A trailblazer is usually the first person to do something and who shows that it is also possible for others to do the same.

This week, a reflection about women trailblazers: contemporary women who have broken barriers and inspire others.

My first thoughts are about Bishop Sarah Mullally who has been selected to become the new Archbishop of Canterbury. There have been105 male Archbishops of Canterbury since the establishment of the office in the 6th century. Bishop Sarah Mullally, as the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury, will be the first woman to hold that office and will be installed in a service at Canterbury Cathedral in March 2026. She became a priest in 2006 and was appointed as the first female Bishop of London in 2018.

Reflecting on her appointment, Bishop Mullally said she hopes to encourage her church “to continue to grow in confidence in the Gospel, to speak of the love that we find in Jesus Christ, and for it to shape our actions across the global Anglican Communion.”

Thinking about women trailblazers closer to home, at my alma mater, the Catholic University of Leuven (KU Leuven), founded on December 9, 1425, we now have, for the first time in six hundred years, a woman Rector: Professor Séverine Vermeire, who was elected on May 20, 2025, and began her term on August 1, 2025. A medical doctor and professor of medecine at the KU Leuven, she is also Research Director of Biomedical Sciences at our university.

Rector Vermeire recently stressed that the KU Leuven must continue to strive for innovative and excellent education, and that “Quality and humanity must go hand in hand.”

At the KU Leuven, we also have for the first time, a woman dean of the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies, my friend Professor Bénédicte Lemmelijn. Bénédicte is a professor of Old Testament studies specializing in textual criticism. She is also a member of the Pontifical Biblical Commission at the Vatican. In May 2022 she was elected dean of the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies.

Under Dean Lemmelijn, about one third of the current professors are women. Bénédicte says there is a lot to learn from the wisdom and experience of her predecessors. “But now is a different time…. Hope, in this context, is about looking forward to a new future, about longing for a new perspective.”

Today, women trailblazers in education, theology, and ministry need our encouragement and support.

For several years I have been following the not always smooth and easy path of women seeking priestly ordination.

The “Philadelphia Eleven” for example were eleven women who were the first women ordained, but irregularly, as priests in the U.S. Episcopal Church, on July 29, 1974. In 1975 four women, the “Washington Four,” were also, irregularly, ordained in Washington DC. Then in 1976, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church affirmed and explicitly authorized the ordination of women to the priesthood.

The ordination of women in the Anglican Communion, in fact, has been increasingly common in certain provinces since the 1970s. 

A Roman Catholic group that very much interests me is the Roman Catholic Women Priests movement, even though they have not yet been officially recognized by Catholic authorities.

Change comes slowly in the RCC. In April 1976, the Pontifical Biblical Commission concluded unanimously: “It does not seem that the New Testament by itself alone will permit us to settle in a clear way and once and for all the problem of the possible accession of women to the presbyterate.” But on October 15, 1976, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome issued a document affirming: “The Church, in fidelity to the example of the Lord, does not consider herself authorized to admit women to priestly ordination.”

Pope John Paul II stirred things up a bit more with his May 22, 1994, document Ordinatio Sacerdotalis. “We declare that the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women” the Pope wrote and continued “this judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church’s faithful.” The Pope had wanted to describe the ban as “irreformable,” but met substantial resistance from high-ranking bishops who gathered at a special Vatican meeting in March 1995 to discuss the document.

Change in the Catholic Church has most often followed a three-stage process. First a movement is condemned. Secondly, when it continues and grows, the movement is tolerated as an experiment. Thirdly when the movement becomes widespread, it is allowed as “part of the Catholic tradition.”

This three-stage process is seen in the history of the Beguines a lay womens’ movement particularly in the Low Countries, in the 13th–16th centuries. Beguines pursued a life of contemplative prayer, study, and active service in the world. They were active in Leuven as early as 1205 and began to really flourish in 1234. Nevertheless, in 1312 Pope Clement V and his Council of Vienne condemned the Beguines as heretics and called for them to disband. This happened two years after a Beguine named Marguerite Porete had been condemned as a heretic by theologians from the University of Paris. She was burned at the stake in central Paris on June 1, 1310.

