authority in the Church.
    Rom. 16:1-2 - while many Protestants point to this verse denounce the Church’s tradition of a male priesthood, deaconesses, like Phoebe, were helpers to the priests (for example, preparing women for naked baptism so as to prevent scandal). But these helpers were never ordained.
    Luke 2:36-37 - prophetesses, like Anna, were women who consecrated themselves to religious life, but were not ordained.
    Isaiah 3:12 - Isaiah complains that the priests of ancient Israel were having their authority usurped by women, and this was at the height of Israel’s covenant apostasy.
    *(Scripture Catholic Apologetics)*

    • @inibeheudo3878
      @inibeheudo3878 Před 4 lety

      As lucid as it could be!

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 Před 4 lety

      Excellent. Thanks much with what must have been a very time consuming upload.

  • @MrJeffworksalot
    @MrJeffworksalot Před 3 lety

    Thank you for looking into and making a video on this topic

  • @MissouriMatt54
    @MissouriMatt54 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for the video.

  • @WashingtonDC99
    @WashingtonDC99 Před 4 lety +6

    I am a Hispanic Traditional Catholic woman who does not approved the Priesthood of women. The only thing in our historic church that I think women stay away from is Priesthood. Anything else is okay with me. We must continue preserving and respecting our 2,020 years of tradition. God is always good. I pray to God to allow me to die before witnessing our traditional Catholic Church being ignore by wickedness. God loves. God bless you. 🙏🙏💪💪👼😇🤓😎❤️❤️💙💙

    • @jaqian
      @jaqian Před rokem +2

      @J Sheeba LGBT have rights. Being married in a church isn't a right.

    • @dylanstuckey3824
      @dylanstuckey3824 Před rokem

      God bless you Marjorie

    • @ranitafeliz2987
      @ranitafeliz2987 Před rokem

      says the woman that 99% sure only attends novus ordo masses. tradition only dies when it meets effortlessness and making things easier it seems! so mysterious!

  • @triroa
    @triroa Před 4 lety +61

    Phoebe may have been called a deacon (diakonos) in Romans, but the same Greek word was used to describe Emperor Nero. It's unlikely that it had the same connotations then as it does today. We have to remain faithful to the Traditions, one of those being a male Diaconate. I'm not a fan of the tendency to (usually baselessly) claim "well the early Church did X" and ignore the other 2000 years of Church history/tradition. People need stability in the rapidly changing modern world, that's one of the reasons people cling to the Church, let's not marry Her to the age, lest She die in the next

    • @deaconbilcarter5210
      @deaconbilcarter5210 Před 4 lety +6

      Agreed! One complicating factor is that the word "deacon" is not just an ecclesial title, but in Greek it is also a generic word meaning "servant". The early Church had many people, men and women, who were servants in ministry. But as Acts of the Apostles demonstrates, only men were sacramentally ordained to clerical status.

    • @pintoloyce
      @pintoloyce Před 4 lety +2

      Well yes we must realize that the whole hierarchy of the Church wasn't completely established perfectly in the early church but developed as time went on , also canon 1024 clearly states "A baptized male alone receives sacred ordination validly." I guess this is one thing left out from the video. Therefore, under the current canon law deaconate ordination of women is not allowed.

    • @tudormardare66
      @tudormardare66 Před 4 lety +2

      Woman deaconesses existed and their role is almost entirely different from that of make deacons.
      The order of deaconesses existed for a period of time until it became obsolete, and only a way to boost women's pride over other women, as to become a deaconess, the woman had to be over 40 years old, a virgin, and with a high level of faith and morality.

    • @deaconbilcarter5210
      @deaconbilcarter5210 Před 4 lety +2

      @@pintoloyce The hierarchy was there from the earliest days. We define hierarchy as the authority of the clergy, and the clergy consist of bishops, priests and deacons. bishops were established by Christ in the naming of the Apostles. Likewise, Christ established the modern priesthood at the Last Supper when he washed the feet of the Apostles. This was a sign of preparation for priestly ministry. Finally, those very bishops (apostles) ordained the first deacons. That structure hasn't changed.
      Incidentally, the very word "hierarchy" literally means "a structure of priests". "Hiero-" is a Greek prefix meaning priests or priestly (hieroglyphics - the picture writing of the Egyptian priests) and "-archy" means "structure", as in "architecture". Therefore, a leadership model is implied in the very establishment of the clerical order.

    • @rudybernal7735
      @rudybernal7735 Před 3 lety

      The BIBLE states DO NOT FOLLOW TRADITION. Every Catholic follows 99% tradition and 1% BIBLE.

