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“Recently, the Vatican ruled out – for now – women entering the diaconate. In doing so, it drew on a theological argument long used to justify the Church’s restriction of priestly ordination to men: that the ordained minister acts in the ‘person of Christ’, and that this representation requires sacramental similarity to Jesus Christ, who was male.
While the question of women priests has been considered closed by the Church, the extension of this argument to women deacons warrants closer examination. In particular, it raises questions about what it truly means to act ‘in the person of Christ’, and whether the application of this concept to the diaconate is theologically consistent.
When we consider the wide diversity of those admitted to Holy Orders across race, ethnicity, age, height and build, facial features, hair and skin colour, we can comfortably conclude that resembling or representing the ‘person of Christ’ has never been understood as a matter of physical appearance or ethnicity.
Similarly, recent Vatican guidance during the pontificate of Pope Francis has clarified that homosexual orientation in itself does not preclude men from priestly formation, provided candidates live in accordance with the Church’s expectations regarding chastity. This indicates that sexual orientation is not regarded as determinative of one’s capacity to act in the person of Christ.
Marital status also appears irrelevant to this representation. Deacons are frequently married, while Jesus was not. Priests vow celibacy; deacons ordinarily do not. Clearly, marital state is not considered essential to acting in the person of Christ.
Nor do stereotypically “masculine” traits or interests function as criteria.
Priestly vocations have emerged from professions such as nursing, social work, and early childhood education, fields often culturally associated with women. Indeed, many of the qualities prized in ordained ministry — listening, empathy, communication, community-building, compassion — are often described, however imprecisely, as “feminine.” Yet these qualities are welcomed rather than regarded as obstacles to sacramental representation.
Taken together, these considerations suggest that acting in the person of Christ is not grounded in physical resemblance, ethnicity, marital status, sexual orientation, or masculine traits.
Accordingly, and adopting modern distinctions made between the terms ‘sex’ and ‘gender’, it seems the remaining criterion for acting in the person of Christ appears to be biological sex alone. That is, in practice, eligibility for Holy Orders — including the diaconate — rests on the possession of a male body.
This narrowing raises an uncomfortable question. Can the fullness of who Christ is, the source of mercy and justice, wisdom and self-giving love, saviour and servant, be reduced to biological sex alone? Such a reduction risks flattening the richness of Christ’s humanity and mission into a single physical attribute, rather than a total life offered for the salvation of the world.
Some would argue that acting in the person of Christ refers less to Jesus as an individual historical male and more to Christ as the anointed saviour who offers himself for humanity. Within this framework, Jesus’ maleness is not the defining feature of his self-sacrifice. Others maintain that because Jesus chose to enter history as a man, this choice must be continued sacramentally through exclusively male ordination. Yet Jesus also entered history as a Jew, within a particular lineage and culture, and nevertheless extended his mission beyond those boundaries to Gentiles and outsiders. His ministry repeatedly begins from a select group and extends to all.
Yet the Church’s current conclusions regarding women deacons appear partial, shaped by selective emphases in scriptural interpretation often favouring women’s exclusion.
For example, when considering women deacons, focus is placed on the sex of Jesus, while other scriptural dimensions are downplayed. The Gospels present Christ as embodying both the Word (Logos) and the Wisdom (Sophia) of God, imagery traditionally gendered as male and female. Yet this richness is rarely integrated into contemporary arguments.
A similar pattern appears in relation to physical disability. Scriptural passages once excluded those with bodily ‘blemishes’ from serving at the altar (cf. Leviticus 21). Today, such texts are interpreted symbolically, allowing men with disabilities to be ordained on the basis of spiritual rather than physical perfection, leaving open the path to Holy Orders for men with disabilities.
This shift in interpretation rightly reflects deeper theological understanding. Yet no comparable generosity is extended to women, whose exclusion is justified through a literal reading focused narrowly on sex. Here, men benefit from symbolic interpretation; women are restricted by the literal.
Other arguments against women deacons rely less on Scripture than on ecclesial or cultural tradition.
While terms such as “ordination” and “Holy Orders” do not appear explicitly in the New Testament, they are treated as decisive in limiting women’s participation in the Church’s hierarchy. By contrast, explicit scriptural references to Phoebe as a deacon of the Church are routinely minimised, despite St Paul’s choice to entrust Phoebe, not one of the named male deacons, with carrying his letter to the Romans, a task central to the proclamation of the Gospel.
