Feminist Dissent, Human Sexuality, and the Liturgy

by Rev. Jerry Pokorsky

In recent years it has become clear that the demands of 
radical feminism are fueling the continuing crisis of 
dissent in the Church. Feminism's appetite has proven 
insatiable, despite the hierarchy's attempts to satisfy it. 
Committee documents promoting "inclusive language" and the 
recent decision to allow altar girls have failed to placate 
feminist grievances.

It should come as no surprise that this source of spiritual 
cacophony finds expression in abusive liturgical practices. 
There appears to be a close association between feminist 
dissent from Church teaching since the days of the Second 
Vatican Council and the persistent liturgical aberrations 
found in many parts of the country. But what exactly is that 
connection?

Dissent begets dissent. Those who promote the ordination of 
women are often the same people who promote abortion, and 
seek approval for various forms of sexual disorder. 
Throughout the year the Women's Ordination Conference 
promotes its agenda in advertisements placed in the 
<National Catholic Reporter> (NCR), the leading voice of 
dissent within the Church in the United States.

The NCR has proven to be a reliable partner. In 1995 
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger described as "infallible" the 
Church's teaching that women cannot be admitted to the 
ministerial priesthood; his letter in answer to the question 
of infallibility was confirmed by Pope John Paul II. NCR's 
thinly disguised editorial rage following that declaration 
is documented in the December 1995 issues of the newspaper.

Sexual disorder is part of the same picture. In an October 
1995 issue of the NCR (the issue was selected at random from 
my reading desk), a group calling itself "Brothers 
Together," apparently hoping to find favor with NCR readers, 
ran an ad promoting "regional gatherings, retreats, 
community with other conscious, loving men" for "gay men." 
In the same issue, the "Conference for Catholic Lesbians" 
promoted their newsletter in an ad and described themselves 
as "advocates for lesbian issues in political and church 
forums."

The NCR itself is also one of the leading proponents of 
liturgical aberrations. A casual review of recent issues 
reveals that the editors have a curious fascination with 
liturgical dance and feminist "liturgies." Illicit 
liturgical practices, reported by the NCR with apparent 
approval, express the spirit of dissent that pervades the 
newspaper.

What, then, is the underlying theological theme explaining 
these strange associations? Dissent on issues relating to 
women's ordination, abortion, and sexual disorder-and the 
paradigmatic expression of that dissent in the seemingly 
unrelated types of liturgical abuse-can be traced to a 
breakdown in understanding of male mediation, as that 
concept is conveyed through the Bible. It is the fact of 
male mediation that disturbs feminist sensibilities and 
stirs them to identify it as "male domination." Arguably, 
the common thread connecting these various types of dissent 
and illicit liturgical practices is the denial of mediation 
as a <male> trait. But to deny the male's role as mediator 
comes at a price; it necessarily denies God's self-
revelation and his plan for the authentic dignity of both 
men and women.

The mediation of Adam and of Christ

The book of Genesis reveals the male's role in mediating 
God's love. After the Fall, Genesis reports that "Adam knew 
Eve his wife, and she conceived and bore Cain, saying, 'I 
have gotten a man with the help of the Lord."' (Gen 4:1) It 
is noteworthy that Eve recognizes her child as a gift from 
God. She does not mention Adam as she delights in the birth 
of her child. But it is clear that Eve actively receives 
God's love, embodied as a child, through the mediation of 
the male: Adam. Even in their fallen state, the first 
parents recognize children as an expression of God's love, 
in which they are permitted to participate.

It is clear from Genesis that the male primarily <mediates> 
God's love to the woman who primarily <receives> God's love. 
There is a hint of this reality even in the physiological 
sexual characteristics of male and female. This is not to 
suggest that "mediation" in a broader understanding of the 
word is exclusively a male attribute-any more than to 
suggest that "receptivity" or "nurturing" are exclusively 
female traits. But these categories, applied to the sexes, 
are predominant sexual traits in human nature. A father, for 
example, can nurture a child with affection, but he cannot 
sustain a child as a mother does by breast feeding. A mother 
can "mediate" God's love to her children, but not in the 
same way in which she received God's love in the conception 
of her children.

The male's primary role in mediating God's love is confirmed 
in the mediation of Jesus Christ between God and man. Christ 
mediates the Father's love to his Church: "For there is one 
God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man 
Christ Jesus." (1 Tim 2:5) It is appropriate that the second 
person of the blessed Trinity entered into the world not 
only as a human being, but as a male. Why? Because the 
primary function of a male, physiologically and spiritually, 
is to mediate God's love. The Incarnation confirms God's 
revelation of male mediation.

