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Sunday, October 29, 2023

Highlights and Presentations of Roman Catholic Women Priests in Rome During Synod in October 2023

Video of Group Conversation on Oct. 29, 2023 on Highlights and Presentations

https://youtu.be/_PAuAtD-FBk




Living Gospel Inclusivity and Equality Now https://youtu.be/LNffQvJCMGo?si=0JDcfe_Sim79KxZR



 

Drawing by Gary Harness

Living Gospel Equality and Inclusivity Now- Bridget Mary Meehan

(Talk in Rome for Spirit Unbounded, Oct. 13, 2023)


This lovely drawing by artist Gary Harness of a woman priest walking on water is a powerful symbol for me.  Every day Roman Catholic Women Priests face the challenge of patriarchal resistance to co-create a new model of ministry that honors the gifts of all God’s people and to provide a place for everyone at the table especially the marginalized and excluded.  


According to the story of Jesus walking toward the disciples on a stormy sea, Peter responds to Jesus’ invitation to “come” by leaping out of the boat and walking on water. (MT: 14:22-32)


Like Peter responding to the Spirit’s call, Roman Catholic Women Priests are coming out of the patriarchal boat and challenging an exclusive male priesthood by ordaining women for public ministry in a companionship of equals. 


This prophetic call has placed us on the edge of the inside of the Church as we follow the teachings and example of Jesus that sets us free to love and to set others free from laws and structures that oppress.


 “Outside the camp”, writes Richard Rohr, “is a prophetic position on the edge of the inside, which is described by the early Israelites as “the tent of meeting outside the camp” (Exodus 33:7). Even though this tent is foldable, moveable, and disposable, it is still a meeting place for “the holy” which is always on the move and out in front of us. “


In this Synod, Pope Francis has called for “enlarging the tent,” to create a Church where all are welcome. 


This is what Roman Catholic Women Priests have been doing for 21 years

We foster radical hospitality in the community of the baptized by inviting everyone to celebrate sacraments including LGBTQ+, the divorced and remarried, and all who no longer feel at home in the Church. 


I first experienced my call to ordination when I was a pastoral associate at Ft. Myer Chapel in Arlington, Virginia in the 1980’s. At that time, there was a priest shortage, so my job description included everything except presiding at Mass and sacraments. Often, when I conducted a communion service in the absence of a Catholic priest, the people would express their gratitude for the “lovely Mass.” Even though I made it clear that this was a Communion Service, they often called it a Mass. So, it dawned on me- if only- I could be ordained they would easily accept me as their priest.  And that would happen only if I left my comfort zone and was ordained in another denomination. 


Then that call to Ordination finally came. In 2005 I was invited by a group of women from different faith traditions in our Florida community to lead discussions on women in the Bible. During one of these sessions, I shared with them that I was invited to attend the first North American ordinations of Roman Catholic Women Priests, on the St. Lawrence Seaway. The women were delighted and told me that not only should I attend, but that I should be ordained and that they wanted me to be their priest! One woman even donated her frequent flyer miles so I could fly free to Canada. 


I was inspired by the courage of the nine women who were ordained on the St. Lawrence River in the first North American Ordination of Roman Catholic women Priests. I knew then that it was time for me to jump out of the boat and prepare for Ordination. 


On July 31, 2006 I was ordained a priest by three women bishops, Patricia Fresen, Gisela Forster, and Ida Raming.  The ordination took place in Pittsburgh, on the river boat “Majestic.” As the bishops and over a hundred people laid hands on us, I felt Spirit’s presence moving through all of us like an electrical current in what I  call- a holy shakeup!


After returning to my home in Florida, I received a telephone call from Dick Fisher asking when I was going to schedule Mass. A few weeks later, six people gathered around my dining room table to celebrate our first house church liturgy. We named our community Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community (lovingly nicknamed MMOJ). 