  • @c.m.cordero1772
    @c.m.cordero1772 Před 2 lety +7

    I like my cousin’s approach to this. She feels that if men want to run the church….great! Let them. She refuses to help in any way when asked to :teach RCIA, lector, cook for a festival, clean pews, or anything else. When someone calls to ask, she tells them to talk to her husband to see if he has time to do it. She also gives no money from her own account. Her husband can give from the household account.

    • @dylanstuckey3824
      @dylanstuckey3824 Před rokem +2

      Seems bitter

    • @leekshikapinnamneni4835
      @leekshikapinnamneni4835 Před rokem

      I think that women already have so much to do. And I do think that women should take up greater leadership roles for sure. What is the priesthood necessary for women?
      Women already do so much for society, and I think that father Casey was right by saying that the church is not an equal opportunity employer.

    • @c.m.cordero1772
      @c.m.cordero1772 Před rokem

      @@leekshikapinnamneni4835 whereas men sit around and have nothing to do.😅

    • @c.m.cordero1772
      @c.m.cordero1772 Před rokem

      @@dylanstuckey3824 just logical.

    • @c.m.cordero1772
      @c.m.cordero1772 Před rokem

      @Mthf not ridiculous at all. I don’t know what birth era would have to do with it.

  • @TheLeftRbabieskillers
    @TheLeftRbabieskillers Před rokem +2

    The question that should be asked is, why would anyone want to be allowed to do X, Y, or Z? is it for their own glory or the glory of God? In our society, some women want to be fathers, not for the children's good but in defiance of the norms.

  • @joakoherrera
    @joakoherrera Před 4 lety +71

    Brother Casey! In July is my diserniment experience in Mexico. Thanks for all your videos and books!

    • @thecanadianmacadamian3018
      @thecanadianmacadamian3018 Před 4 lety +1

      Good luck, God bless!!!

    • @josea.colonmedina275
      @josea.colonmedina275 Před 4 lety

      May God bless and enlighten you in His will. You'll be in my prayers.

    • @vincentinchoco5625
      @vincentinchoco5625 Před 4 lety

      I will for you now that God will enlighten you. Amen.

    • @frcyriloffiongsdv3707
      @frcyriloffiongsdv3707 Před 3 lety +1

      @@fadaoluoma96Hello people, please know that this is a fake account and this imposter is not the Fr. Oluoma whose picture you see on this account. Fr. Oluoma is a popular Catholic priest and has his personal Facebook and CZcams accounts. You can contact him if you need to confirm. I am surprised that CZcams will allow such fraud. The wording of this fraudulent request reveals the fact that no Catholic Priest will ask for money or any support in this way. Please do not fall for this fraud and scam. Thanks.

  • @Colley_co
    @Colley_co Před 4 lety +44

    Thanks for the video! I am an Episcopalian (in seminary for ordination), so I would obviously have a different view of this but I did not grow up Catholic so it is nice to have a better understanding of the Catholic perspective and learn about the important roles women can and should have in the Catholic Church. Love your channel!

    • @prkp7248
      @prkp7248 Před rokem +6

      Well you know, 100 years ago episcopals would say the same.

    • @ChristianHopchas
      @ChristianHopchas Před rokem +4

      @@prkp7248 Protestants don't flip-flop on theology challenge (impossible)

    • @davidmehling4310
      @davidmehling4310 Před rokem +2

      I grew up Catholic and left age 19, no regrets. I'll give him credit for explaining in depth, but I've long believed in opening clergy to women. Now Episcopalian and recently attended a memorable consecration of a female Bishop.

  • @glaceRaven
    @glaceRaven Před 2 lety +23

    Thank you for clearing this up, Fr. Casey. I'd been wondering about this (in part so I could answer the questions of my many non-Catholic friends if they asked about it) but I couldn't get a straight answer until this video. Seems New Advent was not to be trusted in this case. Nor were the few priests claiming that all other roles in the Church are lesser than the priesthood. This was helpful!

    • @janettedavis6627
      @janettedavis6627 Před rokem

      Are you serious you couldn't answer ? Amazes me how little you Catholics know.

    • @worldview730
      @worldview730 Před 6 měsíci

      I think it also boils down in the end to acceptance

  • @nicholaswhitman4620
    @nicholaswhitman4620 Před 3 lety +32

    Long ago Mary of Magdelene was considered an apostle by early Christian communities.

    • @bettyh.3280
      @bettyh.3280 Před 2 lety +10

      Exactly... what a terribly self justifying rationale from this well meaning priest for continuing the inequities of the early church, not of Jesus who on his return to the earth chose two women to appear to. How were women's roles written out of the Gospels? Who got to choose what Gospels were considered to be part of our bible? Sorry but Jesus had no hand in any of that...

