Between the XIXth and the XXth century the Catholic Church set in motion an intense involvement of women in the fight against the supposed apostasy of Modernity. Many Catholic authors focused on the female collaboration with the clergy for the “Christian restoration of society”. The resulting initiatives and theories found a deep correspondence in female aspirations and desires for a new role in the religious world. However this essay shows that these innovations faced a great opposition and an early concern for the female desire for priesthood within the Catholic institutions. We shall develop, in particular, the example of the Daughters of St. Francis of Sales (founded by Caroline Carré de Malberg in 1872) and of the Daughters of the Sacr...