Christ the mediator, using marital imagery, even identifies 
himself as a bridegroom. Responding to the disciples of John 
the Baptist, Jesus asked, "Can the wedding guests mourn as 
long as the bridegroom is with them? The days will come, 
when the bridegroom is taken away from them, and then they 
will fast." (Mt 9:14,15) St. Paul clearly establishes the 
image of Christ as bridegroom and the Church as bride. He 
compares the relationship between husband and wife to that 
of Christ and his Church:

For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is  the 
head of the Church, his body, and is himself its  savior. As 
the Church is subject to Christ, so let  wives also be 
subject in everything to their husbands. Husbands, love your 
wives, as Christ loved  the Church and gave himself up for 
her, that he  might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the 
washing of water with the word, that he might present the 
church to himself in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or 
any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish. 
Even so husbands should love their wives as their own 
bodies. (Eph 5:23-28) Just as Eve received Cain as a gift 
from God through the mediation of Adam, so the Church bears 
spiritual children by the mediation of Christ: "But when the 
time had fully come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, 
born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, 
so that we might receive adoption as sons" (Gal. 4:4,5). 
Just as Eve delighted in Cain as a gift from the Father, the 
Church also delights in the Father's gift of grace mediated 
by the sacrifice of Christ: "And because you are sons, God 
has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, 
'Abba! Father!"' (Gal. 4:6)

It is apparent from the New Testament that the maleness of 
Christ is significant in revealing his role as the one 
Mediator. Only a male can be a bridegroom. Jesus is the only 
mediator between God and man. According to God's design, 
only a male acting in the person of Christ can mediate God's 
love. This helps explain the theology of the male 
priesthood. It is the function of the priest to act in the 
person of Christ (<in persona Christi capitis>), that is, in 
the person of Christ the Head of the Mystical Body and 
Bridegroom of his spouse the Church. The priest, like Christ 
himself, mediates the Father's love to his people, the 
Church. The primary function of a priest is that of mediator 
in the celebration of the sacraments. This paternal 
mediation, in which a priest shares, reflects the male and 
paternal principle which God has placed in both the biology 
and the ontology of his created world. It is a principle 
that was confirmed and deepened by the mediation of the 
incarnate son of God. In the final analysis, does the 
imagery of male mediation matter? Might it be appropriate to 
sacrifice an all-male priesthood-in order to accommodate 
cultural concerns, or in the face of chronic priest 
shortages? Recent decrees by the Holy See make it clear that 
the inadmissibility of women to the ministerial priesthood 
is a teaching that belongs to the deposit of faith; in other 
words, it is part of God's revelation. Some may find this 
teaching difficult. But the imagery of sex roles-of male 
mediation and female fecundity-may be the key to 
understanding.

"Be fruitful and multiply"

The answer to our questions can be found in the 
reexamination of Scripture. In Genesis, God commands the 
first parents to be fruitful:  So God created man in his own 
image, in the image  of God he created him; male and female 
he created  them. And God blessed them, and God said to  
them, '<Be fruitful and multiply>, and fill the earth and  
subdue it...' (1:27-28)

Male and female can be "fruitful" only by obeying the laws 
of nature. When man and woman engage in procreation, they 
act not only in accord with the laws of biology but also in 
conformity to the expressed will of God. Children are 
conceived as a result of the male's mediation and the 
female's receptivity to God's love. Male and female, Christ 
and his Church, priest and people-these are not in 
competition with one another; they complement one another in 
the presence of God. The male actively mediates; the female 
actively receives; and new life expresses the loving union 
of man with woman under God.

Fecundity is directly connected to man's (male and female) 
"imaging" of God and fulfilling his command to subdue the 
earth. Just as God's love is expressed in creation, man's 
love, created in the image of God, is expressed in new life. 
Man discovers his dignity as a "co-creator" with God as new 
life is brought into the world. And the male's role as 
mediator of God's love orders and directs his sexuality 
toward new life.

Similarly, Christ expects the Church to be holy and 
spiritually fruitful. Before his ascension Jesus said to his 
disciples, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been 
given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, 
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and 
of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have 
commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, to the close of 
the age." (Mt 28:18-20) The Church discovers her dignity by 
sharing in the redemptive mission of Jesus Christ. But the 
Church is not fruitful unless she remains in union with 
Christ who, as Mediator, orders and directs the Father's 
love.

