Vol. 25, No. 2 |
Summer 2001 |
Out of the Depths: The Story
of Ludmila Javorova,
Ordained Roman Catholic Priest
by Miriam Therese Winter.
New York: Crossroad, 2001, 260 pp., $19.95, hardcover.
Reviewed by Beth Ramos
The black brocade looked stunning. It was
the perfect dress for a night such as this. She slipped silently
out of the house into December darkness, so she would not have
to explain to her parents why she was in her party clothes
leaving home at such an hour. (p. 9)
This is not the opening of a newly discovered
novel by Charlotte Bronte. This story, as romantic as Jane Eyre,
is true; and the love story it tells--between a woman, her God,
and her Church--is as poignant.
The backdrop of Ludmila's story is the story
of her faith-filled, optimistic parents, who, in 1924, left their
small hometown to begin their married life in the city of Brno.
They were drawn by the promise of the new republic, Czechoslovakia
(a republic only since 1918), with its many jobs and cultural
activities. Ludmila's father was a hard working and idealistic man
who taught his children to learn all they could and to live from
their goodness. Her mother managed a household of twenty people
(fifteen children, four parents and an auntie) with humor and
grace that seemed to flow directly from the Holy Spirit.
In 1964, Ludmila began living out the
giftedness of her parents as the vicar-general of the Koinotes
Community, the underground church of Czechoslovakia.
The leader of the underground church was Felix
Maria Davidek. Felix had grown up in a home very different from
that of Ludmila. His mother was ill, and his father, a tax
collector in Brno, was apparently absent. It was under the
guidance of his mother's doctor and his grandfather that Felix
became an avid student, but it may have been the influence of
Ludmila's family that led him to the priesthood. Ludmila's
brothers studied piano with Felix's mother, and he and they became
good friends. In fact, Felix considered Ludmila's home his second
home, her father his second father.
He was an impassioned man who, from the
beginning of his seminary studies, had difficulty with the
official church. At first, his immediate superiors called his
study of medicine inappropriate, because being a doctor seemed
inappropriate for a priest. Later, in 1950, soon after he ignored
a direct order from his Bishop to stop teaching in the Underground
Catholic University that he had established, he was arrested by
the Communist Party.
During his fourteen-year imprisonment, Felix
Davidek celebrated the Eucharist with his brother prisoners, using
teaspoons for chalices and bread crumbs for hosts. The injustice
of the gender bias prohibiting women's ordination was tangible to
him one day as he was walking down along the wall separating the
men's prison from the women's. He realized that the women had no
access to the nourishment that comes from the Sacraments because
they had no priests. So he shouted the words of the Sacrament of
Reconciliation ("I absolve you in the name of the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit"), knowing that it would be received by
his sisters on the other side He also knew that he would be put
into solitary confinement. This became a pattern for him until his
release from prison in 1964.
In the interim, the Vatican had forbidden
attendance at the state run seminary because the only priests
there were loyal to the state. Davidek asked Ludmila to help him
contact the men who had left the seminary when this order
had been given, and to assist him in helping the church.
In the years that Felix was in prison Ludmila
had almost entered a convent, almost got married, and in her own
way had been ministering to everyone she could. She heard in his
request for help the voice of the Spirit giving her the
opportunity to do what she had committed her life to when she was
a child--to bring the people to God and God to the people. Mature,
intelligent, and cautious, she gave a provisional yes. The two
agreed to work together for three months and then reevaluate, but
the re-evaluation never really happened. Within days, she knew
that she too would give her life for this work, and the
partnership she entered with Davidek was to last until his death
in 1988.
A Woman's Ordination
On December 28, 1970, Ludmila Javorova was
ordained a Roman Catholic priest by Bishop Felix Davidek and
served as a secret priest in the Czechoslovakia underground church
until the Iron Curtain fell in 1990. The most complicated suspense
novel cannot touch the intrigue with which these two priests, one
male and one female, had to live their lives. Nothing they did was
documented, but everything was done within the structure of the
laws of the church. The network they established included 19
bishops. As Bishop, Davidek himself ordained 68 priests, including
Ludmila's father and her brother.
