Logo

Catholic and feminist: You got a problem with that?

Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Catholic and feminist: You got a problem with that?
Catholics ought to be loud and proud in the fight for women’s rights, argues a young feminist.

I wasn’t burning my training bras or hating men (they weren’t yet on my radar screen, anyway), but my feminism was ardently liberal and a huge reason I struggled with my faith.

Over the past few years, I have become more immersed in the Catholic world, and I’ve learned that I’m not the only one who struggles with faith and feminism. There are, of course, many who reject Catholicism outright because of the lack of women in top leadership, and a few who courageously fight to change the 2,000-year-old patriarchal institution.

On the other hand, it seems that many vocal Catholics are saying, “I’m not a feminist.” For whatever reason—it’s too radical, man-hating, or pro-choice—a number of Catholic men and women deny or qualify feminism. By doing so, though, they are only hurting themselves and their sisters.

It’s time more Catholics, both men and women, opened up the conversation between these two points of view. I will always hope the church will treat women in its ranks more equally, but in opening this conversation, I also have come to see a positive relationship between Catholicism and an active feminism that aims to protect the rights of the most vulnerable. Because women, and consequently their children, still suffer the effects of poverty and other injustices more than men do, Catholics must fight for them.

Realizing this has allowed me to be as proud of being a Catholic as I am of being a feminist. For other Catholics, I hope reflecting on faith and feminism moves them to declare themselves proud to be feminists as well.

Apopular Catholic alternative to feminism these days is “new feminism,” Pope John Paul II’s idea that women should embrace their “feminine genius,” or capacity for physical and spiritual motherhood. New feminists defend the dignity of women who choose to stay home, a personal decision I admire, though I would not agree that all women are blessed with feminine genius simply based on gender.

My mother stayed home for nearly 20 years raising my brother and me, but she taught me that feminism extended beyond home life. Feminism is activism—protecting the rights of women in both the public and private sphere. As a feminist I raise women’s issues with friends and at work; I lobby for legislation and vote (knowing women have had this right for less than 90 years and currently hold only 16 percent of congressional seats); and I give to organizations that support women in the United States and abroad.

My greatest qualm with “new feminism” is that I think it is more about a personal decision than activism. Moreover it is not concerned with the “least of these” among us but instead with families that can afford to live off one income while one parent stays home.

An authentically Catholic feminism is not only about vocation or glass ceilings. It is about simply keeping the floor under women, respecting their dignity and rights as people.

Third World feminists challenge Western and predominantly white feminists to struggle not only with issues of gender but also those of race, culture, and class. This is essentially what Catholic feminism does. Catholic teachings on solidarity demand that we listen to the marginalized and oppressed. In this sense Catholic social teaching and feminism go hand-in-hand on many issues.

Catholics, for instance, take a feminist stance on workers’ rights. Issues like fair pay, family leave, and flexible scheduling allow women more equitable treatment at work, but they also promote the good of the family. This isn’t just about the do-it-all mom in upper management; it’s about families struggling to maintain a middle-class lifestyle with two salaries and single moms earning the minimum wage.

We need to fight for the likes of Lilly M. Ledbetter, who sued Goodyear when she learned she was paid less than the lowest-paid man at her level. Women, who still earn 78 cents for every $1 earned by men, were handed a setback when the Supreme Court ruled last May that complaints must be filed within 180 days of the first discriminatory pay decision, even if the employee only learns of the discrimination much later.

The ruling also violated Catholic principles about the rights of workers, which include the just wage. The decision was hailed for protecting businesses, but from a Catholic perspective the economy must serve people, not the other way around.

Catholics are also feminists in our preferential option for the poor and concern for human rights such as health care, education, food, shelter, and protection from violence. Feminists must take Catholic social teaching seriously because women are especially hurt by poverty and the violation of their rights and dignity as human beings.

The U.S. Census Bureau found that the poverty rate of female-headed households was about 30 percent in 2005. Catholic feminists should support an adequate social safety net to protect the health and welfare of women and their children in this country.

Cardinal Renato Martino, the president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, recently pointed out that this is an issue worldwide as well: “It must not be forgotten that today extreme poverty has, above all, the face of women and children, especially in Africa,” he said last August.

The United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), aimed at reducing global poverty, identify gender equality (goal #3) and women’s access to employment, education, and health care as economic problems. For those who live on less than a dollar a day—the majority of whom are female—putting food on the table is a women’s issue.

Catholic feminists can act in solidarity with these women by supporting development efforts. Microloans for women, co-ops, and education programs have become key strategies for development because it is now widely accepted that economies grow where women’s conditions improve.

Still, women seeking a better life elsewhere are now half of all migrants worldwide, according to Caritas Internationalis, the Catholic Church’s umbrella humanitarian organization. Caritas focuses on women and migration because women are more vulnerable to exploitation and trafficking than their male counterparts.

