MEN AND WOMEN “IN THE SERVICE OF CHRIST”
REFLECTIONS ON THE DIACONATE IN
THE ORTHODOX CHURCH
JOHN CHRYSSAVGIS
Abstract:
The principal
focus of this presentation is not merely the historical and theological, or
even the liturgical and canonical dimensions of women and the diaconate or
women and ordination, but rather the pastoral and practical concept of authority and ministry in the church.
There can be no clear understanding of the priesthood or even of the episcopate
unless we first properly appreciate the diaconate. Out of his experience as a
deacon of over thirty years, the author claims that the theology of the
priesthood should not begin from the top down, but rather from the notion of
humble service and diakonia, without
which none of the priestly ministries make any sense at all. And he concludes
that a creative revival of the diaconate could become the source of
resurrection for the ordained ministry in general, thereby playing a crucial
role in the mission of the church. In this respect, the restoration of the
diaconate may well prove both timely and vital.
Let
me open by saying how delighted I am to be a part of this conference and to be
invited by Prof. Vassiliadis to address this gathering. I should preface my
words by noting that my principal interest in this subject is not merely the
historical or theological dimensions of women and the diaconate or women and
ordination, but rather the pastoral and practical concept of authority and
ministry in the church. It is my conviction that there can be no clear
understanding of the priesthood or even of the episcopate unless we first
properly appreciate the diaconate. Having served as a deacon of over thirty
years, I believe that our theology of the priesthood should not begin from the
top down, but rather from the notion of humble service and diakonia, without which none of the priestly ministries make any
sense whatsoever.
Introduction:
Re-Learning to Serve
I learned from a young
age, at the feet of my presbyter-father, that our noblest task is to bear the cross of Christ, to imitate
Christ, who came to serve and not to be served (Mark 10.45). This means that
the noblest thing is to be a
Christian – not a bishop, a priest, or a deacon. It also means that this
noblest vocation of all is open equally and unequivocally to both men and
women.
Over time, of course, the
Church established the three ordained orders. Among these, the diaconate
[derived from the word diakonia
(service), which in itself implies an absence of institutional or hierarchal
structure] is the first order of priestly ministry. Moreover, if no one can
become a priest or a bishop without first being ordained to deacon, this underscores
the fact that the diaconate can be neither overlooked nor undermined; regrettably,
however, the diaconate has in fact been disregarded and reduced to the
detriment of the priesthood in general. It is time, then, for a revitalization
of the diaconate, both for the purpose of a reorientation of the ordained
ministries (a matter of profound
theological and spiritual significance) as well as for practical reasons
(including the understanding of the salient role of women for a proper
appreciation of the diaconate). Reclaimed in its historical and sacramental
dimensions, a revived diaconate could provide a crucial and timely response to
contemporary needs.
A
Reorientation of the Ordained Ministries
In a meeting of
Orthodox bishops several years ago in Chicago, one hierarch touched on the
heart of the problem, when he asked: “Is someone called to the diaconate? Do we not say people are called to the priesthood?” Once again, the precise response to this question is
that we are called primarily to bear the cross of Christ; we are called first to
the royal priesthood, to the priesthood of all believers. Unfortunately, such
questions also underscore the confusion surrounding the sacrament of ordination.
For one is not called to the diaconate any more than one is called to the
episcopate; in fact, mystically – or, more correctly, hierarchically – one is
not even called to the priesthood at all – at least, the priesthood as a
distinct order; rather, one is called to the
priestly ministry of the Church, which has three distinct orders. After
all, each of the specific terms applied to ordained ministers – episcopos (bishop), iereus or presbyteros
(priest), and diakonos (deacon) – are
in fact properly and only reserved for Christ.
In recent centuries,
the diaconate has enjoyed a symbolical or transitional role in our Church.