After our local Bishop, Frank Dewane warned Catholics not to attend our Masses because they were not real Masses and did not count, our weekly gathering outgrew my mobile home. This growth led us to rent St. Andrew United Church of Christ in Sarasota for our Saturday evening liturgy. When the bishop threatened to excommunicate everyone who came to our first ordination over two hundred people filled the pews.   Every time the bishop criticized us or threatened excommunication, our community tripled in size! In my experience, hierarchical opposition to women priests sometimes has been the gift that keeps on giving! The call for the full equality of women and for gender justice is the voice of God in our times that no one can silence.


I am a member of the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests, which is part of the international RCWP movement that began in 2002 with the ordination of seven women on the Danube. Our first women bishops were ordained by an anonymous Roman Catholic male bishop from a well- known line of apostolic succession. On April 19, 2009, I was ordained a bishop by women bishops who were ordained by Bishop X. 

Therefore, our ordinations are valid, but in violation of Church law. Canon 1024, states that only a baptized man can receive Holy Orders. 

In 2008, the Vatican issued a decree of automatic excommunication for the ordination of a woman. We reject this unjust punishment rooted in sexism. Women priests practice prophetic obedience to the Spirit by breaking an unjust man-made law in order to change it. We affirm the Church’s teaching of the primacy of conscience. Our movement offers a path toward gender justice and the healing of centuries-old misogyny in the institutional Church. 

We walk in the footsteps of heroic women saints like Hildegard of Bingen, Joan of Arc, Mother Theodore Guerin and Mother Mary Mackillop who followed their consciences and withstood hierarchical oppression including interdict, excommunication and death. 

Church leaders have reversed outdated teachings, unjust laws and harsh punishments in the past. Sometimes this happens when the person is safely dead! In Joan of Arc’s case, she was declared a saint after being burned at the stake. In our times, Pope Benedict canonized St. Hildegard of Bingen and the two formerly excommunicated nuns, Mother Theodore Guerin from the United States and Mother Mary MacKillop from Australia. Apparently, excommunication is not a barrier to sainthood! 

Women priests are renewing sacramental theology and liturgical rites by emphasizing a theology of blessing, accompaniment and community empowerment. We are turning the pyramid of hierarchical domination into open, participatory circles in which the community of believers makes decisions about ministries, spiritual programs, liturgical celebrations, and governance. 

For example, at our ordinations, after the bishop lays hands on the Ordinand, the entire community is invited to do so too. For me, the highlight of every ordination is watching the faces of people as they bless the newly ordained. In a people-empowered Church, the community is taking their rightful role in affirming the call to ordination in communities of equals. 

I will never forget seeing Marie weep after receiving communion in our house church. She said that after a hostile encounter with a priest years ago, she felt unworthy to receive the Eucharist in her parish community, but  now knew that she was accepted in a caring faith community. 


During COVID, my neighbor, Pearl, asked me to baptize her grandson, Champ, in her home. As we gathered around in a circle on her lanai, I began by affirming that Champ was loved by God from the first moment of his existence and now welcomed into the Christian community by his family and friends. I invited the baby’s mother to pour the water as I recited the words. Grandmother Pearl and the entire family participated in the anointing with oil.  


When people are sick and infirm, I gather with their family and friends in their own surrounding to celebrate the sacrament of the anointing of the sick in a communal setting, inviting others to also anoint and pray together for healing and wholeness. 


When my friend, Jack Duffy, one of the founding members of MMOJ community was dying in July of this year, his adult children asked to receive the Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick with their Dad. As they said goodbye to Jack. I sat with the children and the dog on his bed, and cried with them. Before cremation, we gathered again to say a final farewell to his earthly remains and to affirm our eternal connection in the community of saints. 


One time I co-officiated with a Lutheran pastor at a Catholic Mass at a large wedding on Englewood Beach in Florida. Sheila, the bride, had been married three times and was not interested in jumping through the annulment hoops. Now in her seventies, she met Ed, the love of her life and wanted both the Lutheran minister and me to co-preside at a ecumenical liturgy that reflected both of their faith traditions.


In June of this year, I took care of my dear friend Peg in her home during the last two weeks of her life. Peg was a support member of the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests from the beginning days of the movement who made things run smoothly and efficiently.  She decided that she would like to be present at her own Celebration of Life. 


