Updated: Why are there no female deacons in the Orthodox Church today?

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Thanks to a comment made on our original post from Dr. Phyllis Zagano, Senior Research Associate-in-Residence and Adjunct Professor of Religionat Hofstra University, we have revised our FAQ addressing the absence of female deacons in the Orthodox Church today.

Originally, our answer stated that “…by the 7th century in the West, the male diaconate had become mostly a transitional office to the priesthood/presbytery and the ordained female diaconate, which had not been as widely accepted or exercised in the West, had disappeared.”

We have updated this sentence to read: “…by the 7th century in the West, the male diaconate had become mostly a transitional office to the priesthood/presbytery and the ordained female diaconate, which had not been as widely accepted or exercised in the West, had virtually disappeared.”

To further explain this revision, we have added the following footnote:

“We have evidence (e.g. papal letters) that, in some cases, abbesses of monasteries were still being ordained to the diaconate until around the 12th century. This was separate from their consecrations as abbesses.”

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