Female Diaconate restored by Greek Holy Synod
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Published by Americamagazine.org, February 7, 2005
'Grant Her Your Spirit'
By Phyllis Zagano
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The
Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church of Greece voted
in Athens on Oct. 8, 2004, to restore the female
diaconate. All the members of the
Holy Synod - 125 metropolitans and bishops and
Archbishop Christodoulos, the head of the church
of Greece-had considered the topic. The decision
does not directly affect the Greek Orthodox
Archdiocese of America, which is an eparchy of the
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. The
Greek ecclesiastical provinces of the Ecumenical
Patriarchate received their independence from
Constantinople in 1850 and were proclaimed the
Autocephalous Church of Greece.
While women deacons had virtually disappeared by
the ninth century, discussion of the restoration
of women in the diaconate in Orthodoxy began in
the latter half of the 20th century. Two books on
the topic by Evangelos Theodorou, Heroines of
Love: Deaconesses Through the Ages (1949) and The
"Ordination" or "Appointment" of Deaconesses
(1954), documented the sacramental ordination of
women in the early church. His work was
complemented in the Catholic Church by an article
published by Cipriano Vagaggini, a Camaldolese
monk, in Orientalia Christiana Periodica in 1974.
The most significant scholarship on the topic
agrees that women were sacramentally ordained to
the diaconate, inside the iconostasis at the
altar, by bishops in the early church. Women
deacons received the diaconal stole and Communion
at their ordinations, which shared the same
Pentecostal quality as the ordination of a bishop,
priest or male deacon.
Despite the decline of the order of deaconesses in
the early Middle Ages, Orthodoxy never prohibited
it. In 1907 a Russian Orthodox Church commission
reported the presence of deaconesses in every
Georgian parish; the popular 20th-century Orthodox
saint Nektarios (1846-1920) ordained two women as
deacons in 1911; and up to the 1950's a few Greek
Orthodox nuns became monastic deaconesses. In 1986
Christodoulos, then metropolitan of Demetrias and
now archbishop of Athens and all of Greece,
ordained a woman deacon according to the "ritual
of St. Nektarios"-the ancient Byzantine text St.
Nektarios used.
Multiple inter-Orthodox conferences called for the
restoration of the order, including the
Interorthodox Symposium at Rhodes, Greece, in
1988, which plainly stated, "The apostolic order
of deaconess should be revived." The symposium
noted that "the revival of this ancient order
should be envisaged on the basis of the ancient
prototypes testified to in many sources and with
the prayers found in the Apostolic Constitutions
and the ancient Byzantine liturgical books."
At the Holy Synod meeting in Athens in 2004,
Metropolitan Chrysostom of Chalkidos initiated
discussion on the subject of the role of women in
the Church of Greece and the rejuvenation of the
order of female deacons. In the ensuing
discussion, some older bishops apparently
disagreed with the complete restoration of the
order. Anthimos, bishop of Thessaloniki, later
remarked to the Kathimerini English Daily, "As far
as I know, the induction of women into the police
and the army was a failure, and we want to return
to this old matter?"
While the social-service aspect of the female
diaconate is well known, the Holy Synod decided
that women could be promoted to the diaconate only
in remote monasteries and at the discretion of
individual bishops. The limiting decision to
restore only the monastic female diaconate did not
please some synod members. The Athens News Agency
reported that Chrysostomos, bishop of Peristeri,
said, "The role of female deacons must be in
society and not in the monasteries." Other members
of the Holy Synod agreed and stressed that the
role of women deacons should be social-for
example, the care of the
sick.
The vote of the Holy Synod to restore ordination
of women to the diaconate under limited
circumstances may be the most progressive idea the
Orthodox Church can bring to the world. The
document only gives bishops the option, if they
wish, to ordain senior nuns in monasteries of
their eparchies. Bishops who choose to promote
women to the diaconate will use the ancient
Byzantine liturgy that performs the same
cheirotonia -- laying on of
hands -- for deaconesses as in each major order:
bishop, priest and deacon. Even so, some (mostly
Western) scholars have argued that the historical
ordination of women deacons was not a cheirotonia,
or ordination to major orders, but a cheirothesia,
a blessing that signifies installation to a minor
order. The confusion is understandable, since the
two terms were sometimes used interchangeably, but
other scholars are equally convinced that women
were ordained to the major order of the diaconate.