    • @nicholaspresberg3269
      @nicholaspresberg3269 Před 2 lety +7

      @@bettyh.3280 did he chose to ordan them, or apper to them. Women play a huge role in the Bible, like Mary, Queen of Heaven and earth, this is no low praise. But God did not intend for women to be preists. Sacred Tradition proves this. We cannot destroy Sacred Tradition in the name of equality, for as st. Thomas Moore said when the devil comes knocking, what can we hide behind. Women and Men are equal in dignity, but not in responsibility. The role women play in the Church is huge, for with out a yes from One woman, there would be no Church. God chose a woman to be the Mother of God, so that we could become his children again. Now every mother is called to be the mother of a child of God. St. Augustins mother prayed for his conversion for over 30 years, now he is one of the best know theologians, this is the power of a mother. There are countless times in history when a man married a catholic woman, and she converts him. With out women. There would be no Church.

    • @misty4937
      @misty4937 Před 2 lety +2

      @Conner L
      Jesus didn't appoint anyone!!!! Men appointed themselves.

    • @misty4937
      @misty4937 Před 2 lety +2

      @@nicholaspresberg3269
      I call BS, the patriarchal, sexist male dominated church established in 335 AD took away the priesthood of women that had been practiced for 300 years. In various sects of Christianity. The lies of Catholicism are too great to go over here. There was a COUP I'm 325 n the men won. MARY, Jesus's 1st n greatest disciple.

    • @Ulice90
      @Ulice90 Před 2 lety +5

      @@misty4937 oh please cut the crap. Priesthood was never taken from woman what are you talking about ? Sexist male dominated. Seems you are a sola scruptura "christian" am I right ?

  • @JM-740
    @JM-740 Před 4 lety +29

    If Christ wanted women priests he would’ve made it so. No pope has the authority to allow it, as it is a sacrament. JP II’s Ordinatio sacerdotalis explains it pretty well. The genius of men and women are different and they are complimentary. Women and men have different callings and roles, I would question more the motives of one who wants to be placed in such role simply because they are roles of men. Do you believe that women can have genuine calls to the priesthood?

    • @songbirds3712
      @songbirds3712 Před 4 lety +1

      Well said!

    • @cecectconnecticut344
      @cecectconnecticut344 Před 4 lety +1

      The Pope could change it.

    • @LostArchivist
      @LostArchivist Před 4 lety +1

      @@cecectconnecticut344 The Pope is not God.

    • @vinceeso9037
      @vinceeso9037 Před 4 lety +1

      Well said.
      Bergoglio is a False Prophet.

    • @sorchaaislingoregan1000
      @sorchaaislingoregan1000 Před 4 lety +1

      Considering the many female priests across Anglicanism and Protestantism, along with the evidence to suggest there was a female pope in the 13th century... The short answer is yes.

  • @Daniel_1230
    @Daniel_1230 Před 4 lety +3

    Hi, Casey!!!
    I'm brazilian and I just discoverd your channel. I loved it. Congratulations from Brazil

  • @BishopSeraph
    @BishopSeraph Před rokem +2

    1 Timothy 2:12 But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence.[1]

    • @mikegallant811
      @mikegallant811 Před 6 měsíci

      What if she will not be silent? Then what?

  • @nbnb1271
    @nbnb1271 Před 3 měsíci

    @Fathercasey, I've learned a lot from you, thank you. Love your blogs I also go to your previous blogs

  • @oscarespinosa9264
    @oscarespinosa9264 Před 4 lety +36

    A priest is "In persona Christi", because he acts as Christ and as God; and Christ is male.

    • @florian8599
      @florian8599 Před 4 lety +16

      Soooo.... Christ is God, right?
      And both men and women are made in His image, right?
      And since Benedict XVI, it's actually "in persona Christi caputis", as Christ as the head of the Church.
      And the Church was founded on the New Covenant, right?
      And the New Covenant begun at Golgotha - when Jesus took the final step of humanity in suffering and death, right?
      And the New Body of Christ is the Church, right?
      And if God created men and women after His image, this means that the same men and women are made after Christ's image, right?
      So, if *men and women* alike are *made in Christ's image* - so why can only men act "in persona Christi caputis", if *women are made after the very same image* as men?

    • @George040270
      @George040270 Před 4 lety +10

      @@florian8599 The Church is the bride of Christ. Jesus is the groom. In the Catholic Church, men marry women and women marry men. Men cannot marry men and women cannot marry women.

    • @megan8832
      @megan8832 Před 4 lety +1

      So I can’t be like Jesus! I don’t think so

    • @Ignasimp
      @Ignasimp Před 4 lety +9

      @Don Comer if Jesus had been a woman he would have been killed before even leaving his native town. We don't know why Jesus is a man. He had to be either a man or a woman. He couldn't have been an inbetween right? But being a man was provably the only way people listened to him since women couldn't predicate, specially in the temple, where Jesus predicated a lot.

