Exactly what I needed, when I needed it! As a "new bishop" in The Episcopal Church I was looking for a solid, comprehensive historical overview and contemporary analysis of diaconal ministry in our church. The author, a deacon herself, has delivered exactly this! Picking up on work done by others before her, she has done an excellent job of describing how the diaconate got to its present place and also offering some thoughts (hers and those of others) concerning as to where it might be headed. Over the years, I've watched many of the "waves" she describes rise and fade, or perhaps crash. It's great to see how they're all related, and how they've brought the church to the place where it now finds itself.
Tomorrow, I'll be ordaining four deacons. I'm deeply grateful to have had the chance to read Susanne Watson Epting's work.
There are lots of good bits I could have offered as my favorite. Here are a few sentences I've chosen from her postscript.
"No, the diaconate does not exist for the sake of having deacons, but for the sake of reaching out in the wholesome humility of Christ, making the church relevant, making the world whole. Nor does the presbyterate exist for the sake of immovable altars and fonts, but for the sake of breaking bread in daily life, and of keeping the community together as we move away from privilege. Nor does the episcopate exist for the sake of churchly order, but for the sake of a deeper unity that is unafraid to question its effectiveness, insisting that it be a unity that undergirds the mission and ministry of the whole people of God."
With those who are, and will be, deacons in this diocese, I'm looking forward to calling forth, equipping, and supporting the diaconal ministry of the whole people of God in East Carolina. Grateful for this resource!