1. Introduction
Since Pope Francis’ revision of the Church’s criminal law came into force in December 2021, sexual violence against women in the Roman Catholic Church is no longer merely a punishable violation of the obligation of celibacy, but also a crime against human life, dignity and freedom. Moreover, for the first time, sexual assaults committed by someone taking advantage of their ecclesiastical position and the authority associated with it can now also be prosecuted under Church law (cc. 1395 § 3 and 1398 § 2
Codex Iuris Canonici 1983).
However, this only partially improves the general legal position of women in the Catholic Church; they are still excluded from all offices through which they could shape Church identity by magisterial teaching and/or through ecclesiastical leadership, due to the impossibility of ordaining women as priests, which by the magisterium is considered to be a definitive, i.e., infallible doctrine (cf.
Pope John Paul II 1994;
Ladaria 2018). The magisterium justifies this doctrinal and legal situation with the complementary sexuality of human beings as man and woman, as it is considered to be God’s will. Against this background, the “reservation of the priesthood to males, as a sign of Christ the Spouse […], is not a question open to discussion” (
Pope Francis 2013, No. 104). Since, according to church law, women cannot validly receive the ordination of deacons either (cf.
Anuth 2020), they are limited to the lay state, but even in this they are not legally equal to men (cf. e.g.,
Lüdecke 2012, pp. 184–91), even though Pope Francis recently amended c. 230 § 1 CIC to allow women to become lectors and acolytes as well (
Pope Francis 2021, p. 10). What would be discrimination under state law is considered to be a consequence of the magisterial gender anthropology within the Church, which, according to the Church’s self-understanding, is not mere opinion or even an “invention” of the Pope and the Bishops, but their interpretation of God’s plan for women and men guided by the Holy Spirit. However, the Church has long had a serious mediation problem in this regard and is also currently criticized for promoting misogynistic violence against women through its magisterial gender anthropology and the gender-specific norms of canon law (cf.
Leimgruber 2021, p. 176f.).
1 2. The Church’s Magisterium and Women
As the pastoral theologian Rainer Bucher noted a good 10 years ago, the Catholic image of women is “even and especially among Catholic women—apart from a small minority—simply rejected, even ridiculed” (
Bucher 2009, p. 287). These problems of acceptance are the result of social developments that also find support among convinced Catholics. The Church’s authority knows this and has always reacted to it with “doctrinal intensification and inculcation” (
Lüdecke 2012, p. 211).
As early as 1981, Pope John Paul II clearly stated the Church’s position on the rights and duties of women and on their dignity and social role in his Apostolic Exhortation “Familiaris Consortio” (
Pope John Paul II 1981, No. 22–24). Then, on the occasion of the Marian Year in 1988, he set forth in detail the Church’s teaching on the dignity and vocation of women in the Apostolic Letter “Mulieris dignitatem” and reaffirmed it in 1995 in a “Letter to Women” (
Pope John Paul II 1995). The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith provided a reminder of the Church’s doctrine in 2004 in its “Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on the collaboration of men and women in the Church and in the world” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004). The reason for this reminder and inculcation was that the Congregation saw the Church challenged by “certain currents of thought which are often at variance with the authentic advancement of women” (ibid., No. 1). Regarding the contents, the Congregation does not criticize individual publications or theologians, but identifies certain currents and tendencies that it considers to be dangerous (cf.
Lüdecke 2004, p. 234). One of these tendencies, according to the Congregation, “strongly” emphasizes “conditions of subordination [of women] in order to give rise to antagonism”. Women react to male abuse of power with their own pursuit of power and thus become “the adversaries of men”. From the Congregation’s point of view, this results in a “confusion regarding the human person” that is particularly harmful to the structure of the family (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 2).
“[I]n the wake of this first tendency” the Congregation sees a second one emerging, which minimizes the bodily difference between man and woman (sex) while the category of gender as a “purely cultural element […] is emphasized to the maximum and held to be primary”. From the Church’s point of view this conceals “the difference or duality of the sexes” and “has enormous consequences” since it not only calls “into question the family, in its natural two-parent structure of mother and father,” but also equates homosexuality and heterosexuality and promotes “a new model of polymorphous sexuality” (ibid., No. 2). As the Congregation states, such an anthropology apparently denies the predestination of the person on the basis of his or her “essential constitution” as man or woman and renders “the fact that the Son of God assumed human nature in its male form” unimportant and meaningless (ibid., No. 3). Where the relationship between the sexes is “distorted” in this way, “their access to the face of God is threatened” (ibid., No. 7). For the Church, the relationship between man and woman cannot “be a kind of mistrustful and defensive opposition” (ibid., No. 14).
