Estola Púrpura

Estola Púrpura Boletín en línea sobre ordenación de la mujer en la Iglesia Católica Romana.

Este boletín en línea está diseñada como un foro de expresión e investigación sobre la ordenación de la mujer en la Iglesia Católica Romana. La misma busca ser una alternativa en español, para las mujeres y hombres interesados en continuar estudiando el tema.

Una pequeña clase sobre las vestimentas del (y de la) Obispo u Obispa.
23/09/2025

Una pequeña clase sobre las vestimentas del (y de la) Obispo u Obispa.

11/09/2025
Tan sencillo...¿No?
06/09/2025

Tan sencillo...¿No?

AND I support trans and intersex pastors, in case you're wondering.

Muchachas, ésto también aplica a las ordenadas...
26/08/2025

Muchachas, ésto también aplica a las ordenadas...

📢 ACLARACIÓN IMPORTANTE SOBRE LA BENDICIÓN CON EL SANTÍSIMO

En los últimos días ha circulado la idea de que “los diáconos no pueden bendecir con el Santísimo Sacramento” y que por eso toman la custodia con las manos, mientras que los sacerdotes usan capa humeral.
👉 Esta información es falsa y es necesario aclararlo.

✨ La verdad litúrgica:
• Según el Ritual Sagrada Comunión y Culto Eucarístico fuera de la Misa (n. 91-92), la bendición eucarística puede ser impartida tanto por el sacerdote como por el diácono.
• Ambos ministros ordenados deben usar capa humeral (y si se hace con la custodia, también la capa pluvial).
• Los laicos autorizados, en ausencia de clérigos, pueden exponer y reservar el Santísimo, pero no pueden impartir la bendición.

🙌 El sentido de la capa humeral:
No se trata de que el sacerdote “no pueda tocar la custodia y el diácono sí”, sino de un signo común: quien bendice no es el ministro como persona, sino Cristo realmente presente en la Eucaristía. Tanto el sacerdote como el diácono se cubren con la capa humeral para expresar que son instrumentos, y que la bendición procede del Señor.

✅ En resumen:
• Obispos, presbíteros y diáconos pueden bendecir con el Santísimo.
• Todos lo hacen con la capa humeral, porque la bendición viene de Cristo.
• Los laicos pueden exponer y reservar, pero no bendecir.

18/08/2025

Never heard of St Phoebe? Here’s why
False information is being spread about the tradition of ordaining women as Catholic deacons

Phyllis Zagano
The Irish Times
Sunday 17 August 2025

The Catholic Church’s annual opportunity to ignore the history of women deacons comes again this September 3rd, the Feast of St Phoebe, Deacon of the Church at Cenchrea.

Never heard of her? That’s because in 1969, the church calendar moved St Gregory the Great’s formal feast day from his date of death (March 12th) to the date he was elected pope, conveniently enough, September 3rd, overshadowing her. Conveniently, because Gregory is the preacher who passed along the falsehood that St Mary Magdalene was a pr******te. You cannot make this up.

Now it is worse. Angry journalists, bloggers, and even bishops are spreading even more false information about the history of, and the possibility for the restoration of, the tradition of ordaining women as Catholic deacons. Relying on translated copies of a 43-year-old book on the topic, they posit that no woman was ever ordained deacon in the history of the church, despite the author’s admission that, because there are many missing historical documents, no final determination is possible.

So, what is the problem? Several assertions float about attempting to cut off the Synod on Synodality’s magisterially mandated conversations about restoring the practice of ordaining women as deacons. They fall into two main categories: 1) women cannot “image” Christ, and 2) holy orders cannot be divided.

The most startling objection is that women cannot image Christ, and therefore that they are not made in the image and likeness of God. Yet, the consoling fact of the incarnation is that God became human in the person of Jesus Christ.

Obviously, the understanding of anyone representing Christ today does not depend on sexual differences. To say women cannot represent Christ – cannot be signs of Christ in and for the church – is to deny their full humanity. The assertion sends a terrible signal to the rest of the world, especially to parts of the world where women are second-class chattel, living dominated by a male family member, unable to vote, drive a car, attend school or even decide whom they might marry.

Saying that women can image Christ does not deny gender distinctions or argue for anything other than Catholic teaching: we are all made in the image and likeness of God. To limit that ability due to what scholars call “naive physicalism” is to deny the extraordinary fact of the resurrection, and the Catholic teaching that Christ lives in all Christians.