So, together, we planned a beautiful Eucharistic Liturgy and invited her friends, colleagues and women priests to participate on Zoom. We sang her favorite songs, viewed a special video called “Soul Sister” that I had created for her featuring photos from different times in her life. During the homily time, everyone was invited to share tender words of gratitude and love. We saw tearful faces and heard many wonderful heart-warming stories about Peg and the impact she had on so many lives. As I anointed her body, the entire gathering held out their hands in blessing.  When Peg held up the Cup at the Consecration, she embodied the love of the feminine divine embracing and connecting us spiritually forever.


Roman Catholic Women Priests are redefining the ancient tradition of Eucharistic table sharing that builds community wherever we are including cyberspace. Like Jesus’ followers in the first centuries, we are gathering together to break open our lives, to share bread and wine in memory of Jesus, to reconcile and heal each other, and to live the Christ-Presence in our lives.

Since COVID shuttered Churches, our community has become a Church without walls. Our weekly celebration of Eucharist occurs through a live online gathering in which the priest and online community participate in a shared homily and pray the words of consecration of the bread and wine that each member brings to the celebration. Then each member of the community receives Communion in their own home. 

In our Eucharistic gatherings there has been a growing awareness that the Real Presence of Christ is experienced not only in the bread and wine that we consecrate, but also in the words we say to each other when we receive Communion: “you are the Body of Christ,” or, “You are the face of God.” The experience of the Real Presence of Christ in us is drawing us more deeply into the Divine Mystery in which we live and move and have our being beyond anything we can describe or even imagine. 

Theologians today are reimagining the Eucharist as a profound act of cosmic love in which the whole expanding universe- all the stars, galaxies, black holes, and the entire planet- are present. 

In the encyclical Laudato Si, Pope Francis wrote: “In the Eucharist, the whole cosmos gives thanks to God. Indeed, the Eucharist is itself an act of cosmic love.” 

In this mystical vision of Eucharist, the Real Presence of Christ encompasses all people and all creation in an ever- expanding act of transforming love. 

The two-year Synod -that includes women as voting members for the first time- is a positive step forward for gender justice. I hope our brother, Francis’ call for an open dialogue with the marginalized includes Roman Catholic Women Priests. 

Here we are! We are ready! 

We come from the inside edge to share our lived experiences of widening the Church’s tent by providing a spiritual home where everyone is welcome, and where justice and equality for women is a lived reality!

Come join us on this exciting journey. Get out of the boat and walk on water with us!! 


New York Times

Bishop Theodora next to St. Praxedis , Mary of Nazareth, St. Prudential in St. Praxedis Church in Rome

I had a conversation with Bishop Raul Vera at the break time requesting a meeting with Pope Francis to share our stories and to lift all punishments against us. 


Bishop emeritus of Saltillo-Mexico Raul Vera was present for this presentation. I had a wonderful conversation with him about our movement.


Secretarial international pot la solidaridad con Los pueblos Oscar Arnulfo Romero

Veraraul@me.com

Secretary: jcampbel@me.com Jacqueline Campbell 




This Program on Roman Catholic Women Priests was held at Casa Bonus Pastor, a Catholic Seminary in the Diocese in Rome on October 11, 2023


9:00 AM – 10:00 AM meet and greet, interviews with press


10:00  - Opening Prayer 


Holy One, you inspire women priests to create a church for everyone where all are welcome to celebrate sacraments. We pray that during this synodal dialog the Roman Catholic Church may truly expand the tent by promoting the full equality of women and all genders in ordained ministry. 


May we walk together in a spirit of hope to include all voices and foster your kindom of radical justice, loving inclusion and diversity. Amen.


Opening Song: Courageous Women by Jan Novotka




10:15 - Welcome and Video on Women Priests Redefining Ministry followed by questions and discussion (Bridget Mary Meehan)



10:45 - An Inclusive Catholic Community shares what it means to be church in the 21st Century (Mary Theresa Streck)
https://youtu.be/j4TVKIIUjxE

11:15  - Women priests in Europe - PowerPoint (Christine Moreira)

11:45 - Women priests in Latin America (Olga Lucia Alvarez)



12:00 - Questions and Open Discussion (Team)

12:30 PM – 2:00 PM – lunch, informal discussions and interviews with press.


