The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Barred from priesthood, some Catholic women find other roles

- By Claire Giangravè Of Religion News Service and David Crary Of The Crary reported from New York. Associated Press religion coverage receives support from the Lilly Endowment through The Conversati­on U.S. The AP is solely responsibl­e for this content.

Women aspiring to leadership in the Catholic church have long come to terms with the glass ceiling that exists in the maledomina­ted institutio­n, but Pope Francis’ spate of female appointmen­ts in the Vatican hierarchy suggests that change, however modest, is underway.

A growing number of women hold consequent­ial positions in the church and at the Vatican. But it’s the roles women occupy at the grassroots level — in parishes, dioceses and universiti­es — that suggest to female Catholics that despite the institutio­n’s slowness to change, women are taking the lead, making new demands and inspiring new perspectiv­es.

Nuns in the United States have been among those setting the pace. Several of them have played prominent roles in social justice activism; two others have been the recent leaders of the Catholic church’s vast network of hospitals and health centers.

Women cannot be ordained and become priests, bishops or popes in the Catholic church. It teaches that because Jesus selected only men as apostles, only men can lead the church and perform the sacraments.

This story is part of a series by The Associated Press and Religion News Service on women’s roles in male-led religions.

What’s new is that female empowermen­t is “more and more an issue carried also by men, including priests, bishops and cardinals. Even the pope,” said Sister Nathalie Becquart, the first woman appointed undersecre­tary of the Synod of Bishops.

This important post, assigned to Becquart by the pope in February, was previously held only by bishops. She coordinate­s preparatio­ns for the summits of bishops at the Vatican called synods.

While synods have always been an exclusivel­y male forum for clergy to discuss the church’s pressing issues, under Francis they have become a steppingst­one for women. Sister Alessandra Smerilli, an Italian economist, was appointed councilor of the 2015 synod on youth before she rose in the ranks.

This year, Francis appointed a biblical scholar, Sister Nuria Calduch-Benages, as secretary of the Pontifical Biblical Commission. On Nov. 4, he chose Sister Raffaella Petrini to be secretary general of the governorsh­ip of Vatican City, making her the highestran­king woman in the Catholic city-state.

The first woman appointed to a Vatican congregati­on was Sister Luzia Premoli, a nun from Brazil. She says her 2014 appointmen­t by Francis to the Congregati­on for the Evangeliza­tion of Peoples demonstrat­ed his commitment to include more women as decision-makers.

Premoli joined the Comboni Missionary Sisters at 23, rising to be a superior general overseeing missionari­es in numerous African countries.

Speaking by telephone from her missionary post in the Central African Republic, Premoli said her Vatican appointmen­t was slow to come about because of a “mentality within the church” that disapprove­s of women in top positions.

“But for Jesus it was different,” she said. “He invited women to follow him.”

The injection of women into Vatican positions of authority is already changing perspectiv­es, Becquart says.

After she was elevated by the pope, Becquart lived for six months at a home for clergy close to St. Peter’s Square. The priests initially were hesitant, but after a few shared meals and conversati­ons they got used to the new arrival. “Now they tell me, ‘We miss you. Come back!’” she said.

Worldwide, a growing number of women serve as chancellor­s in dioceses and as members of bishop’s councils. In January, Francis changed canon law to allow women to be lectors and acolytes, giving official recognitio­n to female service during Mass.

In the United States recently, some of the most prominent women on the Catholic stage have been nuns engaged in social activism. They include Sister Helen Prejean, whose campaignin­g against the death penalty was featured in the film “Dead Man Walking”; Sister Norma Pimentel, renown for advocacy on behalf of migrants along the U.S.-Mexico border, and Sister Simone Campbell, who led cross-country “Nuns on the Bus” trips highlighti­ng issues of economic and social injustice.

Among the nuns with clout is Sister Mary Haddad, who has served since 2019 as president of the Catholic Health Associatio­n of the United States. Its network of hospitals, health centers and longterm care facilities is the nation’s largest group of nonprofit health providers.

In high school, Haddad focused on sports, not a possible career in Catholic organizati­ons, and went to Southern Illinois University with a field hockey scholarshi­p.

A leadership opportunit­y arrived quickly. At 22, with a newly earned bachelor’s degree in education, Haddad became a substitute teacher at a Catholic school in her hometown, Gillespie, Illinois. The parish priest was so impressed that, within two months, he asked her to become the principal.

“I remember clearly thinking I’m not qualified — but if he feels I have what it takes, I’m going to do it,” she said. “That was my first entree into church leadership.”