As the discussion about women deacons reignited during the Second Vatican Council, the theory of the “unicity of orders” arose. The false argument that because women cannot be ordained priests, they cannot be ordained as deacons has now gained new traction, even within the Vatican. Even Pope Francis presented a version of it in a television interview less than a year before he died. When an American reporter asked if a young girl would be able to think about becoming a deacon, he gave a resounding “no” to a deacon within holy orders. Why? He did not explain, but as so many other non-specialists do, he reverted to speaking about all the wonderful things women can accomplish while not ordained. Importantly, though, he did not state women could not be ordained as deacons, just that he did not think they would.

The Catholic Church’s three major orders – the diaconate, the priesthood and the episcopate – have a long development trajectory, but one order does not necessarily imply the other.

The diaconate is an interesting case in point. St Paul’s Letter to the Romans (57 CE) presents the first, and only, mention of a deacon by title in all of scripture. Her name is Phoebe, and she was included in the church’s official list of saints, the Roman Martyrology, at its inception. Paul introduces her to the nascent church in Rome as a deacon and asks the Romans to welcome and, importantly, respect her. It is understood that she carried the letter to Rome and interpreted its theology for these new Christians.

Later, the Acts of the Apostles (70-90 CE) recounts the election of seven others by the community at the request of the apostles. They are not given the title “deacon”, despite their designated task to assist with the distribution of food to widows. This event comes well after the death and resurrection of Christ, making the diaconate a creation of the church.

But it is Phoebe who is first named and first known, directly, as a deacon. Why is she not welcomed and respected by the church today?

Phyllis Zagano is an expert on the diaconate of women. She holds a research appointment at Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York, and is the author, most recently, of Just Church: Catholic Social Teaching, Synodality, and Women (Paulist Press).

María es otra cosa... Excelente.  Gloria a Dios.
16/08/2025

María es otra cosa... Excelente. Gloria a Dios.

just announced the on August 13, but August 15 is when we celebrate that Mary reached New Heights. 😉🧡

It's the of Mary, which marks the Church’s doctrine that Mary was taken to heaven, body and soul, at the end of her life. It’s a belief from the early Christian community, though it was only formally proclaimed a feast day by Pope Pius XII in 1950.

Though the day has often traditionally been used to highlight Mary's "perpetual virginity" and "purity," feminist theologians have challenged and nuanced those ideas to reclaim an empowering understanding of the Assumption for women. Here are a few takes!

Dr. Julia Feder, associate professor of systematic theology at Notre Dame, writes:

“.... [Korean feminist theologian] Chung [Hyun Kyung] argues that teachings concerning Mary’s virginity are best understood as statements about Mary’s independence, her refusal to derive her value exclusively from her relationships to men, and an inner integrity rooted in 'her true connectedness to her own self and to God.'"

And from "Mary, Mother of God, Mother of the Poor," by Ivone Gebara and Maria Bingemer:

"Mary's assumption brings a new and promising future for women... [it] restores and reintegrates woman's bodiliness into the very mystery of God. Starting with Mary, the dignity of women's condition is recognised and safeguarded by the creator of that very bodiliness. In Jesus Christ and Mary the feminine is respectively resurrected and assumed into heaven—definitively sharing in the glory of the Trinitarian mystery from which all proceeds and to which all returns."

Finally, Dr. Dorothy Ann Lee at University of Divinity in Australia sees the authority of Mary as a basis for the ordination of women as priests today: "If the world received the body of Christ from this woman, Mary, then women today should not be excluded from giving the body of Christ, as priests, to the faithful at Mass."

15/08/2025

Para pensar.... ¿A nadie se le ha ocurrido demandar, a nivel de tribunal eclesiástico, al Discaterio de la Doctrina de la Fe, por la injusticia de excomulgar mujeres que se ordenan, entre otras cosas? Pedir al tribunal eclesiástico en el Vaticano que se declare nulos los cánones 1024 (que prohíbe a las mujeres poder ordenarse) y 1379.3 (que excomulga a una mujer por ordenarse) o que sean derrogados, por tratarse de leyes injustas que van contra la equidad entre hombres y mujeres ante Dios (Gálatas 3:28 y otros) y la intensión de Jesús (Lucas 10:39-42).
Me encantaría leer tus comentarios al respecto.

28/02/2025

Dirección

San Juan

Página web

Notificaciones

Sé el primero en enterarse y déjanos enviarle un correo electrónico cuando Estola Púrpura publique noticias y promociones. Su dirección de correo electrónico no se utilizará para ningún otro fin, y puede darse de baja en cualquier momento.

Contacto La Empresa

Enviar un mensaje a Estola Púrpura:

Compartir