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Wikipedia

Deacon

A deacon is a member of the diaconate, an office in Christian churches that is generally associated with service of some kind, but which varies among theological and denominational traditions. Major Christian churches, such as the Catholic Church, the Oriental Orthodox Churches, the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Scandinavian Lutheran Churches, the Methodist Churches, the Anglican Communion, and the Free Church of England, view the diaconate as an order of ministry.

Saint Stephen, one of the first seven deacons in the Christian Church, holding a Gospel Book in a 1601 painting by Giacomo Cavedone.

Origin and development

The word deacon is derived from the Greek word diákonos (διάκονος),[1] which is a standard ancient Greek word meaning "servant", "waiting-man", "minister", or "messenger".[2]

It is generally assumed that the office of deacon originated in the selection of seven men by the apostles, among them Stephen, to assist with the charitable work of the early church as recorded in Acts of the Apostles chapter 6.[3][4][5]

The Greek word diakónissa (διακόνισσα), meaning deaconess, is not found in the Bible. However, one woman, Phoebe, is mentioned at Romans 16:1–2[6] as a deacon or deaconess (διάκονος, diákonos) of the church in Cenchreae. Nothing more specific is said about her duties or authority, although it is assumed she carried Paul's Letter to the Romans.

Female deacons are mentioned by the Roman author Pliny the Younger in a letter to the Roman emperor Trajan dated c. 112:

I believed it was necessary to find out from two female slaves (ex duabus ancillis) who were called deacons (ministrae), what was true—and to find out through torture (per tormenta)[7]

This is the earliest Latin text that appears to refer to female deacons as a distinct category of Christian minister.[7]

A biblical description of the qualities required of a deacon can be found in 1 Timothy 3:1–13.[8][9]

Among the more prominent deacons in history are:

Prominent historical figures who played major roles as deacons and went on to higher office include Athanasius of Alexandria, Thomas Becket, and Reginald Pole. On June 8, 536, a serving Roman deacon was raised to Pope, Silverius.

The diaconate has been retained as a separate vocation in Eastern Christianity, while in Western Christianity it was largely used in cathedrals and as a temporary step along the path toward priestly ordination. In the 20th century, the diaconate was restored as a vocational order in many Western churches, most notably in the Catholic Church, the Anglican Communion, and the United Methodist Church.

Mainline Christian traditions

In the Catholic, Scandinavian Lutheran, Anglican, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox churches, the diaconate is one of the major orders—the others being bishop, presbyter (priest), and, historically, subdeacon.[11] Deacons assist priests in their pastoral and administrative duties, but often report directly to the bishops of their diocese. They have a distinctive role in the liturgy of the Eastern and Western Churches.

Latin Catholicism

Beginning around the fifth century, there was a gradual decline in the diaconate as a permanent state of life in the Latin Church.[12] The development of a cursus honorum (sequence of offices) found men entering the clerical state through tonsure, then ordination to the minor orders of lector, porter, exorcist, acolyte before ordination to the major orders of sub-deacon and deacon, all stages on the path to priesthood. Only men destined for priesthood were permitted to be ordained deacons. As seminaries developed, following the Council of Trent, to contemporary times, the only men ordained as deacons were seminarians who were completing the last year or so of graduate theological training, so-called "transitional deacons."

Following the recommendations of the Second Vatican Council (Lumen gentium 29) and the instigation of the Josephites (whose work with African Americans necessitated increased vocational opportunity for married men), in 1967 Pope Paul VI issued the motu proprio Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, reviving the practice of ordaining to the diaconate men who were not candidates for priestly ordination. These men are known as permanent deacons, in contrast to those continuing their formation, who were then called transitional deacons. There is no sacramental or canonical difference between the two, however, as there is only one order of deacons.[13]

The period of formation to the permanent diaconate varies from diocese to diocese as determined by the local ordinary, but it usually entails a period of prayerful preparation and several years of study.[14] Diaconal candidates receive instruction in philosophy, theology, study of the Bible, homiletics, sacramental studies, evangelization, ecclesiology, counseling, and pastoral care and ministry before ordination.

They may be assigned to work in a parish by the diocesan bishop, where they are under the supervision of the parish pastors, or in diocesan ministries.[15] Unlike most clerics, permanent deacons who also have a secular profession have no right to receive a salary for their ministry,[16] but many dioceses opt to remunerate them anyway.[17]

During the mass, the deacon's responsibilities include assisting the priest, proclaiming the Gospel, announcing the General Intercessions, and distributing Communion. They may also preach the homily.[18] As clerics, deacons are required to pray the Liturgy of the Hours. Deacons, like priests and bishops, are ordinary ministers of the sacrament of Baptism and may witness at the sacrament of holy matrimony outside of mass. Deacons may lead funeral rites outside mass such as the final commendation at the gravesite or the reception of the body at a service in the funeral home, and may assist the priest at the requiem mass. They can also preside over various services such as Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, and they may give certain blessings. While in ancient history their tasks and competencies varied, today deacons cannot hear confession and give absolution, anoint the sick, or celebrate mass.

