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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 12
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- Sometimes an issue that has been simmering for years comes
- into sharp focus. This autumn the role that women play in the
- church is causing turmoil in two large, parallel denominations,
- the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church. Last week
- Anglicans voted to ordain women as priests, and this week
- American Catholic bishops meet in Washington to discuss a
- pastoral letter on women's participation in the faith.
-
- John Moody, our Rome bureau chief, covered the Vatican for
- this week's story and found it a complicated test of wills.
- "Approaching the Vatican is in itself an exercise in diplomacy.
- The Pope's urbane and practiced spokesman, Joaquin
- Navarro-Valls, initially considered our questions. After that
- came various monsignors who act as buffers for the Cardinals."
- Moody came to realize that the Vatican does not act quickly,
- when it comes to either social change or the needs of weekly
- journalism. He notes, "They have been at it for 2,000 years and
- know the art of prevailing through patience." Moody found the
- Vatican an austere world, but, he adds, "every so often I was
- struck by the odd 17th century original oil in a hallway."
-
- For Los Angeles bureau chief Jordan Bonfante, the story
- had a nostalgic resonance. Bonfante was assigned to Rome in
- 1978 when, he remembers, "I covered three Popes in a single
- year: Paul VI, who died in August; John Paul I, who lived only
- 34 days; and John Paul II, the current Pontiff. I came to
- regard the Vatican as a second country we had to cover on a
- daily basis." For this story, he talked to leaders of the public
- debate. He then went to local churches and found the discussion
- in the pews just as intense.
-
- Senior editor Nancy Gibbs, who supervised the project,
- knows the debate firsthand. She is an elder of her Presbyterian
- church -- the congregation where her mother is the first-ever
- female clerk. Says Gibbs: "People feel that you can go to church
- and know something familiar will be there. Women are seeking
- access to institutions -- corporations, the military, the Senate
- -- that have been led by men, but none has such an old
- tradition." Subtleties of human emotion are an important factor
- in this conflict. Associate editor Richard N. Ostling, who wrote
- the article, notes that "many people view the present conflict
- as an aspect of women's issues generally. But in moral
- confusion, anxiety is heightened. A sacred trust is at stake."
- To catch the clash of ideas and beliefs at such a moment is a
- journalistic challenge we take seriously.
-
- Elizabeth P. Valk
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