THE LADY IS A BISHOP
by Marjorie Reiley Maguire
"This is not being done for you. It is so this work of justice may continue
in the Church." With these words, an unnamed, male, Roman Catholic bishop
of a diocese, who is in full communion with Rome, told Patricia Fresen that he
had decided to ordain her as one of three female Roman Catholic bishops in the
world. The "work of justice" to which he referred was the continued
preparation and ordination of women as Roman Catholic priests.
Bishop Patricia was recently on a speaking tour in the Midwest, telling her
story of how a nice Catholic girl from South Africa, who was a Dominican sister
for 45 years, became an ordained priest and bishop in the Roman Catholic Church.
Patricia grew up under South Africa's apartheid. As a young child she thought
the whole world was like that, a place where white people had all the better
things in society, where there were signs for white people's beaches and white
people's benches, etc. She also assumed that God had arranged it that way. As
she left childhood, she realized that this neat division into black and white
was not the Will of God. It was unjust. Through her experience in her Dominican
community, which had broken barriers of white and black among the sisters and in
their schools, Patricia came to understand that there is a moral obligation to
change unjust laws and that this is often done by refusal to obey those laws.
Therefore, when she heard about the ordination of seven Catholic women on the
Danube in 2002, she immediately recognized that their ordinations were moral
resistance to the apartheid of sexism in the Catholic Church.
Patricia had felt a longing within her to be a priest for many years. This
longing began after she was sent by her superiors out of South Africa for the
first time in her life, at the age of forty, to study theology in Rome. The
diocese wanted her to get a licentiate in theology so she could teach in the
seminary because they decided that seminarians needed a female presence in their
life.
In Rome, she got better marks in theology classes than many of the young men She
often became their informal tutor for exams. And she worked with people who told
her their problems, even their sins, and who wanted her to be the person to give
them absolution. Yet, as each ordination event came around, she was excluded.
For the first time in her life, this daughter of apartheid understood what it
was like to be the object of discrimination. Her first reaction was anger. But
gradually the anger changed into longing and then into a sense of a call from
God.
Like so many women, Patricia suppressed this vocation to the priesthood because
it made her too unhappy to feel this call, while knowing the Church would not
ordain women. She returned to South Africa and taught in the country's only
seminary for seven years, as its only woman faculty member. One of her subjects
was homiletics. She could teach the seminarians how to preach, even appearing in
videos giving a model homily. But she could never preach an actual homily to
these same seminarians at a community liturgy. One day a priest on the faculty
invited her to give a homily for the first time, on the occasion of the national
observance of women's day. In spite of her hours and hours of preparation, her
homily was never presented because the seminarians began hissing as they
realized she was the one approaching the pulpit to speak. To his credit, the
priest-presider removed his vestments and refused to continue with the Mass.
Patricia left the seminary after that and moved to teaching at the university.
Her life was changed in 2002, when she read the story of the ordination of the
Danube 7, and then had the opportunity to meet with two of the women priests,
Christine Mayr Lumetzberger of Austria and Gisela Forster of Germany. In 2004,
Christine and Gisela informed Patricia that they had been ordained bishops and
they would ordain her a priest, when all three would be in Spain for a women's
synod.
Patricia was 98% sure that her Dominican community in South Africa would stand
behind her and accept her ordination, since they had always been leaders in the
fight against apartheid. They taught her that breaking unjust laws is often the
only way to change them. However, after checking with various theologians and
Roman congregations, her community gave her the ultimatum from Rome - either
confess her sin of being ordained and never tell anyone about it, or ask for a
dispensation from her Dominican vows of 45 years. (Interestingly, she was never
excommunicated. And Rome apparently recognized her ordination as valid, since
they did not want anyone to know about it.) To save problems for her community,
Patricia requested the dispensation, giving as her reason that she had been
ordained a Roman Catholic priest. However, there was no dispensation for her
heart, where she remains a Dominican.
Removed from her community at the age of 63, Patricia was rescued by the kind
offer from Bishop Gisela Forster in Germany to share Gisela's home. Patricia is
learning German and has a small, paid, pastoral ministry position with a team
that visits sick people and elderly in their homes. Then, in 2005, the unnamed
male bishop told her he would ordain her a bishop. Tears streamed down his face,
as well as hers, when he laid hands on her head and said he was ordaining her in
full apostolic succession. He gave her documents naming his predecessor bishops
in apostolic succession back to the early centuries of the Church. The name
Patricia Fresen is printed after his in this long ecclesiastical genealogy.
Those documents are in a bank vault, only to be made public after the male
bishop dies. To follow all the rules of canon law, the male bishop who ordained
her was joined by two other legitimate male bishops. Also in attendance were the
two previously-ordained women bishops and a fourth legitimate male bishop, six
bishops in all.
Besides her small secular job, Patricia now heads up the formation program for
new priest candidates in Roman Catholic Womenpriests. Men as well as women are
accepted into the program. There is no celibacy requirement. Sexuality is
separated from the call to priesthood. There are presently 115 women, 2 gay men,
and 3 married men in the program.
After her talk, Bishop Patricia celebrated Mass for us, together with a woman
deacon who will be ordained a priest this coming summer in Pittsburgh Perhaps
the most telling sign of the kind of bishop Patricia is came when she sat down
after reading the Gospel. The deacon, not the bishop, preached the homily. While
some of us later admitted that we felt a pang of disappointment that Patricia
would not preach, we then realized that Patricia was modeling the
non-hierarchical Church and discipleship of equals that she claimed Roman
Catholic Womenpriests is all about. And the deacon did a very good job!
I drove 90 miles to hear Bishop Patricia's talk in Chicago. However, I did not
need to learn about the juridical details to know that her ordination is valid
and that her Mass was a true Eucharist. Although I do not want to be a priest
myself, last summer I went to the ordinations of the Roman Catholic women
priests and deacons on a boat on the St. Lawrence Seaway. I went out of support
for the women involved and out of curiosity, but also as a skeptic about the
validity of the ordinations. However, during the ordination liturgy, I
experienced the grace of the moment. I experienced the ordinations as valid. I
experienced Patricia, Christine, and Gisela as valid as any bishops I have known
and the ordination liturgy as valid as any I have attended. Sometimes knowledge
comes through such experience.
If only Pope Benedict could have that same experience! He could then give his
approval for the ordination of women, saying, "This is not being done for
you. It is being done so the Church will not die and the Church's work of
justice can continue."
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Marjorie Reiley Maguire is a Catholic theologian with a doctorate from Catholic
University and an attorney with a law degree from the University of Wisconsin.