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Does the Catholic Church have priests, however, women?

No and never will be, The reason that women should not be ordained because they are not men. It sounds politically incorrect, right? But the fact is that God created men to be men and women to be women. When God chose to embody not only choose to become a human being, but chose to become a man. The same way you chose to incarnate in a particular time, place, people, family, and women, so it opted to become a man, the man Christ Jesus (1 Tim. 2:5). Thus, human beings who serve as priests in the person of Christ are men and not women.
  This surprising characteristic of God is not confined to elect men to become priests. To demonstrate the proponents of the ordination of women, can revolve around the question and ask what it is that makes men unfit to bear children. Surely a man is as strong as a woman physically and psychologically and emotionally capable of the demands of giving birth. Surely he is not inferior to a woman. Is not it unfair to the men that only women can bear children?
  This line of absurd logic low, because women have children is a natural fact of life, something easily seen and understood. To shake his fist at the sky and demand equal rights for men to give birth is to rail against the natural order. At this point you can establish that the men were priests supernatural is a fact of life, and to object to it is to oppose the supernatural order. The fact that the supernatural order can not be seen and is not as easily understood as the natural order does not mean that there is no supernatural order

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22 comments for “Does the Catholic Church have priests, however, women?”


  1. Sentinel (TRC) says:

    Nope.

  2. Sick Puppy says:

    No, never

  3. Archangel of SA says:

    No!

  4. liddabet says:

    NO, and you know very well (rolling eyes … what a troublemaker …)

  5. Daewen, A.R.T. says:

    Impossible because Christianity is based on patriarchal grounds, thus putting men in front and behind the women.

  6. darkange says:

    No, and it will not because that idea is not biblical
      The women in the priesthood
      Gen. 3:15, Luke 1:26-55, John 19:26, Rev. 12:1 - Mary is the greatest creation of God, was the person closest to Jesus, but Jesus did not choose to be priest. God chose only men to be priests to reflect the complementarity of the sexes. As the man (the royal priest) gives life to the natural woman in the conjugal partnership, the ministerial priest is the supernatural life in the New Covenant sacraments.
      Judges 17:10, 18:19 - fatherhood and priesthood are synonymous. Micah says: "Stay with me, and my father and a priest." Fathers / priests give life, and mothers receive and nurture life. This reflects our Father God who gives the life of grace through the priesthood of her Divine Son, and Mother Church receives the life of grace and feeding their children. In short, women can not be priests because women can not be parents.
      Mark 16:9, Luke 7: 37-50, John 8:3-11 - Jesus allowed women to join in their unique mission, beyond the glorification of cultural norms. His decision not to order the woman had nothing to do with culture. The writers of the Gospels is also clear that women participate in the ministry of Jesus and, unlike men, never betrayed Jesus. Women have always maintained the highest esteem in the Church (eg, the holiest of the Church and the model of faith is a woman, the constant teaching of the Church on the dignity of motherhood, the Church of understanding of humanity united as the bride of Christ, etc.).
      Mark 14:17,20, Luke 22:14 - the language "the twelve" and "apostles," shows Jesus Eucharistic holy priesthood in charge, giving orders to men.
      Gen. 14:10, Heb. 5:6,10, 6:20, 7:15,17 - Jesus, the Son of God, is both king and priest after the priest-king Melchizedek. Jesus embodies both the priesthood and monarchy parentage.
      Gen. 22:9-13 - as announced, our redemption God chose to be secured by the sacrifice of love that the Son is the Father.
      Matt. 26:26, Mark 14:22, Luke 22:19 - because the priest acts in persona Christi in offering to the Father, the priest can not be a woman.
      Mark 3:13 - Jesus selected the apostles, "as he desired," according to his will and not according to the demands of their culture. Because Jesus acted according to His will was perfectly united to the Father, we can not criticize Jesus' selection of men to be his priests without criticizing God.
      John 20:22 - Jesus breathed only 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 of the priestesses of paganism that existed at the time. A female priesthood would be a return to non-Christian practices. The sacred tradition of a male priesthood and the Church has existed for 2000 years.
      1 Cor. 14:34-35 - Paul says a woman is not allowed to preach the word of God in the Church. It has always been the tradition of the Church by the priest or deacon only (ordered a male) to read and preach the Gospel.
      1 Tim. 2:12 - Paul also said that a woman is not allowed to hold authority in the teaching of the Church. Can you imagine how much Mary, Mother of God, would have been able to teach Christians about his Son Jesus in the Church? However, he is not allowed to hold this kind of teaching authority in the Church.
      Rom. 16:1-2 - while many Protestants point to terminate this verse in the tradition of the Church, the priesthood of a man, Diaconis, like Phoebe, were assistants to the priests (eg the preparation of naked women for a baptism order to avoid scandal). However, these helpers were never ordered.
      Luke 2:36-37 - prophetesses, like Anna, the woman who was devoted to religious life, but were not sorted.
      Isaiah 3:12 - Isaiah complains that the priests of ancient Israel had their authority usurped by women, and this was at the height of Israel's covenant apostasy.

  7. Daver says:

    Will never be a dit.

  8. Mim says:

    No, I mean the nuns, priests but not women

  9. Christopher B says:

    have nun! get it?

  10. Politically Incorrect says:

    No and never will.

  11. Thomas says:

    Nope.

  12. SheIsn't Well says:

    No, but I am sure that they have to break the branches are remaking the Catholic faith to allow women priests.

  13. Leika M says:

    No

  14. Cliona says:

    The Catholic Church has defined as an article of faith that the Church has no authority to order the women. This change can not and will not change. Ever.

  15. PaulCyp says:

    No.

  16. Emily says:

    Do not they have Internet? is easier and faster to find the answer with a search instead of trolling here

  17. True Catholicism † says:

    Nope. Not that I know. Although there are nuns.

  18. ♥<3<3<3♥ says:

    No, it is not allowed

  19. sweetpea says:

    If!

  20. King Leonidas says:

    Perhaps the most gay …. JK JK! In fact, fail
      what I write …. eh ..

  21. A friendly Jihad says:

    yes, and fruity …



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