Likewise, Jesus chose Mary Magdalene, rather than a male apostle, as the first witness and herald of his resurrection. Proclaiming the Good News is a defining dimension of diaconal ministry, yet these precedents are often sidelined.
While semantics over the precise meaning of diakonos continues, broader considerations like pastoral need, vocational discernment, ability, and common sense, are frequently marginalised. In their place, ecclesial stability and fear of division can take precedence. Those in the Church averse to change and those who err towards a paradigm of exclusivity are indulged, while the voices of faithful women simply seeking to follow an authentic calling are deferred or discounted.
As women ourselves, we may unintentionally contribute to this impasse. Habituated to prioritising harmony, many of us avoid asserting our convictions for fear of conflict. Women are taken advantage of when we prioritise peace-keeping and tolerance over self-assertion. We choose to avoid seeing any prejudice against us so as to not rock the boat. We do not resist when we are encouraged to show endless patience, gagged with platitudes of ‘our time will come,’ and restricted through a choice-selection of Biblical verses. Our feelings of anger and disappointment are questioned or reframed as the consequence of ambition, rather than recognised as the consequence of an unfulfilled vocation.
Yet we need to acknowledge that there are numerous women expressing a clear calling towards the diaconate, including many good and faithful Catholic women within Catholic employment and religious orders. Are these callings not worthy of formal discernment?
Even if the Church ultimately judges that women cannot be ordained as deacons, at some point there needs to be an official response to these women even if out of respect alone. Women whose faith and capacity deemed them trustworthy enough to be included within formal Catholic institutions, and whose vocational discernment to religious orders was considered valid, but whose discernment in this matter is somehow deemed categorically invalid and not of God.
In fact, the most recent Vatican study, The Commission for the Study of the Diaconate of Women, established under Pope Francis and whose findings informed the 2024–25 discernment process, acknowledged complex long-term impact of historical issues in this area, but stopped short of recommending change. Its conclusions, reflected indirectly in documents from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and in Pope Francis’ own remarks, often framed women’s discernment in terms of desires for recognition or authority, with discernment of vocation dismissed as feelings, rather than as potential movements of the Holy Spirit.
Conclusions on the validity of a female diaconate drawn through these formal ‘research groups’, formed at the request of one pope and curbed at the request of another, while shaped by historical constraints, internal tensions, and shifting ecclesial priorities, might not be the most spiritually authentic or revealing.
In line with true synodality, grass-roots-level discernment also needs to be considered. Convinced of the Holy Spirit’s consistent teaching in such matters, one constructive path forward would be to assess women expressing a diaconal vocation through the same processes used for male candidates.
If discernment consistently confirms that such vocations are not of God, it would offer clarity and closure for these women nurturing a particular vocation. If, however, the Spirit reveals something broader than current assumptions allow, the Church would be invited into deeper fidelity.
Those women who clearly sense a calling to the diaconate may one day face spiritual accountability for not fighting harder for their vocations. Equally, those who have proven to be a hindrance to these women following their vocation through inadequate or prejudicial discernment processes may bear responsibility for obscuring the Spirit’s work. The Church has long affirmed its authority to ‘bind and loose’ in light of growing understanding (Matthew 16:19). This authority exists precisely so that the Gospel may be proclaimed more fully within changing contexts.
The Church often speaks of the ‘feminine genius’ as a gift. That gift already stands at the Church’s doorstep, in service of the Church’s objective to spread the Gospel, with the ultimate aim of drawing people to God’s love.
A deacon’s life is one of service, liturgy, and proclamation of the Word. There is no gender to loving God. No gender to sacrifice. No gender to justice, mercy, compassion, or service. These are the qualities Christ embodied and entrusted to his Church. Rather than excluding women solely on the basis of sex, the Church might better serve its mission by embracing all who seek to embody Christ’s self-giving love, and to draw others into the wide mercy of God.”
Dr Nimmi Candappa is a Melbourne writer, Plenary Council member and academic. She was a prominent member of and contributor to the Australian Plenary Council.

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