Much of the world may be charmed by
Pope Francis, but what has he done to include women as decision makers
in the Catholic Church? More to the point, what can he do?
Francis has, of course, been busy with other things. The
seventy-eight-year-old Jesuit now in the third year of his papacy seems
quite serious in his efforts to reform the Roman Curia, by all accounts a
bloated bureaucracy resistant to change. The pope's early movement
toward transparency in Vatican financial matters earned him enemies
within the system, and his ongoing efforts to uncover fiscal
improprieties do not exactly grease the wheels needed to move the Curia
forward to reform. Francis's dual efforts—curial and financial
reform—support his larger agenda and aim: preaching the Gospel and
living its message.
But, what about women? In interviews and writings, the pope often
returns to the topic of women's roles in the Church. Within a few months
of his election, Francis called for a "more widespread and incisive
female presence in the Church" in an interview with Antonio Spadaro, the
Jesuit editor of La Civiltà Cattolica, one of Italy's oldest periodicals and the only one whose text is approved by the Vatican's state department.1
The papal interview, translated into several languages and printed in
sixteen Jesuit journals, caught the attention of the major Spanish daily
newspaper El País,2
which suggested Francis might be considering female cardinals. The
report brought a papal response: "I don't know where that comment came
from!"
Even so, Francis repeated the same call a few months later in his first apostolic exhortation, Evangelii Gaudium (The Joy of the Gospel): "we need to create still broader opportunities for a more incisive female presence in the Church."3
He repeated that phrase when speaking before the Pontifical Council for
Culture's February 2015 plenary assembly on women in the church.4
The event was perhaps a response to another papal
suggestion—development of a "theology of the woman in the Church"—made
on the papal plane ride back to Rome from the 2013 World Youth Day in
Brazil.
Even with papal interest—on the airplane from Rio Francis seemed to complain about woman's limited roles5—the
sticking point is ordination. The Catholic Church teaches it cannot
reverse Jesus's decision to choose male apostles, predecessors to
priests and bishops. Sacramental power and juridical authority come with
priestly ordination and episcopal consecration. Barred from these,
women can cooperate with but not share authority.
Such is not necessarily the case. In order to fully hold (the canonical
word is "obtain") certain church offices, an individual must be a
cleric, not a lay, or non-ordained, person. But priest and bishop are
not the only clerical ranks in the church. Deacons are also ordained
clerics, and history documents women ordained to the diaconate from the
earliest centuries of Christianity to the Middle Ages, when the
diaconate faded as a separate order. As priests absorbed the work of
deacons, ordination to the diaconate became simply a step in the cursus honorum
on the way to priesthood. Fewer and fewer women—mostly monastic
abbesses—were ordained as deacons, primarily for service within their
own convents.
However, the Catholic Church restored the diaconate as a permanent
grade of order following the Second Vatican Council. Some bishops
actually brought up the historical fact of women deacons during
conciliar debate,6
but the promulgated documents clearly specify only men would be called
to the order of deacon. When Pope Paul VI restored the diaconate as a
permanent grade of order for the entire Church (it never fully
disappeared in the Eastern Catholic Churches), he asked about women
deacons, possibly of the International Theological Commission but at
least of one of its more prominent members, Cipriano Vagaggini. By 1974,
a journal of the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome published
Vagaggini's densely reasoned historical and theological findings in
Italian: yes, women had been ordained as deacons and could be so
ordained again.7
Coincidentally, interest in Catholic women's ordination as priests was
on the rise, partly in response to the 1974 priestly ordinations of
eleven Episcopal women in Philadelphia. In 1976, the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, the curial office responsible for matters of
faith and morals, published its opinion that women could not be ordained
as priests with the document Inter Insigniores. The question
of women deacons was specifically omitted. Separate debates ensued, one
on women deacons, another on women priests; at times it was argued that
the history of ordained women deacons gave precedent for both.
Then, in 1994, Pope John Paul II issued a four-paragraph Apostolic Letter, Ordinatio Sacerdotalis
affirming that the ban on women priests "pertains to the Church's
divine constitution" and that the Church's determination that it did not
have the authority to ordain women as priests "is to be definitively
held by all the Church's faithful."8
The statement raised several areas of concern, not the least of which
was dueling opinions on whether it is "infallible." Notably, the
document does not mention women deacons.
An interesting argument from the first document on women priests (Inter Insigniores)
is not in the second: the so-called iconic argument, which states that a
person must be male in order to represent Christ. Yet, if one holds
that all people are made in the image and likeness of God and that
Christ is the second person of the Trinity and therefore God, it makes
no sense to say that a woman cannot image Christ. What makes sense,
although it carries no theological weight in this regard, is to say that
women cannot image Jesus. The distinction is critical because it is the
risen Lord, not the restricted male human Jesus, who is represented by
the ordained person.
Recognizing that all persons, including women, are made in the image
and likeness of God—actually a staple of Catholic teaching—does not
automatically grant women access to priesthood. Even given the
abandonment of the iconic argument (some still say it is "implied" in
the 1994 document) there is the question of authority, supported by the
assertion that the ban on women priests is of divine law. Hence the
specter of women priests cannot really be raised with the ordination of
women deacons.
Further, if the ban on women priests is permanent and binding, then the
restoration of women to the ordained diaconate becomes less
complicated, specifically because the current practice of not ordaining
women deacons is arguably a "merely ecclesiastical law"—a regulation,
not a doctrine. The assertion of divine law pertaining to priestly
ordination refers to the presumed intent of Jesus with the apostles. But
the initial choice of servants—deacons—by the apostles was from among
those put forth by the community following Jesus's death and
resurrection. (Acts 6:1-6). Although she is not mentioned in Acts, given
that Phoebe is the only person in scripture called deacon (Rom. 16:1),
and given the many evidences of women deacons throughout history, the
restoration of women to the diaconate seems to be something Francis
could do easily.