In the letter, the Church itself is being called an “expert in humanity” with “a perennial interest in whatever concerns men and women” which has “contributed to a deeper understanding of this fundamental question, in particular through the teaching of John Paul II” (ibid., No. 1). Nevertheless, this question remains “highly topical”, as Pope Benedict XVI emphasized on the 20th anniversary of the publication of the Encyclical “Mulieris dignitatem”, and went on to say: “The man-woman relationship in its respective specificity, reciprocity and complementarity certainly constitutes a central point of the ‘anthropological question’, so decisive in contemporary culture and ultimately for every culture” (
Pope Benedict XVI 2008, p. 163). In 2009, on the occasion of the International Women’s Day, the then Pope stated that the Church wanted to continue being committed “to ensure that every woman always and everywhere may live and express her abilities to the full, obtaining complete respect for her dignity” (
Pope Benedict XVI 2009, p. 6). In the meantime, Pope Francis has also expressed himself similarly on various occasions and described the magisterial position, for example, as follows: “For quite some time, at least in western societies, the model of woman’s
social subordination to man has been surpassed; it is, however, an age-old model that has never completely exhausted its negative effect. We have even overcome a second model, that of pure and simple
parity, applied mechanically, and of absolute
equality. And thus a new paradigm has emerged, that of
reciprocity, in equivalence and difference. The relationship man/woman must therefore recognize that both are necessary insomuch as yes, they possess an identical nature, but each with its own modality. One is necessary for the other, and vice versa, for they truly complete the fullness of the person” (
Pope Francis 2015a). The question is: what does this mean in detail?
3. God’s Plan for Woman and Man
As soon as 1981, Pope John Paul II had already declared in his Apostolic Exhortation “Christifidelis laici”, that by taking part in the “reflection on the anthropological and theological basis of femininity”, the Catholic Church “enters the historic process of the various movements for the promotion of woman”, and in doing so the Church reaches “the very basic aspect of woman as a personal being” and therefore can provide a “most precious contribution”. Above all, however, the Church sees itself committed “to obey God, who created the individual ‘in his image’, ‘male and female he created them’
(Gen 1:27) and who intended that they would accept the call of God to come to know reverence and live his plan. It is a plan that ‘from the beginning’ has been indelibly imprinted in the very being of the human person—men and women—and, therefore, in the make-up, meaning and deepest workings of the individual” (
Pope John Paul II 1989, No. 50). This signifies, that the unchangeable basis of all anthropology is, according to the Church’s official teaching, “the revealed truth concerning man as ‘the image and likeness’ of God” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 6; cf.
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 5). The cornerstones of this divine plan for man and woman, constituted from and by creation (cf.
Pope John Paul II 1989, No. 50;
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 12), “can never be abrogated”, although it is and will be “upset and darkened by sin” (ibid., No. 6). Thus, already in the first creation account, the Bible describes humans as sexually differentiated beings, who are created for and dependent on this relationship. As such, human beings are the image of God (ibid., No. 5). From the Church’s point of view, the importance of the sexual difference is unequivocally affirmed in the second creation account; Eve is not an “inferior” but a “vital helper” for Adam (No. 6). Man and woman are considered to be related to each other: they are called to be there for each other and to complement each other (cf.
Pope John Paul II 1995, No. 7;
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 7;
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 6). This is considered by the Church to be “the heart of God’s original plan and the deepest truth about man and woman, as willed and created by him” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 6). However, the relationship of the sexes was defaced by sin: “In this tragic situation, the equality, respect and love that are required in the relationship of man and woman according to God’s original plan, are lost” (ibid., No. 7).
In the eyes of the Church’s magisterium, the biblical text clearly indicates that in their common humanity, both sexes are essentially alike: “From the very beginning, both are persons, unlike the other living beings in the world about them.