 
Ornately embroidered dalmatic, the proper vestment of the deacon (shown from the back with an appareled amice)

The vestments most particularly associated with the Western Rite Catholic deacon are the alb, stole and dalmatic. Deacons, like priests and bishops, must wear their albs and stoles; deacons place the stole over their left shoulder and it hangs across to their right side, while priests and bishops wear it around their necks. The dalmatic, a vestment especially associated with the deacon, is worn during the celebration of the mass and other liturgical functions; its use is more liberally applied than the corresponding vestment of the priest, the chasuble. At certain major celebrations, such as ordinations, the diocesan bishop wears a dalmatic under his chasuble, to signify that he enjoys the fullness of the three degrees of holy orders—deacon, priest, and bishop.

 
A Catholic deacon wearing his dalmatic and biretta

The diaconate is conferred on seminarians continuing to the priesthood no sooner than 23 years of age (canon 1031 of the Code of Canon Law). As a permanent state, the diaconate can be conferred on single men 25 or older, and on married men 35 or older, but an older age can be required by the episcopal conference.[19] If a married deacon is widowed, he must maintain the celibate state. Under some very rare circumstances, however, deacons who have been widowed can receive permission to remarry. This is most commonly done when the deacon is left as a single father. In some cases, a widowed deacon will seek priestly ordination, especially if his children are grown.[20]

A deacon is not styled "Father" as a priest would be, but as "Deacon",[21] abbreviated variously as "Dn." or "Dcn." This preferred method of address is stated in the 2005 document of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, "National Directory for the Formation, Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons in the United States".

The proper address in written correspondence for all deacons of the Latin (Roman Rite) Catholic Church in the United States is "Deacon Name",[22] although it is not uncommon to see "Rev. Mr." sometimes used. "Rev. Mr.", however, is more often used to indicate a transitional deacon (i.e., preparing for ordination to the priesthood) or one who belongs to a religious institute, while Rev. Deacon is used as the honorific for permanent deacons in many dioceses (e.g., Rev. Deacon John Smith, or Deacon John Smith). The decision as to whether deacons wear the Roman collar as street attire is left to the discretion of each bishop for his own diocese. Where clerical garb is approved by the bishop, the deacon can choose to wear or not wear the "collar".[citation needed]

Deacons, like seminarians, religious, and the two other orders, bishops and priests, pray the Liturgy of the Hours; however, deacons are usually only required to pray morning and evening prayer.[23]

Eastern Orthodoxy and Eastern Catholicism

 
Greek Orthodox deacon in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, wearing an orarion over his sticharion. On his head he wears the clerical kamilavka.
 
Syrian Orthodox deacon with the Orarion above the alb, a censer and the Gospel.

In addition to proclaiming the Gospel and assisting in the distribution of holy communion, the deacon censes the icons and people, calls the people to prayer, leads the litanies, and has a role in the dialogue of the anaphora. In keeping with Eastern tradition, he is not permitted to perform any sacred mysteries (sacraments) on his own, except for Baptism in extremis (in danger of death), conditions under which anyone, including the laity, may baptize. When assisting at a normal baptism, it is often the deacon who goes down into the water with the one being baptized (Acts 8:38). In contrast to the Roman Catholic Church, deacons in the Eastern Churches may not preside at the celebration of marriages, as in Eastern theology the sacrament is conferred by the nuptial blessing of a priest.

Diaconal vestments are the sticharion (dalmatic), the orarion (deacon's stole), and the epimanikia (cuffs). The last are worn under his sticharion, not over it as does a priest or bishop. The deacon usually wears a simple orarion which is only draped over the left shoulder but, if elevated to the rank of archdeacon, he wears the "doubled-orarion", meaning it is passed over the left shoulder, under the right arm, and then crossed over the left shoulder (see photograph, right). In modern Greek practice, a deacon wears this doubled orarion from the time of his ordination. Also, in the Greek practice, he wears the clerical kamilavka (cylindrical head covering) with a rim at the top. In Slavic practice, a hierodeacon (monastic deacon) wears the simple black kamilavka of a monk (without the rim), but he removes the monastic veil (see klobuk) when he is vested; a married deacon would not wear a kamilavka unless it is given to him by the bishop as an ecclesiastical award; the honorary kamilavka is purple in colour, and may be awarded to either married or monastic clergy.

