Feminism and Patriarchy
Theological and doctrinal developments sometimes come out of officially discredited movements. Though Pope John Paul II and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith criticized the errors of liberation theology, for example, the church soon afterward incorporated leading liberation ideas like “structural sin” and “the preferential love of the poor” into its own teaching. Blessed John Paul, even as he tutored Eastern European countries on their transition to market economies in “Centesimus Annus” also reminded them of Marxian insights on alienation, exploitation and marginalization that are still valuable (Nos. 41-42).
In the same way, it is past time for church officials to recognize the proven insights of feminist theology and to dialogue with its critique of the injustices done by patriarchy. It is unfitting for all those insights to be dismissed as theologically “radical.” Jesus’ contemporaries held him in suspicion for openly keeping company with women. The Gospels of Luke and John and the letters of Paul provide ample evidence that women played key roles in the early church. Even in the patristic era, the Christian practices of celibacy and the love of learning led to the emancipation of upper-class women and to their friendship with men. That Christian-inspired social equality ended because the church failed to evangelize fully the military culture of the German tribes, who subordinated women.
Particularly when it comes to the equality of women, both inside and outside the home, the church should acknowledge its own historical inculturation, accept the legitimate insights of feminist theology and purify official theology of the distortions inflicted by patriarchical, pre-Christian Roman and later feudal Teutonic images of womanhood. For as the church proclaims the Gospel as the guarantor of human dignity for all, those vestiges of history continue to impart a counterwitness.
Far-Sighted Leaders
Too many elected leaders continue to subject the country to an especially ruinous trend, which is to put short-term political or partisan advantage ahead of the long-term public interest. Consider, for example, the recently passed House bill to eliminate the Prevention and Public Health Fund, which is part of the Affordable Health Care Act. The reason given for cutting this fund is to use the money to extend for a year the low interest rate currently charged to college students. But the bill is a double fault.
First, in this economy, which has produced so few jobs for graduates, there is no excuse for giving students such a short extension—except election-year politics. What will happen to the interest rate after that? Few economists expect the economic recovery to eliminate the need for low-interest student loans. Far-sighted leaders ought to make a better-educated work force a priority—more engineers, math majors, gerontologists, scientists, inventors, not to mention critical thinkers.
Second, it makes no sense to cut preventive health services. The fund’s major expenditures are for immunization; local, city and state programs to reduce obesity and smoking; and the training of primary care doctors and physician assistants. The nation faces an epidemic of childhood obesity, an increase in diabetes, a prescription-drug addiction crisis and other preventable health issues, plus a shortage of physicians and ever-rising health care costs. Far-sighted leadership, in fact, established the prevention fund. It is one of many future-oriented parts of the health care reform, which is designed for long-term public benefit—healthier citizens—and ought to lower health care costs.
Still Invisible
The homeless man under a bush in the park and the bent-over woman pushing a shopping cart loaded with all she owns are familiar sights. They strike a chord especially this year, the 50th anniversary of Michael Harrington’s The Other America. He coined the term “invisible poor,” who are unseen both because they are socially marginalized and because the affluent look the other way. Mr. Harrington, who died of cancer in 1989, would now be 84. Though he said the intellectual decadence of the neo-Thomism taught at Holy Cross College alienated him from the church, his years at the Catholic Worker and Catholic social teaching enriched his commitment to socialism. His biographer, Maurice Isserman, recently reported a conversation with Harrington’s sons (The Nation, 5/14). What would Harrington do today? he asked. They mentioned his respect for European socialism and suggested he would regret that incivility dominates our political discourse and would be dismayed that 46 million Americans live in poverty.
In 1971 Holy Cross gave Harrington an honorary degree. Catholic universities should honor others who lift the veil of invisibility from the 49.9 million without health insurance, the 8.1 percent unemployed, those in low-wage jobs without benefits, the 46 million on food stamps, the growing lines at soup kitchens. They believe, as President Obama put it, that the growing gap between rich and poor is “the defining issue of our time.”
This is more politcal manipulation of? ?w?o??m?e?n? and the Church for secular poli?t?cal purposes?.
This is more political manipulation of women and the Church for political purposes.
What is needed in this editorial is plain statements of what are some of the concrete problems to justify the statement "it is past time for church officials to recognize the proven insights of feminist theology ..." to be meaningful. The reader should not be expected to take exotic courses in theology or read exotic books to get a explaination of simple facts of the case the editorial is trying to make.
By the way I do know that many of Sister Elizabeth's theological views were recently strongly disapproved of by the Bishops. Sister Elizabeth's issues are not self-evident and not everyone agrees with her.
I am heartily sick of leftist academicians and politicians who schill for more taxes and government intervention at a higher than necessary level (subsidierity again) and never even get to know the "poor", a very diverse group!
Tom, Wikipedia has an article on Feminist Theology for those who need somewhere to start. It is not a Catholic phenomenon, note. In the article I found this quote by Sojourner Truth from her, "Ain't I a Woman?" speech:
"And how came Jesus into the world? Through God who created him and the woman who bore him. Man, where was your part?"
I like that!
There are lots of excellent books and articles by women theologians, but they do tend to be unpopular with many in the all-male hierarchy. But then, that's illustrative of the problem isn't it.
Donald Wuerl took it upon himself to launch an attack at a wonderful woman who wasn't even part of his see, because she stood up for a view of God that threatened his power. He needed to prove that he had the power that went with the testicles. He is a major player in the suppression of opposing voices. Women have ceased being passive victims. We know that Mary Magdalen was a powerful woman and not a repentant whore, someone who Jesus valued for her strength and her ability. The Church seems to be leaving Jesus behind while it kicks devoted women in the face. This is shameful. This is not the way Jesus would have acted. Nor would the person who spoke the wonderful words in Matthew 25:31-46 have countenanced the lack of care for the poor that is inherent in the abandonment of the nuns.