Here the debate heats up. In 2002, the International Theological
Commission, a body within the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, published a long-awaited study document on the diaconate.9
It appears that a subcommittee in the International Theological
Commission's 1992–97 session completed a seventeen- or eighteen-page
positive document about women deacons that its then-president, Joseph
Cardinal Ratzinger, refused to sign. Finally, in 2002, the ensuing
International Theological Commission session approved a much longer and
relatively inconclusive document, which stated that male and female
deacons had different roles in the early church, that priesthood and the
diaconate are separate and distinct ministries, and that the question
of admitting women to the diaconate was something for the church's
"ministry of discernment" to decide.
The reconfigured subcommittee, chaired by one of Cardinal Ratzinger's
former Regensburg students, Henrique Noronha de Galvão, produced a
second study that strangely misses much of the history about women
deacons despite its thirty thousand words. Further, the study implies
that the person ordained as deacon must image Christ, especially in
uncited passages from and paraphrases of an earlier book by subcommittee
member Gerhard L. Müller, who was named bishop of Regensburg just days
after the document's publication.10
Müller, appointed prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith seven months before Benedict XVI resigned and affirmed by Francis,
is also editor of the "Opera Omnia," the collected writings of Joseph
Ratzinger.
Positive scholarship about women deacons, such as Vagaggini's long
article and his briefer intervention before the 1987 Synod of Bishops,
remains known to scholars and joins other major research by Roger
Gryson, Corrado Marucci, Pietro Sorci, and Philippe Delhaye, among
others, that was ignored or discounted by the writers of the 2002
document.11
While Francis may be interested in better situating women within Church
governance and ministry, and even though there is sufficient
theological evidence to readmit women to the order of deacon,
significant curial roadblocks keep him from moving in the obvious
direction. Women deacons could take up significant posts, at the Vatican
and around the world. Women deacons could even become cardinals. But in
2008 the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith decreed ordination
of women a crime worthy of automatic excommunication.12
Francis calls priesthood's connection to power and authority
problematic, writing that it "presents a great challenge . . . with
regard to the possible role of women in decision-making in different
areas of the Church's life."13 But if priesthood is the problem barring women from a "more incisive presence in the Church," the diaconate is the solution.
Notes
- An edited English translation, titled "A Big Heart Open to God," of Spadaro's interview that omitted these words about women appeared in the September 30, 2013, issue of America, and the words were later changed in the online publication, americamagazine.org/pope-interview.
- Juan Arias, "¿Una mujer cardenal?" El País Internacional, September 22, 2013.
- "Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium of the Holy Father Francis . . . on the Proclamation of the Gospel in Today's World," November 24, 2013, 103.
- Laura Ieraci, "Pope Urges 'More Widespread and Incisive Female Presence' in Church," Vatican Radio, February 7, 2015.
- The official translation is: "All we say is: they can do this, they can do that, now they are altar servers, now they do the readings, they are in charge of Caritas (Catholic charities). But there is more! We need to develop a profound theology of womanhood. That is what I think." Earlier translations correctly quote Francis as saying: "We need to make a profound theology of the woman. This is what I think." See "Apostolic Journey to Rio de Janiero on the Occasion of the XXVIII World Youth Day: Press Conference of Pope Francis during the Return Flight, Papal Flight Sunday, 28 July 2013," w2.vatican.va.
- Acta et ocumenta Concilio oecumenico Vaticano II apparando, series prima (anteprapparatoria) (Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1960–1961), II/II, 121, as cited in Gary Macy, William T. Ditewig, and Phyllis Zagano, Women Deacons: Past, Present, Future (Paulist Press, 2011).
- Cipriano Vagaggini, "L'ordinazione delle diaconesse nella tradizione greca e bizantina," Orientalia Christiana Periodica 40 (1974): 146–189. The creation and suppression of this paper is reported in Peter Hebblethwaite, Paul VI: The First Modern Pope (Paulist Press, 1993), 640.
- "Apostolic Letter Ordinatio Sacerdotalis of John Paul II to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on Reserving Priestly Ordination to Men Alone," May 22, 1994, w2.vatican.va.
- Written and originally printed in French, then Italian and English, the document is now published in nine languages online, at www.vatican.va.
- Compare, for example, From the Diakonia of Christ 3 and Priesthood and Diaconate 183, 185–186; From the Diakonia of Christ 4 and Priesthood and Diaconate 186, 184, 186, 187; From the Diakonia of Christ 5 and Priesthood and Diaconate 190–191; From the Diakonia of Christ 6 and Priesthood and Diaconate 187; From the Diakonia of Christ 19 and Priesthood and Diaconate 216; From the Diakonia of Christ 20 and Priesthood and Diaconate 216, 217, 204; From the Diakonia of Christ 22 and Priesthood and Diaconate 218; and From the Diakonia of Christ 23 and Priesthood and Diaconate 217. Some citations and footnotes are identical. See Gerhard L. Müller, Priesthood and Diaconate: The Recipient of the Sacrament of Holy Orders from the Perspective of Creation Theology and Christology, trans. Michael J. Miller (Ignatius, 2002). German original, Priestertum und Diakonat: Der Empfänger des Weihesakramentes in schöpfungstheologischer und christologischer Prespecti (Johannes Verlag, 2000).
- Ordination of Women to the Diaconate in the Eastern Churches: Essays by Cipriano Vagaggini, ed. Phyllis Zagano (Liturgical Press, 2013). A book of translations including these essays and others is forthcoming from Liturgical Press in 2016.
- Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, "General Decree regarding the Delict of Attempted Sacred Ordination of a Woman," www.vatican.va.
- Evangelii Gaudium, 104.