Organizational Video Presentations

DignityUSA

October 21, 2021.

A debate about whether pro-choice politicians like President Biden and Speaker Pelosi were worthy of Communion rages throughout much of 2021. In this presentation to Women-Church Convergence, DignityUSA Executive Director reflects on the larger context of this debate, and on how Catholics might reclaim our sacraments.

SEPAWOC

January 20, 2022

In this video, members of the Core Committee of the Southeastern Pennsylvania Women’s Ordination Conference share about their history, mission, programs, and strategies, working for a renewed Church. In a discussion following the presentation, participants of Women-Church Convergence consider the challenges facing our organizations, especially engaging a new generation.

WATER

September 2021

Feminist Liturgical Innovations - A call with Women's Alliance for Theology, Ethics and Ritual (WATER).

Mary's Pence

July 2022

Mary's Pence Presentation to W-CC on July 21, 2022

October 30, 2018

Women-Church Convergence to Catholic Hierarchy: “No More Abuse!”

We, the undersigned members of Women-Church Convergence, a coalition of 28 feminist groups rooted in the Catholic tradition, say to the Catholic hierarchy and leadership throughout the world, “No More Abuse!”

Survivors of sexual, physical, emotional, and spiritual abuse perpetrated by those representing the Roman Catholic institution are scarred for life. The cover-up by the Vatican and its cardinals is in total opposition to the teaching of Jesus and the Gospel. The Catholic community is facing a pastoral emergency of epic proportions!

We are horrified and disgusted by the well-catalogued accounts of priest pedophilia, abuse of vulnerable adults, bishops forcing seminarians and other priests to engage in sex as a condition of employment, bishops covering up crimes, and the former nuncio’s depiction of dueling factions among clerical higher-ups. We are shocked that bishops continued the abominable practice of moving priest perpetrators to different parishes and did not report the abuse as crimes to legal authorities.

What drives these disgraced Catholic clerics to put their own power and reputation above the safety of its most vulnerable members: children, women, and the non-ordained? It is patriarchy pure and simple, the mistaken notion that a few men, in this case allegedly but not necessarily celibate men, have the right to control what ought to be a democratic institution. That time is over.

Enough is more than enough! Clerical privilege and episcopal rule by incompetent and sometimes criminal cardinals, bishops, and priests must end.

We begin by calling for these concrete next steps with many more to follow:

  • We expect Catholics worldwide to engage in a massive theological and structural overhaul of the church beginning with competent committees of well-trained lay people to lead the Catholic communities in every diocese. Church leaders must be accountable to the people of God, as well as to appropriate civil authorities.
  • We call on the Vatican to insure institutional transparency by calling every diocese to disclose on their websites and in their publications the names of priests and employees with allegations against them, to lift the statutes of limitation on sexual abuse of minors, and to post the sexual abuse hotline number 877-995-5247.
  • We demand that the Vatican remove all popes, cardinals, and bishops who reassigned sexually abusive priests from their leadership positions, and ensure that future bishops have never facilitated abuse. Recognizing that this means virtually all bishops, we repeat our call for meaningful leadership to be assumed by competent laity.
  • We invite religious leaders from other faith traditions and secular professionals, especially counselors, social workers, ministers, rabbis, imams, and psychotherapists to step forward and help our communities support victims, report abuse, and speak out to church leaders. Catholic leaders have proved themselves incompetent to do this. We need help from outside of Catholic circles.
  • We ask educators, parents, guardians, and parish leaders to offer age-appropriate conversations and education K-12 on the prevention of sexual violence.
  • We urge the Catholic laity to develop a process of public reconciliation, based on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa, where victims and survivors of abuse can speak out to church leaders with the goal of moving forward together when perpetrators have admitted guilt and shown a disposition of restitution.

Finally, we acknowledge the pain and suffering of survivors, and we pray:

For survivors, their families, and loved ones whose lives have been irrevocably damaged, including those whose lives ended in suicide.

For Catholic clergy and others who live with their crimes of omission and commission.

For ecclesial communities, including Women-church and intentional Eucharistic communities, which are modeling new ways of being Catholic and church.

We pledge our energies and resources not to cleaning up a mess that is not of our making, but to living new, democratic, egalitarian forms of church that are open to all.

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Signed:

A Critical Mass: Women Celebrating Eucharist

Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests

Catholic Network for Women’s Equality

Catholics for Choice Canada

Chicago Women-Church

Con-spirando

DignityUSA

Greater Cincinnati Women-Church

Loretto Women’s Network

Louisville Women-Church

Mary’s Pence

National Coalition of American Nuns

Roman Catholic Womenpriests

San Francisco Bay Area Women-Church

SC Peace and Justice

Sisters Against Sexism

Southern California Women-Church

Southeastern Pennsylvania-Women’s Ordination Conference (SEPAWOC)

Women Church of Central New Jersey

Women Church of the Wabash Valley

Women-Church Baltimore

WomenChurchBoulder

Women’s Alliance for Theology Ethics and Ritual (WATER)