The term
Holy Orders is used by many
Christian church to refer to
ordination or to a group of individuals who are
set apart for a special role or ministry.
In the
Roman Catholic (Latin:
sacri ordines),
Eastern Catholic,
Eastern Orthodox (ιερωσυνη, ιερατευμα,
Свештенство),
Oriental Orthodox,
Anglican,
Assyrian,
Old Catholic,
Independent Catholic churches
and some
Lutheran churches Holy Orders
refers to the three orders of
bishop,
priest and
deacon, or
the sacrament or rite by which candidates are ordained to those
orders. These Churches regard
ordination
as a
sacrament (the
sacramentum
ordinis).
Protestant denominations have varied conceptions
of church offices. In the Anglican tradition and some
Lutheran churches the traditional orders of
bishop,
priest and
deacon are also bestowed using ordination
rites. The extent to which ordination is considered sacramental in
these traditions has, however, been a matter of some internal
dispute. Many other denominations do not consider the role of
ministry as being sacramental
in nature and would not think of it in terms of "holy orders" as
such.
Historically, the word "order" (Latin
ordo) designated an established civil body
or corporation with a hierarchy, and
ordinatio meant legal incorporation
into an
ordo. The word "holy" refers to the
Church. In context, therefore, a holy
order is set apart for ministry in the Church.
Other offices such as
Pope,
Cardinal,
Monsignor,
Archbishop,
Archimandrite,
Archpriest,
Protopresbyter,
Hieromonk,
Protodeacon,
Archdeacon, etc., are not sacramental
orders. These are simply offices or titles.
Roman Catholicism
The
Roman Catholic Church and
Eastern Catholic Churches
number
Holy Orders, which is the Sacrament that
confers
ordination as
bishops,
priests, and
deacons of
the church, among three
sacraments that create an
indelible mark called a
sacramental character on the
recipient's soul (the other two are
baptism
and
confirmation).
The purpose of the Sacrament is to constitute a person as a
minister within the Church.
Deacons are ministers of service, delegated to act in the name of
the Church and therefore are able to witness marriages (the
Sacrament of Matrimony is actually conferred by the couple on each
other, with the deacon as witness), to baptize solemnly (any human
being may
baptize in an emergency
but a deacon may do so on ordinary occasions with full ceremony),
and to preach.

Priestly Ordination, a popular
devotional depiction of ordination in the Roman Catholic Church
from the 1920s.
In Roman Catholic theology, there is a belief that the apostle
Peter had a role of leadership in the college of apostles, which
the pope retains today among the bishops; this is often accepted by
the Orthodox churches, but with significant modifications).
Bishops, since they have the "fullness of orders," may administer
all the sacraments (except marriage, which the man and women
administer to each other) and are empowered to lead the Church in
terms of sound doctrine and pastoral administration. Bishops are
governors of the church to the point where a bishop in the Catholic
Church, even if not given authority over a functional diocese, will
be given a "titular" diocese (a diocese that no longer exists on
earth) as a sign of the leadership with which all bishops are
charged.
Priests, as cooperators of the bishops in their sacramental
ministry, may confect all of the sacraments except Holy Orders, the
sacrament of governance, itself.
Until 1972 the
Latin Church inside the
universal Catholic Church also had four
minor orders leading up to the
major order of
subdeacon, which were conferred on all
seminarians before they became
deacons. The minor orders and the subdiaconate were
not considered sacraments proper and were
practically suppressed under
Pope Paul
VI as part of the implementation of the
Second Vatican Council. They were,
however, retained by the
Eastern Catholic Churches and by
traditionalist Roman
Catholic, including papally-approved
priestly associations that
use the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite. Only the
sacramental orders (deacon, priest, bishop) were retained in the
reformed
Latin Rite, but modern Catholic
seminarians are "instituted" in "ministries" called acolyte and
reader or lector, which replace the former "minor orders."
