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#367953 - 08/16/11 10:19 PM
Re: Female Readers/Lectors in the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church
[Re: Deacon John Montalvo]
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Member
Registered: 08/12/11
Posts: 38
Loc: California, USA
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Thanks for the reply and for confirming that females may indeed be readers (is "reader" the preferred name for that function?) in the Byzantine Ruthenian Church. From my standpoint I simply want to hear the most gifted individuals chanting the readings -- be they male or female. After all their ability is God-given. Candidly I am also disgusted at those who claim to be "super Catholic" until something the Church actually allows/encourages runs contrary to their personal preferences based on some sort of "1955 USA Latin Rite all is great" idealism Thanks again. Abraham-
First of all, you are not mistaken, your cathedral parish has a few females who are readers. (I know, I serve there.) Continue to encourage yourself and others to become readers and cantors. There is no prohibition of female readers/cantors in the particular law of the Metropolia of Pittsburgh nor in the Pastoral Handbook promulgated by His Grace, Bishop Gerald. There is a prohibition against females serving in the altar at the Holy Table.
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#367954 - 08/16/11 10:24 PM
Re: Female Readers/Lectors in the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church
[Re: Otsheylnik]
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Member
Registered: 08/12/11
Posts: 38
Loc: California, USA
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Thank you for taking this so "deep." This is becoming more and more fascinating to me. There really is a great deal to it including the eventual (God willing!) reunification of the Church. I wish some of the people in my parish would read this thread and ponder/pray on some of the information that is being presented. Thank you. I don't think there is anything in conflict with Orthodox tradition to have female lectors, with one important caveat: that the female lector does not do anything to suggest that she might be a tonsured reader (i.e. clergy).
It goes without saying that she should not wear a sticharion or get a blessing to read within the altar; reading position shows more variation.
In the more conservative Orthodox parishes (I am talking Russian use here) if a woman reads the epistle she will read it from the kliros or similar place, not from the centre of the church. This is because traditionally only tonsured readers read from this position; this however is rapidly changing, due in part to tonsured readers becoming rare. Additionally, women now routinely read the six psalms or Old Testament readings at all night vigil from the centre of the church so I expect this to become a non-issue even for the epistle reading.
I can't find it online, but somewhere there is a letter by St Tikhon on minor orders in the Orthodox Church, and he specifically says that he has no problem with women readers; I think this should be a non-issue, provided that reading is not confused with being a tonsured reader.
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#367964 - 08/16/11 11:45 PM
Re: Female Readers/Lectors in the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church
[Re: Abraham]
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Member
Registered: 01/31/09
Posts: 291
Loc: California
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I (a female, by the way) would love to have attended the workshop. We were down there a couple of weeks ago and had a brief visit with Father James, who told us that you all were having the workshop. I wanted to stay for it. (-:
I think you hit it on the head. These people are really afraid of having women priests, which simply is not going to happen. It is the same attitude in the Latin church with female Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion. "I won't accept Communion from a woman." If you object to a non-ordained person distributing communion, your objection should hold equally true, whether the person be male or female. It is reasonable to say that one is only comfortable receiving from a priest. If we are going to have non-ordained people filling roles that were previously reserved to the ordained, why does it matter if that person is a male or female? On the other hand, I wouldn't really want to see women serving at the altar, so I apparently have my limits as well. Maybe this person's line was just at a different place than mine.
Elizabeth
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#367965 - 08/17/11 12:08 AM
Re: Female Readers/Lectors in the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church
[Re: babochka]
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Member
Registered: 08/12/11
Posts: 38
Loc: California, USA
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I (a female, by the way) would love to have attended the workshop. We were down there a couple of weeks ago and had a brief visit with Father James, who told us that you all were having the workshop. I wanted to stay for it. (-:
I think you hit it on the head. These people are really afraid of having women priests, which simply is not going to happen. It is the same attitude in the Latin church with female Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion. "I won't accept Communion from a woman." If you object to a non-ordained person distributing communion, your objection should hold equally true, whether the person be male or female. It is reasonable to say that one is only comfortable receiving from a priest. If we are going to have non-ordained people filling roles that were previously reserved to the ordained, why does it matter if that person is a male or female? On the other hand, I wouldn't really want to see women serving at the altar, so I apparently have my limits as well. Maybe this person's line was just at a different place than mine.
Elizabeth I just think that ultimately they're "cafeteria catholics" -- they ultimately pick and choose what they will accept no matter what the Church allows/disallows. Their gold standard appears to be their idealized, personal perception of what the Latin Rite was like in the USA in the 1950's. Someone at my parish once told me "I would NEVER receive Holy Communion from a woman!" I said "Why? In some cases under specific conditions the Church allows just that." After some hemming and hawing he replied "because their hands are not consecrated!" To wit I replied "You had better not receive communion here today. As a Byzantine Catholic priest Father's hands aren't consecrated either." The guy looked as if his brain had just exploded...
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#368101 - 08/20/11 01:33 AM
Re: Female Readers/Lectors in the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church
[Re: Abraham]
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Member
Registered: 01/19/06
Posts: 764
Loc: Australia
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Someone at my parish once told me "I would NEVER receive Holy Communion from a woman!" I said "Why? In some cases under specific conditions the Church allows just that." After some hemming and hawing he replied "because their hands are not consecrated!" To wit I replied "You had better not receive communion here today. As a Byzantine Catholic priest Father's hands aren't consecrated either." The guy looked as if his brain had just exploded...
Haha I will have to remember that one.
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#375565 - 02/11/12 03:25 AM
Re: Female Readers/Lectors in the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church
[Re: Abraham]
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Global Moderator
Member
Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 8894
Loc: Massachusetts
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Mariya,
Welcome to the forum! I hope you'll enjoy it here.
Many years,
Neil
_________________________
"One day all our ethnic traits ... will have disappeared. Time itself is seeing to this. And so we can not think of our communities as ethnic parishes, ... unless we wish to assure the death of our community."
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#375571 - 02/11/12 09:33 AM
Re: Female Readers/Lectors in the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church
[Re: Abraham]
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Member
Registered: 11/09/01
Posts: 6018
Loc: Falls Church, VA
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When I was at a Ruthenian parish, someone complained about the use of women as readers. The priest ended that argument by asking, "Are you volunteering to read, then?"
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