The question was on the role of women in the Church. My reply is as follows:
The most significant sources of conflict within the Catholic Church today revolve around the role and status of women. Should women be allowed to become priests? Must women be prevented from using artificial means of birth control? Are women equal to men in all things?
In 1994, Pope John Paul II issued a statement to the effect that the Church had no authority to admit women to the priesthood and that the question would have to be put off indefinitely. It wasn’t quite an announcement made from a position of infallibility, though it comes very close and there is some debate as to whether it qualifies as an infallible pronouncement.
For all the women who hoped that they might one day become priests, this struck hard, not simply because it denied them their aspirations but also because it appeared to deny them even the dignity of having a debate about the matter. To this day people who attempt to argue that perhaps women are fit to be priests do so with the risk of losing the right to call themselves Catholic theologians.
In this, the forces of conservatism are definitely in charge — but what else could John Paul have done? As noted above, debates over the status of women are probably the most contentious in the Catholic Church. If John Paul had even merely allowed the debate to continue, it probably would have meant continued rancor that would have pulled Catholics apart; had he given even a hit of approval for the ordination of women, it would have been even worse. The reality is, as our former Holy Father indicated, the Church does not have the authority to change the priesthood. This was started by Jesus and He selected men, and that is why the Church retains a male only priesthood and episcopate.
The church was started by Paul/Saul, not Jesus. The earliest churches included women 100% percent this herasy was burned and butchered out of existance, see Cathars,and Manichaaean and Albigenes. All were subject to brutal extermination in 11th and 13 th century france.:wave: