Rolandus Bandinelli, the later Pope Alexander III, wrote his Stromata (=Commentaries on Laws) in Bologna in 1148 AD. It is basically a commentary on Gratian's Law Book.
Translation from the latin by John Wijngaards
There is no doubt that formerly there existed the custom of
ordaining deaconesses, that is: readers of the gospels. Because no deaconess
was allowed to be ordained before the age of forty and after ordination they
were forbidden to marry.
But women have no part in the order of the
priesthood, nor can they have it.
Note. Since he accepts that there were deaconesses in the early church, he restricts women from the priesthood, but not necessarily from the diaconate. However, mistakenly, he equates deaconesses with readers of the gospels.
On Causa 15, question 3, beginning.
It is shown in this chapter that if a woman has vowed abstinence from food or drink or dress or anything else except for the carnal debt with the consent of her husband, she need not observe the vow if he orders her to do the opposite. This meaning and the decree itself is clearly proved in these chapters. For a woman must always be subject to her husband as to her own head, as is being taught clearly in these five chapters
On Causa 33, question 5, chapter 11.
Wives may in no way be killed, but apart from the danger of death they can be punished to incarceration.
On Causa33, question 2, chapter 10.
Source: Ida Raming, The Exclusion of Women from the Priesthood, Scarecrow Press, Metuchen 1976, pp. 49-50.
|
|
|---|
Please, credit this document
as published by www.womenpriests.org!