Just as it is the nature of man (male and female) to be 
fruitful, it is the nature of Christ in union with his 
Church to express God's creative love. A fruitful Church is 
an evangelical and missionary Church. A missionary Church is 
fruitful because she has received the redemptive grace of 
the Father through the mediation of Christ. That mediation 
continues to be fruitful through the mediation of priests 
<in persona Christi capitis>. So every priest can and should 
be called "Father" because, by the design of God himself, he 
participates in and mediates the divine fatherhood of God in 
his plan to "fill the earth and subdue it." The spiritual 
children of the priest are God the Father's children, born 
into the Church through the sacraments.

Attack on the male ministerial priesthood

The attack (and it must be described as an "attack") on the 
exclusively male priesthood is an attack on the male's role, 
set out by God's design, as mediator. This has immediate and 
unwelcome consequences. Since mediation is the primary 
function of a male, it is fitting that the priesthood should 
maintain the marital imagery established in Genesis and 
confirmed in Christ. That imagery would be destroyed by the 
ordination of women; it would redefine the nature of the 
priesthood and would sever the priesthood of the Church from 
the priesthood of Jesus Christ. Why? Because the attack on 
the exclusively male priesthood suggests that the Church can 
exist without a mediator. But a Church without a mediator is 
a Church without Christ. Ultimately the denial of an 
exclusively male priesthood breaks man's contact with an 
infinitely transcendent God and denies both men and women 
access to their right to divine adoption in Christ.

Of course all of the Christian faithful, by way of their 
common priesthood, "mediate" the Father's love, most 
explicitly in the lay apostolate. But the common priesthood 
should not be confused with the ministerial priesthood. The 
consequence of confusing the common priesthood of all 
believers with the sacerdotal priesthood is a denial of the 
essential meaning of the Eucharist. While absence of the 
activity of the common priesthood (ordered to and formed by 
the Eucharistic presence of Christ) would disable the 
Church's evangelical mission to the world, if there were no 
sacerdotal priesthood there would be no immanent Eucharistic 
presence. A "headless body" is not the Church; it is merely 
an "assembly."

The attack on the exclusively male priesthood is also an 
attack on Adam's role as mediator. If we fail to recognize 
the primary role of the male in mediating God's love, then 
Eve can no longer delight in the conception of children 
precisely as a gift from God. The denial of Adam's role as 
mediator gives the illusion that the child is not a gift 
from a transcendent and loving God. Eve no longer sees 
herself as the receiver and a <steward> of her children, she 
perceives herself as the <owner>. Eve is tempted to see the 
child as a mere extension of her own body, a "growth" to 
which she is free to either grant or deny life.

But recognizing the male's role as mediator impels man to 
order the sexual act toward new life, according to its 
nature. The male is a "go-between"-an agent acting between 
God and the woman in bringing about new life. This agency 
anticipates the reception of God's grace, which is brought 
through the one mediator, Jesus Christ, to all men and 
women. The sexual act was designed by God to express and be 
open to new life. Man was designed to be "fruitful" and to 
"multiply" by graciously accepting and cooperating with the 
gift of God's love. God's order and plan for human sexuality 
is safeguarded by the awareness of the male's role as 
mediator. To recognize the gift of male mediation entails a 
profound act of humility the male is "merely" an instrument 
of God's love, not the author of love. The woman "merely" 
receives God's love as a good steward; she is not the owner 
of that love. Therein lies the dignity of both men and 
women. By respecting God's plan, men and women participate 
in God's continuing creation under his loving Providence.

The deliberate denial of male mediation therefore is an act 
of sinful pride. Devoid of male mediation, the exercise of 
sexuality no longer makes reference to a transcendent God. 
(A "mediator" after all, is not acting on his own; he 
belongs to the person he mediates.) Denial of the male's 
role in mediating God's love unleashes the illusion of self-
sufficiency on the part of both male and female. Both are 
tempted to claim exclusive "ownership" of their sexual 
powers and to use them in accordance with their inclinations 
of the moment.

But the consequences of original sin, combined with the 
illusion of self-sufficiency, are devastating. Sexuality 
becomes disordered and dysfunctional. Eroticism, 
masturbation, contraception, homosexuality, and abortion are 
symptoms of a selfish and autonomous sexuality. Given the 
naturally aggressive character of the male after the Fall, 
the denial of his role as a "mere" mediator of God's love 
has set the stage for male domination. In general, when 
sexuality is no longer regulated by God's plan, male 
irresponsibility (and often brutishness) is quick to emerge. 
Ironically, when the reality of male mediation is denied (in 
our day, often the result of feminist activism and an eager 
acceptance of the feminist ideology on the part of men), it 
is women who suffer the most.

