BaNanas thank you for putting your response into context. I can certainly see 'where you're coming from'. All of us who were brought up in the RCC will have had different experiences. I suspect mine were much more liberal than some others. Our nuns were great feminists who saw their mission as empowering their girls to change the world after giving us the best education they could. I think many were not so fortunate. Two sisters of that order are distinguished theologians and their work is concerned with the OOW and other matters of present contention.
As for empowerment. Well, I can only speak for myself, but I have found my Catholicism to be deeply empowering, giving me the spiritual support and intellectual framework for much of the many political campaigns I have been involved with.
That's not to say that there is not much in the church that needs to be reformed. Of course there is. But, as always, there is a huge disconnect between what happens in individual parishes up and down the country, the radicals in South America, the worker priests and nuns, and the very visible presence of the flummery in Rome.
It may seem to many that there is a failure of logic in a radical feminist being a member of the RCC, but it's the everyday goodness that I see in my own parish that is persuasive, that and the fact that the RCC is my heritage; like your mother, she may be awkward, resistant to change and a bit of a dinosaur, but she's yours.
Good Morning Wednesday 13th May 2026
Is Mumsnet down today (13th May)