Violence affects female migrants, women in war-torn countries, rape victims shunned in their cultures, as well as American women facing domestic abuse and sexual assault. Preventing this violence, in my opinion, is one of the most important causes for feminists. Because each man and woman is made in God’s image, Catholics are called to confront and prevent violence against women wherever it may be.

But what about the elephant in the living room: How are human dignity and respect for the lives of women and unborn children best upheld in the hotly debated area that feminists call “reproductive rights”?

Certainly Catholics and feminists take a variety of stances on the many issues covered by the term reproductive rights: abortion, birth control, sex education, condoms in AIDS-ravaged countries, incest, and rape and its use as a tool of war.

There is some good news on the prickliest of these issues, abortion: A study by Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good found that from 1982 to 2000 benefits for pregnant women, including employment policies, economic assistance, and child care, reduced abortions. These are all women’s issues Catholic feminists can fight for while protecting the unborn.

Being Catholic and feminist isn’t easy, but the important part is that Catholics bring their faith to bear on their feminism, ask tough questions, and act on their beliefs.

When I got angry at my junior high friend for distancing herself from feminism, I’m not sure I could define feminism. In fact, it remains a flexible term covering a large and diverse movement.

But the statement “I’m not a feminist” still irks me. Women and men must look critically at the world, take into account their values, and figure out what it means for them to support the dignity and rights of their mothers, sisters, and daughters.

If Catholics did so, I think everyone would be as proud as I am to say, “I am a feminist.”

And the Survey Says...
 AgreeDisagreeOther
I am a feminist:
34%
44%
22%
Pope John Paul II’s view of the “feminine genius” is more appealing to me than secular feminism.
26%
32%
42%
The Catholic Church has a good record on women’s rights.
21%
67%
12%
The abortion issue prevents me from calling myself a feminist.
18%
66%
16%
While poverty is an important issue, it shouldn’t be the main focus of feminists.
48%
44%
8%
Women have achieved equal rights and don’t need to fight for them anymore.
5%
92%
3%
Results are based on survey responses from 101 U.S. Catholic readers and website visitors. Advance copies of Sounding Board are mailed to a sample of U.S. Catholic subscribers. A representative selection of their comments follow in Feedback.
The top causes for Catholic feminists should be:
Poverty reduction.
16%
Reproductive rights.
15%
Health care.
15%
Pro-life.
14%
Violence prevention.
12%
Workplace equality.
8%
Upholding the value of motherhood.
6%
Women’s ordination.
3%
Other.
11%

Megan Sweas is an assistant editor at U.S. Catholic. This article appeared in the January 2009 (Volume 74, Number 1; pages 23-25) issue of U.S. Catholic.

Comments (20)

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Feminism vs. The Church

If there is a conflict between the ideals of feminism and the teachings of the Church founded by Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, which one do you suppose is correct?

"Hence if anyone, which God forbid, should dare willfully to deny or to call into doubt that which we have defined, let him know that he has fallen away completely from the divine and Catholic Faith." - Pius XII

If the words of the Pope do not mean much to you, we also have scripture: "Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore he who resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgement." - Romans 13: 1 - 2

"I appeal to you, brethren, to take note of those who create dissensions and difficulties, in opposition to the doctrine which you have been taught; avoid them. For such persons do not serve our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own appetites, and by fair and flattering words they deceive the hearts of the simple-minded." - Romans16: 17 - 18

The Church is not a democracy. She is the Body of the Christ who "taught them as one who had authority, and not as their scribes." "Authority " does not mean "power" but "right" - "author's rights". The Church has authority only because she is under authority, the authority of her Author and Lord. "No one can give himself the mandate and the mission to proclaim the Gospel. The one sent by the Lord does not speak and act on his own authority, but by virtue of Christ's authority" (CCC 875). This authority of the Church, then, is not arrogant but humble, both (a) in its origin, as received from Christ, under Christ; and (b) in its end, which is to serve as Christ served - if necessary, to the point of martyrdom.

The Church is a divine as well as human institution. If it was purely human, we could argue for women priests. If this is such a big deal, why not join the Episcopol church which caters to every fashionable and poplular trend regardless of the moral implications. Dissent confuses the good and faithful Catholics. This will eventually have to be answered for by those who are leading Christ's flock away from the narrow path. God Bless.

Catholics and Feminism

When I was ordained a deacon I was told by my bishop, when I was presented the Book of Gospels to"
"Receive the Gospel of Christ,
whose herald you now are.
Believe what you read,
teach what you believe,
and practice what you teach."
The gospel of Christ tells us to treat women with dignity and respect and to love them. Part of this love and respect is to treat women as equal human beings recognizing and accepting their capacity to serve. When will our church include herself in the mandate of Jesus Christ to treat women as equal to men as she mandates all other organizations and her faithful to follow the gospel of Jesus Christ?