Contraception, for example, has not turned out to be the 
widely heralded means of the liberation of women. 
Contraception neutralizes fertility; it is designed to make 
male mediation impossible. But what has been the result of 
the widespread practice of contraception? Women have been 
reduced to objects of lust; promiscuity has skyrocketed; 
statistics reveal that the divorce rate coincides with the 
rate of the availability of contraceptives. When 
contraception fails, and male mediation takes place after 
all, the baby conceived often suffers the grim fate of an 
intruder.

The effect on liturgical practices

The denial of male mediation as essential to the priesthood 
of Jesus Christ also deforms the celebration of the liturgy. 
Without a male priest, there can be no liturgical expression 
of mediation between God and man. Without a male priest, 
there can be no liturgical expression of man's contact with 
an infinitely transcendent God. Only a male, by the plan of 
God, can mediate his love through the Eucharist to his 
people. A community which denies the priest's role as 
mediator can no longer be open to new life. In its quest for 
autonomy, it has deliberately and liturgically disconnected 
itself from the Author of grace and life.

This explains the liturgical disorder associated with 
illicit liturgical practices. At times a priest might be 
uneasy about his role as a mediator. There is a hint of this 
attitude when he illicitly changes the liturgical greeting, 
"The Lord be with you," to "The Lord is <with> us." Another 
example occurs at the dismissal when a priest may feel 
compelled to say "May almighty God bless us..." instead of 
"May almighty God bless you...." At other times, the priest 
may feel the need to "jazz up" the liturgy to make it more 
appealing or "relevant" to the community.

Just as the denial of male mediation is an act of sinful 
pride, so the denial of the priest's role as a mediator in 
the liturgy sets up the celebrant as the center of 
attention. He is no longer a mediator but a presider. Devoid 
of mediation, the celebration of Mass no longer makes 
reference to a transcendent God. The focus is on the priest, 
often in competition with the community. The attitude 
unleashes the illusion of self-sufficiency on the part of 
both priest and people. Both are tempted to claim exclusive 
"ownership" of the celebration and to use it according to 
their inclinations of the moment.

Unexpected changes in the Mass break the solemnity built up 
through centuries of organic growth in the crafting of 
liturgical rubrics. The innovations may be entertaining, on 
a certain level, but they distract from what is really going 
on at the Mass; the opportunity for contemplative prayer is 
disrupted. At the very least, the priest becomes a poor 
mediator (his liturgical practices render the Mass "valid 
but unlawful"). In the extreme (should he fail to use bread 
made of wheat, for example), he does not mediate at all, 
because his Mass is invalid. A priest who takes liberties 
with the liturgy implicitly denies his role as mediator in 
Christ and renders the liturgy infertile.

Liturgical promiscuity

It is not at all difficult to see parallels between 
liturgical abuse and sexual promiscuity. Unlawful activities 
in the celebration of Mass express a spirit of disorder and 
dysfunction. Liturgical aberrations are like contraceptive 
sex, in which "routine" sexual behavior cannot satisfy the 
most essential appetites. So there is a constant need to go 
beyond the normal into various forms of eroticism. 
Liturgical dance, for example, is an example of something 
"new" and "exciting" in the liturgy. But rather than opening 
up the community to a transcendent God, it merely occupies 
the attention of the community until something more 
entertaining comes along. Liturgical aberrations are also 
symptoms of a self-absorbed and autonomous community, a 
community without a strong father. Like a wife who has 
rejected her husband, or a husband who has rejected his role 
as father, the community is barren. It has closed in on 
itself, incapable of new life because it has shut itself off 
from God's grace.

Evidence of this barren individualism in contemporary 
celebrations of the liturgy can be found in some attitudes 
toward adoration of the Blessed Eucharist. The Eucharist-the 
body, blood, soul, and divinity of Jesus Christ-is the gift 
of the heavenly Father through the mediation of the priest. 
In adoration outside of Mass, a properly formed Catholic 
does not worship by contemplating the work of the male 
priest as a mediator. The attention is on the Eucharist-just 
as Eve delights in her child, not in Adam who mediated the 
child. (Of course this does not exclude Eve's appreciation 
of Adam, any more than the Catholic community's worship of 
the Real Presence excludes an appreciation of the priest. 
But the priorities should be clear.) If the Mass has been so 
reduced that many participants see the liturgy as nothing 
more than a community meal, adoration of the Eucharist would 
be senseless at best, perhaps even irritating.

