I wrote this months ago and it has just been sitting on my computer getting rusty. After a conversation with a dear friend, who is so committed to making this Church better for women, and a small crisis about how I can keep fighting when I'm no longer in theology school- I thought it would be a good time to share.
Dear Future Daughter(s),
Yesterday I sat in mass watching the Alter boys and I thought of you. I heard you so vividly asking me "why can the boys do it and we can't" and my heart broke. I spent the rest of the hour angry, wondering how I was going to bring you to a place that yet again denied you of your right to be all that you will be put on this Earth to be. I imagined how I would explain this to you, felt frustrated that you too will have to keep fighting and felt even more fearful of the unasked questions. I know what happens when you see the inequality playing out over and over again throughout your life. I know how this is digested, this idea that you are less- less capable, less worthy and less seen and known. Unfortunately, there are so many places that you will get this message. No matter how hard we try to protect you- advertisements, school, books, movies, everything around you will tell you that because you were born with a different biological makeup, you are not enough. We will fight that, every single day and I will tell you that all of those advertisements and messages are wrong, it will not be easy, but I think there are enough voices that are stronger than those to remind you that you are so very worthy.
Yet, sitting in the pew, watching the boys sit up on the alter, next to the priest in his King like chair, physically above and separate from us, holding the readings for him, supporting him in doing the sacraments, being groomed to someday take his place if they so please, I was so very angry that in this place too, I will have to try to find louder voices than those. I felt angry imagining that fight in this very institution that is supposed to connect you to a God that knows you are just as worthy, capable, and sees you for all that you have to offer this world. My fear is not you asking the question, or even being able to answer- I will answer, I am so sure that this institution has it so very wrong and as I prayed I knew that God too thinks it is so very wrong. I am worried about the unspoken ways this will affect how you understand yourself. The Church is failing us, failing women and men alike, and truly failing God. I sat with my head in my hands so very frustrated wondering how I will possibly be able to bring you, my future daughters, who I want nothing more than to know your goodness, to a place that denies this to you. In a place that is supposed to show us the way in bringing about the Reign of God, the place of God on this Earth, the messenger, the bridge, however we want to understand it, it's messages are so strong. They cut so deep, the gender of who is up there and who can become a priest, the actions of this Church they function in so many hurtful ways.
Overwhelmed with anger, questions and a fear of bringing you here, I realized this deep anger is of God. God wants me to be angry, because God too is so angry that there are only men on the altar. God is angry that the young girls who brought up the gifts found such joy in having the priest come down from the altar and take the gifts from them, because they so deeply want to be involved, invited to stand on the alter, and so rarely are. God needs us sitting in those pews angry, aware, asking all the questions. It pains me to imagine you feeling the hurt of being told you are less, but we will talk about it. You will ask, we will answer, we will dig, we will cry and scream and express how not ok it is that you are not included. And eventually dear daughters, we will be heard. Eventually, sweet girls, you will stand on the alter if you so please.
Sunday's Gospel was the annunciation, (reminder that I wrote this months ago) Mary finds out she is pregnant and hurries to tell her cousin Elizabeth who is also pregnant. We are told there is celebrating, Mary is highlighted for the ways she goes to share the good news and the two are lifted up for "helping one another". It is advent, the Church is waiting for baby Jesus to be born and the message we get about Mary is that she is a helper. In my anger about alter boys I found myself angry about Mary too. We speak so often about God coming to us in the flesh as Jesus, but we forget that the flesh that grew Jesus was Mary's. The flesh that stretched and tore and bled was Mary's. We hold Mary up as a Virgin, obedient to God's word, quietly taking on this surprise, yet she is so much more than that. Mary is strong and brave and courageous. And maybe even a little bit pissed, shocked and terrified that she has been given this burden, and expected to just take it as her own. I don't think she just smiled and nodded. I don't think Jesus coming in the flesh as male provides any reasoning for only men to be priest, only boys to be alter servers, and for you to feel the deep pain of being less than. Your very sex is the only way that we can know and follow Jesus in this life- a way of living that is so very good and worthy. Jesus brought such life, fought for justice, showed us the way we should all be living today, but Mary- Mary brought Jesus to life. And we must not forget that.
So in this season I will remember you, I will dream of you, and I will remember Mary. I will hold tight to the fact that the institution is wrong, and there is so much good in this tradition to reinterpret to you. Questions that I hope you always ask, pain you always express, so that together we can look at the ways this Church, like the rest of the world, is failing you. And failing your brothers alike. We will make sure you know a God that knows you and your worthiness, we will look closely at the ways you digest this, and when we cant do it all, we will trust that in your life you will find the space to know that you are being failed, and together we will stoke in you the flames to fight back, to stand up, to claim your worthiness, and look for the places where you are treated, seen and celebrated for who God knows you are.