As far as street clothing is concerned, immediately following his ordination the deacon receives a blessing to wear the exorasson (Arabic: Jib'be, Slavonic: riassa), an outer cassock with wide sleeves, in addition to the anterion (Slavonic: podraznik), the inner cassock worn by all orders of clergy. In the Slavic practice, married clergy may wear any of a number of colours, but most often grey, while monastic clergy always wear black. In certain jurisdictions in North America and Western Europe, a Roman collar is often worn, although this is not a traditional or widespread practice.

A protodeacon (Greek: πρωτοδιάκονος: protodiakonos, "first deacon") is a distinction of honor awarded to senior deacons, usually serving on the staff of the diocesan bishop. An archdeacon is similar, but is among the monastic clergy. Protodeacons and archdeacons use a double-length orarion even if it is not the local tradition for all deacons to use it. In the Slavic tradition a deacon may be awarded the doubled-orarion even if he is not a protodeacon or archdeacon.

 
Painting of a Russian Orthodox deacon leading an ektenia (litany)

According to the practice of the Greek Orthodox Church of America, in keeping with the tradition of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the most common way to address a deacon is "Father".[24] Depending on local tradition, deacons are addressed as either "Father", "Father Deacon", "Deacon Father", or if addressed by a bishop, simply as "Deacon".

The tradition of kissing the hands of ordained clergy extends to the diaconate as well. This practice is rooted in the holy eucharist and is in acknowledgement and respect of the eucharistic role members of the clergy play in preparing, handling and disbursing the sacrament during the Divine Liturgy, and in building and serving the church as the Body of Christ.

Anciently, the Eastern churches ordained women as deaconesses. This practice fell into desuetude in the second millennium, but has been revived in some Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches. Nectarios of Aegina ordained a number of nuns as deaconesses in convents. Deaconesses would assist in anointing and baptising women, and in ministering to the spiritual needs of the women of the community. As churches discontinued ordaining women as deacons, these duties largely fell to the nuns and to the priests' wives.

Lutheranism

In the Lutheran Churches of the Scandinavian tradition, there is a threefold ministry of "bishops, priests, and deacons".[11] Until the 1960s, deacons in the Church of Sweden were required to be celibate.[11] For deacons, "vows made at ordination involve seeking and helping anyone in bodily or spiritual need, defending the rights of all, standing beside the oppressed, and exhorting God's people to all good works so that the love of God is made visible in the world."[11] An ordained deacon's charism includes "visits, helps, and supports those in bodily or spiritual need; gives Christian nurture and teaching in the faith; is a sign of merciful kindness in the parish and society at large, and in all things serves Christ in the neighbour".[11]

Anglicanism

 
An Anglican priest vested as a deacon with an alb and a purple stole over his left shoulder

In Anglican churches, including the Free Church of England, deacons are permitted to marry freely before or after ordination, as are Anglican priests. Most deacons are "transitional", that is, preparing for the priesthood and they are usually ordained priests about a year after their diaconal ordination. However, there are some deacons who do not go on to receive priestly ordination, recognising a vocation to remain in the diaconate. A permanent deacon is also known as a "distinctive deacon", or a "vocational deacon".[25][26]

Many provinces of the Anglican Communion ordain both women and men as deacons. Many of those provinces that ordain women to the priesthood previously allowed them to be ordained only to the diaconate. The effect of this was the creation of a large and overwhelmingly female diaconate for a time, as most men proceeded to be ordained priests after a short time as a deacon.

 
Certificate of ordination as a deacon in the Church of England given by Richard Terrick, the Bishop of London, to Gideon Bostwick. February 24, 1770

Anglican deacons may baptize and in some dioceses are granted licences to solemnize matrimony, usually under the instruction of their parish priest and bishop. Deacons are not able to preside at the eucharist (but can lead worship with the distribution of already-consecrated communion elements where this is permitted), nor can they pronounce God's absolution of sin or pronounce the Trinitarian blessing.[27] In most cases, deacons minister alongside other clergy.

An Anglican deacon wears an identical choir dress to an Anglican priest: cassock, surplice, tippet and academic hood. However, liturgically, deacons usually wear a stole over their left shoulder and fastened on the right side of their waist. This is worn both over the surplice and the alb. A deacon might also wear a dalmatic. Church of England deacons are supported through the CofE Network of Distinctive Deacons (CENDD).[26] Bishop James Newcome of Carlisle is the Distinctive Deacons’ Champion in the House of Bishops.[28]

Methodist churches

In Methodism, deacons began as a transitional order before ordination as elders (presbyters). In 1996, the United Methodist Church ended the transitional deacon and established a new Order of Deacons to be equal in status with the Order of Elders. Both men and women may be ordained as deacons. Deacons serve in a variety of specialized ministries including, but not limited to, Christian education, music, communications and ministries of justice and advocacy. Unlike United Methodist elders, deacons must find their own place of service. Nevertheless, the bishop does officially approve and appoint deacons to their selected ministry.[29] Deacons may assist the elder in the administration of Sacraments, but must receive special approval from a bishop before presiding over Baptism and holy communion.[30] United Methodist deacons are present in North America, Europe and Africa.

