http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/14688209.htm

Defiant female priest says Mass
RENEGADE GROUP HOLDS SERVICES; DIOCESE SAYS SACRAMENTS INVALID
By Kim Vo
Mercury News
The fledgling congregation gathered in a circle at Sunday Mass at Spartan 
Memorial Chapel to
introduce themselves. A woman in a long, white robe spoke first.

``My name is Victoria Rue,'' she said. ``And I am a Roman Catholic woman 
priest.''

Rue belongs to a renegade movement that is ordaining women as Catholic priests, 
in defiance of the
Vatican. Today, Rue celebrates Mass at the non-denominational chapel at San 
Jose State University.

Joining her at the altar on Sundays -- also in clerical robes -- have been a 
married man, his wife
and another woman. The ceremonies prompted the Diocese of San Jose this month 
to warn Catholics
that the sacraments there would be invalid.

It's a prickly issue more Catholic dioceses will face as increasing numbers of 
women join the
ordination movement.

``God has called me,'' said Juanita Cordero, a Los Gatos woman who will soon be 
ordained as a
deacon and aims to be a priest by 2007. ``Growing up it was never a possibility 
because it was
always for men.''

Cordero, a former nun, is among 120 women enrolled in the Roman Catholic 
Womenpriests program,
which has been boldly ordaining groups of women as priests and deacons.

A dozen will be ordained in Pittsburgh on July 31, including Cordero and women 
from Carmel and
Pismo Beach. Another woman -- fearful that her bishop will quickly 
excommunicate her -- will only
say she's from the Bay Area.

Those women plan to eventually work as priests, offering pastoral care and 
presiding over rituals
ranging from baptisms to weddings to Mass.

The church says the movement is built on a falsehood: Women can't be priests, 
so whatever
ceremonies they hold are moot.

The women say they're reforming the church by defying it, hoping to bring about 
a more inclusive
institution that welcomes women, married men and gays in all of its ranks. In 
addition to a more
egalitarian church, they say, the movement fulfills their long-thwarted wishes 
to become priests.

Divinity degree needed

The Womenpriests program, which has no set headquarters but claims members in 
North America and
Europe, requires women to earn a master's degree in divinity along with 10 
additional units in
areas such as spirituality and pastoral care.

The program gained notoriety in 2002 when a sympathetic bishop ordained seven 
women on the Danube
River near Germany and Austria. The women have since been excommunicated. 
Still, some bishops went
on to illicitly ordain two of those women as bishops, and they in turn have 
ordained other women.
Local dioceses say those ordinations are hollow, citing canon law and the 
Vatican's actions
against the original seven.

Both sides turn to historical precedent and theology to support their views.

The group claims that because the women were initially ordained by bishops in 
good standing, their
own ordinations are valid. Supporters say their stance has precedent in the 
early church, citing
artifacts showing women at the Eucharist table and references to presbytera or 
episcopa --
feminizations for priest and bishop.

``The reality of women priests is historical,'' said Rue, a professor of both 
women's studies and
religious studies at San Jose State University. ``It's a birthright women 
have.''

Critics say it's unclear whether the depictions were of women and altars, and 
that the terms more
properly translate as ``wife of'' priest or bishop, explained the Rev. Arthur 
Holder, an expert on
the history of Christian spirituality at the Graduate Theological Union in 
Berkeley. The most
oft-cited theological reasons women can't be priests is they aren't created in 
the image of Christ
and that Jesus himself set the rules when he selected 12 men as his apostles.

Pope Benedict XVI, like his predecessor Pope John Paul II, probably won't allow 
women's
ordination, said the Rev. Thomas Reese, a Vatican expert.

``You got 20 centuries of teaching and practice. You need a pretty good reason 
to reverse that,''
Reese said. ``They would say you can't reverse that.''

Polls show that a majority of American Catholics support women's ordination, he 
said, but it's
unclear if they would support a maverick movement to bring it about.

Take John Wilhelmsson, a San Jose State graduate student and lifelong Catholic, 
who is frustrated
that Rue calls herself a Catholic priest when the church doesn't allow it.

``It's like telling a big lie,'' he said, ``and telling it over and over 
again.''

Other tensions have surfaced. The group posted fliers around the campus 
advertising the ``Catholic
and inclusive'' Mass, sometimes putting them beside the diocese's warnings that 
someone had
printed and hung. Several times the Mass fliers were taken down; one week, the 
diocese's
statements were removed.

Other than steering Catholics away, the diocese has no plans to punish or talk 
with the women
clergy, spokeswoman Roberta Ward said. The silence dismays Rue, but the diocese 
feels there's
nothing to discuss while the two sides fundamentally disagree.

Besides, most of the services are so small, Ward said, there's no point in 
drawing more attention
to them.

Anywhere from three to 30 people have attended the services, which began in 
March. Though the
services contain the hallmarks of a Catholic Mass, some rituals have been 
tweaked. Clergy and
laity gather and walk to the front of the church. Phrases such as ``our 
mother'' and ``she'' are
regularly interspersed with the more familiar ``our Father'' and ``he.'' 
Homilies resemble Bible
study sessions as priests sit and invite congregants to share their thoughts on 
the teachings.

Longing for reform

The altered ceremony, along with the female priest, took awhile to get used to, 
admitted Carole
Thum, but the Saratoga woman kept attending because she longs for reform.

A granddaughter, who as a child wanted to be a priest, felt sidelined by her 
gender and eventually
left the faith. An acquaintance's parents are conflicted because they are 
Catholic and he is gay.
And then there were the pedophiles.

``It's a very confusing, puzzling time, but I think we need to have change,'' 
she said. ``I just
knew so many spiritual, educated women in my life. I wonder if they were 
priests what could they
have accomplished.''

Kathleen Strack says she decided to stop waiting. She had wanted to be a priest 
since age 8 and in
the 1999 got a master's in divinity just in case the opportunity ever arose. 
Now 61, she's ready
for ordination.

It's hard. She knows some will treat her as an outcast in the faith she deeply 
loves. She's
currently using her maiden name, not wanting to be excommunicated before she 
becomes a priest.

She's held fast to the calling all these decades, even after a priest tried to 
dissuade her when
she was in middle school.

``He said, `Girls can't be a father to the people,' '' she recalled. ``And I 
thought, no, but I
can be a mother to the people.''

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