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While some Catholics and even non-Catholics today are asking if priests are necessary, especially given the ongoing sex-abuse scandal, The Roman Catholic Womanpriests (RCWP) looks to reframe and reform Roman Catholic priesthood, starting with ordained women. Womanpriest is the first academic study of the RCWP movement. As an ethnography, Womanpriest analyzes the womenpriests' actions and lived theologies in order to explore ongoing tensions in Roman Catholicism around gender and sexuality, priestly authority, and religious change. In order to understand how womenpriests navigate tradition and transgression, this study situates RCWP within post-Vatican II Catholicism, apostolic succession, sacraments, ministerial action, and questions of embodiment. Womanpriest reveals RCWP to be a discrete religious movement in a distinct religious moment, with a small group of tenacious women defying the Catholic patriarchy, taking on the priestly role, and demanding reconsideration of Roman Catholic tradition. Doing so, the women inhabit and re-create the central tensions in Catholicism today.
Women priests. --- Ordination of women --- Catholic Church. --- Roman Catholic Womenpriests-USA, Inc. --- Priestesses --- Women in the ministry --- Priests --- Women clergy --- Roman Catholic Womenpriests-USA, Incorporated --- Roman Catholic Women Priests-USA, Inc. --- RCWP-USA, Inc. --- Roman Catholicism. --- feminism. --- ordination. --- priesthood. --- sacraments. --- womanpriest. --- women.
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Many Americans assume that the Catholic Church is inherently conservative, based on its stances on abortion, contraception, and divorce. Yet there is a longstanding tradition of progressive Catholic movements in the United States that have addressed a variety of issues from labor, war, immigration, and environmental protection, to human rights, women's rights, exploitive development practices, and bellicose foreign policies. These Catholic social movements have helped to shift the Church from an institution that had historically supported incumbent governments and political elites to a Church that has increasingly sided with the vulnerable and oppressed. This book provides a concise history of progressively oriented Catholic Social Thought, which conveys the Catholic Church's position on a variety of social justice concerns. Sharon Erickson Nepstad introduces key papal encyclicals and other church documents, showing how lay Catholics in the United States have put these ideas into practice through a creative and sometimes provocative political engagement. Nepstad also explores how these progressive movements have pressured the religious hierarchy to respond to pressing social issues, such as women's ordination, conscription, and the morality of nuclear deterrence policies. 'Catholic Social Activism' vividly depicts how these progressive movements have helped to shape the religious landscape of the United States, and how they have provoked controversy and debate among Catholics and non-Catholics alike.
Church and social problems --- Christian sociology --- Catholic Church. --- Katholische Kirche --- Catholic Church --- USA --- United States. --- Catholic Climate Change. --- Catholic Social Teachings. --- Catholic Social Thought. --- Catholic Worker. --- Catholic feminism. --- Central America solidarity. --- Central America. --- César Chávez. --- Dolores Huerta. --- Dorothy Day. --- Environmentalism. --- Laudato Si. --- Mary Daly. --- National Religious Partnership for the Environment. --- New Sanctuary Movement. --- Pacem in Terris. --- Pax Christi. --- Pledge of Resistance. --- Plowshares movement. --- Pope Francis. --- Pope John XXIII. --- Pope Leo XIII. --- Pope Pius XI. --- Quadragesimo Anno. --- Rerum Novarum. --- Roman Catholic Womenpriests. --- Rosemary Radford Ruether. --- Sanctuary movement. --- School of the Americas Watch. --- Social Catholicism. --- United Farm Workers. --- Witness for Peace. --- Women-Church. --- contraception. --- draft board raids. --- draft card burnings. --- environmental movement. --- immigrant rights. --- immigration. --- just peace. --- just war doctrine. --- liberation theology. --- lived religion. --- nonviolence. --- ordination of women. --- pacifism. --- peace movements. --- reproductive rights. --- solidarity.
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