Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The ordination of women to ministerial or priestly office is an increasingly common practice among some contemporary major religious groups. [2] It remains a controversial issue in certain religious groups in which ordination [a] was traditionally reserved for men. [2] [3] [4] [b]

  2. Women in Church history have played a variety of roles in the life of Christianity—notably as contemplatives, health care givers, educationalists and missionaries. Until recent times, women were generally excluded from episcopal and clerical positions within the certain Christian churches; however, great numbers of women have been influential in the life of the church, from contemporaries of ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Women play significant roles in the life of the Catholic Church, although excluded from the Catholic hierarchy of bishops, priests, and deacons. In the history of the Catholic Church, the church often influenced social attitudes toward women. Influential Catholic women have included theologians, abbesses, monarchs, missionaries, mystics ...

  5. Clergy – Their Attitudes to and Images of Women from Freedom From Sanctified Sexism – Women Transforming the Church by Mavis Rose, pp. 19-38. Allira Publications, 17 Cervantes Street, MacGregor, Queensland 4109, Australia.

  6. Jul 14, 2019 · According to Kateusz, author of Mary and Early Christian Women: Hidden Leadership, the artworks “illustrate that early Christian women routinely performed as clergy in orthodox churches.”. “The art speaks for itself because women are seen at the church altar in three of the most important churches in Christendom,” she told NCR.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ClergyClergy - Wikipedia

    Clergy" is from two Old French words, clergié and clergie, which refer to those with learning and derive from Medieval Latin clericatus, from Late Latin clericus (the same word from which "cleric" is derived). [2] ". Clerk", which used to mean one ordained to the ministry, also derives from clericus. In the Middle Ages, reading and writing ...

  8. Jan 1, 2008 · In the early centuries of Christianity, ordination was the process and the ceremony by which one moved to any new ministry (ordo) in the community. By this definition, women were ordained into several ministries. Four central ministries of episcopa (women bishop), presbytera (women priest), deaconess and abbess are discussed in detail in order ...

  1. People also search for