Sep 7, 2012
Modern day feminism is not so much a war against men as it is against motherhood. After all, motherhood prevents women from being identical to men. Feminism, in a nutshell, is an attempt to take back from men what is believed to be rightfully women’s; namely, the liberty to be childless.
But in the pursuit to make women identical to men, feminism paved the way for the acceptance of same-sex marriage and other social ills. Indeed, marriage is not the only thing this movement has undermined. Studies have shown that women are less happy and less satisfied with their lives than just a few decades ago.
Far from improving the condition of women, what radical feminism has accomplished bears much similarity to the legacy of ancient paganism. For those who are influenced by this ideology, it has proved to be a movement backward. “In Ancient Greece,” Cardinal James Gibbons wrote, “women were in an unending tutelage, slavery, instrument of man’s passion.” (Our Christian Heritage, 1889) Not just in Greece, but it was a universal phenomenon that women suffered as second class citizens in the unbaptized world.
Who, then, was the greatest benefactor of women rights? This same Cardinal gives the answer: “Every impartial student of history is forced to admit that women are indebted to the Catholic religion for the elevated station she enjoys today in family and social life.” There is a reason for this! Feminism begins with the political and benefits only those women who are affiliated with its cause. Catholicism, on the other hand, begins with the theological, that is, sin and God’s intervention.