Ebook
This book brings a critique to the theology of the ordained ministry in contemporary Catholicism, a theology that fosters clericalism. It challenges a theology that views the ordained as "set apart" for a particular work over and against the laity. This book brings critique to current practices, including lifelong commitment to the ordained ministry, the requirement of celibacy for the ordained, and the exclusion of women from the ordained ministry. The author examines history, reclaiming elements that have been distorted or forgotten, and asks, "What is retrievable in the tradition that is freeing and redeeming for a renewed theology?" The critique of the traditional theology and current practices in the ordained ministry and the retrieval of relevant elements of the tradition is a springboard for reconstructing a theology of the ordained ministry. The model of the Trinity is suggested as an image for the ordained ministry itself and through its relational nature, the ministry of the whole church. The model of the Trinity sets the ordained ministry in its rightful context of the Christian community, where all of the gifts of the baptized are valued and where ministry is collaborative, non-hierarchical, and mutually enriching for the people of God.
“I read Josephine Armour’s book, Call No One on Earth Your
Father, with delight. It is very well written, very well
argued, and very well researched. She critically examines the
various arguments used by Catholic theologians to exclude women
from the priesthood and finds them all unpersuasive. Positively,
her argument is that women must be included in the leadership of
the church for the health and well-being of the church. . . . What
is so important to note is that men in power in both traditions
have developed separate, irreconcilable, and tendentious arguments
to exclude women from what they consider to be the most important
ministry in the life of the church; for Catholics presiding at the
Eucharist as a priest, and for evangelicals preaching the Word of
God as a pastor.”
—Kevin Giles, evangelical pastor and author of What the Bible
Actually Teaches on Women
“Josephine Armour’s erudite call for a radical renewal of the
Catholic Church offers all Christian churches a valuable gift. Her
well-argued call for women to be incorporated fully into Christian
leadership is urgent, if all the churches are to have any hope of
recovering from the terrible damage that the patriarchal
institution has inflicted on children in its care.”
—Muriel Porter, OAM, author of Sex, Power and the
Clergy
“Call No One on Earth Your Father raises and explores many
contemporary questions regarding ministry in the contemporary
Catholic Church from a feminist and wider theological perspective.
Its explorations and recommendations are well supported by the many
contemporary authors quoted in the work.”
—Tony Densley, Catholic Priest
"Call No One on Earth Your Father offers a timely
contribution when the church is reeling from scandal and searching
for a way forward. Josephine Armour reimagines that way which is
theologically sound, faithful, honest, and open."
—Michael Trainor, Australian Catholic University
Josephine Armour is an adjunct lecturer in ecclesiology at St
Barnabas College, Adelaide, South Australia.