    • @medliantony4610
      @medliantony4610 Před 4 lety

      God made both men and women in his own image,then how can you say that god is male?

  • @utamihalliday2995
    @utamihalliday2995 Před 4 lety +16

    As Catholic women, we could support the church in so many ways. We have an important role in our family as a praying pole. A Catholic family can stay faithful in their faith because of our constant prayers for our husband and children. In this world situation where the fast development of another religion and their teaching is so overwhelming, our prayers for our families for the sake of our Catholic church's future take a very important role. And I am privileged to take up that responsibility. I don't need female priests.

    • @EzioAuditoreDaFirenze99
      @EzioAuditoreDaFirenze99 Před 10 měsíci

      The apostle Paul says that women shouldn't teach because Eve sinned first, which implies that women are more easily deceived or naieve.
      As a woman, would you agree or disagree with that statement? Would you entrust justice and recognition of good and evil, and authority, with a woman? And moreover, do you think many of these ultra liberal denominations such as Methodism are perhaps being governed by women with rose tinted glasses?
      I'm not saying this to the detriment of women. Of course, men are more violent and make more abuses of power, and are impulsive, from my experience. And for this reason God said, it is not good for man to be alone.
      Of course for drawing these distinctions, in the modern age, this is considered a sexist position. Do you think this is a sexist position?

  • @Aisha-721
    @Aisha-721 Před 3 lety +6

    I remember receiving a call from a Catholic friend saying that Pope John Paul II said infallibly that women can't be ordained priests and quit talking about it.
    But some parishioners at a church I attended believed that women should be allowed to be priests. I wanted them to accept what the Pope said, even though I'm a (pro life) feminist.

    • @alhilford2345
      @alhilford2345 Před 3 lety +3

      Not just Pope John Paul, but the whole Church, the Magisterium, God Himself has decreed that women cannot be priests.

    • @bizarte24_
      @bizarte24_ Před 2 lety

      There is a danger of extremists and radicals if ordaining women.

    • @konyvnyelv.
      @konyvnyelv. Před rokem

      Popes said many different things during the centuries

    • @dylanstuckey3824
      @dylanstuckey3824 Před rokem +2

      I admire your attitude. Even though you probably disagree ideologically you submit to the will of the Church. I hope I can always be as faithful as you.

    • @daviddavenport9350
      @daviddavenport9350 Před rokem +1

      @@alhilford2345 Maybe not God....we dont know HIs thoughts on the matter.

  • @stevewood8914
    @stevewood8914 Před 3 lety +2

    The reasons as stated here can be paraphrased as "We don't ordain women because we never have"; not a very convincing argument for never doing it

    • @johnlove2954
      @johnlove2954 Před 3 lety +1

      Actually it is. You forget that it is their choice and you have to argue your case, and not vice versa.. A little bit humbleness of ego will help you a long way.

  • @JesusIsLove2512
    @JesusIsLove2512 Před 4 lety +12

    Praise the Lord Jesus Christ 🙏 Mother Mary Pray For Us 🙏 Abba Father Bless us and we Adore You 🙏

  • @janetm8356
    @janetm8356 Před 4 lety +12

    So first the Church says we have a church in the first place to remain flexible and to be able to make decisions based partly on circumstances. Then the Church tells us, well, we have all these years of tradition, so we can’t change now. Then Pope Francis says he wants to look into having female deacons. How long has he been “studying” this issue? As a life long Catholic, I’ve concluded it’s an old boys club and it’s not going to change. If the sex abuse scandal that has wracked it from one end to the other didn’t tell church leaders that the old boys club wasn’t working, will anything?

    • @janetm8356
      @janetm8356 Před 4 lety +4

      Another thing, I’ve heard all my life, and I see it in these comments here, too. It goes like this: why should a woman want to be anything but a mother, the highest calling there is? So let me ask you, why should a man want to be anything but a father, also a very high calling?

    • @msudoc
      @msudoc Před 3 lety

      J D Grow up.

  • @marleyboy7732
    @marleyboy7732 Před 3 lety

    Never really thought about this topic before. With the world going through changes. Is there or has there been conflicts about women being ordained?

  • @lisamarie5149
    @lisamarie5149 Před 3 lety +3

    In the Bible, Jesus is called the Bridegroom and His Church is the Bride. If priests are 'in persona Christi' it makes perfect sense that only men are called to the priesthood, as women can't fulfill the role of Bridegroom. It's also been my experience that women are over represented in the average parish. They're lectors, altar servers, cantors and EMHC's. They teach catechism, are principals, teachers, run the choir, run the finances, head ministries, keep the calendar, are on the parish council, etc, etc. Take a look at the staff on any parish website and it's pretty much all women. As a woman, I'd actually prefer to see more men take on some of these roles. We're literally overrun with females!

