Cardinal O'Malley: If I started a church, I'd love to have women priests
Catholics who thought Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley’s remarks about Kansas City Bishop Robert Finn’s suitability for office were provocative have another interesting comment to ponder: If he were to start a church, he would “love to have women priests.”
In an interview with “60 Minutes” on CBS that producers said took more than a year for them to persuade him to do, O’Malley seemed troubled by reporter Norah O’Donnell’s question as to whether the exclusion of women from the Church hierarchy was “immoral.”
O’Malley paused, then said, “Christ would never ask us to do something immoral. It’s a matter of vocation and what God has given to us.”
“Not everyone needs to be ordained to have an important role in the life of the Church,” he said. “Women run Catholic charities, Catholic schools …. They have other very important roles. A priest can’t be a mother. The tradition in the Church is that we ordain men.
“If I were founding a church, I’d love to have women priests,” O’Malley said. “But Christ founded it, and what he has given us is something different.”
The Boston cardinal also said the Vatican’s decision to place a group of American nuns under bishop supervision for allegedly straying from Church doctrine was a “disaster.”
O’Malley also said he was “terrified” of taking over the Boston Archdiocese in 2003 as the clergy sexual abuse crisis roiled parishes and lawsuits threatened to bankrupt the local church. “The seminary was empty. People were angry,” he said. O’Malley sold the cardinal’s residence for more than $100 million to help settle lawsuits
O’Malley also repeated what he first revealed at a Boston launch event for Crux: That he and the pope communicate mainly via fax, sending letters back and forth because it is “fast and efficient.”
He also said he believes that Francis will change the face of the Church: “No doubt.”
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