What do you call an excommunicated Catholic priest, ignorant of the
sacraments, who openly calls for the ordination of women? If you're the
Boston Globe, you call him a "prominent priest" who is "in good
standing." Then, for good measure, you entitle the article about
the priest,
"Priest takes church to task for not ordaining women." Good ...
grief.
The paper profiles dissident ex-priest Roy Bourgeois, a man ignorant
of the teachings of the Church to which he was ordained. And the author of the slanted
piece, Globe religion reporter
Michael Paulson,
fails to fully "take Bourgeois to task" for being so oblivious of such a
fundamental facet of Church teaching.
While Paulson accurately quotes John Paul II's 1994 letter
"Ordinatio Sacerdotalis" that "the Church has no authority
whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women," Paulson
neglects a very important fact. In the Catholic
faith, "Holy Orders" is a
sacrament, and sacraments were instituted by Jesus himself.
This is the important reason why the Church simply does not have
the authority to change something Jesus instituted. For example, the
Church could not decide tomorrow that it will baptize with goat milk
instead of water. It just can't do that. The reason is much
deeper than just "tradition and the fact that Jesus' apostles were
male." Got it, Michael?
To read more about the misguided and unmindful Bourgeois, check out
"Roy Bourgeois, aka Jimmy Carter with a Roman collar," by Carl Olson
at the Ignatius Press blog.
Finally ... The fact that Paulson comes across as
cheerleading for Bourgeois' cause does nothing for the reputation that
the Boston Globe has a long and deep animus for the Catholic Church. (And this
reputation goes back waaaay back before the scandals hit in 2002.)