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A sign of the times
1. THE DIGNITY AND THE VOCATION OF WOMEN - a
subject of constant human and Christian reflection - have gained exceptional
prominence in recent years. This can be seen, for example, in the statements
of the Church's Magisterium present in various documents of the Second
Vatican Council, which declares in its Closing Message: "The hour is
coming, in fact has come, when the vocation of women is being acknowledged in
its fullness, the hour in which women acquire in the world an influence, an
effect and a power never hitherto achieved. That is why, at his moment when the
human race is undergoing so deep a transformation, women imbued with a spirit
of the Gospel can do so much to aid humanity in not falling".1 This
Message sums up what had already been expressed in the Council's teaching,
specifically in the Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes2 and in the
Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity Apostolicam Actuositatem.3
Similar thinking had already been put forth
in the period before the Council, as can be seen in a number of Pope Pius
XII's Discourses4 and in the Encyclical Pacem in Terris of Pope John
XXIII.5 After the Second Vatican Council, my predecessor Paul VI showed
the relevance of this "sign of the times", when he conferred the
title "Doctor of the Church" upon Saint Teresa of Jesus and Saint
Catherine of Siena,6 and likewise when, at the request of the 1971 Assembly of
the Synod of Bishops, he set up a special Commission for the study of
contemporary problems concerning the "effective promotion of the
dignity and the responsibility of women".7 In one of his Discourses
Paul VI said: "Within Christianity, more than in any other religion, and
since its very beginning, women have had a special dignity, of which the New
Testament shows us many important aspects...; it is evident that women are
meant to form part of the living and working structure of Christianity in so
prominent a manner that perhaps not all their potentialities have yet been made
clear".8
The Fathers of the recent Assembly of the
Synod of Bishops (October 1987), which was devoted to "The Vocation and
Mission of the Laity in the Church and in the World Twenty Years after the
Second Vatican Council", once more dealt with the dignity and vocation of
women. One of their recommendations was for a further study of the
anthropological and theological bases that are needed in order to solve the
problems connected with the meaning and dignity of being a woman and being a
man. It is 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.
This is what I intend to deal with in this
document. The Post-Synodal Exhortation, which will be published later, will
present proposals of a pastoral nature on the place of women in the Church and
in society. On this subject the Fathers offered some important reflections,
after they had taken into consideration the testimonies of the lay Auditors -
both women and men - from the particular Churches throughout the world.
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