The Methodist Church of Great Britain also has a permanent diaconate—based on an understanding of the New Testament that deacons have an equal, but distinct ministry from presbyters. Deacons are called to a ministry of service and witness, and "to hold before them the needs and concerns of the world". The Methodist Diaconal Order is both an order of ministry and a religious order within the Methodist Church in Britain. It was formed in 1989 as a successor to the Wesley Deaconess Order and is open to both women and men. Diaconal ministry is one of two ordained ministries within the Methodist Church.[31] The original Wesleyan Deaconess Order was founded by Thomas Bowman Stephenson in 1890, following observation of new ministries in urban areas in the previous years.[32] The order continued as the Wesley Deaconess Order following Methodist Union in 1932, but, following the admission of women to "The Ministry" (as presbyteral ministry is commonly termed in the Methodist Church), a number of deaconesses transferred and recruitment for the WDO ceased from 1978. The 1986 Methodist Conference re-opened the order to both men and women and the first ordinations to the renewed order occurred during the 1990 Conference in Cardiff, which coincided with celebrations of 100 years of diaconal service in British Methodism; deaconesses had previously been ordained at their annual convocation.[32]

The Methodist Church of Southern Africa ordains deacons who constitute a diaconal order, similar to that in the British church.[33]

Reformed churches

Church of Scotland

There are two distinct offices of deacon in the Church of Scotland. The best-known form of diaconate are trained and paid pastoral workers. The permanent diaconate was formerly exclusively female, and it was in 1988, the centenary year of the diaconate, that men were admitted to the office of deacon. The offices of deacon and minister are now both open to both women and men; deacons are now ordained (they were previously "commissioned").

The other office of deacon can be found in congregations formerly belonging to the pre-1900 Free Church of Scotland, with a "Deacons' Court" having responsibility for financial and administrative oversight of congregations. Only a few congregations still retain this constitutional model, with most having since adopted the Church of Scotland's "Model Constitution" (with a Kirk Session and Congregational Board) or "Unitary Congregation" (with just a Kirk Session). Most of the Free Church congregations united with the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland in 1900 creating the United Free Church of Scotland, which itself united with the Church of Scotland in 1929.

The congregations of the post-1900 Free Church of Scotland which did not join the UF Church in 1900 continue to have Deacons.

Presbyterian churches

One of John Calvin's legacies was to restore the diaconate as a servant ministry.[34] Individual congregations of the various Presbyterian denominations, such as the Presbyterian Church (USA), Presbyterian Church in America and Orthodox Presbyterian Church, also elect deacons, along with elders. However, in some churches the property-functions of the diaconate and session of elders is commended to an independent board of trustees.[35]

Dutch Reformed churches

In many Dutch Reformed churches deacons are charged with ministries of mercy. As such, the deacons are also members of the local church council. A special feature of the Dutch Reformed churches is the fact that the diaconate of each local church is its own legal entity with its own financial means, separated from the church itself, and governed by the deacons.

Uniting Church in Australia

In the Uniting Church in Australia, the diaconate is one of two offices of ordained ministry. The other is Minister of the Word.

Deacons in the Uniting Church are called to minister to those on the fringes of the church and be involved in ministry in the community. Deacons offer leadership in a ministry of service to the world. The primary focus of the ministry of deacons is on care and compassion for the poor and oppressed and in seeking social justice for all people. They take both an active role in leadership in such actions themselves, but are also play a key role in encouraging other Uniting Church members in similar action.

Some examples of service that deacons may take include: prison chaplaincy, acting as youth or community workers, in community service agencies, in schools and hospitals, or in mission placements in Australia or overseas. Although the primary responsibility for worship in congregations lies with the Ministers of the Word, deacons have a liturgical role appropriate to their distinctive ministry, including ministries where their main leadership is within a congregation.

In the Uniting Church both ministers of the word and deacons are styled The Reverend.

The Uniting Church has recognised deacons since union, but it was not until the 6th Assembly in 1991 that the Uniting Church began ordaining deacons. This was partly because the historical, theological and sociological roles of deaconesses and deacons was being widely discussed in Churches throughout the world at the time that the Basis of Union was being drafted [36]

Other traditions

Deacons are also appointed or elected in other denominations, though this is less commonly seen as a step towards the clerical ministry. The role of deacon in these denominations varies greatly from denomination to denomination; often, there will be more emphasis on administrative duties than on pastoral or liturgical duties. In some denominations, deacons' duties are only financial management and practical aid and relief. Elders handle pastoral and other administrative duties.

Amish

The Amish have deacons; they are elected by a council and receive no formal training.