Eastern Christianity
The
Eastern Orthodox Church
considers Ordination to be a
Sacred
Mystery (what in the West is called a sacrament). This Mystery
is limited in that it may only be conferred by a bishop, and not by
a priest (all of the other Mysteries may be performed by a priest).
Certain
archimandrites may be given
permission to bestow
minor orders, but
only a bishop may ordain a priest, deacon or, normally together
with at least one or two other bishops, another bishop.
It was the mission of the
Apostles to go
forth into all the world and preach the
Gospel, baptizing those who believed in the name of
the
Holy Trinity ( ). In the
Early Church those who presided over
congregations were referred to variously as
episcopos (bishop) or
presbyteros (priest). These successors of the
Apostles were ordained to their office by
the
laying on of hands, and
according to
Orthodox theology
formed a living, organic link with the Apostles, and through them
with
Jesus Christ himself. This link is
believed to continue in
unbroken
succession to this day. Over time, the ministry of bishops (who
hold the fullness of the priesthood) and presbyters or priests (who
hold a portion of the priesthood as bestowed by their bishop) came
to be distinguished. In Orthodox termology, the terms
priesthood and
sacerdotal refer to the ministry
of bishops and priests. All of the ordination ceremonies take place
during the
Divine Liturgy.
A
bishop is the Teacher of the Faith, the carrier
of
Sacred Tradition, and the living
Vessel of Grace through whom the
energeia (
divine
grace) of the Holy Spirit flows into the rest of the church. A
bishop is
consecrated through the laying
on of hands by other bishops, normally at least two or three, but
in emergency situations, such as times of
persecution, a single bishop may
ordain another. His consecration takes place before the
Little Entrance of the Liturgy. A
Gospel Book is laid over the head of the one
being ordained, and the
consecrating
bishops lay their hands upon the Gospel Book, while the prayer
of ordination is read, after this, he ascends the
synthranon (bishop's throne in the sanctuary)
for the first time.
A
priest may serve only at the pleasure of his
bishop. A bishop bestows
faculties (permission to minister
within his
diocese) by giving a priest
chrism and an
antimension; he may withdraw faculties by
demanding the return of these items. The
ordination of a priest takes place at the
Great Entrance of the Liturgy. He is
taken three times around the
Holy Table
(altar) and then kneels on both knees, resting his forehead upon
the Holy Table. The ordaining bishop then places his
omophorion over the ordinand's head and reads the
prayer of ordination. He will then be vested as a priest. Later,
after the
Epiklesis of the Liturgy, the
bishop hands him a portion of the
Lamb (
Host) and
says the words:
Receive thou this pledge, and preserve it whole and
unharmed until thy last breath, because thou shalt be held to an
accounting therefor in the second and terrible Coming of our great
Lord, God, and Saviour, Jesus Christ..
A
deacon is ordained after the epiklesis. He is
taken three times around the Holy Table and then kneels on one
knee, resting his forehead on the Holy Table. The ordaining bishop
then places his omophor over the ordinand's head and reads the
prayers of ordination. He will then be vested as a deacon and given
an
hexateryga (liturgical fan).
An Orthodox deacon is not permitted to perform weddings or baptisms
(except, in the case of baptism
in
extremis, under which circumstances any Orthodox layman
may do the same). An Orthodox deacon will not normally preach,
unless he has the bishop's explicit permission to do so.
Anglicanism
The
Anglican Communion believes
its bishops to be in
Apostolic
Succession, though there is some difference of opinion with
regard to whether ordination is to be regarded as a sacrament or
not. The
Book of Common Prayer
provides rites of ordination for bishops, priests and deacons, and
permits only bishops to administer ordination. Typically, within
Anglicanism three bishops are required for ordination to the
episcopate, and one bishop will perform ordinations to the
priesthood and diaconate.
Anglo
Catholics will tend to be closer to the Roman Catholic position
with regard to the sacramental nature of ordination and in the use
of
Minor Orders.
