Last week, Pope Francis
loosed a media tsunami by dropping a pebble of sanity into an ocean of
religious angst.
"If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has
goodwill, who am I to judge?" he told reporters on the flight back to
Rome after his trip to Brazil.
What did it mean? Was he changing church teaching? And how might it affect 1.2 billion Roman Catholics worldwide?
Hundreds of news stories and thousands of blogs, tweets and
commentaries later, most observers heard in Francis' statement a
proposal to end to his predecessor's hard line on homosexuality.
Pope
Benedict XVI had barred men with "deep-seated homosexual" tendencies
from seminaries, calling homosexuality an "objective disorder."
But
Francis said gays who sought to live faithfully — that is, celibate —
were not to be judged or excluded from the church.
By looking to the individual's heart instead of his genitals, Francis
demonstrated a commitment to those who are neglected, marginalized and
disenfranchised, as he repeatedly has done during his four-month papal
tenure.
Yet there is one group more numerous than LGBTs in the church
and significantly more neglected, disenfranchised and marginalized — for
whom his ministrations fall short.
Who, you ask? Roman Catholic women.
During the same interview on the papal plane, Francis said, "Women in
the church are more important than bishops and priests," just as "Mary
is more important than the apostles."
Continuing, the pope said the
church needed to develop a theology that addressed the role of women.
But, he clearly stated, those roles would never include the ordained
ministry because Pope John Paul II expressly forbade it.
(I leave it to
Catholic scholars and theologians to explain why Francis can all but
countermand Benedict's directives on gays but not John Paul's on women.)
"That door is closed," Francis told reporters.
Those are harsh words
for millions of Catholic women worldwide.
These include nuns whose
communities have been beggared by declines in vocations and decreased
institutional support, lay women whose leadership sustains parishes
without full-time priests and girls seeking to discover their calling in
a church where ordination in impossible.
Francis' remarks also have ramifications for millions of women
worldwide whose poverty and exploitation have roots in their
second-class religious status.
And sadly, even if the world were full of
female Catholic priests, Orthodox rabbis, evangelical preachers and
Muslim imams, the problems of sex trafficking, prostitution, indentured
servitude, honor killings, rape, genital mutilation and polygamy would
not immediately disappear.
Still, full recognition of women's religious
calling and authority would be a start in dismantling theological
justifications that enable sexism, misogyny and exploitation.
Reporters who headlined the pope's remarks on gays, knowing the story
had more juice than Francis' condemnation of drug cartels and
excoriations of poverty, treated his comments on women as an
afterthought.
That's because in the current media ecology of religion
and public life, sex sells and gender gets a nod.
(Forget religious
leaders opining on violence, materialism or climate change. Unless Jesus
himself appeared in a "Remember Sandy Hook" T-shirt to buy sunscreen at
Wal-Mart, there's no story.)
But the ongoing negotiation of gender has been the American story
since the 1960s.
The advent of the birth control pill, severing sex and
procreation, catalyzed profound changes in family life, the workplace
and the marketplace.
And the subsequent effect on politics and economics
has been perhaps most vociferously debated in the religious sphere.
Headlines on abortion, the culture war and "family values" have been a
staple for decades now.
Reporters tell the daily story, inflected by the demands of the "sex
sells" imperative.
But the absence of sustained critical attention to
social and cultural forces, including religion, keeps us reeling from
headline to headline.
Yes, Francis took a step forward in the church's
treatment of gays.
But he kept in place its bar to women.
And the import of that bar — its global reverberations in unwanted
pregnancies, female poverty and sexual slavery — remains hidden in plain
sight.