Church of the Brethren

The Church of the Brethren also have deacons, as do other Brethren denominations. They are elected by the congregation to serve in ministries of compassion. They are elected for life in some congregations.

Baptists

Baptists traditionally recognize two ordained positions in the church: elders (pastors) and deacons, as per 1 Timothy 3. Some Baptist churches in the Reformed tradition recognize elder and pastor as separate offices.

Baptists have traditionally practised congregationalism, giving each church the ability to discern for themselves the interpretation of scripture. Thus, Baptist churches hold a wide variety of views on the qualifications and activities of deacons: some Baptist churches have the deacons decide many of the church affairs, while others have deacons in serving roles only.

The predominant view among Baptist churches (especially theologically conservative ones, including the majority of Southern Baptist and Independent Baptist churches) is that a deacon must be a male, and married (or a widower) and not divorced previously. If a deacon subsequently divorces, he must relinquish his office (but if his wife dies he may continue to serve). However, there are Baptist churches where women are allowed to be deacons or deaconesses (primarily in the United Kingdom and in the United States among African-American and theologically moderate churches). In the General Association of Regular Baptist Churches, deacons can be any adult male member of the congregation who is in good standing.

In some African American Missionary Baptist churches and in churches affiliated with the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. male and female deacons serve as one board. Other churches may have two separate boards of deacons and deaconesses. Most often the deacon or deacon candidate is a long-standing member of the church, being middle aged, but younger deacons may be selected from among members of a family that has had several generations in the same church. They are elected by quorum vote annually. Their roles are semi-pastoral in that they fill in for the pastor on occasion, or support the pastor vocally during his sermon. They may also lead a special prayer service, generally known as "The deacon's Prayer." Their other roles are to accompany the pastor during Communion by handing out the remembrances of bread and wine (or grape juice) and to set a good example for others to follow. Their administrative duties sometimes include oversight of the treasury, Sunday school curriculum, transportation, and various outreach ministries.

See Baptist Distinctives for a more detailed treatment of deacons in churches in other associations, particularly the UK.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The office of deacon is generally open to all 12- and 13-year-old male members of the LDS church; all are encouraged to become deacons. Duties include:

  • Gather fast offerings.
  • Pass the sacrament.
  • Serve as the bishop's messenger.
  • Care for the grounds and physical facilities of the church.
  • Assist in service projects or welfare assignments as assigned by the bishop.
  • Watch over the church and act as standing ministers (see D&C 84:111).
  • Be involved in missionary and reactivation efforts (see D&C 20:58–59).
  • Assist teachers in all their duties as needed (see D&C 20:53, 57).

Church of Christ

In accordance with Church of Christ doctrine and practice, only males may serve as deacons (deaconesses are not recognized), and must meet Biblical qualifications (generally I Timothy 3:8-13 is the Biblical text used to determine if a male is qualified to serve as deacon). A deacon may also be qualified to serve as an elder (and, in fact, may move into that role after a period of time if his service as deacon is considered acceptable).

The role of the deacon varies, depending on the local congregation. Generally a deacon will have responsibility for a specific non-spiritual function (e.g. finance, building and grounds, benevolence); however, the deacons (like the rest of the congregation) are under the subjection of the elders, who have spiritual and administrative authority over the deacon's function.

In congregations which lack qualified elders (where, in their absence, the men of the congregation handle leadership duties), often there also are no deacons, as they are usually appointed by the elders of the church.

New Apostolic Church

In the New Apostolic Church, the deacon ministry is a local ministry. A deacon mostly works in his home congregation to support the priests. If a priest is unavailable, a deacon will hold a divine service, without the act of communion (Only priests and up can consecrate holy communion).

Iglesia ni Cristo

Iglesia ni Cristo's deacons serve as worship service's strict etiquette checkers in male's seatings, deaconesses are their female counterparts. They also serve as offering collectors and other church duties during worship services. Deacons are required to be married people of strong faith and good example. There is also a head deacon, who leads the congregation in prayer before the sermon and the prayer for voluntary offerings. They were also can be promoted to Bishops, if they are faithful to the rules.

Jehovah's Witnesses

Deacons among Jehovah's Witnesses are referred to as ministerial servants, claiming it preferable to translate the descriptive Greek term used in the Bible rather than merely transliterate it as though it were a title.[37] Appointed ministerial servants aid elders in congregational duties. Like the elders, they are adult baptized males[38] and serve voluntarily.[39]

Quakers

Deacons in the structure of most meetings of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) are called overseers. This is not an ordained role but rather a temporary ministry that is discerned every three years. They are responsible for coordinating pastoral care within a community while elders (the equivalent of the Biblical presbyterate) take care of the spiritual concerns of the meeting. Other names include "pastoral care" or "care and counsel".