The woman is another ‘I’ in a common humanity” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 6). The equal dignity of man and woman as persons, however, does not mean indistinctive equality, but “is realized as physical, psychological and ontological complementarity, giving rise to a harmonious relationship of ‘uni-duality’” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 8). In this sense, the sexual difference characterizes man and woman “not only on the physical level, but also on the psychological and spiritual” level, and this “diversity, linked to the complementarity of the two sexes, allows thorough response to the design of God according to the vocation to which each one is called” (
Holy Congregation for Catholic Education 1983, No. 5). According to the Church’s conviction, only sin has turned this creationally good relationship of the sexes into a “potentially conflictual” one (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 8).
The basic three-step of the magisterium’s gender anthropology therefore consists of the following: “Man and woman are equal as persons”, “men and women are different in their expression of humanity”, “women and men are dependent on mutual partnership” (cf.
Secretariat of the German Bishops’ Conference 1981, pp. 8–18). In external perception, this has long been perceived as a “stereotypical pattern of argumentation” of post-conciliar Church teachings on questions of the position of men and women, because on the one hand, “the equal personal dignity of women is emphasized again and again, on the other hand, the peculiarity of women, their specific, special nature is strongly emphasized, in order to legitimize a different assignment of tasks and roles” (
Raming 1990, p. 420). Others state that a theological gender anthropology “at the height of the current state of human scientific research” remains a desideratum as long as the Church’s magisterium holds on to “a pre-modern, essentialist concept of nature”, “by which certain assumptions about the ‘nature’ of women (or the sexes) are directly linked to normative expectations of their social roles” (
Heimbach-Steins 2007, p. 34).
The magisterium is nevertheless immune to such criticism, even if it is shared by many of the faithful, because according to their self-understanding, the Pope and the Bishops are not free to change the current Church’s doctrine on the relations between man and woman. Thus, Pope John Paul II emphasized that a deepening of the theological and anthropological foundations of gender difference is, as always, “a question of understanding the reason for and the consequences of the Creator’s decision that the human being should always and only exist as a woman or a man. It is only by beginning from these bases, which make it possible to understand the greatness of the dignity and vocation of women, that one is able to speak of their active presence in the Church and in society” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 1). God’s plan for the sexes is the crucial factor for the magisterium’s anthropology. The Pope and the Bishops see themselves committed to this divine plan as its binding interpreters (cf.
Second Vatican Council 1966, No. 10; c. 747 § 1
Codex Iuris Canonici 1983) when emphasizing that “man and woman are distinct, and will remain so for all eternity” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 12).
The knowledge that God created human beings as man and woman in mutual relation to one another should enable Catholics to “appreciate that the presence of
a certain diversity of roles is in no way prejudicial to women, provided that this diversity is not the result of an arbitrary imposition, but is rather an expression of what is specific to being male and female” (
Pope John Paul II 1995, No. 11). Even if the human body in both sexes “includes right from the beginning the nuptial attribute, that is, the capacity of expressing love” (
Pope John Paul II 1980), women furthermore have a special and “naturally spousal predisposition” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 20) according to Church’s doctrine. This specificity of the female personality makes it understandable from the magisterium’s point of view why man was not created for woman, but vice versa, why woman was created for man, without this implying a subordination of woman to man (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 6).
In this regard, the Church, and with it, most recently Pope Francis, “considers it very important that women be given proper esteem, that they be able to claim in full the place that is theirs, both in the Church and in society”. For this reason, he explicitly calls for girls to be educated, among other things, “to the beauty and greatness of their vocation as women […] in a right and discerning relationship between man and woman” (
Pope Francis 2015b).
4. The “Genius of Women”
In order to counteract the tendency of an emancipatory “masculinization” of women, Pope John Paul II already demanded in “Mulieris dignitatem” to emphasize the vocation and dignity of women “that result from the specific diversity and personal originality of man and woman” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 10). According to the former Pope, the following becomes clear in the light of biblical anthropology: “The personal resources of femininity are certainly no less than the resources of masculinity: they are merely different” (ibid.). Pope John Paul therefore liked to speak of a specifically “feminine ‘genius’ or also of a ‘charisma’, a special ‘vocation’ of women” (
Burggraf 1999, p. 327). The question arises: What does this “genius” of women consist of from the magisterium’s point of view?
According to Church’s doctrine, the personality of all women is essentially shaped by their physical capacity for motherhood (cf.