Lutheranism
Lutherans reject the Roman Catholic
sense holy orders because they do not think
sacerdotalism is supported by the Bible.
Martin Luther taught that each
individual was expected to fulfill his God-appointed task in
everyday life. The modern usage of the term
vocation as a life-task was first employed by
Martin Luther. In
Luther's
Small Catechism, the holy orders include, but are not limited
to the following: bishops, pastors, preachers, governmental
offices, citizens, husbands, wives, children, employees, employers,
young people, and
widows.
Process and sequence
The sequence in which holy orders are received are: minor orders,
deacon, priest, bishop.
For Catholics, it is typically in the last year of
seminary training that a man will be ordained to
the diaconate, called by Catholics in recent times the "
transitional diaconate". This is to
distinguish men bound for priesthood from those who have entered
the "
permanent diaconate" and do
not intend to seek further ordination. Deacons, whether
transitional or permanent, are licensed to preach sermons (under
certain circumstances a permanent deacon may not receive faculties
to preach), to perform
baptisms, and to
witness
Catholic marriages, but to
perform no other sacraments. They assist at the
Eucharist or the
Mass, but are not able to consecrate the
bread and wine. Normally, after six months or more as a
transitional deacon, a man will be ordained to the priesthood.
Priests are able to
preach, perform
baptisms,
confirm,
witness marriages, hear
confessions and
give
absolutions,
anoint the sick, and celebrate the
Eucharist or the Mass.
Orthodox seminarians are typically
tonsured
as
readers before entering
seminary, and may later be made subdeacons or deacons; customs vary
between seminaries and between Orthodox jurisdictions. Some deacons
remain permanently in the diaconate; many go on to be ordained
priests. Orthodoxy has two types of clergy: married (known as
"white clergy") and
monastic (known as
"black clergy"). Monastic deacons are called
hierodeacons, monastic priests are called
hieromonks. Orthodox clergy must either
marry or be tonsured as
monks prior to
ordination to the subdiaconate (although some jurisdictions delay
this until the diaconate), though some bishops may make
economia (dispensation) to allow a
candidate to marry after his ordination to the subdiaconate. But
once a man has been ordained a priest, he may not marry. If his
wife dies, he may not remarry and must remain celibate. Often,
widowed priests will take
monastic
vows. Orthodox bishops are taken from among the monks.
For Anglicans, a person is ordained a
deacon
once he or she has completed training at a theological college. The
candidate then typically serves as a
curate
and may be ordained as a
priest, at the
discretion of the bishop, following a period of time. Other deacons
may choose to remain in this order. Anglican deacons can preach
sermons, perform
baptisms and conduct
funerals, but, unlike priests, cannot conduct
marriages or celebrate the
Eucharist. In most branches of the Anglican
church, women can be ordained as priests, and in some, can be
ordained
bishops.
Bishops are chosen from among priests in
churches that adhere to Catholic usage.In the Roman Catholic
Church, bishops, like priests, are celibate and thus unmarried;
further, a bishop is said to possess the fullness of the sacrament
of Holy Orders, empowering him to ordain deacons, priests, and-
with papal consent-other bishops. If a bishop, especially one
acting as an ordinary- a head of a diocese or archdiocese- is to be
ordained, three bishops must usually co-consecrate him with one
bishop, usually an archbishop or the bishop of the place, being the
chief consecrating prelate.
Among Eastern Rite Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, which
permit married priests, bishops must either be unmarried or agree
to abstain from contact with their wives. It is a common
misconception that all such bishops come from
religious orders; while this is generally
true, it is not an absolute rule. In the case of both Catholics-
(Western and) Eastern Catholic, Oriental Orthodox and Eastern
Orthodox, they are usually leaders of territorial units called
dioceses (or its equivalent in the east, an
eparchy). Only bishops can validly
administer the sacrament of holy orders.