Catholics & Feminism

I am responding to the responses to Ken's post.

I am not typically a discussion board participant, but perhaps this is also something I can do in my home while my toddlers are napping or while I am baking cookies for the Glory of God.

I will remind others in this discussion that NOWHERE in the Gospels does Jesus limit women's vocations. Perhaps we could Learn Something from Listening to Jesus. Jesus is really quite amazing that way!

Jesus calls us to do all things in love - like care for our families, bake our cookies, visit the sick, serve the poor, and perform the sacraments. Women serve the Lord with great love in many ways. In the Roman church they can all but perform the sacraments. I don't know why the Roman church does this, but I don't think it has anything to do with Jesus's teachings.

Bryan Cones's picture

Glorious cookies

Good point, Dina. It's true that the church's teaching against the ordination of women isn't based on any spoken teaching of Jesus but extrapolated from his "example"--that he didn't include women among the Twelve. I think the argument can be made that it is a fairly weak argument, since Jesus obviously had women in his close circle, and we have Paul's witness of women's leadership in the early church. I've often, however, why everyone seems to accept out of hand that there is a connection between being one of the Twelve and being "ordained" as we understand it today. 

And I'd love to have the recipe for cookies baked to the Glory of God. :)

Bryan Cones

gender = dignity

Greetings,

Would you proffer to tell us your full name, Deacon, and who your Ordinary is?

Timothy+

P.S. Between the sexes, equality in capacity does not denote dignity but dignity does indeed correspond to gender. When properly fulfilled one will be completely dignified and, hence, equal between the sexes, as each gender is an objective reality made by Being especially for this purpose: reciprocity, complementary, or balancing. In short, we cannot change the ground from which we emanate and to which we are necessarily referred no matter what gender we are, your Grace.

Bryan Cones's picture

Threat?

Tim, what you have written here could easily be perceived as a threat. Uscatholic.org is meant to be a forum for open conversation, even about controversial issues. Leave whatever opinion you want, but if I find another post that I deem to be a threat or personal attack, that will be the end of your participation in this conversation.

"In all things charity," I think, is the motto we should strive to live by. In fact I'd argue that even the purest doctrine without charity is not Christian at all. 

Bryan Cones, Managing Editor of U.S. Catholic

The Body

Bryon,

No such threat was intended. The man identified himself as a representative of the Church. As such, he ought to espouse what the Church teaches and not publicly advocate the opposite. If he were a private individual, I would agree with you. However, since he is not, and he is publicly deviating from what he has sworn to protect by oath, I am in line with charity by seeking to protect the Body. I hope that you agree.

Timothy+

Bryan Cones's picture

Charity

I think any fair-minded person would see your opening sentence as a threat. And the commenter only said that the church should treat women equally, so I hardly think he deviated from church teaching. Pope John Paul II said as much.

Part of charity is presuming the best of your brothers and sisters, and no, I do not think, in light of this comment and others, that you are "in line" with it.

So I will reiterate: Make your point charitably, without even a hint of a threat or name-calling, and I will delighted to have you participate in USC's online conversation. But please tread carefully.

Bryan Cones

What else am I supposed to preusume?

Greetings,

I hear what you are saying. And, perhaps, I do indeed seek justice differently than you do. I have made that clear and that I feel your organization ironically, considering your mandate, frustrates justice’s objective goal. You are right. It is true. I have said as much. Perhaps my zeal does, indeed, get in the way of my delivery. For that, I am sorry.

However, considering the context of Deacon Ken’s remarks, what other kind of systematic equality could he have been referring to if not publicly longing for the Church to ordain women priests or deacons?

If he was not intimating “recognizing and accepting their capacity to serve” as women priests then, honestly, what else am I supposed to presume?

And, hypothetically, if he were so intimating, I would be line with charity in calling him out on it in order to stave scandal, no?

Can you see that?

Timothy+

abortion & feminism or abortion = feminism?

Greetings,

I think you are right. It is a very thorny concept: feminism. The activism usually associated with feminism, or at lest always encapsulated as its fundamental requisite, corresponds to reproductive rights.

The legitimate obligation to put right setbacks with women who might otherwise have an abortion if not so addressed (the setbacks) does not adequately deal with the problem of abortion itself.

And to identify oneself with the term feminism, and what that term means etymologically, one will always have to consider oneself pro or for a possible abortion to occur--- by women who may not have any other choice?

Timothy+

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Comments are limited to a maximum of 1500 characters.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Filtered words will be replaced with the filtered version of the word.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
Answer this question to prove you are a human visitor and prevent automated spam submissions.
U.S. Catholic insists on a civil and respectful dialogue on our website, following our Comment policy. Comments should be charitable, on topic, and brief. U.S. Catholic reserves the right to delete comments deemed inappropriate. We encourage you to choose your words wisely.