2:00 PM – 4:00 PM – repeat of morning program


4:00PM- 4:30PM - Time for Conversations and Interviews


4:30 PM - 5:30 PM Joint Liturgy with the Catholic Women's Council on the theme of abuse of women in the Church: 'Lament, Resistance and Healing'


5:30 PM -  Women's Ordination Conference film, 'Women Talking,' will be screened, followed by a discussion.


6:30 PM -9:00 PM - dinner, informal discussions and interviews with press.


For more information contact:

Rev. Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan – sofiabmm.bmm@gmail.com

What's App: +1 703-505-0004

Rev. Dr. Mary Theresa Streck – mtstreck@gmail.com

Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests

https://arcwp.org

 


Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Vatican summit tackles women’s ordination with a nod from Pope Francis The synod on synodality gets the ball rolling on the question of female clergy, but the final decision will be up to Pope Francis, by Claire Giangravé

 Thank you, Claire Giangravé for this hopeful article! 

 I sensed an openness and enthusiasm in my conversations with bishops and synodal delegates during the ten days I was in Rome in October. 
My prayer is that Pope Francis will be open to the Spirit speaking through  Roman Catholic Women Priests who have been creating a more loving, just and compassionate Church. 
For 21 years women priests have been working in our local areas to make a Church for everyone by baptizing children of parents who love their faith but do not attend a regular parish, by officiating at weddings of divorced and remarried, by anointing elders who had no parish community but wanted to receive the Anointing of the Sick and for the marginalized and excluded who wanted a Catholic faith community where they were warmly welcomed and not judged because of the sexual orientation. The list goes on and on. 
Why should we be heard? For all those reasons and because we are equal members of the Church by our baptism and minister on the inside edge of the Church fostering a wider tent in inclusive communities and ministries everyday! The  first step Francis could take  toward healing is to remove all canonical punishments against the members and supporters of our movement for following their consciences and leading the Church towards the full recognition of women and all genders in ordained ministry.
Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP

Monday, October 23, 2023

ARCWP/Catholic Women's Council Liturgy of Lament, Resistance and Healing at Casa Bonus Pastor, Oct. 11, 2023

 At the conclusion of our presentation about the inclusive communities and justice ministries of Roman Catholic Women Priests, we celebrated a Liturgy of Lament, Resistance and Healing with the International Council of Catholic Women. Our program on women priests and this liturgy took place at Casa Bonus Pastor, a Vicariate of the Diocese of Rome, which is an active residence of  5 seminarians. This is a historic first for the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests and the Diocese of Rome as well as the Council of Catholic Women.

May this spirit of dialogue continue to evolve in our Church!






Liturgy of Lament, Resistance and Healing


Preparation of the space

Altar in the middle with flowers, plants, bread and wine, water, the posters of the organizations, fabrics of the different countries. 


The Liturgy has three parts: lament, resistance, and healing.


  1. 1. Welcome and initial rite  


Welcome words (Virginia or Cathy)


Beginning rite (Lubia)



We greet the four cardinal points, we invoke the presence of the ancestors: the ancestors of the east and we bow towards the east and ring a bell or rattle... We remember the ancestors, those who preceded us on the path.


Prayer (Together)

Living, loving Sophia, we thank you your presence in our midst, as we gather in solidarity to affirm and celebrate the dignity and equality of women. We recognize the gifts, efforts and achievements of those here, and across time, and around the world. Fill us with the grace, wisdom, vitality and enthusiasm of your Spirit. Confirm and strengthen our vision. Sustain and strengthen our hope as we work to change history in our Church, and in our world.


  1. 2. LAMENT


A litany of grief and gladness (2) - Nicola Slee  (Mary Teresa and Bridget alternate verses)


For every woman

forbidden to preside at the Eucharistic table,

banned from breaking holy bread

and barred from offering the sacred cup:

   mourning and mercy.


For every woman 

who presided at her own supper table,

who fed the hungry with good things

and succoured the lonely with the cup of life:

  glory and thanksgiving.