The proof will
be in the liturgy the bishops actually use. At
present there is only one liturgy and one
tradition by which to create a woman deacon in the
Byzantine rite, and it is demonstrably a ritual of
ordination for the "servant who is to be ordained
to the office of a deacon."
Even the document on the diaconate issued by the
Vatican's International Theological Commission in
2002 admits that "Canon 15 of the Council of
Chalcedon (451) seems to confirm the fact that
deaconesses really were 'ordained' by the
imposition of hands (cheirotonia)." Despite the
pejorative use of quotation marks here and
elsewhere in the document when historical
ordinations of women deacons are mentioned, this
Vatican commission seems unwilling to deny the
history to which the Church of Greece has now
newly returned. Further, the Vatican document
points out that the practice of ordaining women
deacons according to the Byzantine liturgy lasted
at least into the eighth century. It does not
review Orthodox practice after 1054.
The rejuvenation of the order of deaconess in the
Church of Greece is expected to begin during the
winter of 2004-5. The contemporary ordination (cheirotonia)
of women provides even more evidence and support
for the restoration of the female diaconate in the
Catholic Church, which has acknowledged the
validity of Orthodox sacraments and orders.
Despite the distinction in Canon 1024-"A baptized
male alone receives sacred ordination validly"-one
can presume the possibility of a derogation from
the law, as
suggested by the Canon Law Society of America in
1995, to allow for diaconal
ordination of women. (The history of Canon 1024 is
clearly one of attempts to restrict women from
priesthood, not from the diaconate.)
In fact, the Catholic Church has already
indirectly acknowledged valid ordinations of women
by the Armenian Apostolic Church, one of the
churches of the East that ordains women deacons.
There are two recent declarations of
unity-agreements of mutual recognition of the
validity of sacraments and of orders-between Rome
and the Armenian Church, one signed by Paul VI and
Catholicos Vasken I in 1970, another between John
Paul II and Catholicos Karekin I in 1996.
These agreements are significant, for the Armenian
Apostolic Church has retained the female diaconate
into modern times. The Armenian Catholicossate of
Cilicia has at least four ordained women. One,
Sister Hrip'sime, who lives in Istanbul, is listed
in the official church calendar published by the
Armenian Patriarchate of Turkey as follows:
"Mother Hrip'sime Proto-deacon Sasunian, born in
Soghukoluk, Antioch, in 1928; became a nun in
1953; Proto-deacon in 1984; Mother Superior in
1998. Member of the Kalfayian
Order." Mother Hrip'sime has worked to restore the
female diaconate as an active social ministry, and
for many years was the general director of Bird' s
Nest, a combined orphanage, school and social
service center near Beiruit, Lebanon. Her
diaconate, and that of the three other women
deacons, is far from monastic.
The future Catholic response to the documented
past and the changing present promises to be
interesting. The tone of the International
Theological Commission document reveals an attempt
to rule out women deacons, but the question is
left remarkably open: "It pertains to the ministry
of discernment which the Lord established in his
church to pronounce authoritatively on this
question."
It is becoming increasingly clear that despite the
Catholic Church's unwillingness to say yes to the
restoration of the female diaconate as an ordained
ministry of the Catholic Church, it cannot say no.
Prayer for the Ordination of a Woman Deacon
O Eternal God, the Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Creator of man and of woman, who
replenished with the Spirit Miriam, and Deborah,
and Anna, and Huldah; who did not disdain that
your only-begotten Son should be born of a woman;
who also in the tabernacle of the testimony, and
in the temple, did ordain women to be keepers of
your holy gates - look down now upon this your
servant who is to be ordained to the office of a
deaconess, and grant her your Holy Spirit, that
she may worthily discharge the work which is
committed to her to your glory, and the praise of
your Christ, with whom
glory and adoration be to you and the Holy Spirit
for ever. Amen."
-Apostolic Constitutions, No. 8 (late fourth
century)
Phyllis Zagano, Ph.D. is the Aquinas Chair
Professor of Catholic Studies at St. Thomas
Aquinas College, Sparkill, NY and Senior
Research Associate-in-Residence at Hofstra
Universty, Hempstead, NY. She is the author
of
Holy
Saturday: An Argument for the Restoration of the
Female Diaconate in the Catholic Church
(Crossroad, 2000).
America (americamagazine.org), Vol. 192 No. 4,
February 7, 2005.
Copyright © 2005 by America Press, Inc.
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