In a statement approved by Pope John Paul II, the Vatican announced Saturday that Roman Catholics must consider their church's doctrine that only men can be priests to be "infallibly" taught.
Invoking the word "infallible," which in Catholic theology is reserved for teaching considered irreversible, free from error and requiring full assent from the faithful, indicates the pope's desire to rule out unequivocally the possibility of ordaining women.But Saturday's statement, although carrying papal approval, came from the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which oversees church teaching, and not directly from the pope. And that is likely to spur a new round of disputes among theologians about the statement's degree of authority.
Behind those disputes will be agonizing reappraisals by many Catholics who are deeply committed to the ordination of women. A New York Times survey in September showed that 61 percent of American Catholics favor the ordination of women to the priesthood, and among many nuns and women holding key posts in the church this question is viewed as a measuring stick of the its attitudes toward women's equality.
Bishop Anthony Pilla of Cleveland, who was elected Tuesday as president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Saturday addressed a plea to Catholics who have questioned the church's teaching that only men can become priests.
Some American clerics used Pope John Paul II's October visit to appeal for the ordination of women. Earlier this month, a woman said she and other women were secretly ordained during communist rule in the former Czechoslovakia. In Austria, a liberal bishop, Reinhold Stecher, said last week he would ask the Vatican to rethink the ban.
"I ask you now prayerfully to allow the Holy Spirit to fill you with the wisdom and understanding that will enable you to accept it," Pilla said of the teaching. He insisted, as has the pope on many occasions, that the limitation of priesthood to men is not meant to diminish the equality or dignity of women.
But several theologians and bishops said the new statement was as likely to lead to reappraisals of the teaching authority of the church and the pope as to rejection of women's ordination.
"There are literally millions of Catholics in the U.S. alone who see no reason why women can't be ordained, and they're not going to decide they're not Catholics or stop going to church," said the Rev. Richard McBrien, a theology professor at the University of Notre Dame. "It is the pope and the Vatican who will be seen as out of step."
Saturday's statement was an official response by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to a query concerning "Ordinatio Sacerdotalis," Pope John Paul's declaration in May 1994 that "the church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and that this judgment is to be definitely held by all the church's faithful."
There were reports that at the request of bishops from around the world, the pope had refrained from using the word "infallible" in that declaration. A letter from Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, the head of the congregation, explains that Saturday's statement is being issued because doubts have persisted whether Catholics must abide by the pope's earlier declaration. That may explain why "infallibly" appears now, although not directly in the voice of the pope.