For every woman

denied the right to pronounce absolution,

forbidden to anoint the sick with holy chrism,

and prohibited from counselling those in distress:

  mourning and mercy.


For every woman

who crooned blessing on a sick child,

Whose hands ministered to the dying and brought relief,

and whose skill administered the healing of touch and tenderness:

  glory and thanksgiving.


For very woman 

denied the voice to speak out her own religious truth,

refused the opportunity to teach her wisdom,

and ridiculed for her theological insights and ideas:

 mourning and mercy.


For every woman

who claimed her authority in vision, prophecy and dream,

who spoke out her truth in hymnody, verse and story,

and cherished the privilege of prayer and knowledge of the divine:

  glory and thanksgiving.


We grieve for all that has been lost, never to be recovered.

We glory in all that has been recovered, never again to be lost.


First reading from the Gospel attributed to Mary Magdalen (Cathy)

Peter: 

“Sister, we know that the Saviour greatly loved you above all other women, so tell us what you remember of his words that we ourselves do not know or perhaps have never heard.”

And she began to express these things to them:

I saw the Master in a vision and I said to him, ‘Lord I see you now in a vision.’

And he answered me, ‘You are blessed, Mary, since the sight of me does not disturb you. For where the heart is, there is the treasure.’ 

Mary Magdalen: 

“What has bound me has been slain… I am freed from Ignorance… From this moment onward, I go forward into the season of the great Age, the Aeon, and there, where time rests in stillness in the eternity of time, I will repose in silence.”  

And having said this Mary fell silent since it was to this point that the Saviour had brought her.   (From the third dialogue)

Andrew’s response was to say to the rest of the brothers:

“Say what you will about all that she has said to us, I for one do not believe that the Saviour said such things to her, for they are strange and appear to differ from the rest of his teachings.”

After consideration, Peter’s response was similar:

“Would the Saviour speak these things to a woman in private without openly sharing them so that we too might hear? Should we listen to her at all, and did he choose her over us because she is more worthy than we are?”

Then Mary began to weep, saying to Peter: 

“My brother, what are you thinking? Do you imagine that I have made these things up myself within my heart, or that I am lying about the Saviour?”

Speaking to Peter, Levi also answered him:

“You have always been quick to anger, Peter, and now you are questioning her in exactly that same manner, treating this woman as if she were an enemy. If the Saviour considered her worthy, who are you to reject her? He knew her completely and loved her faithfully.

We should be ashamed of ourselves! As he taught us, we should be clothed instead with the cloak of true Humanity, and following his command announce Good News without burdening it further with rules or laws he himself did not give us.” 

(From the fourth dialogue)


Second Reading from Luke’s Gospel (Lk 23:27-28) 

There followed a great multitude of people, and of women who wept and lamented.

But Jesus turned to them and said: “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for your children.” 


Response: We remember and love you. 

(Regina and Kate alternate)


  1. 1. Weep for the women battered and bruised, broken and oppressed. Response
  2. 2. Weep for the women who have been abused spiritually, emotionally, intellectually and physically. Response
  3. 3. Weep for the women, who from the cradle to the grave, will never feel quite good enough. Response
  4. 4. Weep for the women who have lost their confidence and “fire”. Response
  5. 5. Weep for the women whose identity has been crushed. Response
  6. 6. Weep for the women whose God is not accepted by the patriarchy. Response
  7. 7. Weep for the women who were burnt at the stake for their healing abilities and for speaking about their God experiences in prayer. Response
  8. 8. Weep for the women whose babies were stolen from them. Response
  9. 9. Weep for the women and children who were abused and raped in our institutions. Response
  10. 10. Weep for the women “trapped” in a sexist, patriarchal Church and society. Response
  11. 11. Weep for the women whose vocations to ministry have been denied by the Church. Response
  12. 12. Weep for the women who have been erased from history. Response
  13. 13. Weep for the women who were persecuted for protesting and challenging unjust structures. Response
  14. 14. Weep for the women who are patronized, passed over, underpaid, ignored, discriminated against, harassed, excluded, exploited, abused, violated, raped… Response