Recognition of other churches' orders
There is mutual recognition of the validity of holy orders among
the Eastern Orthodox, Polish National, Oriental Orthodox, and Old
Catholic churches and the Assyrian Church of the East, as they have
maintained the
apostolic
succession of bishops, i.e., their bishops claim to be in a
line of succession dating back to the
Apostles, just as Catholic bishops do.
Consequently, if a priest of any of these Churches converts to
another, he is generally received as a priest without need for
re-ordination. Similarly, the Roman Catholic Church unconditionally
recognizes the validity of ordinations in the aforementioned
Eastern churches. Eastern Orthodox bishops can, and frequently do,
grant recognition to the holy orders of converts who were earlier
ordained in the Catholic Church (though there is much debate in
Eastern Orthodoxy about this); that is part of the policy called
church economy.
Anglican churches, unlike other
Protestant churches, claim to maintain apostolic succession. But,
the succession of Anglican bishops is not universally recognized.
The Roman Catholic Church judged Anglican orders invalid when
Pope Leo XIII in 1896 wrote in
Apostolicae Curae that
Anglican orders lack validity because the rite by which priests
were ordained was not correctly performed from 1547 to 1553 and
from 1558 to the time of Archbishop
William
Laud, thus causing a break of continuity in apostolic
succession.
Eastern Orthodox
bishops have, on occasion, granted "economy" when Anglican priests
convert to Orthodoxy. Changes in the Anglican Ordinal since King
Edward VI, and a fuller
appreciation of the pre-
Reformation ordinals suggest that the
correctness of the enduring dismissal of Anglican Orders may be
questioned. In order to reduce doubt concerning Anglican apostolic
succession, since the 1930
Bonn agreement, many Anglican
bishops have been consecrated by bishops of the
Old Catholic Church whose holy orders are
recognised by the
Holy See.
Neither Roman Catholics nor Anglicans recognize the validity of
ordinations of ministers in
Protestant
churches that do not maintain the apostolic succession. Rome also
does not recognize the apostolic succession of (
high church) Lutheran Protestant
denominations.
Anglicans accept the ordinations of those denominations in full
communion with the Anglican Communion, such as some
Lutheran denominations. They may preside at
services requiring a priest if one is not available.
The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) accepts
the legal authority of clergy to perform marriages but does not
recognize any other sacraments performed by ministers not ordained
to the Latter-day Saint priesthood. Although the Latter-day Saints,
who developed from private revelations and the wider
Restorationist movement, do claim a doctrine
of a certain spiritual apostolic succession, it is significantly
different from that claimed by Catholics and is not recognized by
the
Holy See.
Marriage and holy orders
The rules discussed in this section are not considered to be among
the infallible dogmas of the Catholic Church, but are mutable rules
of discipline. See
clerical
celibacy for a more detailed discussion.
Married men may be ordained to the diaconate as Permanent Deacons,
but in the
Latin Rite of the
Roman Catholic Church generally may
not be ordained to the priesthood. In the
Eastern Catholic Churches and in
the
Eastern Orthodox Church,
married deacons may be ordained priests but may not become bishops.
Bishops in the Eastern Rites and the Eastern Orthodox churches are
almost always drawn from among
monks,
who have taken a vow of celibacy. They may be widowers, though; it
is not required of them never to have been married.
In some cases, widowed permanent deacons have been ordained to the
priesthood. There have been some situations in which men previously
married and ordained to the priesthood in an
Anglican church or in a
Lutheran Protestant church have been ordained to
the Catholic priesthood and allowed to function much as an Eastern
Rite priest but in a Latin Rite setting. This is never
sub conditione (conditionally), as there
is no recognised true priesthood in the Protestant denominations.
Such ordination may only happen with the approval of the priest's
Bishop and a special permission by the Pope.
Anglican clergy may be married and/or may marry after
ordination.
