Media CenterCarolyn Woo’s CNS Column – 'More' for Women in the Church

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By Dr. Carolyn Y. Woo

March 2015

With International Women's Day approaching on March 8th, I turn my thoughts to the important conversation about the role of women in the Church. Since Pope Francis called for including the perspectives of women in decision-making, this discussion has taken on even more significance. While the Holy Father has stated that the Church has no authority for the ordination of women priests, he noted that the engagement of women needs to go beyond "altar girls or the president of a charity, there must be more." ¹

As a woman president of a charity, I have been pondering this comment. Putting aside the ordination of women, what is the "more" that the Holy Father suggests? Is it a move beyond women's leadership of pastoral and social ministries to the consideration of where and how women can appropriately share in the governance of the Church? Is it an acknowledgement that for all the "doing" that women undertake to evangelize as parents and neighbors, serve as volunteers to sustain the vitality of the Church, or work in and lead Catholic organizations, it is time for women to have a "place at the table" where the Church does her thinking, teaching, and policy making?

As a woman who made my career in a traditional male sector (business school deanship), I have seen progress made in professional enclaves of western countries. Most people have moved beyond the question of whether women are as competent as men. Society has spoken to the inherent prejudice and injustice when access to roles of authority and influence is denied. Actions to ensure equality include mandatory inclusion of women candidates in searches, established pools of qualified women, metrics to monitor progress, as well as efforts to move women into pipelines for development and onto platforms that offer visibility.

These efforts that pivot on opportunities, rights, and remediation, important as they are, lack an integral dimension that must undergird the conversation about women in the Church. As the Church is the Body of Christ, a family, a community, the foundation of the conversation is first and foremost about relationship. How do the leaders of the institutional Church wish to engage women as cherished members of the family? Loved like sisters, daughters, mothers and friends? Welcomed as colleagues? Sought out for their gifts? Invited as partners for the mission?

My parents had a traditional Chinese marriage: my father delegated to my mother the duties for running a household and raising six children. He never took her advice on investments (which turned out to be quite good), nor solicited her thoughts when he held court on global affairs even though she read the newspapers daily. He shared the stress of his problems, but not the problem-solving part. I knew that was not enough for my flourishing nor for a joyful and lasting marriage.  I wanted to be a partner, not a subcontractor.

Catholic Relief Services runs a program "Faithful House" in Africa for couples that centers on communication: learning to listen and talk to each other. From the ensuing attention, understanding and engagement, the couples come to cherish each other; open up to each other on important issues of children and finances; take better care of each other; share dreams and fears; and turn to the other as partners with hope for a future and a sense of common purpose to bring this about.

Is this what the Holy Father meant by "more”? Could such collaboration, mutuality and shared responsibility happen more in the Church? Could women contribute more to the governance of the Church and the realization of the Church’s mission?

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(1): quote from Catholic Herald, 7/29/2013 in a press conference with Pope Francis on the flight back from World Youth Day in Rio.

Dr. Carolyn Y. Woo is the president & CEO of Catholic Relief Services, the official overseas humanitarian agency of the Catholic community in the United States. This article is part of her ongoing monthly column, Our Global Family, written for Catholic News Service. You can follow Dr. Woo on Twitter at @WooCRS.

Read Dr. Woo’s previous columns