Silent Reflection


  1. 3. RESISTANCE


Standing on the Shoulders - Joyce Johnson Rouse (Earth Mama)

https://tinyurl.com/3zu6a35f 


I am standing on the shoulders of the ones who came before me

I am stronger for their courage, I am wiser for their words

I am lifted by their longing for a fair and brighter future

I am grateful for their vision, for their toiling on this Earth


We are standing on the shoulders of the ones who came before us

They are saints and they are humans, they are angels, they are friends

We can see beyond the struggles and the troubles and the challenge

When we know that by our efforts things will be better in the end


They lift me higher than I could ever fly

Carrying my burdens away

I imagine our world if they hadn't tried

We wouldn't be here celebrating today


I am standing on the shoulders of the ones who came before me

I am honored by their passion for our liberty

I will stand a little taller, I will work a little longer

And my shoulders will be there to hold the ones who follow me

They lift me higher than I could ever fly

Carrying my burdens away

I imagine our world if they hadn't tried

We wouldn't be so very blessed today


I am standing on the shoulders of the ones who came before me

I am honored by their passion for our liberty

I will stand a little taller, I will work a little longer

And my shoulders will be there to hold the ones who follow me


Prayer (Together)

O Holy One, You give us life, and we live and breathe with your Spirit. You call us good, and we live as equal partners. You share the earth with us, and we, as co-creators with you, complement your ongoing activity of creation.

Among all our blessed ancestors, we celebrate the women who firmly confronted the structures of oppression in their times with unique vision and compassion: 

Sarah, Deborah, Judith, Miriam, Ruth, Esther, Anna, Miriam of Nazareth, Mary Magdalen, Paula, Brigid, Julian, Hildegard, Margarite, Joan, Catherine of Siena, Teresa, Louise de Marillac, Mary Bartola, Katherine Zell, Mary of the Cross, Bakhita, Dorothy Day, Caroline Chisholm…

United with them, with WomenSpirit rising, with our Mother-Planet and her people everywhere, with one another and You, O Holy One, our spirits dance and sing.

We give grateful thanks for all the women who have gone before us, opening for all of us a path to life. We are thankful for all the women who risked everything they had so that all of us could live in a better, more just world.


Third reading from  John (4, 3-41) (Gloria)


Jesus came to a town in Samaria called Sychar, near the plot of ground Jacob had given to his son Joseph. Jacob’s well was there, and Jesus, tired as he was from the journey, sat down by the well. It was about noon.

When a Samaritan woman came to draw water, Jesus said to her, “Will you give me a drink?” (His disciples had gone into the town to buy food.)

The Samaritan woman said to him, “You are a Jew and I am a Samaritan woman. How can you ask me for a drink?” (For Jews do not associate with Samaritans.)

 Jesus answered her, “If you knew the gift of God and who it is that asks you for a drink, you would have asked him and he would have given you living water.”

“Sir,” the woman said, “you have nothing to draw with and the well is deep. Where can you get this living water? Are you greater than our father Jacob, who gave us the well and drank from it himself, as did also his sons and his livestock?”

Jesus answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”

The woman said to him, “Sir, give me this water so that I won’t get thirsty and have to keep coming here to draw water.”

He told her, “Go, call your husband and come back.”

“I have no husband,” she replied.

Jesus said to her, “You are right when you say you have no husband. The fact is, you have had five husbands, and the man you now have is not your husband. What you have just said is quite true.”

“Sir,” the woman said, “I can see that you are a prophet. Our ancestors worshiped on this mountain, but you Jews claim that the place where we must worship is in Jerusalem.”

“Woman,” Jesus replied, “believe me, a time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. You Samaritans worship what you do not know; we worship what we do know, for salvation is from the Jews. Yet a time is coming and has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in the Spirit and in truth, for they are the kind of worshipers the Father seeks. God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in the Spirit and in truth.”

The woman said, “I know that Messiah” (called Christ) “is coming. When he comes, he will explain everything to us.”

Then Jesus declared, “I, the one speaking to you—I am he.”

Just then his disciples returned and were surprised to find him talking with a woman... 