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 18;
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 13). The fact that the physical constitution of women and their organism contain the natural predisposition to motherhood, conception, pregnancy and birth as a consequence of the conjugal union with a man, is considered by the Church not to be something purely biological, but also to correspond “to the psycho-physical structure of women” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 18). According to magisterial doctrine, the capacity for motherhood results in a special “capacity for the other”, which is concretized in various specifically feminine values and gifts. Women are therefore said to possess a “deep intuition of the goodness in their lives of those actions which elicit life, and contribute to the growth and protection of the other” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 13). Women, therefore, also have a special sense of the meaning of life and a respect for what is concrete and, moreover, the “singular capacity to persevere in adversity, to keep life going even in extreme situations, to hold tenaciously to the future, and finally to remember with tears the value of every human life” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 13). Although all human beings are called to reach out to each other, “women are more immediately attuned to these values”, and for that reason, they “are the reminder and the privileged sign of such values” (ibid., No. 14; cf. ibid., No. 16).
Pope John Paul II teaches in his “Letter to Women”, that women, more than men, acknowledge their fellow human beings “because they see persons with their hearts”; it is therefore especially in their everyday service to others, when “they try to go out to them and
help them”, that women understand and “fulfil their deepest vocation” (
Pope John Paul II 1995, No. 12). With regard to the manifold ethical-social service of women in the field of education and health care, in which they realize “a kind of
affective, cultural and spiritual motherhood” (ibid., No. 9), John Paul II hoped in 1995 that women “will reflect carefully on what it means to speak of the
‘genius of women’, not only in order to be able to see in this phrase a specific part of God’s plan which needs to be accepted and appreciated, but also in order to let this genius be more fully expressed in the life of society as a whole, as well as in the life of the Church” (ibid., No. 10).
As Mary is being understood as “the highest expression of the ‘feminine genius’” the former Pope called her “a source of constant inspiration” for a deeper understanding of this special “genius” of women (ibid., No. 10). Even in the early years of his pontificate, he had taught that God had manifested “the dignity of women in the highest form possible, by assuming human flesh from the Virgin Mary, whom the Church honors as the Mother of God, calling her the new Eve and presenting her as the model of redeemed woman” (
Pope John Paul II 1981, No. 22). In Mary, in addition to motherhood, virginity (cf.
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 20), which is considered the second specific dimension in the realization of the female personality, also acquires its “full meaning and value” (ibid., No. 17). Although, according to the magisterium’s teaching, motherhood is of crucial importance to the female identity, women must not be reduced to their reproductive function (cf.
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 13). Consequently, Christian virginity “is of the greatest importance” against such a narrow perception of women. According to the Church, this vocation “refutes any attempt to enclose women in mere biological destiny. Just as virginity receives from physical motherhood the insight that there is no Christian vocation except in the concrete gift of oneself to the other, so physical motherhood receives from virginity an insight into its fundamentally spiritual dimension: it is in not being content only to give physical life that the other truly comes into existence” (ibid., No. 13).
Pope John Paul II assumed that Mary, who became a mother as a virgin, can help all the faithful, but especially women, to understand “how these two dimensions, these two paths in the vocation of women as persons, explain and complete each other” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 17; cf.
Pope John Paul II 1987, No. 46). In this context, the motif of the bride is important: “Mary accepted her election as Mother of the Son of God, guided by spousal love […]. By virtue of this love, Mary wished to be always and in all things ‘given to God’, living in virginity” (ibid., No 39). Since, according to the Church’s understanding, a person only becomes truly devoted to others in such a bridal love, consecrated virginity cannot be properly understood without it; while this applies “similarly” to the consecrated chastity of men in priestly celibacy or in religious orders, the woman is understood to be “naturally” disposed to be bridal (cf.
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 20). The love of Christ as the bridegroom is considered ecclesiastically as an example and “the model and pattern of all human love, men’s love in particular” (ibid., No. 25). Bridal love is understood as responding to this love of Christ: the bride is united with the bridegroom “because she lives his life; […] united
in such a manner as to respond with a ‘sincere gift’ of self
to the inexpressible gift of the love of the Bridegroom” (ibid., No. 27). On the one hand, this is meant to be valid for the Church as the bride of Christ, and therefore for both men and women (cf. ibid., No. 27); on the other hand, it is also meant to confirm “the truth about woman as bride” (ibid., No. 29), who cannot find herself unless she gives her love to others (cf. ibid., No. 30).