Deaconesses

 
Saint Stephen, detail of the bishops and deacons windows by Józef Mehoffer in the cathedral of Fribourg

The title "woman deacon" or "deaconess" appears in many documents from the early church period, particularly in the East. Their duties were often different from that of male deacons; women deacons prepared adult women for baptism and they had a general apostolate to female Christians and catechumens (typically for the sake of modesty).[40] Women appear to have been ordained as deacons to serve the larger community until about the 6th century in the West.[41] Liturgies for the ordination of women deacons had similarities with as well as differences from those for male deacons.[42] Opinions on the sacramental nature of the ordination vary: some scholars argue that the ordination of women deacons would have been equally sacramental to that of male deacons,[43] while others say that women deacons of history were not sacramentally ordained in the full sense, as determined in the Catholic Church by Canons 1008 and 1009 of the Code of Canon Law.[44]

The Catholic Church presently does not recognise the validity of female ordinations, be it to the diaconate or any other clerical order. In August 2016, the Catholic Church established a Study Commission on the Women's Diaconate to study the history of female deacons and to study the possibility of ordaining women as deacons.[45] Until today, the Armenian Apostolic Church is still ordaining religious sisters as deaconesses, the last monastic deaconess was Sister Hripsime Sasounian (died in 2007) and on 25 September 2017, Ani-Kristi Manvelian a twenty-four-year-old woman was ordained in Tehran's St. Sarkis Mother Church as the first lay deaconess after many centuries.[46] The Russian Orthodox Church had a female subdiaconate into the 20th century. The Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church of Greece restored a monastic female subdiaconate in 2004.[47] And on 16 November 2016, the Holy Synod of the Greek Orthodox patriarchate of Alexandria also restored the female diaconate, actually for subdeaconesses only.[48]

Cognates

The Greek word diakonos (διάκονος) gave rise to the following terms from the history of Russia, not to be confused with each other: "dyak", "podyachy", "dyachok", in addition to "deacon" and "protodeacon".

Scots usage

In Scots, the title deacon is used for a head-workman, a master or chairman of a trade guild, or one who is adept, expert and proficient. The term deaconry refers to the office of a deacon or the trade guild under a deacon".