Other concepts of ordination
Ordination ritual and procedures vary by denomination. Different
churches and denominations specify more or less rigorous
requirements for entering into office, and the process of
ordination is likewise given more or less ceremonial pomp depending
on the group. Many Protestants still communicate authority and
ordain to office by having the existing overseers physically lay
hands on the candidates for office.
Methodist churches
The American
Methodist model is an
episcopal system loosely based on the Anglican model, as the
Methodist Church arose from the Anglican Church. It was first
devised under the leadership of Bishops
Thomas Coke and
Francis Asbury of the
Methodist Episcopal Church in the
late 18th century. In this approach, an
elder (or "presbyter") is ordained to word
(preaching and teaching), sacrament (administering Baptism and the
Lord's Supper), order (administering the life of the church and, in
the case of bishops, ordaining others for mission and ministry),
and service. A
deacon is a person ordained
only to word and service.
In the
United Methodist
Church, for instance, seminary graduates are examined and
approved by the Conference Board of Ordained Ministry and then the
Clergy Session. They are accepted as "probationary (provisional)
members of the conference." The resident bishop may commission them
to full time ministry as "provisional" ministers. (Before 1996, the
graduate was ordained as a transitional deacon at this point, a
provisional role which has since been done away with. The order of
deacon is now a separate and distinct clergy order in the United
Methodist Church.) After serving the probationary period, of a
minimum of two years, the probationer is then examined again and
either continued on probation, discontinued altogether, or approved
for ordination. Upon final approval by the Clergy Session of the
Conference, the probationer becomes a full member of the Conference
and is then ordained as an elder or deacon by the resident Bishop.
Those ordained as elders are members of the Order of Elders, and
those ordained deacons are members of the Order of Deacons.
The British Methodist Conference does not have bishops but just the
two distinct orders of presbyter and deacon.
Presbyterian churches
Presbyterian churches, following their Scottish
forebears,
reject the traditions surrounding overseers and instead identify
the offices of bishop (episkopos in Greek) and elder
(presbuteros in Greek, from which the term "presbyterian"
comes). The two terms seem to be used interchangeably in the
Bible (compare
Titus 1.5-9 and
I Tim. 3.2-7). Their form of
church governance is known as
presbyterian polity. While there is
increasing authority with each level of gathering of elders
('Session' over a congregation or parish, then presbytery, then
possibly a synod, then the General Assembly), there is no hierarchy
of elders. Each elder has an equal vote at the court on which they
stand.
Elders are usually chosen at their local level, either elected by
the congregation and approved by the Session, or appointed directly
by the Session. Some churches place limits on the term that the
elders serve, while others ordain elders for life.
Presbyterians also ordain (by laying on of hands) ministers of Word
and Sacrament (sometimes known as 'teaching elders'). These
ministers are regarded simply as Presbyters ordained to a different
function, but in practice they provide the leadership for local
Session.
Some Presbyterians identify those appointed (by the laying on of
hands) to serve in practical ways (
Acts 6.1-7) as deacons (
diakonos in Greek,
meaning "servant"). In many congregations, a group of men or women
is thus set aside to deal with matters such as congregational
fabric and finance, releasing elders for more 'spiritual' work.
These persons may be known as 'deacons', 'board members' or
'managers', depending on the local tradition. Unlike elders and
minister, they are not usually 'ordained', and are often elected by
the congregation for a set period of time.
Other Presbyterians have used an 'order of deacons' as full-time
servants of the wider Church. Unlike ministers, they do not
administer sacraments or routinely preach.
The Church of
Scotland
has recently begun ordaining deacons to this
role.
Unlike the Episcopalian schemes, but similar to the United
Methodist scheme described above, the two Presbyterian offices are
different in
kind rather than in
degree, since
one need not be a deacon before becoming an elder. Since there is
no hierarchy, the two offices do not make up an "order" in the
technical sense, but the terminology of Holy Orders is sometimes
still developed.
