The
Sacrament of Holy Orders
The
sacrament of Holy Orders is celebrated
once a year in the Diocese of Lincoln, presided over by Bishop Fabian
Bruskewitz. Usually both Deacons and Priests are ordained in the ceremony or
ceremonies. We have a diocesan seminary for the college years located in
Seward, Nebraska. It is Saint
Gregory the Great Seminary. If you are interested
in learning more about this sacrament and what preparation is needed, please
contact one of the priests of the parish or our vocation directors of the
diocese at the Newman Center in Lincoln.
As to Orders. The supreme task which Christ had to fulfill was his priestly work
of atonement which he completed as mediator between God and man. By the union in himself
of humanity and divinity Christ is by nature the mediator. As a man from among men, Christ
is our mediator with the Father; yet he is also capable of offering a worthy sacrifice to
God because, by virtue of the union of his human nature with the Second Person of the
Godhead, his human actions have in infinite value. In this fullest sense, the priesthood
belongs to Christ alone.
But if Christ wished to live on and continue his work in the Church, the first thing he
had to do was to provide for the continuance of his sacerdotal and mediatory function.
Above all, if Christ wished to renew the sacrifice of the Cross throughout the ages and
all over the world as the sacrifice of the New Law in the Holy Mass, he had to allow other
men to share in his priesthood. For if there is to be a true sacrifice, there must be a
priesthood ordained and authorized by God from whose hands God will accept the sacrifice.
All attacks on the priesthood of the Catholic Church thus go back to denial that the
Holy Mass is a true sacrifice, entrusted by Christ to his Church, and ultimately to denial
of any visible Church to which Christ entrusted his work as mediator and redeemer. So the
attacks of Wycliffe, the Reformers and the "liberal" historians regarded the
setting up of an official priesthood as the result of the evolution of Christian life in
the early Christian communities.
The priesthood is ordained in the first place for the offering of sacrifice and
therefore for the solemnization of the Church's formal worship. The arrangements for these
celebrations demand also a corresponding ministry and thus graded ministers to the alter.
This grading of the ministry goes in part back to direct institution by Christ, but in
part was introduced by the Church.
The degrees of order - the four minor and three major orders with the highest of all,
that of Bishop - signify an order of rank in the mediation of grace. It must be
distinguished from the other order of rank which concerns jurisdiction, magisterium and
pastorate. The latter are not essentially linked with the powers of mediation of grace,
but in the concrete order established by God there are close relationships between the two
kinds of power. For example, the fact that the power of forgiving sins exists in the
Church does not, in itself, say anything about who has this power. But in the divine
order, only a priest can have it.
Besides the conflict about the fact of the sacrament of order, its institution by
Christ and its hierarchical structure, it has always been a principal concern of the
Church to raise the priesthood to the high moral level suitable to its sublime duties. In
the West, a most important stem in this direction was the insistence on celibacy. But as
we are concerned here solely with doctrinal matters, documents on this are not given.
THE CHURCH TEACHES: Order is a true sacrament instituted by Christ who ordained the Apostles at the Last
Supper. It is administered by the laying on of hands and the key phrases of the ordination
preface. Only a Bishop can validly ordain. Order is a purely ecclesiastical concern. The
effect of the sacrament of order is to impart the Holy Spirit and to impress an indelible
character, which permanently distinguishes those in orders from the laity. The laity also
has a part in Christ's priesthood, but in another manner. The office of Bishop is above
the priesthood (which in turn is above the diaconate) and gives special powers of
consecration. To the priesthood belong the celebration of Holy Mass and the power of
forgiving sins. The subdiaconate belongs to the priesthood and diaconate to the 'major
orders.' In addition, the four 'minor orders' were instituted by the Church. Conditions
for the valid reception of order are baptism and being of the male sex.
For more information,
read the Catechism on Holy Orders here.
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sacrament: Marriage
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