Priesthood is also female

  • Dates
    2024 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Contemporary Issues, Documentary, Editorial, Portrait
  • Location Norway, Norway

This project aims at exploring the role of women in ecclesiastic positions within the Church. As in many other professions and vocations, men are still the majority and sole holders of higher ranks in the Catholic Church.

This project (ongoing) aims at exploring the role of women in ecclesiastic positions in the Church. As in many other professions and vocations, men are still the majority and sole holders of higher ranks in the Catholic Church. Norway is known to be a progressive country with a state-owned Church. Women do not choose to become priests only out of devotion, but also as a career, despite facing opposition from the more conservative communities in the southern, western, and northern regions of Norway. Yet, churches are mostly attended by women, inviting to reflect on the need for female priests in the religious sphere and leadership positions. Meeting with Sunniva Gylver (58), a Norwegian Lutheran priest of the Fageborg church in Oslo, and lately appointed as bishop of Oslo, we get a glimpse into the life of a female priest in the capital. Sunniva not only represents the Church, proudly wearing the robe and preaching the Sunday mass, she also adopts some alternative approaches to priesthood by introducing more progressive activities like yoga in the Church.

Priesthood is also female by Giulia Gustavsen Angelini

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