tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post7560239704424582756..comments2024-03-28T09:14:32.869-04:00Comments on southern orders: THE POPE REITERATES WHAT I HAVE TAUGHT FOR 40 YEARS AS TO WHY IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FOR THE CHURCH TO ORDAIN WOMEN—IT IS BASED ON THE SPOUSAL RELATIONSHIP OF CHRIST, THE GROOM AND THE CHURCH HIS BRIDE, WHICH THE PRIEST AND THE MASS SIGNIFY IN A SACRAMENTAL WAY.Fr. Allan J. McDonaldhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16986575955114152639noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-49638218952784058522020-02-14T15:31:26.646-05:002020-02-14T15:31:26.646-05:00Anon 2 - You are absolutely correct.
American Exc...Anon 2 - You are absolutely correct.<br /><br />American Exceptionalism combined with Protestant Assurance of Salvation combined with the last 50 years of Moral Majority-style religious aggressiveness have led to the very wrong-headed understanding of what a manly Christian man is.<br /><br />Jesus was, above all else, vulnerable. In that He is a very unpalatable image for those who tout the virtues of high testosterone levels in clergy. "Oh, but he made a whip and cleansed the Temple! He was a tough guy!" they say.<br /><br />But they say that without noting that He did not shield his face from mocking and spitting. He made Himself vulnerable for our salvation. "God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God."<br /><br />Paul, of course, continued the understanding. "That is why, for Christ's sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong."<br /><br />John Wayne was good on a movie screen, but isn't a role model for Christian manliness.<br /> Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-33993615027389302052020-02-14T03:11:52.272-05:002020-02-14T03:11:52.272-05:00I thought our exemplar for “manliness” was suppose...I thought our exemplar for “manliness” was supposed to be Jesus, not John Wayne. Clearly, I must have been mistaken.Anonymous 2noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-83270584104946555462020-02-12T21:53:50.088-05:002020-02-12T21:53:50.088-05:00anon
I'll take a high testosterone man as a pr...anon<br />I'll take a high testosterone man as a priest over the limp wristed twats I've been exposed to in the past<br />to quote Fr Z https://wdtprs.com/2020/02/priestly-not-prissily/<br />one of the best priests I have had the fortune to know was 6ft 2 and filled a doorway, five o clock shadow by noon, former marine Chaplin, yet when he said mass you could see the devotion, and believe me he didn't have a prissy voice. He got several vocations from our parish, first in maybe 30 years, the young men flocked to him, unfortunately he is now retired, horrible back problems, still fills in once in a blue moon. Complains that it ruined his golf gameThe Egyptiannoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-38824026568253515922020-02-12T15:38:37.524-05:002020-02-12T15:38:37.524-05:00"Who said anything about high testosterone le..."Who said anything about high testosterone levels? Anonymous' laundry list is just noise and distraction--the troll's specialty."<br /><br />Nope. The blog owner posted:<br /><br />"My comments: Holy Father, laymen too have preserved the Faith in the absence of a priest in many places. Just think of Korea which preserved the Faith of the preVatican II Church centuries ago. <br />And in terms of big lavish signs for the Sacraments, make sure we ordain big, manly men with muscles and facial hair produced by high levels of testosterone! That will please modern liturgists."Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-86155180948294746212020-02-12T14:54:54.856-05:002020-02-12T14:54:54.856-05:00Who said anything about high testosterone levels? ...Who said anything about high testosterone levels? Anonymous' laundry list is just noise and distraction--the troll's specialty.5noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-54139969526826443822020-02-12T11:51:35.169-05:002020-02-12T11:51:35.169-05:00Dan, Bless your heart.Dan, Bless your heart.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-88283564366468324942020-02-12T10:59:34.909-05:002020-02-12T10:59:34.909-05:00Anonymous, you have none of those problems to worr...Anonymous, you have none of those problems to worry about......Danhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01504517769804159508noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-42400100549241326922020-02-12T10:34:53.795-05:002020-02-12T10:34:53.795-05:00So we already have high testosterone men in the pr...So we already have high testosterone men in the priesthood! My bad!Fr. Allan J. McDonaldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16986575955114152639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-69136246958251864932020-02-12T10:27:51.130-05:002020-02-12T10:27:51.130-05:00Oh, by all means, let's attract men with high ...Oh, by all means, let's attract men with high levels of testosterone to the priesthood.<br /><br />Problems associated with abnormally high testosterone levels in men include:<br />•Low sperm counts, shrinking of the testicles and impotence (seems odd, doesn't it?)<br />•Heart muscle damage and increased risk of heart attack<br />•Prostate enlargement with difficulty urinating<br />•Liver disease<br />•Acne<br />•Fluid retention with swelling of the legs and feet<br />•Weight gain, perhaps related in part to increased appetite<br />•High blood pressure and cholesterol<br />•Insomnia<br />•Headaches<br />•Increased muscle mass<br />•Increased risk of blood clots<br />•Stunted growth in adolescents<br />•Uncharacteristically aggressive behavior (although not well studied or clearly proven)<br />•Mood swings, euphoria, irritability, impaired judgment, delusions<br /><br />Yeah, that's the ticket....Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-88877533831036888892020-02-12T09:51:23.128-05:002020-02-12T09:51:23.128-05:00We had a Catholic priestess ordained directly by G...We had a Catholic priestess ordained directly by God at the Vatican in Macon. God rest her soul. She attended St. Joseph Church and a few other parishes too. She'd ask to concelebrate but I always said no to her. Nonetheless, she would come to Mass in her chasuble and bring her own bread and wine to consecrate and receive.<br /><br />But that wasn't the worst of it! She always wore the wrong liturgical color which really drove me crazy!Fr. Allan J. McDonaldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16986575955114152639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-87119571893265560272020-02-12T09:45:11.663-05:002020-02-12T09:45:11.663-05:00How tacky of her to wear a stole over her chasuble...How tacky of her to wear a stole over her chasuble! Really?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-75709899830296028552020-02-12T09:15:45.631-05:002020-02-12T09:15:45.631-05:00That silly-looking woman in the chasuble and stole...That silly-looking woman in the chasuble and stole may not know it, but she has excommunicated herself.<br /><br />I knew someone who found that out the hard way. She ended up being denied Communion at her son's funeral. Fortunately, she took the path back (and it was a hard path) to reunion with the Church.<br /><br />Seeing a woman play priest is like seeing Protestant ministers in Roman collars. It's all just play-acting and self-dishonesty.Vatican Zeronoreply@blogger.com