Then, leaving her water jar, the woman went back to the town and said to the people, “Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did. Could this be the Messiah?” They came out of the town and made their way toward him.

Meanwhile his disciples urged him, “Rabbi, eat something.”

…“My food,” said Jesus, “is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish his work.”

Many of the Samaritans from that town believed in him because of the woman’s testimony, “He told me everything I ever did.” So when the Samaritans came to him, they urged him to stay with them, and he stayed two days. And because of his words many more became believers.


Sharing

Consuelo starts with a small commentary 


Litany in celebration of the women of the Bible (Ivenise and Mónica)


Response: Walk with us. 

  1. 1. Midwives of Egypt, you defended the offspring of the chosen people. Response
  2. 2. Miriam, prophetess, and singer of the Exodus, you celebrated the triumph of Yahweh with your musical instruments, sharing joy with all the people. Response
  3. 3. Deborah, judge of Israel, you united the tribes to strengthen their identity and defeat their enemies. Response
  4. 4. Judith, you took up the defense against the enemy on behalf of your people, when the elders had no answer or decision. Response
  5. 5. Young people of the processional choirs, with your songs and dances you rejoiced on the feasts of Yahweh. Response
  6. 6. Elizabeth, cousin of Mary, in your advanced age, you were blessed with pregnancy; encouraged, reassured, and rejoiced with Mary in her pregnancy; and raised the great prophet, John the Baptist. Response
  7. 7. Samaritan woman, you met and debated with Jesus and invited those in your village to meet him and hear him for themselves. Response
  8. 8. Syrophoenician woman, you challenged Jesus to look beyond his own Jewish people in his ministry. Response
  9. 9. Mary, you ignored the conventions of your time and prioritized listening and learning from Jesus. Response
  10. 10. Joanna, Susanna, Salome, Mary of Clopas, and other women disciples and friends of Jesus, you were the first deaconesses of the Church, you paid for Jesus’ ministry, and you had the courage, loyalty and love to remain with him in his dying. Response
  11. 11. Mary Magdalene, you found Jesus alive on Easter morning and was entrusted to tell the Good News to the other disciples. Response
  12. 12. Priscilla, house church leader and teacher in shared ministry with your husband, you spread the Gospel throughout Europe and Asia Minor, forming communities. Response
  13. 13. Housewives of the first communities, you opened your homes for the sharing of the Word and the breaking of bread. Response
  14. 14. Lydia, merchant of purple dye, you communicated the faith to all your household and offered hospitality to the growing Christian community. Response
  15. 15. Deacon Phoebe and other deaconesses of the first communities, you served the neediest and protected many brothers and sisters. Response
  16. 16. Mary, mother of John Mark, you gathered the Christian assembly for prayer in your home. Response
  17. 17. Mary, you sang God's praises, and celebrated the love poured out on all the humble who trusted in God. Response


  1. 4. HEALING


Whenever Women Gather - Jay Murnane (Mary Teresa or Bridget)


Whenever women of thought gather

Thoughtful women

Horizons are stretched wider.

Whenever women of heart gather

Compassionate women

Tender-strong eyes open to injustices,

Making connections.

Whenever women of soul gather

Generous women

There is solidarity, and a wide embrace,

A fulcrum of possibility

Which can fell walls,

Set voices free,

Illuminate alternatives

And heal shattered hopes.

Whenever women of wisdom gather

Free women, 

daring women, 

ingenious women

there is a drumming

in cadence with the song

at the center of all:

a co-creativity


a rumbling

a crumbling

of business-as-usual

and powers that be.

Whenever women of spirit gather

Feisty women

Laboring women

There is a birthing.

There is life,

Sisters!


CWC Report

To highlight the work that has been done, the teaching and sharing that has nourished us in this Synod of women over the past two years across the globe, we have met here this evening from our different continents and been nourished further. Coming together virtually and in reality, is a healing experience. The text of the CWC Report of our international listening sessions was presented in Rome last October and is offered here as a symbol of our work. (Virginia or Teresa).


