The Disappearing Deaconess: How the Hierarchical Ordering of Church Offices Doomed the Female Diaconate


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About The Book

For all the recent research on deaconesses in the early Church we still know very little about them for two reasons: First their duties were very limited so there isnt much said about them in ancient texts. Second their presence was also very limited: There werent many of them anywhere outside Constantinople. In many places there werent any at all and for a long time there werent any anywhere in the Orthodox Church. Why?The Disappearing Deaconess examines not just the evidence of their existence but also patristic teaching on male and female and the evolution of various ministries in the early Church to conclude that the office of deaconess was inherently problematic for early Christians because it appeared to elevate women over men in the hierarchy of the Church contrary to Christian beliefs about both the natural order and the divine economy. The book first summarizes what is known about deaconesses in the early Church weighing various explanations for their decline and disappearance then it surveys early Christian teaching on gender to provide a broader context for understanding the female diaconate before tracing the hierarchical evolution of Church organization-from the many more or less informal offices mentioned in the New Testament to the emergence of the clerical orders we know today with increasing emphasis on the distinction of clergy and laity leading to the concept of hierarchy as understood by the sixth-century writer known as Dionysius the Areopagite.The Disappearing Deaconess also includes two important appendices addressing proposals to reinstitute the order of deaconess and the larger issue of male and female as understood by the Orthodox Church. The first appendix is A Public Statement on Orthodox Deaconesses by Concerned Clergy and Laity signed by fifty-seven Orthodox clergymen and lay leaders and released January 15 2018. The second appendix is the authors remarks at a conference on Renewing the Male and Female Diaconate organized by the St. Phoebe Center for the Deaconess held in Irvine California on October 7 2017. These remarks set forth a theological basis for the distinction of male and female as the key to understanding many gender issues including the exclusion of women from clerical orders.
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