  • @lapun47
    @lapun47 Před 4 lety +20

    Both women and men can become contemplatives/mystics in any walk of life. Why this clamoring to take on a priestly vocation simply in the name of "equality"?

    • @iliya3110
      @iliya3110 Před 4 lety +13

      It's because of the error of feminism that took over the world beginning with communist propaganda in the early 20th century. The enemies of Christ and the Church hate the patriarchy of Christendom (and implicitly, any timeless traditional role that men have always had in society and the family until the 20th century). Most of the indoctrinated feminists of our time don't really have a good understanding as to why they think the way they do, but they've been conditioned from their youth to be feminists - and so they are. It's been a kind of brainwashing. Most Western people think gender equality means women are in charge and men shouldn't lead their families. They think as if feminism is a virtue, but it's quite the opposite. It's against natural law and it's a grave error that is destroying masculinity, the family, and society. It's nothing short of a demonic deception.

    • @paolagrando5079
      @paolagrando5079 Před 4 lety +4

      @@iliya3110 You a bit confused on the feminism.

    • @paolagrando5079
      @paolagrando5079 Před 4 lety +1

      @@iliya3110 What is natural law?

    • @Ignasimp
      @Ignasimp Před 4 lety +3

      @@iliya3110 I'm not a feminist. And I think women should be able to be priests. Cathegorysing people as "feminists" instead of counterarguing their arguments only shows your ineptitude. And trying to make it look as if people say this is because of feminism instead of understanding that people can have their own ideas without having to be part of a sociopolitical movement is at least oversimplifying reality.

    • @iliya3110
      @iliya3110 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Ignasimp God bless. It's possible not to be an ideologue in identification, but be imbued with a given ideology implicitly, even if it is unintentional because of the culture one grew up in. I am not accusing any given person of being an ideologue, only stating, perhaps with hyperbole, what is the likely reason for this. The bottom line is that it's the infallible teaching of the Church that only men can be priests. It cannot be reformed without breaking away from the apostolic Faith. One can go join a Protestant sect if they want women priests. But if they want the truth they must submit to the authority of Christ given to us through the successors of the [male] Apostles. Catholicism has given the highest honor to women, more than any other society. Catholicism recognizes that all women are equal in dignity to men so this has nothing to do with that. It has everything to do with order. Men are the heads of the family, according to way God has designed it. Similarly Christ is the Bridegroom of the Bride [the Church], according to how God designed it. Christ is the Head of the Church, not the other way around. Similarly, the bishop is the head of his flock, not in a purely existential sense, but in a spiritual AND material sense. Thus he possesses a natural and supernatural authority over the children of God. The priest partakes of the High Priesthood of Christ - which is a divine and, if you want, Jewish mystical priesthood. It is both spiritual and material. By God's design the Old Covenant Jewish priesthood was male. The New Covenant Priesthood in Christ is male, in His human nature, because Christ is male and priests partake of Christ High Priesthood. It's ontologically impossible, on a level we do not fully comprehend, for a woman to be a priest. She can wear his vestments, but that's where it ends. This teaching cannot change. Were it to ever 'change', such a 'church' would fall from the One, Holy, and Apostolic Church.

  • @recalcitrantradical7312
    @recalcitrantradical7312 Před 4 lety +3

    Serious question: Is the sui generis nature of gender part if the calculus?

  • @mrnarason
    @mrnarason Před 9 měsíci +1

    Entire video darted around the question so much...

  • @joanmaltman9580
    @joanmaltman9580 Před 2 lety +2

    I am old fashioned and I think women have a place in the church but not on the altar.

  • @mchristr
    @mchristr Před 4 lety +40

    The issue is salvific. One who truly doesn't believe the Gospel will look elsewhere for their foundational identity. If the ultimate worth offered at the Cross of Christ is rejected, the default position turns to the culture for a definition of human value. It should be obvious that the whimsical nature of culture provides no solid footing.

  • @josephryan5949
    @josephryan5949 Před 4 lety +7

    In my youthful days, I was an Altar boy. It was a position of privilege. We boys knew it and were proud of it. The girls could only look on in envy. At least, I presume they were envious. Consideration of their feelings would have been the furthest thing from our minds at that stage. We had more important things to worry about, like, whose turn was it to serve at the next wedding or funeral. Both days guaranteed a big pay-out, and we looked forward to both with similar eagerness.Eventually, my friends and I outgrew the surplice and soutane, and passed on our trade to the next generation of young men. On it went, this grand old tradition, until one fine day, there came a shock to the system ; girls appeared behind the Altar rails !First, there were one or two, but very soon, they practically took over the show. I guess they were making up for lost time. The boys, their 'special' status now a thing of the past, seemed to lose heart and almost disappeared from the scene.Indeed, it took a long time for things to balance out, and longer still for old warriors like myself and my childhood companions to accept the new scenario.However, while those memories will always be precious to us, we learned to live with the new reality, and if any of us have a daughter today, we would surely shed a tear of joy, to see her dressed in her surplice and soutane, serving Mass, behind the Altar rails.

