Edición digital Logos
The contributors to Women, Sex, and the Church challenge the common misconception that Catholic teachings are anti-women and anti-sex. Instead, these women explore precisely how controversial teachings on abortion, sex, marriage, contraception, and reproductive technologies evidence the Church’s love of women. The timely issues of the priesthood, balancing work and family, and the intersection of Catholic sexual and social ethics are also discussed. The contributors to this text rely on biological, sociological, and medical evidence, combined with personal anecdotes and experience, to defend difficult Church teaching—all from a pro-woman perspective.
In the Logos edition, this volume is enhanced by amazing functionality. Scripture citations link directly to English translations, and important terms link to dictionaries, encyclopedias, and a wealth of other resources in your digital library. Perform powerful searches to find exactly what you’re looking for. Take the discussion with you using tablet and mobile apps. With Logos Bible Software, the most efficient and comprehensive research tools are in one place, so you get the most out of your study.
“John Paul II’s approach is just the opposite—he acknowledges, even glories in, the differences between the sexes, finding in this very fact the basis for the equal dignity of each and their equal need for each other. This view is captured by the term ‘complementarity,’ a word that speaks of differences to be sure, but of differences that enrich each partner in the relationship, so that the resulting combination is greater than the sum of its parts.” (Pages 16–17)
“The crucial equality that must be recognized here is a moral one, that women have the same personal dignity and rights as men. They are, therefore, equally entitled to others’ respect and goodwill, as well as to the legal and political privileges that flow from this deeper respect for persons.” (Page 17)
“Any attempt to nonarbitrarily determine an alternative moment when a human being, present at fertilization, becomes a human person, worthy of protection under the law, is rationally impossible.” (Page 39)
“I simply recognized original and personal sin, not the patriarchy, as my adversary, and self-sacrificing, redemptive love, rather than legal commands, as the primary vehicle for cultural transformation.” (Page 2)
“You choose: either your baby or yourself, your baby or your future, your baby or your success. This is a man’s world, and you had better become like a man—that is, not pregnant—if you want to succeed.” (Page 42)
This book takes on both the thorniest dilemmas and the best kept secrets of the Catholic Church’s teachings concerning women, with thoroughness, intelligence, and honesty.
—Helen Alvaré, associate professor of law, George Mason University
It should be required reading for every son, brother, fiancée, husband, father, seminarian, and priest. These women know something about life, and in listening to them you come away wanting to become a better man.
—Paul McNellis, philosophy faculty, Boston College
As a highly readable, provocative exposition of the case for the Church’s vision of sex, marriage, and sexual difference, it could not be more timely.
—Mary Shivanandan, professor of theology, John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family
Erika Bachiochi holds a JD from Boston University School of Law and an MA in theology from Boston College, where she was a Bradley Fellow at the Institute for the Study of Religion and Politics. Bachiochi was the editor of The Cost of “Choice”: Women Evaluate the Impact of Abortion. She lectures at colleges, universities, and law schools on feminism, the family, abortion, and the church, and keynotes various conferences and retreats for Catholic women.