Hratch Tchilingirian
The Primate of the Diocese of Tehran (under the jurisdiction of the
Catholicosate of Cilicia) ordained a young woman as a deaconess in
Tehran’s St. Sarkis Mother Church on Sept. 25, 2017. Even as the office
of deaconess had existed in Armenian Church convents for centuries, this
was a historic first. It is the first time that a lay woman, not a nun,
was ordained a “parish deacon.”
Twenty-four year old Ani-Kristi Manvelian, an anesthesiologist by
profession, was ordained—along with Mayis Mateosian—by Archbishop Sebouh
Sarkissian, the Primate of the Diocese of Tehran.
Deaconess Ani-Kristi has been involved in the life of the church in
Tehran since she was very young. She used to perform the duties of an
acolyte (dpir) during church services, such as reading the psalms and carrying the ceremonial candle.
In explaining the purpose of the ordination, Archbishop Sarkissian
said: “Today, our Church is confronting the imperative of
self-examination and self-critique. It is imperative to rejuvenate the
participation of the people in the social, educational and service
spheres of the Church. It is our deep conviction that the active
participation of women in the life of our Church would allow Armenian
women to be involved more enthusiastically and vigorously, and would
allow them to be connected and engaged. They would provide dedicated and
loving service [to the people]. The deaconess, no doubt, would also be a
spiritual and church-dedicated mother, educator, and why not, a model
woman through her example. It is with this deep conviction that we are
performing this ordination, with the hope that we are neither the first
nor the last to do it.”
According to the Primate, parish priests in Tehran are watchful and
keen to recruit more women who fit the profile of prospective
deaconesses.
What is special and novel about Deaconess Ani-Kristi Manvelian’s
ordination is that she is a “parish” deacon—that is, she is not a member
of a convent or a religious order, like the Kalfayan Sisters in
Istanbul or Gayanyants Sisters at Birds Nest in Jibel, Lebanon, who have
a few sisters among their ranks and are not ordained deaconesses.
Like her male counterparts in the Armenian Church, if and when
Deaconess Ani-Kristi marries, she will continue to serve as a deaconess.
Deaconesses have been part of the Christian tradition from the early
years of the faith. There are numerous references in the Epistles and
early Church writings.
In the Armenian Church tradition, the development of the office of
female diaconate is divided into four historical periods according to
Fr. Abel Oghlukian, the author of a study on the subject: (a) 4th-8th
centuries in Greater Armenia; (b) 9th-11th centuries in Eastern and
Cilician Armenia, where the term “deaconess” is included in the book of
ordination (Մաշտոց); (c) 12th century and on, where there are “literary
references and rites for the ordination of deaconesses in liturgical
texts in Cilicia and eastern Armenia; and (d) 17th century renewal of
female diaconate.
The last ordained monastic deaconess in the Armenian Church was
Sister Hripsime Sasounian in Istanbul. The late Patriarch Shnork
Kalustian of Constantinople ordained Sister Hripsime of Kalfayan Sisters
(established in 1866) as a deaconess in 1982, using the canon of
ordination used for male deacons (Dzernadrutian Mashtots). Damascus-born
Deaconess Hripsime was 54 years old at the time. She passed away in
2007.
In North America, Seta Simonian Atamian was the first adult women ordained as an acolyte (dpir),
a lower rank, by Archbishop Vatche Hovsepian of the Western Diocese in
1984 at St. Andrew Armenian Church, in Cupertino, Calif. However, when
in 1986 she moved to the East Coast of the United States, she was not
allowed by the local diocese to serve on the altar in the Armenian
Church.
Even as this is a most welcome step by Archbishop Sebouh Sarkissian
and the Diocese of Tehran (under the jurisdiction of the Catholicosate
of Cilicia), the Armenian Apostolic Church has yet to formally restore
the office of female diaconate.
Today the question is how to revive the female diaconate for the
pastoral life of local parishes rather than in monastic settings or
convents, which are virtually non-existent as viable institutions.
"The Armenian Weekly," January 16, 2018
"The Armenian Weekly," January 16, 2018
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