To Change the Church, Have the Conversation
BY ELLIE HIDALGO AND CASEY STANTON
H
ow does the Church discern the movement of the Holy Spirit for our times? When you’re talking about a 2,000-yearold institution grounded in tradition, how does the Holy Spirit try to move the hearts of the faithful to do a new thing? Or an old thing once again? The possible restoration of women to the permanent ordained diaconate necessitates a global conversation that is complex and consequential. In discussing the pathway to such a change, Fr. Warren Sazama, pastor of St. Thomas More Parish in the Twin Cities, said off the cuff, “The way you change the Church is you have the conversation.” He may not have been intending to offer a blue-print for how the Holy Spirit works, but his words have stuck with women discerning a call to the diaconate who are wondering if they could ever be brave enough to initiate the conversation with their pastors, parishioners, even their bishops. Discerning Deacons launched in April 2021 to engage Catholics in the active discernment of our Church about restoring women to the permanent diaconate—including blessing women with the sacramental grace of diaconate ordination. Our work supports educational opportunities and conversations in parishes and communities so that everyone can participate in the discernment. 10
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Inspired by the synodal journey and dreams of the Church in the Amazonian territory of South America, our project seeks to create encounters between diaconal women and other Catholic leaders, where Spirit-inspired listening and dialogue can bear the fruits of conversion. Why the need to be brave?
Conversation Closed If the way to conversion is through conversation and encounter, then the converse is also true; the way to keep things as they are is to silence the conversation. In 1994, Pope John Paul II taught in Ordinatio sacerdotalis that the Church “has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women,” and his successors have confirmed this teaching. Intended or not, the impact has often been to stifle the larger conversation about women’s leadership in the church, including what is within the bounds of the authority of the Church with regards to women. For example, the Second Vatican Council (Lumen gentium) teaches that deacons are ordained “not unto the priesthood, but unto a ministry of service...in the diaconia of the liturgy, of the word, and of charity to the people of God.” It is a vocation distinct from the priesthood which points to Jesus the Servant Leader. There is nothing in Catholic doctrine that would prevent the Church from restoring women to the diaconate, and yet it has
Photo © Poojan Desai, unsplash
“Inspired by the synodal journey and dreams of the Church in the Amazonian territory of South America, our project seeks to create encounters between diaconal women and other Catholic leaders, where Spirit-inspired listening and dialogue can bear the fruits of conversion.” been challenging for the faithful to fully embrace having the conversation. Pope Francis’s vision of a synodal, listening, and participatory Church has led to greater permission to engage in conversations, trusting that as we listen more deeply to one another and create spaces for discernment, the Holy Spirit reveals God’s will that allows us to walk together and build the kingdom of God. An opportunity to take up the issue of women and the diaconate opened up in 2016 when religious superiors from the International Union of Superiors General asked Pope Francis to create an official commission to study the possibility of including women among permanent deacons, as was the case in the early Church. Pope Francis responded positively to the sisters’ request and formally established his Commission for the Study of the Diaconate of Women, naming twelve scholars as members—six men and six women. In the two millennia of church history, this commission may be the first to include an equal representation of both men and women. In describing the work of the papal commission on women deacons, the Holy Father, in a March 2017 interview with the German newspaper Die Zeit, said, “We must not be afraid! Fear closes doors. Freedom opens them. And if freedom is small, it opens at least a little window.” However, the findings from this commission were never made public. The question emerged again at the Synod