The most famous holder of this title was Deacon Brodie, who was a cabinet-maker and president of the Incorporation of Wrights and Masons as well as being a Burgh councillor of Edinburgh but at night led a double life as a burglar. He is thought to have inspired the story of The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ . The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.). Bartleby. 2000. Archived from the original on 25 January 2009. Retrieved 17 August 2008.
  2. ^ Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1889). An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-910206-6. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
  3. ^ Acts 6
  4. ^   Thurston, Herbert (1913). "Deacons". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
  5. ^ Hopko, Thomas. . Archived from the original on 21 October 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
  6. ^ Romans 16:1–2
  7. ^ a b Madigan, Kevin (2011). Ordained Women in the Early Church. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-8018-7932-6.
  8. ^ 1 Timothy 3:1–13
  9. ^ "Deacon, Deaconess - Baker's Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology Online".
  10. ^ Acts 8:26–40
  11. ^ a b c d e "Ministry and Ministries". Church of Sweden. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  12. ^ . Archdiocese of Newark. Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
  13. ^ Charles M. Wilson. . Archived from the original on 21 June 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  14. ^ Latona, Mike (2 May 2022). "Diocese of Rochester deacons guide potential candidates". Catholic Courier. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 February 2008. Retrieved 9 March 2008.
  16. ^ Canon 281 § 3.
  17. ^ Details about the permanent diaconate in the United States are outlined in a 2005 document of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, National Directory for the Formation, Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons in the United States. url=
  18. ^ "Divine Worship". www.usccb.org. from the original on 6 August 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  19. ^ Pope Paul VI (18 June 1967). "Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem". www.vatican.va. from the original on 27 October 2014. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  20. ^ (National Directory for the Formation, Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons in the United States, 2005, p. 36)
  21. ^ "Deacon Trinidad Soc", Church of Our Lady of Sorrows, bulletin, May 3, 2015, p. [1].
  22. ^ The Official Catholic Directory 2013, A-30
  23. ^ Hall, Christine (1992). The Deacon's Ministry. Gracewing Publishing. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-85244-182-4. deacons are usually only required to pray Morning and Evening Prayer.
  24. ^ "Etiquette and Protocol". Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. from the original on 2 April 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2009.
  25. ^ The Diocese of Sheffield, Distinctive Deacons, accessed 31 May 2022
  26. ^ a b Kimber, G., What is a Distinctive Deacon? Answering some questions, CofE Network of Distinctive Deacons, accessed 31 May 2022
  27. ^ "The Christian Faith: Ch 63 – Ordination – (2) As a Sacrament". www.katapi.org.uk. from the original on 29 December 2016. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  28. ^ CofE Network of Distinctive Deacons, About the Network, accessed 30 May 2022
  29. ^ . General Board of Higher Education and Ministry – The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on 23 February 2017. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  30. ^ The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church, 2008, para. 328
  31. ^ . Methodist Diaconal Order. Archived from the original on 27 December 2013. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  32. ^ a b . Methodist Diaconal Order. Archived from the original on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  33. ^ . The Methodist Church of Southern Africa. Archived from the original on 23 February 2017.
  34. ^ Apple, David S. (2005). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2013.
  35. ^ . www.pcaac.org. Archived from the original on 7 October 2017. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  36. ^ McCaughey, J.D. Commentary on the Basis of Union, Uniting Church Press: Melbourne, 1980.
  37. ^ "Questions From Readers", The Watchtower, June 15, 1962, pp. 383−84, "The religious words or titles 'bishop' and 'deacon' are simply words that have been more or less closely transliterated into the English language; that is, they are carried over much like the way they appear in the Greek instead of being translated. These two words are epískopos and diákonos. ...However, at an early time the apostate church made titles out of these designations and applied them to men who held positions...known as 'bishops' and 'deacons'. ...New World Translation as well as certain others, such as An American Translation, do not render epískopos and diákonos as titles but according to the meaning of the words, as 'overseers' or 'superintendents' and as 'assistants' or 'ministerial servants'." [emphasis retained from original]
  38. ^ "Those 'Acquiring a Fine Standing'", Our Kingdom Ministry, September 1978, p. 1, "The Bible sets high standards for a ministerial servant. (1 Tim. 3:8–10, 12) Brothers recommended should clearly be meeting these. Becoming a ministerial servant is no routine thing; it is not as if almost every adult, baptized male should have the position as a sort of titleholder. Ministerial servants should be exemplary, spiritual men."
  39. ^ "Congregations for Building Up in Love and Unity", Doing God's Will, 1986 Watch Tower, p. 12, "As in the first century, so today, qualified, mature, and experienced Christian men are designated as elders, or overseers [among Jehovah's Witnesses]. These supervise the congregation and look after its spiritual needs. They are assisted by other faithful men known as ministerial servants. These men receive no salary or other financial benefit but serve voluntarily, meeting their own expenses"
  40. ^ John Wijngaards, The Tasks of Women Deacons url=. Archived from the original on 25 November 2011. Retrieved 2 March 2011. and Duane L.C.M. Galles, Women Deacons – Are they Possible? url="Duane L.C.M. Galles". from the original on 21 June 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  41. ^ Matthew Smythe, Deaconesses in Late Antique Gaul url=. Archived from the original on 25 November 2011. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
  42. ^ Thurston, Herbert (1908). "Deaconesses". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. IV. New York: Robert Appleton Company. from the original on 26 May 2007. Retrieved 23 June 2007.
  43. ^ R. Gryson, The Ministry of Women in the Early Church (Collegeville 1976, p. 120); C.Vagaggini "L'Ordinazione delle diaconesse nella tradizione greca e bizantina", (Orientalia Christiana Periodica 40 (1974) 145–89; here p. 188); P. Hünermann, "Conclusions regarding the Female Diaconate" (Theological Studies 36 (1975) 325–33; here pp. 327–28); A Thiermeyer, "Der Diakonat der Frau" (Theologisch Quartalschrift 173 (1993) 226–36; here pp. 233–34); P. Hofrichter, "Diakonat und Frauen im kirchlichen Amt" (Heiliger Dienst 50 (1996) 140–58; esp. 152–54); A. Jensen, "Das Amt der Diakonin in der kirchlichen Tradition der ersten Jahrtausend" (Diakonat. Ein Amt für Frauen in der Kirche – Ein frauengerechtes Amt?, Ostfildern 1997, pp. 33–52; here p. 49); D. Ansorge, "Der Diakonat der Frau. Zum gegenwärtigen Forschungsstand" in T.Berger/A.Gerhards (ed.), Liturgie und Frauenfrage, St. Odilien 1990, 31–65; here pp. 46–47; Chr. Böttigheimer, "Der Diakonat der Frau" (Münchener Theologische Zeitschrift 47 (1996) 253–66; here pp. 261–62); K. Karidoyanes Fitzgerald (Women Deacons in the Orthodox Church, Brookline 1998, pp. 120–21); P. Zagano, Holy Saturday. An Argument for the Restoration of the Female Diaconate in the Catholic Church (New York 2000, pp. 98–102); D. Reininger, Diakonat der Frau in der einen Kirche (Ostfildern 1999, p. 126); G. Macy, W.T. Ditewig, P. Zagano Women Deacons: Past, Present, Future (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press 2010); and J. Wijngaards, Women Deacons in the Early Church. Historical Texts and Contemporary Debates (Herder & Herder, New York 2002).
  44. ^ Aimé Georges Martimort, Deaconesses: An Historical Study (Ignatius Press, 1986, ISBN 0-89870-114-7)
  45. ^ . ncronline.org. 2 August 2016. Archived from the original on 7 April 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  46. ^ Tchilingirian, Hratch (16 January 2018). "Historic Ordination: Tehran Prelacy of the Armenian Church Ordains Deaconess". The Armenian Weekly. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
  47. ^ Zagano, Phyllis (7 February 2005). (PDF). America Magazine. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  48. ^ "-- [ Greek Orthodox ] --". www.patriarchateofalexandria.com. Retrieved 22 November 2020.