Blessing and Breaking of Bread (Together)

We give grateful thanks for all the women who have gone before us, opening for all of us a path to life. We are thankful for all the women who risked everything they had so that all of us could live in a better, more just world.

We are thankful for each other. May we be healing agents in our discipleship of Jesus.


We become body by sharing the bread. To break bread in solidarity is to be bread for others. Jesus set the example of this at his last supper and asked us to continue this sacred action in remembrance of him and his teaching. 

(Share the bread while Dime Cómo Ser Pan is being sound)


Dime Cómo Ser Pan (Tell me how to be bread) - Salomé Arancibita

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQQRt4G9Zb8


Dime cómo ser pan

Dime cómo ser pan

Cómo ser alimento

Que sacia por dentro

Que trae la paz


Dime cómo ser pan

Dime cómo ser pan

Dime cómo acercarme

A quien no tiene aliento

A quien cree que es cuento

El reír, el amar


Dime cómo ser pan

Dime cómo dejarme

Comer poco a poco

Entregándolo todo

Y llenándome más


Dime cómo ser pan

Dime cómo ser pan

Cómo ser para otros

En todo momento

Alimento y maná


Dime cómo ser pan

Dime cómo ser pan

Cómo ser para otros

En todo momento

Alimento y maná


Tú que eres el pan de la vida

Tú que eres la luz y la paz

Tú que empapas la tierra

Cuando llueves el cielo

Dime cómo ser pan

Tú que haces de mí tu reflejo

Tú que abrazas mi debilidad

Tú que sacias mi hambre

Cuando vuelvo de lejos

Dime cómo ser pan (bis)


Dime cómo ser pan

Que cura la injusticia

Dime cómo ser pan

Que crea libertad


Tell me how to be bread

Tell me how to be bread

How to be food

That satiates within

That brings peace


Tell me how to be bread

Tell me how to be bread

Tell me how to draw near

To the one who has no breath

To the one who thinks it's a fairy tale

To laugh, to love


Tell me how to be bread

Tell me how to let myself

Be eaten little by little

Giving it all away

And filling me up more


Tell me how to be bread

Tell me how to be bread

How to be for others

At all times

Food and manna


Tell me how to be bread

Tell me how to be bread

How to be for others

At all times

Food and manna


You who are the bread of life

You who are light and peace

You who drench the earth

When you rain down the sky

Tell me how to be bread

You who make me your reflection

You who embrace my weakness

You who satiate my hunger

When I return from afar

Tell me how to be bread (encore)


Tell me how to be bread

That heals injustice

Tell me how to be bread

That creates freedom

The Cup of blessing holds our unfulfilled hopes mixed with the wine of grace.


Silent Contemplation


Prayer of Blessing – Miriam Therese Winter

(Pray together)

May the blessing of God go before you

May her grace and peace abound

May her spirit live within you

May Her love wrap you ‘round

May Her blessing remain with you always

May you walk on holy ground.

Sending


Song: Power of Women – Karen Drucker (album Selfless)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKBRr5EFniQ


It's the power of women – united we stand
We're making a difference when we join hands
It's the power of women who will heal this world
The power of women – the power of women...

**

1. It's the Goddess, it's the matriarch, it's the maiden, it's the crone
Every colour, every race through the ages it's been shown
That women have compassion, women show the way
To a world that's filled with peace and love let me hear you say

* *

2. As we stand in this circle feeling our connection
We can feel the power move as we state our intention
To bring peace to this world and right all the wrongs
Joining now in sisterhood we lift our voice in song and sing

* *

We got the power to change the world so what are we gonna do?
First we have to realize that it's up to me and you
Every single day I'm gonna take the time to pray
And spread some loving kindness to each person along my way
Whatcha gonna do with your power?


Dance of blessing as we send one another forth.

We hold hands and dance (Brasilian song in Portuguese or African song)


ARCWP Novena 2024 - Mondays, 7:00PM EDT, Aug. 12- Oct. 7th, Praying for Women Priests and Upcoming Ordinations in August- October in U.S. and Rome,

 If you cannot join us on Mondays, please pray Novena alone or with others for special blessings on our Ordinands and their prophetic witnes...