    • @deaconbilcarter5210
      @deaconbilcarter5210 Před 4 lety +8

      What you describe is the very clericalism we are called to avoid. Just because a group of boys are lording their position over girls doesn't mean the girls deserve the position, too. it means those boys DON'T deserve it. They see it as an avenue to make money and to be held in esteem.

    • @felisd
      @felisd Před 3 lety +2

      Your altar boys got paid to serve at weddings or funerals?? In my church, it was all voluntary service. And honestly, from what I saw in my generation of altar servers, the priests started inviting girls to become servers because there weren't enough boys to do the job.

    • @josephryan5949
      @josephryan5949 Před 3 lety

      @@felisd Not really getting paid as such. More like a tip really, but it became a tradition. Nobody was going to get rich out of it, but it was one of the perks of the job.

    • @dylanstuckey3824
      @dylanstuckey3824 Před rokem +1

      @@deaconbilcarter5210 exactly right. The Church allows girls to be altar servers but it doesn’t mean it’s good or it’s fitting. Being an altar server is preparation for holy orders. It seems to me like it would just confuse the young girls that become altar servers.

    • @Poppy10years
      @Poppy10years Před rokem

      @ Joseph Ryan. Isn’t this how progress happens. The horrors of recent church history are because old habits and male privilege is clung on to by a frightened powerful group. Look what is happening with Bp Olsen in Fort Worth Texas. Please open your hearts and see how unfair the Church is to over 50% of the population.

  • @ClergetMusic
    @ClergetMusic Před 3 lety +14

    Let’s also not forget that in Exodus, God chose Aaron (a man) and his sons (also men) to be ordained priests to serve Him.

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    • @daviddavenport9350
      @daviddavenport9350 Před rokem +1

      Arent you talking about an incredibly, breathtakingly misogynist culture here?

    • @alonsoACR
      @alonsoACR Před rokem

      @@daviddavenport9350 Catholicism is not tied to any culture. Never was, never will.

  • @bongwaygirl5266
    @bongwaygirl5266 Před 3 lety +10

    I'm sorry, but 2000-something years ago, Jesus also did not have a CZcams channel. Why accepting changing times only it suits the Church?

    • @patricksoares6253
      @patricksoares6253 Před 3 lety +2

      Your statement does not make sense.

    • @SirThyrm
      @SirThyrm Před 3 lety +2

      @@patricksoares6253 i think it does. It asks the question of why some things can and others can not be changed. The "we always did it that way" does not apply because as he pointed out other things did change. Calling it out to be just something that is convenient to the church that changes, makes clear that it needs an answer that is based not on what the church likes and don't likes and that the reasoning for something not to change it needs a batter answer than tradition.
      I would think that it does change tho, Today the Pope did give women more rights in the conducting of mass.

    • @patricksoares6253
      @patricksoares6253 Před 3 lety +1

      @@SirThyrm The pope did not change nothing in this aspect.
      This fact concerning the Catholic Church has to be very clear: She is not driven by the ideas of the current time and by people's opinion. She is the body of Christ and mantains her 2000 years teaching despite of what the world wants.
      Tradition is one pillar of the Church, so "we always did it that way" is indeed important. What may be changed is what CAN be changed. The central aspects of the faith are not into question, and this is one.
      "Jesus Christ did not call any women to become part of the Twelve. If he acted in this way, it was not in order to conform to the customs of his time, for his attitude towards women was quite different from that of his milieu, and he deliberately and courageously broke with it."
      - Declaration on the question of admission of women to the ministerial priesthood

    • @gillianc8106
      @gillianc8106 Před 3 lety

      @@patricksoares6253 Jesus also didn’t call any, say, Americans to the Twelve. And yet we have American priests.

    • @patricksoares6253
      @patricksoares6253 Před 3 lety +1

      ​@@gillianc8106 But it is explicitly stated in the Scriptures to evangelize the gentiles and spread the gospel to them. In the writings of Saint Paul that is notorious.
      And at the same time, there's no evidence (not in the Scriptures nor in the early, medieval and modern Church) that women could be priests.
      The Church is Catholic, universal to the human genre, and it would be irracional to deny other races the sacrament of order. And it would be irracional to lift the Church, Scripture and Tradition teachings because of man made tendencies.

  • @anthonyburke3000
    @anthonyburke3000 Před 4 lety +15

    My understanding is that the priest acts in persona Christi when celebrating the sacraments. Since Christ IS a man a woman cannot act in persona Christi.
    Mary serves as the penultimate role of women in the Church and should always be followed as that example. She is the Queen of Heaven.
    God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Two of the persons in the Trinity are explicitly male.
    This issue is not about equality. It's about power. I remember this same temptation played out in Genesis.