In 1988, Pope John Paul II reminded all Catholics that if they want to fully understand God’s plan of salvation for human history, they must not exclude “the mystery of ‘woman’: virgin-mother-spouse” from the perspective of their faith (ibid., No. 22). In the “womanhood” of faithful women, and especially of consecrated women, the Church recognizes “a highly significant ‘iconic character’, which finds its full realization in Mary and which also aptly expresses the very essence of the Church as a community consecrated with the integrity of a
‘virgin’ heart to become the
‘bride’ of Christ and
‘mother’ of believers” (
Pope John Paul II 1995, No. 11).
5. The Role of Women in the Catholic Church
According to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the knowledge of the special nature of the female personality, of the “genius” of women, enables to understand “the irreplaceable role of women in all aspects of family and social life involving human relationships and caring for others” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 13). Against the background of the special dignity and vocation of women, the Church also considers it plausible that their exclusion from receiving priestly ordination “does not hamper in any way women’s access to the heart of Christian life” (ibid., No. 16; cf.
Leahy 1996, p. 242). From the magisterial point of view, women merely get there by a different route than men.
The Congregation stresses that “women play a role of maximum importance in the Church’s life”. By living the Marian attitudes of listening and welcoming, of humility and faithfulness and of praise and expectation “with particular intensity and naturalness”, and thus recalling them for all the baptized, they contribute “in a unique way to showing the true face of the Church, spouse of Christ and mother of believers” (
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith 2004, No. 16). Priests, however, especially in the celebration of the Eucharist, act “in persona Christi capitis” and therefore, according to the conviction of the Church, must be men. The magisterium concludes that because at its institution Christ entrusted the Eucharist exclusively to the apostles, “he thereby wished to express the relationship between man and woman, between what is ‘feminine’ and what is ‘masculine’” as “a relationship willed by God both in the mystery of creation and in the mystery of Redemption” (MD 26). The resulting differing roles of man and woman in the Church, however, should not be understood from a purely functional point of view, but should be seen in the light of the “sacramental economy”, which means “the economy of ‘signs’ which God freely chooses in order to become present in the midst of humanity” (
Pope John Paul II 1995, No. 11; cf.
Pope Francis 2020, No. 100f.). In this perspective of an “iconical“ mutual complementation, the distinct roles of man and woman, according to the Church’s official self-understanding, represent two essential dimensions of the Church at once. Pope John Paul II, closely following Hans Urs von Balthasar, called these the “Marian” and the “Petrine” principles (
Pope John Paul II 1995, No. 11;
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 27; cf. e.g.,
von Balthasar 1978, pp. 65–72).
For Pope John Paul, the “Marian profile is also—even perhaps more so—fundamental and characteristic for the Church as is the apostolic and Petrine profile to which it is profoundly united. …The Marian dimension of the Church is antecedent to that of the Petrine, without being in any way divided from it or being less complementary. Mary Immaculate precedes all others, including obviously Peter himself and the Apostles. This is so, not only because Peter and the Apostles, being born of the human race under the burden of sin, form part of the Church which is ‘holy from out of sinners’, but also because their triple function has no other purpose except to form the Church in line with the ideal of sanctity already programmed and prefigured in Mary. A contemporary theologian”, namely Hans Urs von Balthasar, the former Pope assesses, “has rightly stated that Mary is ‘Queen of the Apostles without any pretensions to apostolic powers: she has other and greater powers’” (
Pope John Paul II 1988, No. 27 Footnote 55 with reference to
von Balthasar 1979, p. 144). Pope Francis has explicitly taken up this anthropological and mariological line of his predecessor and stated that, in the light of the nuptial mystery, the Church is the bride of Christ, and “we understand why there are these two dimensions: the Petrine or episcopal dimension and the Marian dimension, including everything involving the motherhood of the Church, in the deepest sense” (
Pope Francis 2016, p. 8).
This means, that from the magisterial point of view, the man as representative of the Petrine dimension of the Church has his place in the realm of the official-hierarchical; the woman, on the other hand, as representative of the Marian principle, plays the role of a virgin or mother marked by specifically feminine values and characterized by bridal love (cf.
Lüdecke 2012, p. 203). Even though “this charismatic sector is undoubtedly distinguished by the ministerial sector in the strict sense of the term”, it is nevertheless considered to be “a true and deep participation in the government of the Church”, because the support of ordained ministers by faithful women “has always been a crucial factor without which the Church cannot survive” (
Pope Benedict XVI 2006, p. 273; cf.