Congregationalist churches
Congregationalist
churches implement different schemes, but the officers usually have
less authority than in the presbyterian or episcopalian forms. Some
ordain only ministers and rotate members on an advisory board
(sometimes called a board of elders or a board of deacons). Because
the positions are by comparison less powerful, there is usually
less rigor or fanfare in how officers are ordained.
Latter Day Saint Movement
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has a relatively
open priesthood, ordaining nearly all adult males and boys of the
age of twelve and older. Latter-day Saint priesthood consists of
two orders: the Melchizedek and Aaronic. The offices, or ranks, of
the Melchizedek order (in roughly descending order) include
apostle, seventy, patriarch, high priest, and elder. The offices of
the Aaronic order are bishop, priest, teacher, and deacon. The
manner of ordination consists of the laying on of hands by two or
more men holding at least the office being conferred while one acts
as voice in conferring the priesthood and/or office and usually
pronounces a blessing upon the recipient. Teachers and deacons do
not have the authority to ordain others to the priesthood. All
church members are authorized to teach and preach regardless of
priesthood ordination so long as they maintain good standing within
the church. The church does not use the term "holy orders."
Community of Christ
Community of Christ has a largely volunteer priesthood, and all
members of the priesthood are free to marry (as traditionally
defined by the Christian community). The priesthood is divided into
two orders, the Order of Aaron, and the Order of Melchisedec
(commonly known as the Aaronic priesthood or Aaronic Order; and the
Melchisedec priesthood or Melchisedec Order). The Aaronic order is
the “lesser priesthood” and the Melchisedec order is the “greater
priesthood”. The Aaronic order consists of the offices of deacon,
teacher and priest. The Melchisedec Order consists of the offices
of elder (including the specialized office of seventy) and high
priest (including the specialized offices of evangelist, bishop,
apostle, & prophet). The Melchisedec priesthood is also
commonly termed the “high priesthood”, but as noted, not all
members of this priesthood are actually high priests. Paid
ministers include “appointees” and the general officers of the
church, which include some specialized priesthood offices (such as
the office of president, reserved for the three top members of the
church leadership team). As of 1984, women have been eligible for
priesthood, which is conferred through the sacrament of ordination,
by virtue of the laying-on-of-hands. While there is technically no
age requirement for any office of priesthood, there is no automatic
ordination or progression as in the LDS Church. Young people are
occasionally ordained as deacon, and sometimes teacher or priest,
but generally most priesthood members are called following
completion of post secondary school education. Priesthood offices
are not generally termed “orders of priesthood”, but certain
offices constitute orders. For example, all bishops belong to the
Order of Bishops. All evangelists belong to the Order of
Evangelists. Other offices belong to quorums (seventies and high
priests) or councils (apostles). The three presidents of the church
form the First Presidency, which is sometimes termed council, and
other times termed quorum. Deacons, teachers, priests and elders do
not belong to permanent bodies, but may organize local quorums for
all members of a given office within a particular city or region.
In March 2007 a woman was ordained for the first time to the office
of president.
Non-traditional organizations
The non-authoritarian religious denominations, such as the
Universal Life Church, prefer to
empower their clergy by minimizing the impediments to those who
feel the calling to make a spiritual connection to the cosmos.
Reducing the barriers to performing religious ceremonies, these
denominations encourage those within the general population to
realize spiritual experience. By enabling friends or relatives to
perform ceremonies like marriages, organizations that offer online
ordination demystify and integrate religious understanding into
lives of the otherwise nonreligious public.
Other unaffiliated religious organizations, such as Rose
Ministries, hold that everyone has the right to the distinction of
being ordained who shows a willingness to pursue and share the
truth. Their ordination process is one way of accommodating this
belief.
Still others, such as Spiritual Humanism, believe that religion
must be able to adapt to new knowledge about the universe without
rejecting the deep spiritual connections to human history and the
natural world that we are a part of, and that all humans have an
inalienable right and duty to practice their own religious
traditions.
