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Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church | A Wisdom Archive on Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church |  | Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church A selection of articles related to Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church |  |
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Ordination of women, Ordination of women - Anglican Communion, Ordination of women - Buddhism, Ordination of women - Christianity, Ordination of women - Eastern Orthodox, Ordination of women - Islam, Ordination of women - Judaism, Ordination of women - Other communions, Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church, Ordination of women - Thailand, Christian views of women, Role of women in Judaism, Women as imams, Stained-Glass Ceiling
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church |  |  |  | Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - Christianity
Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church.
The ordination of women is much discussed in the Roman Catholic Church today, as vocations to the priesthood decline and with them access to the sacraments, most immediately the Eucharist. The official teaching of the Church is presented first, followed by the arguments for ordaining Catholic women and a few facts about the movement for change.
The Church teaching on the ordination of only men holds that maleness was integral to the personhood of both Jesus and ...
See also:Ordination of women, Ordination of women - Christianity, Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church, Ordination of women - Eastern Orthodox, Ordination of women - Anglican Communion, Ordination of women - Other communions, Ordination of women - Judaism, Ordination of women - Islam, Ordination of women - Buddhism, Ordination of women - Thailand Read more here: » Ordination of women: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - Christianity |
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 |  |  | Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - BuddhismThis ordination of women is currently and historically practised in some Buddhist regions and not in others.
The tradition of the ordained monastic community (sangha) began with Buddha, who established orders of Bhikkhu (monks) and later, after an initial reluctance, of Bhikkuni (nuns). The stories, sayings and deeds of some of the distinguished Bhikkhuni of early Buddhism are recorded in many places in the Pali Canon, most notably in the Therigatha. However, not only did the Buddha lay down more rules of discipline for the bhikkhuni (311 compared to the bhikkhu's 227), he also ...
See also:Ordination of women, Ordination of women - Christianity, Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church, Ordination of women - Eastern Orthodox, Ordination of women - Anglican Communion, Ordination of women - Other communions, Ordination of women - Judaism, Ordination of women - Islam, Ordination of women - Buddhism, Ordination of women - Thailand Read more here: » Ordination of women: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - Buddhism |
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 |  |  | Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - JudaismJewish tradition and law does not presume that women have more or less of an aptitude or moral standing required of rabbis. However, it has been the longstanding practice that only men become rabbis. This practice continues to this day within the Orthodox community but has been revised within non-Orthodox organizations. Reform Judaism created its first woman rabbi in 1972, Reconstructionist Judaism in 1974, and Conservative ...
See also:Ordination of women, Ordination of women - Christianity, Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church, Ordination of women - Eastern Orthodox, Ordination of women - Anglican Communion, Ordination of women - Other communions, Ordination of women - Judaism, Ordination of women - Islam, Ordination of women - Buddhism, Ordination of women - Thailand Read more here: » Ordination of women: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - Judaism |
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 |  |  | Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - IslamAlthough Muslims do not formally ordain religious leaders, the imam serves as a spiritual leader and religious authority. There is a current controversy among Muslims on the circumstances in which women may act as imams — that is, lead a congregation in salat (prayer). Three of the four Sunni schools, as well as many Shia, agree that a woman may lead a congregation consisting of women alone in prayer, although the Maliki school does not allow this. According to all currently existing traditional schools of Islam, a woman cannot lead a mixe ...
See also:Ordination of women, Ordination of women - Christianity, Ordination of women - Roman Catholic Church, Ordination of women - Eastern Orthodox, Ordination of women - Anglican Communion, Ordination of women - Other communions, Ordination of women - Judaism, Ordination of women - Islam, Ordination of women - Buddhism, Ordination of women - Thailand Read more here: » Ordination of women: Encyclopedia II - Ordination of women - Islam |
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