H
hdedwards
Guest
I was just wondering if in the Catholic Church women are allowed to become deacons and if not what other vocations are available besides sisterhood
No, women are not permitted to become Deacons (and never have been Deacons in the concept of Holy Orders)I was just wondering if in the Catholic Church women are allowed to become deacons and if not what other vocations are available besides sisterhood
Someone in my Bible study had mentioned that in our area when married men were studying to be deacons, that their wives would attend classes with them so that they could share in their ministry. She referred to the wives as deaconesses. I know at our parish the deacon and his wife teach RCIA and baptismal preparation classes together. Still, that doesn’t make her an actual deacon since she can’t baptize or marry anyone. I do wonder though if this is the practice everywhere or an invention of my archdiocese.Some of the Eastern Churches had what they called Deaconesses until a couple hundred years ago. Some are bringing the role back. The catch is that if one looks at this role it amounted to being what we in the Western Church would call an un-cloistered Nun. Certainly a role in the Western Church that is still available albeit under a different title than Deaconess. Whether these Deaconesses were “ordained” in the same sense as a man is not totally clear.
She CAN baptize as per CCC 1284.she can’t baptize or marry anyone.
Isn’t it amazing how many people, especially women, do not see marriage and motherhood as a vocation?the most common vocation undertaken by Catholic woman is marriage, as wife and mother.
In the Archdiocese of Detroit, that position is restricted to Deacons.…at least in ours women can serve as Pastoral Life Directors,
It is considered a sort of vocational calling in the east to be the wife of a priest or of a deacon. The translation for a priest’s wife’s title is Priestess, Priest’s Wife, or Mother depending on the language. A deacon’s wife is called Deaconess or the same title as the priest’s wife, depending on the language. The title is applied to her in the same way Father is applied to priests.Someone in my Bible study had mentioned that in our area when married men were studying to be deacons, that their wives would attend classes with them so that they could share in their ministry. She referred to the wives as deaconesses.
Whether there was a pair of unicorns on the ark is not totally clear. Therefore we must rely on the deposit of faith passed on through the church and the Historical account of salvation history to draw our conclusions pertaining to Women recieving holy orders. It is not likely that women recieved Holy Orders. There are too many instances that indicate otherwise. Specifically:. Whether these Deaconesses were “ordained” in the same sense as a man is not totally clear.
There is a third possiblity that most people overlook in discussions about deaconesses (and without myself seeing the whole historical record on the issue I still think it’s probably the correct one from what I’ve read): deaconesses could have been truly ordained even though they did not receive the Sacrament of *Holy Orders. *One need look only as far as the nearest traditional order for an example of this; subdeacons are ordained to that ministry, but their ordination does not confer a sacrament like ordination to the diaconate and above. We’ve been doing that long enough that I see no reason to assume there was a point in time at which ordination only referred to Holy Orders.Whether the deaconesses of the past were truly ordained is historically unclear. Your answer to that question is obviously going to depend on whether you believe they absolutely can’t be ordained sacramentally (in which case “deaconesses” were not a sacrament), or if you believe that they might be able to be deacons (in which case you are likely to believe that at least some of the deaconesses of the past were truly sacramentally ordained).
Do you deny the true ordination of subdeacons?It is not possible for a deaconess to be truly ordained and yet not receive the Sacrament of Holy Orders. That suggestion is absurd.
Ron Conte
Yes, ordained. There are two threads in the Eastern Christianity subforum with good information.Some of the Eastern Churches had what they called Deaconesses until a couple hundred years ago. Some are bringing the role back. The catch is that if one looks at this role it amounted to being what we in the Western Church would call an un-cloistered Nun. Certainly a role in the Western Church that is still available albeit under a different title than Deaconess. Whether these Deaconesses were “ordained” in the same sense as a man is not totally clear.