Haddad subsequent­ly earned two master’s degrees and joined the Sisters of Mercy of America, working in health care, social services and education in the U.S., Trinidad and Tobago, and Belize.

While joining the order, Haddad sometimes talked with another novice who resented the ban on women’s ordination and yearned to be a priest. Haddad says she never shared that frustratio­n.

“People ask me what it’s like being a woman in a male-dominated church, thinking I must feel subservien­t, but I don’t feel that way,” she said. “I’ve been afforded opportunit­ies to demonstrat­e my abilities to serve God’s church.”

“My father died in car crash when I was 3, and I saw my mother taking on his roles — she did it all,” Haddad added. “There’s nothing a man can do that a woman can’t.”

Among the lay women reaching positions of power in U.S. Catholicis­m is Carolyn Woo, who was dean of the University of Notre Dame’s business school for 14 years before serving as president and CEO of Catholic Relief Services from 2012 to 2016. CRS provides humanitari­an aid in over 100 countries, spending more than $900 million a year.

Woo is not eager to debate women’s ordination. That argument “has taken up every ounce of oxygen,” she says.

Instead, in face-to-face conversati­ons and an upcoming book, Woo insists there are rewarding options for women beyond the priesthood.

“When I meet with young women, there’s an undertone of ‘Women really don’t have much influence,’” she said. “It takes time to engage, to explain, ‘No, there are a lot of opportunit­ies for women to lead.’”

In 2016, Francis created a commission to study the possibilit­y of women deacons, who can preside over services except for Mass and cannot perform sacraments. In 2019, Francis said the commission’s report didn’t provide a “definitive response” and launched a new study that is unfinished.

“It’s all part of an effort to postpone so as not to address the problem,” said Lucetta Scaraffia, a history professor at the Sapienza University of Rome. In 2012, Scaraffia was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI to run “Women Church World,” a magazine published alongside the Vatican newspaper L’Osservator­e Romano.

In 2019 she and many of her reporters resigned after publishing articles on the servitude and sexual abuse of religious sisters by clergy. Scaraffia says the Vatican hierarchy forced the resignatio­ns by applying a tight noose around the publicatio­n.

Scaraffia is nuanced in discussing female ordination. “I think that women should have authority in Vatican and church department­s as normal women, as lay women, who see things differentl­y,” she said.

Scaraffia believes the Vatican’s recent female appointmen­ts are “important from a symbolic and public image perspectiv­e.” But reflecting her own experience, she says these women “chosen by the ecclesial hierarchy, competent but obedient, don’t have a real chance to interfere with the Church’s decisions.”

Instead, she says Pope Francis should appoint members of the Internatio­nal Union of Superiors General, which represents more than 600,000 religious sisters worldwide, to serve on the Council of Cardinals, a group of prelates handpicked by the pope as advisers.

The cultural pressure needed for the Catholic Church and Vatican to empower more women can only come from the outside, Scaraffia said.

“The church is not changing — the women in the church are changing,” she said, “including religious sisters who were quiet and obedient for a long time. Now they are no longer silent and obedient. Now they are coming forward with their requests, their projects, their identity.”

 ?? SISTER LUZIA PREMOLI VIA AP ?? Sister Luzia Premoli holds a makongo, a wooden bowl, July 28, 2020near a market in Bagandou in the Central African Republic. Premoli was the first woman appointed to a Vatican congregati­on in the history of the Catholic Church. She is located in Africa where she teaches young women about the Bible and Christiani­ty and works with a community of Pygmies on education and agricultur­al initiative­s in the equatorial forest.
SISTER LUZIA PREMOLI VIA AP Sister Luzia Premoli holds a makongo, a wooden bowl, July 28, 2020near a market in Bagandou in the Central African Republic. Premoli was the first woman appointed to a Vatican congregati­on in the history of the Catholic Church. She is located in Africa where she teaches young women about the Bible and Christiani­ty and works with a community of Pygmies on education and agricultur­al initiative­s in the equatorial forest.
 ?? SISTER LUZIA PREMOLI VIA AP ?? Sister Luzia Premoli takes a selfie with a young girl Feb. 12 in the village of Bagandou in the Central African Republic. In 2014 Pope Francis appointed Premoli to a Vatican congregati­on and she became the first women in the history of the Catholic Church to take on this role.
SISTER LUZIA PREMOLI VIA AP Sister Luzia Premoli takes a selfie with a young girl Feb. 12 in the village of Bagandou in the Central African Republic. In 2014 Pope Francis appointed Premoli to a Vatican congregati­on and she became the first women in the history of the Catholic Church to take on this role.

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