    • @danielz4192
      @danielz4192 Před 4 lety +3

      Actually, all three are presented as explicitly masculine. The Holy Spirit is also exclusively referred to as “He”

    • @jamesmccloud7535
      @jamesmccloud7535 Před 3 lety

      @@danielz4192 He is symbolic not literal

    • @FatJoe98100
      @FatJoe98100 Před 3 lety

      This is also why concelebration is considered by some to be a liturgical abuse because Christ was one man not many.

    • @josephcastillo1703
      @josephcastillo1703 Před 2 lety

      You are exactly right about in persona Christi…I’m pretty disappointed that Father forgot to mention this in his video.

  • @Nurichiri
    @Nurichiri Před 4 lety +23

    I find it interesting that our Blessed Mother was specifically said to have been in the room with the apostles at Pentecost. Afterwards she is never mentioned again. I wonder what she did with her second dose of the Holy Spirit (the first being at the Annunciation).

    • @MissyJ
      @MissyJ Před 4 lety +11

      The first Marian Apparition happened while she was still alive. My guess is she spent a lot of time in prayer- being there for those who needed her.

    • @davinciandiversity8823
      @davinciandiversity8823 Před 4 lety +2

      The celebration of the Assumption/ Dormition talks about her passing, so I believe tradition states she simply lived peacefully in Judea until her end.

    • @Montfortracing
      @Montfortracing Před 4 lety +2

      Nurichiri, have you seen the movie Full of Grace? It's about Mary's life right before her Assumption. I think it's based on some writings from 1st century Christianity.

    • @marountayar2831
      @marountayar2831 Před 4 lety +1

      She taught saint Luke what he later wrote about the annunciation and Jesus`s infancy and probably many other things. And maybe ( probably too ) she also taught saint John because remember that she was living with him...

    • @akirahojo2
      @akirahojo2 Před 4 lety +3

      Not sure how much of this is conspiracy theory but I had read many years ago from religious history enthusiasts that early Christians were led by many women however there was a conflict amongst the Apostles about this in particular between Peter and James, with Peter winning the argument and thus women leaders were eventually marginalized within the church.
      One interesting argument was many of the early converts specially from pagans were women because early Christianity apparently treat women more equally than what we now have in the church.
      Take it with a grain of salt but I always wonder how different the church was in the first 200-300 years.

  • @rmdodsonbills
    @rmdodsonbills Před rokem +2

    Ever since the 1994 document, I've been praying for God to explicitly tell the Pope that he should allow ordination of women, by whatever method is necessary to prove to whichever pope it is that it's not just some bad tuna-induced dream but a real message from God that needs to be taken seriously. Refusing to allow women in the priesthood, in this day and age, is unjust and when you then take into consideration the crisis in vocations, nonsensical.

  • @mouseandryforever6848
    @mouseandryforever6848 Před 2 lety +40

    This is one of my major sticking points when it comes to the church. I was baptized in 1969 into the Catholic Church and I feel that I belong to the church but I don't go to church and I don't do confession and I feel in many ways left out. I also watched a great movie about the changes that Vatican too brought about regarding nuns. Cutting out the nuns role is a death blow to the church. Women also want to serve and I think having nuns at every Church and having a mother and a father is the way forward for the church.

    • @jaqian
      @jaqian Před rokem +20

      If you aren't going to confession and mass you are leaving yourself out. Being Christian is about being part of a community. Nuns are still active in the church we have nuns in our parish and they are very involved.

    • @MM22272
      @MM22272 Před rokem +3

      @@jaqian 1000%

    • @richlopez5896
      @richlopez5896 Před rokem +6

      Nobody has cut nuns out. There's tons of them. Sounds like you are leaving yourself out by intentionally not going to Mass or Confession. Women serve numerous functions in the Church.

    • @rorypinata265
      @rorypinata265 Před rokem +4

      You should go to Mass and confession, you'll help shape the Church how you see fit. If you're unmarried become a nun. If you're married encourage your daughters to become nuns.

    • @seniitaiao2656
      @seniitaiao2656 Před rokem +1

      Lukewarm catholics😢

  • @wayne96707
    @wayne96707 Před 4 lety +35

    I was waiting for you to reference Saint JP II “Theology of the Body” where he explains it so beautifully, and sensibility. Now days the younger generations won’t give in to “because that’s how it’s always been done” sort of answer. They need a deeply rooted explanation... “Theology of the Body” has it.

