San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Catholic women push for female deacons

- By Yonat Shimron

Casey Stanton wanted to offer encouragem­ent, love and healing to the inmates at the North Carolina Correction­al Institutio­n for Women, where she served as a chaplain intern a few years ago.

But as a Catholic woman, she could not represent her church there in any official capacity.

The state of North Carolina requires chaplains in its state prison system to be ordained. And the Catholic Church does not ordain women — neither as priests, nor as deacons.

Stanton, who is 35 and holds a master of divinity from Duke Divinity School, is not seeking to become a priest, which canon law forbids. She would, however, jump at the chance to be ordained a deacon — a position that would allow her and other women to serve as Catholic chaplains in prisons, hospitals and other settings.

“I’d like to be able to represent the church in these places where I feel like we’re called to go,” Stanton said.

She tried the Veterans Affairs hospital next. But there too, she found a similar obstacle to fulltime chaplaincy.

“I thought I could find some workaround,” she said. Instead, she added, Catholic chaplaincy “felt like a dead-end.”

In April, Stanton co-founded Discerning Deacons, an organizati­on that urges conversati­on in the Catholic Church around ordaining women deacons. Stanton hopes it might add to ongoing efforts on multiple continents to restore women to the ordained diaconate, which the church in its early centuries allowed.

Last Monday, a new commission set up by Pope Francis to

study women in the diaconate began meeting for one week in Rome. It is the fourth group since the 1970s to discuss ordaining women deacons, and many are hoping they will release their recommenda­tions publicly so the church can lay the groundwork for restoring the order.

Francis has repeatedly called for a greater female presence in church leadership, and while he has continued church teachings against women priests, he changed church law to allow women to be installed as lectors and acolytes.

Up until the 12th century, the Catholic Church ordained women deacons, although by then their service was mostly restricted to women’s monasterie­s. Some Orthodox churches that split from the Catholic Church in the 11th century still do. In the New Testament Book of Romans, the Apostle Paul introduces Phoebe as a “deacon of the church at Cenchreae.”

In the 1960s, the Second Vatican Council reinstated the role of deacon for men. (It had previously reserved the diaconate as a transition­al ministry for men studying to be priests.)

Partly due to the shortage of priests, there is growing momentum to restore women to the diaconate. At the 2019 Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon region, a large number of bishops requested the permanent diaconate for women. Many are now hoping the next synod, which will culminate in Rome in

2023, will take up the issue again.

“If the church expresses its need, the Holy Father would have an easier time restoring women deacons,” said Phyllis Zagano, senior research associatei­n-residence at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., and the foremost expert on women deacons in the Catholic Church.

The work of the deacon as defined by canon law is to minister to the people of God in word, liturgy and charity. Though not a paid position in most instances, it does require a person to undergo a course of study and a laying on of hands through ordination.

Deacons may also proclaim the Gospel, preach, witness marriages, baptize and conduct funeral services. They cannot lead a Mass, consecrate the Eucharist or hear confession­s.

The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate estimates there are about 19,000 male deacons in the United States today, a 1 percent drop from last year. Formation programs for deacons reported a 2 percent drop in enrollment­s. Perhaps most troubling, the share of deacon candidates in their 30s and 40s has declined to 22 percent in 2020, down from 44 percent in 2002, a June report found.

In some parts of the country, Catholic laywomen are already serving as administra­tors in lieu of priests, often as parish life coordinato­rs, but without ordination.

“Right now, when you are a woman serving in any capacity, there’s often a cloud of suspicion hanging over your work, the sense that your work would be better done by a man or a priest,” said

Anna Nussbaum Keating, a Catholic writer who supports restoring the diaconate for women. “There’s a sense she is inferior or maybe she’s there because she wants to change the church, versus understand­ing that there have always been women in ministry in the church and that their contributi­ons are holy and valid and good.”

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