Scholars today argue that the real reason the Beguines were condemned was that they were independent women who did not properly submit to male authority. Men sought to gain control over these rebellious women. Just as many modern Christians see the LGBTQ+ Pride movement as degenerate, many Christian men in the Middle Ages felt the same about the Beguines. They regarded these women’s lifestyle as unnatural. They feared the very existence of the Beguines might corrupt and defile “God-ordained gender roles.”

In any event, the Beguines continued and flourished. The papal condemnation of the Beguines, however, was not reversed until 1321 by Pope John XXI. They were then permitted to officially resume their way of life.

Change of course comes when there are new understandings about our past. Today, women historians and women theologians are giving us new insights and added information which earlier male historians and theologians either did not know or simply wanted to hide or ignore.

We know today that in early Christianity, women presided at Eucharist and exercised various ministerial roles. An important book about this is: When Women Were Priests by Karen J. Torjesen, Professor Emerita of Religion at Claremont Graduate University. In an earlier post I have also mentioned The Hidden History of Women’s Ordination by Gary Macy, from Santa Clara University.

Today I know a number of women priests and bishops in what is known as the international Roman Catholic Women Priests movement. They are trailblazers and their day will come.

The mission of Roman Catholic Women Priests movement is to prepare, ordain, and support women who feel called by the Holy Spirit and have been called by their communities to priestly ministry.

This international movement is operating worldwide with two groups formed in the USA referred to as Roman Catholic Womenpriests-USA (RCWP-USA) and the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests (ARCWP). Both of these organizations have international members. Today there are more than 215 women priests and at least 15 bishops worldwide. These women priests and bishops are ministering in over 34 USA states and are also present in Canada, Europe, South and Central America, South Africa, the Philippines, and Taiwan. For more information see:   https://romancatholicwomenpriests.org

It is very important that we support current and potential women trailblazers in education and ministry. Their often courageous actions are necessary for achieving gender equality and fostering social progress.

Who are the women trailblazers in your community? Who are the young women who can become trailblazers? And most importantly, how can we all be supportive of them?

  • Jack

 

 

 

 

 

10 thoughts on “WOMEN TRAILBLAZERS

  1. I would like to know why lay women in the USA can’t become permanent Lay Deacons? In the early years after Vatican II, laymen undergoing the formation for the Lay Deaconate were strongly urged to have their wives attend all the theological classes along with their husbands, yet the wives were not ordained!

    In civil academia, there are 2 paths towards graduate degrees — 1) towards the PHD in an academic field & 2) a terminal Master’s or further professional study, even if in the same academic field as the PHD!

    Why can’t there be 2 types of Deaconate — a terminal route for the laity & a continuing route for the clerical??

  2. Thank you, Jack, for your support and encouraging others to support

    the many women trailblazers in our own communities!!!

  3. Thank you for a very thoughtful and excellently-written review of women in leadership, especially in Church-related positions!! Let us keep Archbishop Sarah Mullaly in our prayers, for protection and safety, fellowship, unity, and peace.

    A question … re: some RCC hierarchy’s resistance to women in ordained ministry:

    Why are those old men afraid, and what are they so afraid of?

  4.  “But now is a different time…. Hope, in this context, is about looking forward to a new future, about longing for a new perspective.”
    Such an inspiring and hope-filled witness, Jack.  This is all good news and I believe that the desire and longing for a new perspective is a gift to us from who we can become as church in the future. 
    There are many signs of change in these women trailblazers and firsts in our historical time that have the potential to become part of our Sacred Tradition. And there  are many women firsts and trailblazers in the Apostolic Witness; Mary, mother of Jesus and the Church , the Samaritan Woman, the unnamed woman remembered who anointed Jesus with nard, and Mary Magdalene the first to witness the risen Christ in the garden sent to proclaim, He is Risen. The return of women to full participation in ministry and authority will be a blessing for the Catholic Tradition.

  5. Illuminating and inspiring. Thanks! The reflection on a three stage process for change in the RCC was especially useful. Let’s hope we can achieve official female ordination without any more women being burned at the stake. The Womenpriest organization gives me hope.

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