G
Ghosty
Guest
Yes, but all this means from a Latin perspective is that Deacons in the East don’t perform all the Sacramental roles possible for them. Women don’t perform any of the Sacramental roles of the Deacon, either, so there’s no obvious problem arising.In the West, Deacons can administer certain Sacraments, or Mysteries; that is not part of the ordination of a Deaconess, according to the service you posted.
**But in the East, Deacons cannot.
CHEIROTONIA is the distinguishing word here.
And the Deaconess, like the Deacon, returns the Chalice to the Altar after Communion–something a layman cannot do.**
My only point in bringing this up is that there is nothing in ordaining Deaconesses that conflicts with the Latin understanding of the Diaconate, so it won’t be grounds for Sacramental invalidity in the eyes of the Catholic Communion.
If one group says “only men over 30 can perform surgery”, and another group says “we have doctors who are men and women, but none of them perform surgery”, then there is no contradiction, only a difference in practices.
Peace and God bless!