    • @MegaGraceiscool
      @MegaGraceiscool Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks Wayne. I'm researching Catholicism and I keep running into the tradition fallacy, which does nothing for me. I'll check out Theology of the Body

    • @juanchicruz6551
      @juanchicruz6551 Před 3 lety +3

      @@MegaGraceiscool How is a fallacy? If your town eats goldfish for centuries that's not a fallacy, that's a tradition.
      One of the points of the Church is also tradition

    • @juanchicruz6551
      @juanchicruz6551 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nothanks6549 I do know about the fallacy, but this one is not as the Catholic Faith is also based on Tradition, so it must keep being that way because one of the pillars of the Catholic Faith is Tradition
      This Tradition is only regarding to Faith and not other types of values which may change or not, and go on or not according to Catholic belief
      In this topic must be understand that something may be that something because it keeps being in one way or having those characteristics. We cannot say Sumerians must have different characteristics today (hypothetical case they were alive) and differ totally as how they were before because they wouldn't be Sumerians
      Some things may be allowed to change and others not depending on what that group is. If it were not, they wouldn't be themselves.
      This is antrophology. If Catholic Faith can't be based also in Tradition, then it is not Catholic Faith

  • @claraartnow6645
    @claraartnow6645 Před 4 lety +16

    I kinda accept that Jesus' apostles were all men, and that our tradition comes from the patriarchy. I just have a big doubt; one of the reasons you mentioned was because the Church doesn't feel it has the authority to decide this. But the apostles in the first Council of Jerusalem decided something transcendental and of upmost importance: decided that circumcision was no longer necessary for the salvation of gentile men. I don't know if the apostles thought about this temporarily, but it hasn't changed since, and circumcision is something very important. I'm not gonna start a fight for this issue, but I just feel openminded about women's priesthood, and I feel I need a deeper reason to deny women's priesthood, and I don't understand either why women can't have other ordinations like deaconate right now... I don't want it to be because of sexism (let's not deny that there is sexism in the church)... 🤔 Bear in mind that, at least in my country, priests use to have the help of a woman or some women in the parish for some works on the church too.

    • @allyinherit7872
      @allyinherit7872 Před 4 lety +1

      I think you should read 1 Corinthians chap 24 verse 34

    • @claraartnow6645
      @claraartnow6645 Před 4 lety

      @@allyinherit7872 Sorry I can't find the passage. Could you send me a link to the passage of the Bible? 🙏

    • @allyinherit7872
      @allyinherit7872 Před 4 lety

      @@claraartnow6645 I'm sorry dear I meant chapter 14:34

    • @claraartnow6645
      @claraartnow6645 Před 4 lety +4

      @@allyinherit7872 Thanks!
      I disagree with Paul in this particular letter, and here's my reasoning. I understand from the context that we can't apply this nowadays. I think Paul (as well as other Apostles) had a certain mentality, very rooted from the jewish traditions that we don't have now. This kind of mentality of the time, for example, put christians from gentile origins below judeo-christians. You can see an example also in the episode of Saint Peter and Cornelius (a christian from pagan origins) in acts chapter 10 and 11. Back then jews weren't allowed to eat with non-jews or stay at their homes. Women had also an unequal treatment, for example in the Resurrection the Apostles didn't believe Mary Magdalene (Mark 16:9-20) or that servant who announced Peter's freedom (Acts 12:6-19). But we know that the firsts witnesses of Christ's Resurrection were women, and that the Holy Spirit came to Cornelius: God doesn't make distinction with persons. That's why I believe we can't apply what Paul says to nowadays.
      Aside from that, I don't mind that Priesthood is only assigned to man. It just bothers me, how can we women serve the Church from the hierarchy, like others? What's our responsibility?

    • @JuanmaAmagliani
      @JuanmaAmagliani Před 3 lety +1

      @Collins Anosike well, no. But you don't see the names of Sts. Joaquim and Anna, nor the formation of monastic orders, nor the use of the cross as an identity symbol and you know, a long et cetera. We Catholics recognize tradition and the magisterium of the Church as valid sources of faith. So women not being priests in the Bible doesn't mean that it is automatically forbidden, the reasoning behind that has to be found somewhere else

  • @slabas
    @slabas Před 3 lety

    Father, What is your name? Who are you? I cannot easily see that you have provided this information on these videos. Thank you

  • @greencowtd
    @greencowtd Před 5 dny

    Unrelated, I’ve been searching on your channel for the video you made about women not being less than men. It was very encouraging. Did the video get removed?
    Was feeling a bit down today and wanted to watch it. What is the physical manifestation of being less than men? Does He answer our prayers less? Do we have to work harder for salvation? Will we always be stained in his eyes? I understand what men see, but I don’t fully understand what GOD thinks about us. Do we just not know because the civilization that wrote the Bible saw women in a different light so we will never know the truth anyway?
    I try to think of Cabrini in instances like these. Are men just honored by GOD by default and women have to earn it? Thoughts?