Bishop calls for female deacons at Church synod
Vatican City, Oct. 8: A Canadian bishop has said the Church should think about allowing women to become deacons — one step below a priest — to help boost their involvement and influence.
Paul- Andre Durocher told a three- week synod on the family at the Vatican that qualified women should be given higher positions, including being ordained as deacons — a suggestion met with applause from some Church leaders.
Bishop Durocher suggested “concerning the permanent diaconate, that this synod recommends the establishment of a process that could eventually open women access to this order”.
As it stands, the number of Catholic nuns and lay religious in the world far outweighs that of priests — some 700,000 to 415,000 — but women are pitifully represented in the Church hierarchy.
Bishop Durocher, president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, was tackling a subject close to the Pope’s heart at his intervention on Tuesday, which was published on Thursday on the synod website.
Pope Francis has repeatedly said he would like to create more opportunities for women, though he has taken few concrete steps to change the situation within the Church.
Deacons are authorised to deliver sermons and celebrate baptisms, weddings and funerals, but only priests can give communion and hear confessions.
While becoming a deacon has long been a step towards priesthood, married man can also become part of the “permanent diaconate”, helping overstretched priests or standing in for them when they are away.
The idea of women eventually becoming priests is out: Pope Francis has insisted Pope John Paul II was right when he said that the Church did not have the authority to make such a change.