When Egner’s pastor read her letter, he asked her to write another that either renounced her position or made clear that she “yields to the wisdom of the church.”
When she refused, she was told she could no longer teach her Old Testament class for sixth-graders at Our Lady of Lourdes parish in Westwood.
“This is frightening,” Egner said Monday. “I think it’s a step backward.”
Her pastor, Rev. David Sunberg, said his decision is not part of a broader crackdown on dissent and he is not following a new, get-tough edict from Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk, who recently ordered Akers to stop teaching in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati because of her public support for the ordination of women.
Spokesman Dan Andriacco also said the archbishop had nothing to do with Egner’s dismissal.
“We have an obligation to teach what Christ and His church teaches,” Sunberg said. “If she can’t do that, it wouldn’t be in our interest to have her teach.”
In her letter, Egner said she could find no biblical reference barring women from the priesthood and that allowing women priests could help ease the priest shortage that now afflicts the church.
“Some self-reflection on the part of church officials may be beneficial,” she wrote.
She also suggested that the clergy abuse crisis might have been avoided if the church had been more open to the ordination of women.
Egner, who has been a volunteer teacher for two years, said she never discussed her views on women priests in her religion class and she told Sunberg she never would bring it up. Her letter does not identify her as a teacher and does not name her parish.
“I feel the punishment is disproportionate,” Egner said. “Priests have abused boys and their punishment was disproportionate the other way. I feel the church really hasn’t taken responsibility and addressed that, and yet I can’t write a letter to the editor.
“I don’t get that.”
The reasons for Egner’s dismissal are similar to those Pilarczyk gave when he told Akers, a teacher for 40 years, that she no longer could teach in archdiocesan schools and institutions.
He said the Catechism of the Catholic Church is clear when it states that “the ordination of women is not possible” because Christ chose only male apostles.
Pilarczyk gave Akers an ultimatum after her name appeared on the Web site of the Women’s Ordination Conference, which advocates for the ordination of women.
The archbishop told her to remove her name from the site and publicly renounce her support for women priests. Akers agreed to the first demand but refused the second.
Sunberg said he was disappointed Egner also refused to publicly retract her comments.
“It kind of surprised me, and it saddened me, too,” he said. “Carol is a nice person.”
Egner, 53, said the decision stunned her. She described herself as “very Catholic” and as someone who still urges her patients to pray for saintly intervention.
She said she’s now likely to leave Our Lady of Lourdes parish.
“This just smacks of, this is the way it is and if you don’t like it there may be repercussions,” Egner said.
“Catholics have a very long tradition of various beliefs and the ability to talk about them, and sometimes things change.”
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