The Archbishop of Algiers, french-born Monsignor Jean-Paul Vesco OP, 62, wants deaconesses, he told the Vatican newspaper Osservatore Romano (2 March): "I very much want it to happen!"
"It seems impossible to me to deprive the faithful, and therefore myself, of the female reception of the Word of God [as if ordinary women couldn't 'receive the Word of God']. None of the arguments put forward have ever convinced me" [because I, Vesco, have fallen away from the Catholic faith].
Because he doesn't want to understand, Monsignor Vesco finds it "difficult" to understand the objections against women's ordination.
He accuses the Church of having "a problem with women for centuries", when in fact Vesco has a problem with the Catholic Faith. Vesco fears that it is in danger of becoming "an obsolete Church, not timeless, but anachronistic and old-fashioned in its organisation", when in reality the Novus Ordo Church is putting itself on the sidelines by becoming a branch of the local newspaper, which is struggling with a loss of subscribers.
For Vesco, the image of clerics and women on the same meeting hall during the Ex-Synod on sex shows a "change of era" [or rather: an era of change for the sake of change].
No joke: Vesco praises the dying "Protestant churches" for their "democratic, that is, synodal culture" and "we undoubtedly have much to learn from them".
After so much nonsense, if Francis lives long enough, he will doubtlessly make him a cardinal.
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