Ordination of women
The Roman Catholic Church does not ordain women to any of the
orders and has officially declared that it does not have authority
to ordain women as priests or bishops. Ordaining women as deacons,
however, appears to remain a possibility, but not in any
sacramental sense of the diaconate. Many Orthodox, Old Catholic,
Anglican and Protestant churches ordain women, but in many cases,
only to the office of deacon or deaconess. Whether the Catholic
Church historically ordained, or simply "set apart", women as
deaconesses is a matter of theological and historical
investigation.
Various branches of the Orthodox churches, including the Greek
Orthodox, currently ordain woman as deaconesses. Some churches are
internally divided on whether the Scriptures permit the ordination
of women. When one considers the relative size of the churches (1.1
billion Roman Catholics, 300 million Orthodox, 590 million
Anglicans and Protestants), it is a minority of Christian churches
that ordain women. Protestants constitute about 27 percent of
Christians worldwide and most which do ordain women have only done
so within the past century.
In some traditions women may theoretically be ordained to the same
orders as men. In others women are restricted from certain offices.
The
Church of England (in the
Anglican Communion), for example,
does not permit the
consecration of
women as bishops, though the Episcopal Church USA (the United
States denomination that is part of the Anglican Communion) does.
Similarly, in some Protestant denominations, women may serve as
assistant pastors but not as pastors in charge of congregations. In
some denominations, women can be ordained to be an
elder or
deacon.
Some denominations allow for the ordination of women for certain
religious orders. Within certain traditions, such as the Anglican
and Lutheran, there is a diversity of theology and practice
regarding ordination of women.
The
Roman Catholic Church, in
accordance with its understanding of the theological tradition on
the issue, and the definitive clarification found in the encyclical
letter
Ordinatio
Sacerdotalis (1994) written by
Pope John Paul II, officially teaches that
it has no authority to
ordain women as
priests and thus there is no possibility of female priests at any
time in the future.
Ordination of homosexuals
To many conservative Christians, homosexuality is interpreted in
terms of behavior. A homosexual is a person who engages in same-sex
behavior. A biblical world view of what homosexuality is can come
from 1 Corinthians 6:9 as well as many others. This biblical view
would place homosexuality as described in Leviticus 20 as sexual
immorality and equal to adultery, lust, fornication, and incest.
The ordination of gays and lesbians is not a new thing, but their
ordination as openly practicing homosexuals has caused controversy
among some churchgoers: two-thirds of weekly church-goers believe
that it is inappropriate for gays and lesbians to serve in the
clergy. In the past, ordinands who were gay or lesbian did not
admit their sexuality, and were ordained. Many educated people and
mental health professionals in the western world now interpret
homosexuality in terms of fundamental sexual orientation, not as
lifestyle choice or character flaw. The term refers simply to a
person who is attracted to persons of the same gender. A homosexual
may choose to be celibate, or may be sexually active. Researchers
note that there have historically been homosexuals in every
society. Religious liberals, gays, lesbians, human sexuality
researchers, and mental health therapists argue for the acceptance
of homosexuals.
The
Universal Fellowship of
Metropolitan Community Churches is the most prominent American
denomination with an official stance allowing
non-celibate gays and lesbians to be
ordained. Smaller denominations, like the
Liberal Catholic Church, the
Swedenborgian
Church of North America and the
Apostolic Johannite Church also
do so.
The
United Church of Christ,
because of its decentralized model that arose from Congregational
churches of New England, allows such ordinations by default since
there are no official denomination-wide stances on
doctrine.
