Women Called to Catholic Priesthood - by Sharon Henderson Callahan & Jeanette Rodriguez (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Sharon Callahan and Jeanette Rodriguez explore the contexts, calls, journeys, spirituality, and theology of women called to priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church in this compelling and carefully crafted ethnographic work.
- Author(s): Sharon Henderson Callahan & Jeanette Rodriguez
- 184 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christianity
Description
About the Book
Callahan and Rodriguez explore the contexts, calls, journeys, spirituality, and theology of women called to priesthood in the Roman Catholic church in this compelling and carefully crafted ethnographic work. The authors encourage readers to thoughtfully engage the ecclesial challenges and spiritual renewal uncovered in these womenpriests' stories.Book Synopsis
Sharon Callahan and Jeanette Rodriguez explore the contexts, calls, journeys, spirituality, and theology of women called to priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church in this compelling and carefully crafted ethnographic work. Posing the questions of how womenpriests' stories illustrate both ecclesial challenges and spiritual renewal, the authors encourage readers to thoughtfully engage these women on their own terms.
Women Called to Catholic Priesthood draws on the stories of forty-two women serving in the United States, Canada, Colombia, Europe, and South Africa. Ranging in age from their early thirties to their late eighties, these women tell stories that help us understand the spirituality and deep sense of call womenpriests experience despite the challenges they face in challenging Roman Catholic canon law. Callahan and Rodriguez's work is both moving and timely as the global church engages in synod work aiming to discern where the Spirit of God is calling Roman Catholics in the twenty-first century.
Review Quotes
This book is an unmissable asset for anyone interested in the ordination of women. It documents, with incredible detail, the stories of forty-seven Catholic women who were ordained despite the opposition of the official church. It describes their call, their struggle to surmount barriers, their inner motivation, and the spirituality that guided and still guides them in their ministry. Fascinating and significant data, underpinned by the authors' highly professional scholarship and compassionate understanding of real people. --Dr. John Wijngaards, professor emeritus, Missionary Institute London; chair, Wijngaards Institute for Catholic Research
In a carefully crafted ethnographic study of the Roman Catholic Women Priests' movement, Callahan and Rodriguez offer a hopeful and joyful message to anyone who feels marginalized by institutional religion. --Gary Macy, professor emeritus of theology, Santa Clara University
Callahan and Rodriguez offer a stunning pneumatological and ethnographic reversal of expectation on the "ordination of women" question within the Roman Catholic Church by rigorously examining the ongoing ministries and "spirits" (1 John 4) of women ordained in apostolic succession (if contra legum, canon 1024). Scripturally, theologically, and phenomenologically, the authors provide ample testimony to Spirit's fruit and ecclesial renewal in (and because of) the faithful perseverance of over forty womenpriests living their priestly vocations. That this is done with such clear love of a church that refuses such women, even with theological-ecclesial integrity and prophetic challenge, makes this a compelling read and a remarkable testimony to God's ongoing work in the world, sometimes despite the church. --Lisa M. Hess, ordained clergywoman (PCUSA); professor of practical theology and contextual ministries, United Theological Seminary (Ohio), and author of A Companionable Way: Path of Devotion in Conscious Love