Holy
Orders
CONTACT: Parish
Office at 484-0532
The
Sacrament of Holy Orders is the
continuation of Christ's priesthood,
which He bestowed upon His Apostles;
thus, the Catechism of the Catholic
Church refers to the Sacrament of Holy
Orders as "the sacrament of
apostolic ministry." In the
Sacrament of Holy Orders, a man is
incorporated into the priesthood of
Christ, at one of three levels: the
episcopate, the priesthood, or the
diaconate.
There
is only one Sacrament of Holy Orders,
but there are three levels. The
first is that which Christ Himself
bestowed upon His Apostles: the
episcopate. A bishop is a man who
is ordained to the episcopate by another
bishop (in practice, by several
bishops). He stands in a direct,
unbroken line from the Apostles, a
condition known as "apostolic
succession."
Ordination
as a bishop confers the grace to
sanctify others, as well as the
authority to teach the faithful and to
bind their consciences. Because of
the grave nature of this responsibility,
all episcopal ordinations must be
approved by the Pope.
The
second level of the Sacrament of Holy
Orders is the priesthood. No
bishop can minister to all of the
faithful in his diocese, so priests act,
in the words of the Catechism of the
Catholic Church, as "co-workers of
the bishops." They exercise
their powers lawfully only in communion
with their bishop, and so they promise
obedience to their bishop at the time of
their ordination.
The
chief duties of the priesthood are the
preaching of the Gospel and the offering
of the Eucharist.
The
third level of the Sacrament of Holy
Orders is the diaconate. Deacons
assist priests and bishops, but beyond
the preaching of the Gospel, they are
granted no special charism or spiritual
gift. Deacons can baptize, witness
marriage, and preside at other
liturgical events. In the Eastern
Churches, both Catholic and Orthodox,
the permanent diaconate has been a
constant feature. In the West, the
office of deacon was reserved to men who
intended to be ordained to the
priesthood. The permanent
diaconate was restored in the West by
the Second Vatican Council.
Married men are allowed to become
permanent deacons, however if his spouse
passes away before he does, he cannot
marry again.
Each
level of ordination confers special
graces, from the ability to preach,
granted to deacons; to the ability to
act in the person of Christ to offer the
Mass, granted to priests; to a special
grace of strength, granted to bishops,
which allows him to teach and lead his
flock, even to the point of dying as
Christ did.
If
you feel a true calling to the spiritual
life of priesthood, or the diaconate,
please call the Parish Office.