Rome makes this claim: A few heretical sects in the first centuries, especially Gnostic ones, entrusted the exercise of the priestly ministry to women: this innovation was immediately noted and condemned by the Fathers, who considered it as unacceptable in the Church. Inter Insigniores, § 6.
Rome quotes five sources. We know of them only through the severe disapproval with which they are noted by:
Conclusion: Irenaeus does not address the question of ordaining women as such. Among the Fathers quoted only Epiphanius argues the case against women priests explicitly. His arguments do not stand up to scrutiny.
Rome states: It is true that in the writings of the Fathers one will find the undeniable influence of prejudices unfavourable to women, but nevertheless, it should be noted that these prejudices had hardly any influence on their pastoral activity, and still less on their spiritual direction. Inter Insigniores, § 6.
Response: Rome misses the point entirely. Obviously, the Fathers of the Church did not totally exclude women from their pastoral activity and spiritual ministry. They may even, on occasion, have been kind, tolerant and gracious towards them. The point is that, in the general opinion of the Fathers, women could not be considered for ordination:
Such prejudice cannot be shown in detail to have been held by all Fathers of the Church in its three manifestations, often by lack of documentary evidence and by a lack of occasions when the prejudices would show up. The prejudices were so much part of the accepted culture and the social structures that they did not need to be fully expressed. Yet, the prejudices were always there and acted as the major block against promoting women to the priesthood.
Ambrosiaster (4th cent. AD) spoke for all of them when he said:
Women must cover their heads because they are not the image of God. They must do this as a sign of their subjection to authority and because sin came into the world through them. Their heads must be covered in church in order to honor the bishop. In like manner they have no authority to speak because the bishop is the embodiment of Christ. They must thus act before the bishop as before Christ, the judge, since the bishop is the representative of the Lord. Because of original sin they must show themselves submissive. How can anyone maintain that woman is the likeness of God when she is demonstrably subject to the dominion of man and has no kind of authority? For she can neither teach nor be a witness in a court nor exercise citizenship nor be a judge-then certainly not exercise dominion. On 1 Corinthians 14, 34.
Rome claims that at least St. Chrysostom was not biassed. Here are their exact words: St John Chrysostom, for his part, when commenting on chapter twenty-one of John, understood well that womens exclusion from the pastoral office entrusted to Peter was not based on any natural incapacity, since, as he remarks, even the majority of men have been excluded by Jesus from this immense task. De Sacerdotio 2, 2: PC 48, 663.
This is truly an amazing interpretation! For Chrysostom says just the opposite. The task of the priesthood is so demanding, he says, that no woman can match up to it. For those things which I have already mentioned might easily be performed by many even of those who are under authority, women as well as men; but when one is required to preside over the Church, and to be entrusted with the care of so many souls, the whole female sex must retire before the magnitude of the task, and the majority of men also. The addition that the task is too big for the majority of men also, is no consolation. The whole female sex falls short. Why, because they are inferior by nature! Read the whole passage in its context.
St. Chrysostom's real ideas about women are expressed as follows:
Notice, St. Chysostom's teaching here fails on many counts. It contradicts the inspired meaning of both the Genesis story and the Pauline passages 1 Corinthians 14,34-35 and 1 Timothy 2,11-15. It presumes the inferiority ascribed to women in Greek philosophy and in Roman law. To him, women were inferior by nature, by law and by God's punishment.
With such faulty cultural and religious ideas in his mind, how could Chrysostom ever have imagined that women might be ordained priests?
The so-called tradition of not ordaining women in the early Church is not a true Tradition at all. It is a practice due to social, cultural and religious prejudices.
John Wijngaards
Read also Patristic elements towards a theological anthropology of woman as a human being and as woman in her difference from man,, by Constantinos Yokarinis, lecture in Warsaw 1996.
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