The ordinations of these two men, because they
were married, and Ludmila's, because she is a woman, are not
recognized by Rome. And out of respect for the Church she will not
practice her priesthood. This is what she says about her decision:
I cannot say I do not accept the prohibition
I have been given, because I do accept it. … They were
speaking legally on the basis of church law. … But the
sacrament also has a sacral aspect. … When we speak from this
perspective, nobody can tell be that my priest hood does not
exist, even if they say that these two aspects cannot exist
apart from each other, but only in harmony [my emphasis])…
In the history of salvation God accepts things at certain times
that are not permitted at other times. God permitted my
ordination. (p. 241)
When I read these words, I let go of a long
deep breath I hadn't even realized I was holding. "Oh,
Ludmila," I sighed. "But they do exist in
harmony, and you are the song they sing." And then I
chuckled. The Singer and the Song is the title of a memoir
by the book's author, Miriam Therese Winter. "God is the
singer," Miriam Therese tells us in her memoir, "and we
are the song."
It was the melody of the Spirit within my own
life that I heard as I read Ludmila's story.
I grew up in a town so small that our church
was the town hall and the priest a missionary. I remember counting
the candles on the altar when I was five years old because two
meant it was a "low" mass and I would just have to
listen, but six candles meant it was a Holy Day and I could sing!
I remember leaving the church after my first Penance (Confession)
feeling that I was best friends with God. And the next day, when I
received my First Holy Communion, I was a princess in God's
kingdom. I also remember realizing when I was 10 that because I
was female, I couldn't be Pope or President and the next most
powerful thing I could do was to become a parent. My desire to be
"powerful" came from my confidence that God wanted me to
bring God's graces into the world, and I seek to fulfill that
commitment as a wife and mother, and through my avocation as a
family life educator.
There are times when I am very angry with the
injustice of the gender bias within the Roman Catholic Church that
doesn't allow me to do all that I do and be priest too, and I
fully expected to find this anger reinforced by Ludmila's story.
Instead, I understood (gasp) and appreciated (gasp again!) the
dilemma presented to most members of the universal church by her
priesthood. My sense is that she wanted to keep her priesthood
hidden because she didn't want "the rug pulled out from under
people's faith," a very valid ministerial concern. But when
it became public, she accepted that also as God's grace. Ludmila's
story is the story of a priesthood without pretense, one without
authority but not without power. She never celebrated a public
mass, and very few people knew she was ordained; but her prayer
life changed because she knew she was praying as a priest. When
she celebrated the Eucharist, she invited the blessed Mother and
other Saints to be with her, so even though it looked like she was
alone she was in Communion with the eternal, universal church. As
she went about her daily life, people who felt they couldn't go to
a priest would talk to her and go away feeling reconciled with
their lives and their God, and she felt that God was directing her
priesthood.
Perhaps the humility and commitment with which
Ludmila lives out the prohibition to practice her priesthood, even
in secret, is an extension of God's direction. Perhaps the fact
that she tried to keep her priesthood hidden and could not is an
extension of God's direction too. Jesus said that the Kingdom is
now and not yet. Perhaps the time for Women Priests in the Roman
Catholic Church is now and not yet also. Perhaps now that a woman
has publicly claimed her priesthood, we will recognize ourselves
within her story. Perhaps we will find each other and then, one
day, like the walls of Jericho, and the Wall in Berlin, the wall
between the men and women of the Roman Catholic Church will just
come tumbling down.
Reviewer Beth Ramos
is a new member of EEWC, having learned about EEWC through Linda
Bieze as she and Linda participated in the 2001 Women's Leadership
Institute at Hartford Seminary under the direction of Miriam
Therese Winter, author of the book Beth reviewed. (For information
about the Women's Leadership
Institute, see Linda Bieze's Council
Column in the spring issue of EEWC Update).
Over the years, Beth
has worked as an elementary school teacher, a campus minister, a
tutor, a founder and director of a parent education/support
program, a consultant in personal and professional growth, a
supervisor of seminary interns, a training captain and assistant
manager for Discovery Zone, and a library technician. At present,
she is a teacher of preschoolers in Holliston, Massachusetts.
"The consistent
values underneath all I've done and do are love of learning and
life, faith, and family." Beth writes. "Of all that I've
done, I'm most proud of the life my husband Art and I have built
together, and of our daughters, Jennifer (25) and Meredith
(23)."
© 2001
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus |