Natasha wrote:"The question of the ordination of women to the priesthood in Orthodox churches is not "closed", according to WCC general secretary Konrad Raiser. In one plenary session, Vsevolod Chaplin of the Russian Orthodox Church described the call for inclusive language as "blasphemous". As long as other WCC churches advocate an agenda calling for all churches to ordain women and accept inclusive language, he said, "eucharistic unity is a dream that will never come true". When a journalist asked Raiser to comment at a press conference on Chaplin's remarks, the German theologian pointed to recent research about women's ordination by two respected Orthodox theologians, Bishop Kallistos Ware and Elisabeth Behr-Sigel, who he said had reached the conclusion that "there are no essential or ecclesiological reasons preventing the ordination of women in the Orthodox tradition". Raiser said this research, which reflects "emerging perspectives" within Orthodoxy, shows that "if you take seriously the Christian affirmation that men and women are created equally in the image of God..., the systematic exclusion of women from the ministry cannot be defended on purely theological grounds". " :ohvey:
This is not good news. Forgive me for saying this, but the two Orthodox theologians cited by Raiser are wolves in sheep's clothing. This is the danger of ecumenism. Ware and Behr-Siegel are saying what the WCC wants to hear, because it fits their agenda. If any Orthodox disagrees with those two theologians, they are considered 'traditionalist' freaks. My question is this, why haven't others in the church rebuked Ware and Behr-Siegel for their position? I am glad to a member of the MP stand up here and say that the WCC position is blasphemous.