6. Authority and ministers

Introduction
The question of authority arises in any religion. Who holds it? What are its sources? In the so-called revealed religions, as for Christianity, authority is primarily owned by the text considered as revealed and closed (the Canon of the Scriptures). Then arises the question of the interpretation of this text and of the revelation, and the question of who has the authority to talk about the text, to interpret it, to teach it, and the authority to give the sacraments (whatever their number) and officiate at religious ceremonies.
Source 1

Decision n°8, extraordinary session of the 68th national synod of the French Reformed Church (Clermont-Ferrand, April 29-30, 1966)

From the beginning of the 20th century, women were allowed to attend courses in Protestant theology. During the period of the two World Wars, with the lack of pastors that ensued, women had to take the parish life into their own hands, including by chairing worship. In France, the first ordinations of women took place in Alsace in the late 1920s. During the 1950s, the French Reformed Church tackled the issue of the ordination of women. Held in 1966, the extraordinary session of the 58th National Synod settled this issue by opening the pastoral ministry to women without restriction. With the historical and critical exegesis distancing itself from the old tradition, the Synod was able to unlock Paulinian rules. Nowadays, 20% of French pastors are women, and we find women pastors all over the world.

The national Synod:
1. Expresses the Church's gratitude towards women who already have a ministry (assistant in a parish, deaconess*, etc.). It assesses the eminent dignity of their ministries and wants their ministries to be more considered through a better definition of the charges and the responsibilities they entail. (Adopted unanimously)
2. Recognizing that Christ built his Church through the unity, the diversity and the complement of the various ministries that He gives to this Church, it decided to welcome and ordain women as well as men in the ministries of the Word and the ministries of the Diaconate. (Adopted by 74 votes against 7)
3. From now on, this will be the responsibility of the Commissions and of competent Councils to review the vocations, to give to women as well as men the permission for consecration and ordination, and to review and decide their assignments. (Adopted by 77 votes against 3)

* In the Churches of the Reform, deacons and deaconesses are responsible for assisting the poorest people, like in the early Church.

Decision n°8, extraordinary session of the 68th national synod of the French Reformed Church (Clermont-Ferrand, April 29-30, 1966). Trans. Marie Lebert.

Source 2

Catholic priests during the liturgy

Dressed in a white alb, deacons are ordained by the bishop, recognizable by his miter.

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Source 3

Orthodox priest during the liturgy

The Orthodox priest stands in the sanctuary (the space forbidden to lay people) and prays in front of the altar. On the altar are the liturgical dishes with bread and wine, as well as the gospel.

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Public domain Image under URL: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dues4Sept21_2009.jpg (08/12/2014)