Why would Eucharistic adoration be irritating, rather than 
merely irrelevant, to those who have abandoned faith in the 
Real Presence? In a Mass where the Eucharist is reduced to a 
community meal, the Real Presence mediated by the priest is 
denied. To a person who insists upon denying the role of the 
priest as mediator, adoration of the Eucharist can only call 
attention to the <priest> himself who confected the 
Eucharist (almost as if the priest were the chief "minister 
of hospitality" and "cook"). It would be as if Eve would 
look upon Adam with envy: as someone who competes with her 
for duties she might perform equally well. Eve might even 
overlook or deny the humanity of her child as she resents 
being excluded from Adam's activities. Consequently, in some 
convents, visiting priests are disinvited to concelebrate 
Mass with the chaplain because of the alleged appearance of 
"male domination." Such a preoccupation betrays, at worst, a 
faithless attitude toward the Real Presence and at best, a 
misunderstanding of the proper role of priests as mediators.

Authentic male mediation

Is it possible to reverse the sad effects of post-conciliar 
liturgical aberrations? If it is correct to say that 
liturgical aberrations are expressions of the denial of male 
mediation, then a parallel between sexual promiscuity and 
liturgical abuse is unavoidable. For clergy and laity alike, 
the answer to the question depends on a rediscovery of the 
authentic meaning of male mediation in general. A father 
must be aware of the nature of his fatherhood. Jesus himself 
warns, "And call no man your father on earth, for you have 
one Father, who is in heaven." (Mt 23:9) A "father" can dare 
to call himself "father" only if he participates in the 
Fatherhood of God. And he participates in the Fatherhood of 
God by mediating God's love according to God's design, 
whether sexual or liturgical.

The answer to the question of whether or not the effects of 
liturgical abuse can be reversed also depends upon whether 
bishops and priests are willing to humble themselves, to be 
"mere" mediators of God's grace to his people. This may 
require a radical change of attitude regarding the priest's 
relationship with his people. A mediator has been given the 
obligation to confer God's grace upon his people. A priest 
should be aware that his blessing is more efficacious than a 
layman's blessing. He should also be aware that his prayers, 
offered in the name of the people, will be heard more 
readily because he has apostolic authority conferred by way 
of Holy Orders. Saints are heard more readily because of 
their personal holiness; priests are heard more readily 
because they have been commissioned to approach the Lord on 
behalf of the community. So the priest's attitude and 
demeanor in the celebration of the sacraments should reflect 
this sacred dignity.

Nomenclature also needs attention. Although the priest 
"presides" as the "celebrant," he is actively and intimately 
involved in the celebration of the Mass as a "go-between" 
between God and the congregation. The priest's role as 
mediator preempts his role as "president of the assembly." 
Without denying the legitimate roles of other liturgical 
ministers, he must dismiss any thoughts of "enabling" or 
"facilitating" them as if his primary role as "presider" 
were to delegate duties for purposes of "inclusion" in 
ministry. He does not properly "build community." God's 
grace forms and transforms the community of believers 
through priestly mediation. As priest and mediator the 
priest offers sacrifices on behalf of the congregation. He 
efficaciously speaks to the heavenly Father on behalf of the 
community. He directs and orders the liturgical celebration 
according to its nature. The liturgy is not a committee 
meeting, and liturgical actions are not theater. The liturgy 
is a representation of the history of redemption, which 
relentlessly unfolds and engages the community in worship. 
Through the mediation of the priest, the liturgy solemnly 
expresses and orders God's love, which is received by the 
community with spiritual fecundity.

As priests become more aware of their role as mediators, 
should we be concerned about the emergence of clericalism? 
Not if authentic male mediation is understood correctly. 
When priests and bishops recognize their role as mediators, 
they recognize the limits to their authority. They are 
commissioned to present the Word of God without distortion. 
And the liturgical expression of the Word is regulated by 
the Church which insists that "...no other person, not even 
a priest, may add, remove, or change anything in the liturgy 
on his own authority." (Vatican Council II, <Sacrosanctum 
concilium>, 22)

The authority of priests is not their own. As paternal 
mediators, they belong to the Father and they are sons of 
the Church. Defined and regulated by God's plan, they ensure 
that their priestly exemplar of mediation is none other than 
Jesus Christ, who "came not to be served but to serve, and 
to give his life as a ransom for many." (Mk 10:45).

<Father Jerry Pokorsky is a priest of the Diocese of 
Arlington, Virginia, and on the editorial committee of 
Adoremus.>

This article appeared in the March 1996 issue of "The 
Catholic World Report," P.O. Box 6718, Syracuse, NY 13217-
7912, 800-825-0061. Published monthly except bimonthly 
August/September at $39.95 per year.

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