Ida Raming

Ida Raming (born 1932 in Fürstenau, Germany) is a German author, teacher and theologian.

Life

After school Raming studied Catholic theology, philosophy and pedagogy at the University of Munster and the University of Freiburg. She finished university in 1973 and worked as a teacher in Germany. She wrote several books concerning women's rights in the Roman Catholic Church.

On 29 June 2002, Raming and six other women were ordained priests by Independent Catholic bishop Rómulo Antonio Braschi, a former Roman Catholic priest from Argentina who left the Roman Catholic Church out of disagreement with the anti-liberation theology of the Vatican to join the Catholic Apostolic Charismatic Church of “Jesus the King”. In the media, the ordained women were called the Danube Seven because they were ordained on the Danube River near the town of Passau on the border between Germany and Austria. In 2003 Raming was excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church.[1][2]

Raming, who in 1986 had co-founded Gruppe Maria Magdala, Priesteramt für die Frau, which promotes priesthood for women, indicated that her personal experience of misogynistic religious restrictions including the exclusion of women from ordained offices was the impetus behind her actions.[3][4]

Works

References

  1. Erklärung anlässlich der Frauenordination in Österreich
  2. BBC: Catholic women in unofficial ordination, June 2002
  3. Ida Raming, womenpriests.org.
  4. Frauen und katholische Kirche, Wir sind Kirche.

External links

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