The Catholic Thing

Is Catholic Feminism Working?


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By Carrie Gress
The idea that Catholics must embrace feminism to engage non-Catholic women has been repeated so frequently that it's simply accepted as a truism. But is it actually working?
Before answering that question, let's take a close look at the work of St. John Paul II. He is generally invoked as the reason why we must have a Catholic feminism. As pope, John Paul was clearly interested in upholding the dignity of every woman. His 1988 Apostolic Letter, Mulieris Dignitatem, delved deeply into the nature of womanhood and has provided a backbone of sorts to the contemporary understanding of Catholic womanhood.
What we do not find anywhere in that roughly 25,000-word document is the word "feminism."
In fact, he only used the word one time: in his 1995 encyclical, Evangelium Vitae, where he called for a "new feminism." In one short paragraph, he wrote:
In transforming culture so that it supports life, women occupy a place, in thought and action, which is unique and decisive. It depends on them to promote a "new feminism" which rejects the temptation of imitating models of "male domination," in order to acknowledge and affirm the true genius of women in every aspect of the life of society, and overcome all discrimination, violence and exploitation.
Despite this single mention, feminism has been perhaps oversold to the faithful as the route forward for understanding womanhood. It has even been used to claim that those who don't embrace Catholic feminism are rejecting John Paul's wider Catholic vision.
Yes, John Paul II was deeply interested in restoring and upholding the dignity of women, but he saw too that it had to be pursued in a way consistent with the Catholic faith. What is often missed in by those focusing on the Polish Pontiff's view is the modifier "new" - thereby implying that the "old" feminism is inadequate.
Through my own research about older feminism - most of which was not available during John Paul's pontificate - it is clear that feminism has significant problems. Since the beginning, it has had deep connections with the occult, egalitarianism (influenced by socialism/Marxism), and the eradication of monogamy for the sake of liberating women.
These misguided efforts have led to more unhappy women, fewer marriages, and severe damage to the nuclear family. As an ideology, feminism has perpetuated the belief that abortion is the means through which women can achieve equality with men, resulting in 44-million worldwide abortions in 2023, more than all other causes of death combined.
Perhaps more fundamental to feminism's problems is the question that has driven most of its forms since its inception, "How do we make women more like men?" Pope John Paul recognized this in his brief paragraph on feminism, saying that we must reject "the temptation of imitating models of 'male domination,'" where women adopt male vices.
This idea had led to the belief that children are an obstacle to women's happiness, resulting in the extreme ways in which women's fertility is curtailed, as if it is a curse instead of the blessing the Church and Scripture have always affirmed.
Feminism has long been considered a bridge to bring in outsiders via more familiar landscapes. The problem, however, has been that the hoped-for movement of women, from the outside in, has frequently had the opposite result, leading more Catholic women to identify with feminism than with the Church.
Catholic women currently contracept, abort, and divorce at roughly the same rates as non-Catholic women. Moreover, the teachings of the Church about women, which have developed slowly over millennia, have been overshadowed by contemporary feminist language which presents a shallow understanding of womanhood.
Although there are certainly individual cases to the contrary, Catholic women now resemble secular feminists more than secular feminists resemble us. Meanwhile, womanhood, and particularly motherhood, which has long been an icon of the Church itself, has be...
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