Pope John Paul II 1995, No. 11). Accordingly, as recently as 2020, Pope Francis stated that women “make their contribution to the Church in a way that is properly theirs, by making present the tender strength of Mary, the Mother”; acknowledging this means that “we do not limit ourselves to a functional approach, but enter instead into the inmost structure of the Church” (
Pope Francis 2020, No. 101). Because of this connection between anthropology and church structure, Hans Urs von Balthasar as early as 1979 called the Catholic Church the probably “last bulwark in humanity of a genuine appreciation of the difference of the sexes” (
von Balthasar 1979, p. 114). Regardless of whether one wants to share this assessment or not, against the background of the described anthropology of the Church’s magisterium, the gender-specific provisions of canon law, according to which women do not validly receive ordination (c. 1024
Codex Iuris Canonici 1983) because they cannot act “in persona Christi capitis” qua being women, or there is no male counterpart for the state of consecrated virgins (c. 604
Codex Iuris Canonici 1983) because only a woman can adequately represent the bridal dimension of the Church integrally (cf.
Anuth 2015;
Hip-Flores 2018, p. 36), become understandable.
6. Consequences and Perspectives
All Catholics are obliged by canon law to obediently accept what the Church’s magisterium presents as an interpretation of God’s plan for men and women, including the expectations and assignments regarding their distinct roles (cc. 212 § 1, 750, 752
Codex Iuris Canonici 1983). By tracing its doctrine back to Revelation, the magisterium immunizes itself against criticism and consistently rejects it as a dangerous “(gender) ideology” (cf. e.g., AL 56;
Congregation for Catholic Education 2019). Under the label of “gender ideology”, the Catholic Church has been trying to reframe the human rights discourse since the mid-1990s. Against the UN Conferences of Cairo (“Population and Development”, 1994) and Beijing (Fourth World Conference on Women, 1995), with the demand for equal sexual and reproductive rights on the one hand and the introduction of the gender concept into the UN context on the other hand, the Catholic Church sets its positions of “equality of dignity without equal rights” and complementarity of the sexes (cf.
Paternotte 2015, pp. 135–42;
Werner 2021, pp. 230–35). “Gender” is presented as a treacherous political strategy (“submarine”) aiming at an anthropological revolution and as a threat for man and woman as persons; while in contrast, a new, i.e., Catholic “feminism” is being propagated, and a link to the discourse of ecology is being established. In addition to the aforementioned use of the Church’s magisterium, political alliances are being forged with Evangelicals and Muslims, Catholic intellectuals with anti-gender positions are being internationally connected, and ecclesial movements such as Opus Dei, the Neocatechumenal Way, and Comunione e Liberazione are being mobilized for protest (cf.
Paternotte 2015, pp. 135–42;
Leimgruber 2020).
In the Catholic Church, interpretive authority over the “being” and “genius” of women lies exclusively with the Pope and Bishops, i.e., with men. However, Catholic women are less and less willing to have essence and role attributed to them in this way. They consider it neither theologically nor sociologically justified that women are treated “as second-class beings in teaching and practice” of the Church (
Ganz 2021, p. 40). For them, the “half of humanity” is still “negatively discriminated against” by the Church (
Fischer 2019, p. 269), and they call the Church’s anthropology of sexes “a damning paean to women […] which in its romantic exaggeration of virginity, sexuality and motherhood is a pure mockery of any woman” (
Reisinger 2019, p. 1).
These problems of acceptance of the Church’s doctrine are not new but have become even more acute in the context of the gender discourse. Moreover, in recent years, there has also been a growing awareness that sexual violence against women is usually related to hierarchical gender concepts, unequally distributed power, and dependencies (cf.
Heyder and Leimgruber 2020, pp. 188, 201–05). In this respect, Doris Reisinger is probably right in pointing out that the “patriarchal basic order of the Church has its share in the abuse crisis, because the systematic exclusion of women inevitably leads to equally systematic violence against women and children, no matter the society or the institution” (
Reisinger 2019, p. 1). However, as long as the Pope and the Bishops see themselves bound to God’s plan for man and woman—as established and taught by them—and consequently as not free to reform the Church’s doctrine, women must realistically adjust to the fact that the official anthropology of the Catholic Church as well as its gender-hierarchical constitution based on this doctrine will remain unchanged and therefore present a systemic risk factor.