The performance of women in the Catholic Church has proved to be a relevant
theme when it comes to approaches to women's achievements in the ecclesial
environment. Although the Church has shown itself to be more open the performance
of women in various sectors hitherto reserved exclusively on men, the theme needs
to continue to be debated in order to promote new achievements in this context. The
discipleship of women is biblical, it arises around Jesus in the same way that the
discipleship of men arises, but with a differential: by welcoming women around
himself, Jesus guarantees them a dignity that is a novelty until then. Women who
gather around Jesus are not only listeners of their message or passive expectants,
but agents as much as male disciples. This becomes evident especially in the figure
of Mary Magdalene who becomes the first witness of the risen Jesus, according to
the Fourth Gospel and sent by him as messenger of resurrection. The role of some
women in certain narratives of the Fourth Gospel, including Mary Magdalene, is an
invitation for Catholic Christian communities to rethink how women's ministry often
limits for gender reasons they seek, often justify from biblical texts. Thus, Mary
Magdalene and the women of the Fourth Gospel are an invitation of the Joanine
community to a more discipular church formed by women and men sent equally by
Jesus.