Parish clergy are ordained to the priesthood after serving only briefly as
deacons. It is as if they are expected
to “move on!” or “move up!” The diaconate itself has been reduced to little
more than a preparation or stepping-stone for the priesthood or episcopate. The
latter two stages are often considered more significant for the ordained
ministry, whereas the diaconate resembles a kind of sub-priesthood, rarely
perceived as a lifelong or permanent office. This is clearly part of the
problem surrounding the suspicion or trepidation of bishop – and, to a lesser
degree, also congregations – with regard to the ordination of women deacons,
who are seen as seeking promotion to higher clerical orders.
In many Orthodox
churches, the diaconate has been still further reduced, relegated in some to a
purely aesthetic or in most to an exclusively liturgical office. While not
insignificant, these functions only scarcely express the full potential of the
diaconate. Indeed, from an historical perspective, the purely liturgical obligations were
traditionally delegated to sub-deacons, who were neither ordained nor
consecrated but simply “named” or “appointed.” Deacons, however, were always
responsible for more than liturgical order; deacons functioned as an essential
aspect of the Christian community and its diverse manifestations and
expressions.
So my first
argument is that there is something seriously missing from the ordained
ministry if deacons are undervalued or omitted in the overall picture. A fuller
vision of the ordained ministry should recognize the role of the bishop as the bond of unity and
spokesman for doctrine; likewise, it should respect the role of the presbyter in celebrating the
presence of Christ in the local community. Yet it should also realize the role
of the deacon as servant in completing and complementing this circle of
unity and community in the local Church. And this role may be fulfilled by
men and women alike.
The authentic
image of the Church that we should be seeking – in our minds and hearts as in
our ministry – is that of a dinner table,
and not that of a corporate ladder. The Church is not a pyramid, where all
attention and authority are turned toward and look to the summit. We are to
imagine the Church as comprising a sacrament, where the principal and essential
focus is the celebration of the eucharistic feast, in which “the least is
greatest” (Matt. 23.11), “the last is first” (Matt. 20.16), and “the leader is
servant.” (Matt. 20.26)
Accordingly, if the
image of the table – the picture of church-as-eucharist
– is our formative and normative icon of the Church, then we might imagine
deacons as waiting at festive tables or serving community needs, rather than as
pawns at the bottom of some powerful or political organization; and certainly
not as apprentices or interns awaiting promotion or self-fulfillment. Each of
the orders is self-sufficient; it is not incomplete or contingent on further
advancement. In this perspective, we can appreciate the invaluable and
inviolable importance of deacons, male and female alike. After all, what greater
gift could anyone ever ask for than – merely, only, simply – to serve: for some
ministering socially at tables in the Mystical Body of Christ, just as for
others ministering liturgically at the Mystical Supper? I certainly know of no
other, no better, no more sublime.
A
Practical Revitalization
In the Orthodox
Church, at least unlike other denominations, we have always retained the order
deacons; the diaconate has never fallen into complete disuse, even if it is
merely a shadow of its shining prestige during the second and third centuries.
For far too many years, the potential of the diaconate, including both men and women, has not been brought to fruition or even adequately fulfilled. So what we
do (or can do) with deacons in our Church is the question we must now address.
In my humble
opinion, today the diaconate could express the diversity of gifts found
among the laity as the “royal priesthood,” which ought to be embraced and
enlisted in a sacramental (namely, in an ordained) manner by the Church. Thus,
ministerial dignity may be conferred on certain members of the laity, male and
female, whose particular qualifications would be formally incorporated and
integrated within the community. Such persons should be commissioned or
empowered through the imposition of hands and grace of the Spirit, their
various charismata – ceremonially; or sacramentally – recognized and intimately
bound with the altar. In this way, they would support – and not be regarded as
substituting – the ordained ministry of the Church.
Thus, matters
of pastoral care, practical administration, financial concern, and even
theological education could quite easily be delegated to deacons. Here is my
vision: Someone whose administrative gifts are welcomed for the organization of
a parish might be “ordained” to perform this task in the community. He (or she)
could be a deacon that serves (whether part-time or full-time) in that capacity.
