Saturday, November 8, 2014

Bergoglio's Personal Consultant Wants Priestesses

Bergoglio's Personal Consultant Wants Priestesses

Spaced-out Modernist Pablo d'Ors, Francis-Bergoglio's Personal Consultant
  Is Recommending to Bergoglio the Installation of Priestesses.
Pablo d'Ors Called Our Lord Jesus Christ's Divine Decision
not to Select Women for the Priesthood to Be "an Unacceptable Discrimination".
Not Only Is Christ a "Bigot," but All Those Who Are Opposed to Priestesses
Are "Sinners" in the Eyes of This Personal Consultant of Bergoglio's

Is Francis-Bergoglio planning to force the admission of priestesses into his Newchurch of the New Order, in the same way in which he connived to force the admission of homosexuals into his Newchurch? Even when his Extraordinary Synod on the Family wouldn't buy Bergoglio's anti-Christian pro-"gay" doctrine, Bergoglio ordered the failed paragraph to be reinserted into the Synod's final report.

Spanish modernist Pablo d'Ors, whom Bergoglio's appointed to his Pontifical Council for Culture, yesterday revealed to the Italian daily La Repubblica that he was "absolutely" in favor of opening up the Novus Ordo presyterate to priestesses, that is, prebyteresses or ministresses. Of course, priestesses are Biblically and Traditionally condemned as Pagan in the Catholic Church. d'Ors went on to say that several other Bergoglio appointees wanted priestesses. Bergoglio's Council has determined to focus its February 2015 session in Newrome on "women's issues," including the condemnation of priestesses.
 
d'Ors got off onto a New Order roll when he called Our Lord Jesus Christ's divine decision not to select women for the priesthood to be "an unacceptable discrimination" and that those who were opposed to priestesses were "sinners." It is truly blasphemous how these delusional Newchurch modernists like d'Ors, set themselves up as God to overrule Jesus Christ, True God and Second Person of the Most Blessed Trinity.

Even Vatican II NewChurch got this right...
The Roman Catholic Church doctrine on the ordination of women, as expressed in canon law and is that: "Only a baptized man (in Latin, vir) validly receives sacred ordination."[1] The Church teaches that this requirement is a matter of divine law, and thus doctrinal.[2]

Some supporters of women's ordination have asserted that there have been ordained female priests and bishops in antiquity.[6] The church's position is that, although "a few heretical sects in the first centuries, especially Gnostic ones, entrusted the exercise of the priestly ministry to women: this innovation was immediately noted and condemned by the Fathers who considered it as unacceptable in the Church."[7] In response some supporters of women's ordination argue those sects were not heretical but orthodox.[8]

There is evidence that women were ordained by some groups within the Christian community. For example, Pope Gelasius I apparently condemned the practice of women officiating at altars; inscriptions near Tropea in Calabria refer to "presbytera", which could be interpreted as a woman priest or as a wife of a male priest.[8] Furthermore, a sarcophagus from Dalmatia is inscribed with the date 425 and records that a grave in the Salona burial-ground was bought from presbytera Flavia Vitalia: selling burial plots was at one time a duty of presbyters.[8] There have been some 15 records so far found of women being ordained in antiquity by Christians; the church, as noted, states those ordinations were by heretical groups. The Vatican II sect is very much gnostic ad heretical so it should not surprise anyone.
In 1994, Pope John Paul II declared in his letter
Ordinatio Sacerdotalis, stating: "Wherefore, in order that all doubt
may be removed regarding a matter of great importance…
I declare that the Church has no authority whatsoever
to confer priestly ordination on women and
that this judgment is to be definitively
held by all the Church's faithful."[20]

 In 1976, the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued the Declaration on the Question of the Admission of Women to the Ministerial Priesthood which taught that for doctrinal, theological, and historical reasons, the Church "... does not consider herself authorized to admit women to priestly ordination." Reasons given were the Church's determination to remain faithful to its constant tradition, its fidelity to Christ's will, and the iconic value of male representation due to the "sacramental nature" of the priesthood. In April 1976, the Pontifical Biblical Commission released a study examining the exclusion of women from the ministerial priesthood from a biblical perspective: "The masculine character of the hierarchical order which has structured the church since its beginning ... seems attested to by scripture in an undeniable way." "As a matter of fact, we see in the Acts of the Apostles and the epistles that the first [Christian] communities were always directed by men exercising the apostolic power."[19] However, in the conclusion of the document, they write:
"It does not seem that the New Testament by itself alone will permit us to settle in a clear way and once and for all the problem of the possible accession of women to the presbyterate.
These modernists run under the Marxist/Masonic banner of "absolute equality" and soon all religions will be united as the diabolical plot to overthrow the Dogma of Faith commences.

 

 

2 comments:

  1. "Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law."
    1 Corinthians 14:34

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's impossible. This has been Dogmatically defined. No woman can ever be priest.

    ReplyDelete