Most of the mainline Protestant denominations, such as the
Presbyterian Church USA, the
Moravian Church, and the
Evangelical Lutheran
Church , are openly discussing the issue. The
United Church of Canada and the
Uniting Church in
Australia already welcome gays and lesbians in permanent
partnerships into the ordained ministry. The
United Methodist Church has also
been discussing the issue for many years, but its official position
continues to deny ordination to "Self-Avowed Practicing
Homosexuals." In theory, a homosexual who is celibate is a fit
candidate for ordination within the
United Methodist Church, but in
practice this rarely happens.
In the
Episcopal Church USA,
bishops in some dioceses ordain non-celibate gays and lesbians,
while those in others do not. In the wider
Anglican Communion, which includes more
conservative congregations in developing countries, the ordination
of homosexuals is highly controversial.
The
Archbishop of
Canterbury, spiritual head of the
Anglican Communion, formed the Eames
Commission due to controversy associated with the consecration of
Gene Robinson to the order of
bishop in the
Episcopal Diocese of New
Hampshire, and the planned consecration of
Jeffrey John (who was to be ordained
Bishop of Reading) in the
Church of England. Its findings, published
as the
Windsor Report, recommended
that the consecration of individuals in same-sex relationships as
bishops cease, although it conspicuously avoided discussing gays
and lesbians ordered as priests and deacons. In response, the
Episcopal Church placed a moratorium on confirming the
consecrations of
all bishops.
Episcopal Bishop
J. Neil Alexander of the
Diocese of Atlanta said he
voted for the ordination of Gene Robinson as bishop because
Robinson was open about his sexuality and honest about his caring
relationship. In the past known gay clergy were ordained to the
episcopate only because they lied about their sexuality.
The
Roman Catholic Church
allows the ordination of men who have, in the past, experienced
same sex attraction, but only on the
condition that they have lived without engaging in homosexual
culture or acts for several years, and can be psychologically
verified as having their same-sex attraction under control.
Previously ordination of these homosexually inclined males was
strictly forbidden, even though this discipline was often not
observed by local bishops after the 1960s. The Catholic community
believes that the priest is the person authoritatively appointed to
do homage to God in the name of society, even the primitive society
of the family, and to offer Him sacrifice. The Christian law also
has its priesthood to carry out the Divine service, the principal
act of which is the Eucharistic Sacrifice, the figure and renewal
of that of Calvary.
The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ordains to the
priesthood only men
who have covenanted
not to have sex
with anyone besides their wife. Some gay men have chosen to remain
celibate, while others have chosen to
marry. Regardless of orientation, only married men may become
bishop. Transgendered
persons who were born men may only receive the priesthood if they
have not had, and are not planning to have, an operation to change
their gender.(1999 Church handbook.) Women are not ordained to the
priesthood.
Footnotes
- can. 1008, CIC 1983
- canon 845, CIC 1983
- can. 879, CIC 1983
- Paul VI, moto proprio, Ministeria quedam Aug 15, 1972,
in AAS, 64 (1972) p529
- Max Weber,
The Protestant
Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, trans. Talcott
Parsons, Ch.3, p. 79 & note 1.
- See Luther's Small Catechism
- The Ecumenical Patriarch on Anglican Orders
- [1]Rose Ministries
- [ http://www.spiritualhumanism.org/]Spiritual Humanism
-
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/general_current_events/churchgoers_disapprove_of_gay_and_lesbian_pastors
- Full text of the 2005 Vatican document on ordaining
homosexuals into the priesthood
- Moore, Carrie A. "Gay LDS men detail challenges", Deseret Morning
News, March 30, 2007
- Interview with Elder Oaks and Wickman
Print resources
- Campbell, Dennis. Yoke of Obedience, 1988. ISBN
0-687-46660-1
- Oden, Thomas. Pastoral Theology:
Essentials of Ministry, 1983. ISBN 0-06-066353-7
- Willimon, William. Calling
& Character: Virtues of the Ordained Life, 2000. ISBN
0-687-09033-4
- Willimon, William. Pastor:
The Theology and Practice of Ordained Ministry, 2002. ISBN
0-687-04532-0
External links