The same could occur in cases where someone (again, either male or female) has certain
unique gifts in specific areas: for instance, as youth minister or even
financial comptroller (just as monasteries have a novice master and a steward [oikonomos], as catechetical instructor
or hospital chaplain, as pastoral assistant or social worker, and so on. Deacons
may also be officially “called and commissioned” to preach or counsel, perform
functions of parish or public service, as well as assist in liturgical and
community affairs, such as administering the sacraments to members of the
community in need.
I would dare go a step
further and venture to claim that there is no reason whatsoever for educators
in theological schools and seminaries to be ordained presbyters unless their
principal ministry lies in parish ministry. There is, after all, a long
tradition of this in our church. Otherwise, we are passively surrendering to
another deleterious temptation in our Church, namely that of clericalism – no
matter how spiritual our justification or how logical our vindication may be!
Here is the fundamental and essential question for me: Does someone have to be a
priest in order to do what he is doing?
"Ordained" is one thing:
"ordained a priest" is another!
The rebalancing of our
hierarchy – the reorientation of our ordained ministries – through the
restoration and reinvigoration of the diaconate (both male and female) could
invariably have profound theological significance, spiritual influence, and practical
consequence for the development of our parishes and the growth of their
ministries.
Lessons
Learned: Personal Observations
1.
I learned over a number of years in church administration, parish ministry and theological
education that the priesthood is the cause of much confusion in many ways resulting
from a misunderstanding of authority both by those in priestly orders as well
as by the laity. This has proved deeply hurtful alike for those ordained as for
those aspiring to ordination.
If
we properly understand the diaconate, then we will better understand the other
orders of the priesthood, too. We will also understand why – and how – women
can quite naturally – by which I mean traditionally, rather than exceptionally
– participate in the diaconate without arousing hierarchical fears of
ordination to the presbyterate or foregoing theological discussion about the
male priesthood. Candid, objective, and dispassionate conversation about the
priesthood can only enrich our appreciation equally of the ordained ministry
and the royal priesthood.
2.
I have also come to appreciate that part of the challenge lies perhaps in the
unrealistic expectations that we have of the priesthood, upholding the priest
as a perfect icon or infallible model. Contemporary theologians cite patristic
sources about priests manifesting and
realizing the priesthood of Christ
and the priesthood of all believers. This perception is encountered in more
traditional as in more enlightened theologians.
Yet, it is romantically idealistic, if not spiritually
perilous to claim that a priest represents
Christ or even all people; it is far more humble to believe that the priesthood
presents God to the people (as in the
Old Testament) and the community to Christ (as in the New Testament). And there
are innumerable “ordained” ways of doing this! One of them is precisely the
diaconate. It is similarly arrogant to claim that the priesthood is “not simply
one of the ministries” – that is to
say, “not only one vocation among
many” – and that the priest somehow embraces “all vocations” and not just a “religious
vocation,” which all people have without any distinction whatsoever. So certain
theologians goes as far as to claim that the priest has no ministry at all because he is somehow the term of reference for
and ultimate consummation of all
ministries. In my humble opinion, such claims are presumptuous, both opening up
to diverse forms of abuse and alluding to yet a third challenge, to which we
have already made reference.
3.
One of the critical problems in our misunderstanding of the priesthood – and
especially in our misconception of the diaconate in relation to its
incorporation of women – is the confusion between priesthood (as inclusively embracing the ordained
bishop, priest and deacon, but also the royal priesthood) and priest
(as a distinct order of the ordained
ministry). Unless we disabuse ourselves of this confusion – which only further advocates
secular and unsacred authoritarianism – then we cannot really appreciate any of the three orders of priesthood.
Conclusion: Fulfilling a Vital Role
Thus, the diaconate could
be expanded and enhanced to reflect a modern ministerial expression, even while
being rooted in the historical apostolic experience. Perhaps deacons will gradually
also awaken other ministries from their hardened roles and traditional
expectations. A creative revival of the diaconate in our age could become the
source of resurrection for the ordained ministry in general, thereby playing a
crucial role in the mission of the church. In this respect, the restoration of
the diaconate may well prove both timely and vital.