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Thursday, March 28, 2024

It is time the Church recognised that there really is no justification to continue the ban on women’s ministry by John Wijngaards


 


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It is time the Church recognised that there really is no justification to continue the ban on women’s ministry

Key agenda items for the Synod on Synodality include women’s role in the church, but will anything ever really change?
Associated Press / Alamy

At first sight, Pope Francis announcement earlier this month about the ten study groups on women’s diaconate would seem to make sense. Some issues “require in-depth study” which the large synodal gathering cannot deal with and so will be handed over to these ten study grous for further in-depth examination.  “They will offer an initial account of their activity on the occasion of the Second Session [in October 2024] and, if possible, will conclude their mandate by the month of June 2025”. As Sister Nathalie Becquart, undersecretary of the General Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops, rightly observed, some issues require expert examination.

The diaconate of women is covered by the study group on the ministries. Managing this study group has been entrusted to the Vatican Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. And this is where the trouble starts. For, going by past experience, entrusting the study of women’s ordination to that curial department is not simply kicking the can down the road but like throwing the issue into a dustbin.

The study group is told to base its examination on previous work done by the dicastery. That sounds ominous. For it carries a record of burying academically established facts.

As long ago as in 2003, the dicastery’s theological commission refused to accept that the ancient women deacons were truly sacramentally ordained. Their report ignored modern scholarship, omitted vital evidence and was misleading in its restriction of published ordination rites and its conclusions. Read a full analysis of the 2003 Vatican Report here.

At the same time the Wijngaards Institute began to publish, on www.womendeacons.org, the many well-preserved first-millennium ordination rites of women deacons. These women were ordained using a rite identical to the one for the ordination of their male counterparts, which was recognisably sacramental. The manuscripts include Barbarini Gr 336, the Bessarion, Vatican GR 1872, Coislin Gr 213 and 4 manuscripts based on the sacramentary sent by Pope Hadrian to Charlemagne in 786 AD.

In 2015 the Wijngaards Institute sent, based on this research, a “Documented Appeal to Pope Francis to Request the Re-instatement of the Ordained Diaconate for Women”.  It offered a summary of the evidence. We received a polite reply from the Pope’s office, and surely we understand our evidence was passed on to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. But in 2018, Archbishop Luis Ladaria, head of this curial department, still declared: “The impossibility of ordaining women belongs to the ‘substance’ of the sacrament of order, a fact the Church recognises. She cannot change this substance. … It is not just a question of discipline, but of doctrine.”

The Pontifical Biblical Commission concluded in 1975 that the ordination of women could not be validly excluded on the basis of Scripture. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith subjected the Biblical  Commission from then on to the Theological Commission. Meanwhile commission member Cipriano Vagaggini published an article in Orientalia Christiana Periodica in 1974 concluding that the ordination of women deacons in the early church was sacramental. What the church had done in the past, he suggested, the church may do again. 

In 1997 the International Theological Commission actually confirmed what  Vagaggini had stated earlier: history supports the argument that women could be sacramentally ordained. Yet while news reports appeared about that document, it was never published by the Vatican. 

A study commission on the women’s diaconate was set up in 2016 in response to a request from the International Union of Superiors General. In 2019 the commission was abolished because it had been “unable to find consensus and give a ‘definitive response’ on the role of women deacons in the first centuries of Christianity.” What its findings were we do not know. Its report has not been made public.

In 2020 Pope Francis ordered a new study commission on the diaconate of women to replace it in response to a request in the final document of the October 2019 Synod on the Amazon. Any findings and recommendations are not as yet known.

In June 2016, just after Pope Francis announced he would create the commission for the study of the history of women deacons in the Catholic Church, he joked to journalists, “When you want something not to be resolved, make a commission.” 

Setting up the study grous is somehow inevitable. But the following reforms in the way they function are urgent. Overall control of the study grous should be given to the Synodal Office. And the theologians serving in the study groups should not be chosen by the curial departments, which have a reputation of appointing scholars who already agree with their official views. Episcopal Conferences should be asked to provide lists of truly independent scholars.

Pope Francis has said that the decision to set up study grous was made so as to “enable the assembly, in its second session, to focus more easily on the general theme that I assigned to it at the time, and which can now be summarised in the question: ‘How to be a synodal Church in mission?’.” If that is the case, it is time the Pope recogised that the Church’s mission will never be credible for so long as it continues to ban women from its ministries, without any real doctrinal justification.

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