References

Church of Christ

  • Introducing the Church of Christ. Star Bible Publications, Fort Worth, Texas 76182.
  • Evangelicalism & the Stone-Campbell Movement (William R. Baker, ed. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2002) for essays on Church of Christ ecclesiology.
  • Thatcher, Tom; "The Deacon in the Pauline Church" in Christ's Victorious Church: Essays on Biblical Ecclesiology and Eschatology (Jon A. Weatherly, ed. Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2001).

Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church

    Lutheran Church

    • Concordia Deaconess Conference

    deacon, this, article, about, office, christian, churches, other, uses, disambiguation, deacon, member, diaconate, office, christian, churches, that, generally, associated, with, service, some, kind, which, varies, among, theological, denominational, tradition. This article is about the office in Christian churches For other uses see Deacon disambiguation A deacon is a member of the diaconate an office in Christian churches that is generally associated with service of some kind but which varies among theological and denominational traditions Major Christian churches such as the Catholic Church the Oriental Orthodox Churches the Eastern Orthodox Church the Scandinavian Lutheran Churches the Methodist Churches the Anglican Communion and the Free Church of England view the diaconate as an order of ministry Saint Stephen one of the first seven deacons in the Christian Church holding a Gospel Book in a 1601 painting by Giacomo Cavedone Contents 1 Origin and development 2 Mainline Christian traditions 2 1 Latin Catholicism 2 2 Eastern Orthodoxy and Eastern Catholicism 2 3 Lutheranism 2 4 Anglicanism 2 5 Methodist churches 3 Reformed churches 3 1 Church of Scotland 3 2 Presbyterian churches 3 3 Dutch Reformed churches 3 4 Uniting Church in Australia 4 Other traditions 4 1 Amish 4 2 Church of the Brethren 4 3 Baptists 4 4 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 4 5 Church of Christ 4 6 New Apostolic Church 4 7 Iglesia ni Cristo 4 8 Jehovah s Witnesses 4 9 Quakers 5 Deaconesses 6 Cognates 7 Scots usage 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 10 1 Church of Christ 10 2 Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church 10 3 Lutheran ChurchOrigin and development EditThe word deacon is derived from the Greek word diakonos diakonos 1 which is a standard ancient Greek word meaning servant waiting man minister or messenger 2 It is generally assumed that the office of deacon originated in the selection of seven men by the apostles among them Stephen to assist with the charitable work of the early church as recorded in Acts of the Apostles chapter 6 3 4 5 The Greek word diakonissa diakonissa meaning deaconess is not found in the Bible However one woman Phoebe is mentioned at Romans 16 1 2 6 as a deacon or deaconess diakonos diakonos of the church in Cenchreae Nothing more specific is said about her duties or authority although it is assumed she carried Paul s Letter to the Romans Female deacons are mentioned by the Roman author Pliny the Younger in a letter to the Roman emperor Trajan dated c 112 I believed it was necessary to find out from two female slaves ex duabus ancillis who were called deacons ministrae what was true and to find out through torture per tormenta 7 This is the earliest Latin text that appears to refer to female deacons as a distinct category of Christian minister 7 A biblical description of the qualities required of a deacon can be found in 1 Timothy 3 1 13 8 9 Among the more prominent deacons in history are Stephen the first Christian martyr the protomartyr Philip whose baptism of the Ethiopian eunuch is recounted in Acts 8 26 40 10 Phoebe who is mentioned in the Letter to the Romans Lawrence an early Roman martyr Vincent of Saragossa protomartyr of Spain Francis of Assisi founder of the mendicant Franciscans Ephrem the Syrian Romanos the Melodist a prominent early hymnographerProminent historical figures who played major roles as deacons and went on to higher office include Athanasius of Alexandria Thomas Becket and Reginald Pole On June 8 536 a serving Roman deacon was raised to Pope Silverius The diaconate has been retained as a separate vocation in Eastern Christianity while in Western Christianity it was largely used in cathedrals and as a temporary step along the path toward priestly ordination In the 20th century the diaconate was restored as a vocational order in many Western churches most notably in the Catholic Church the Anglican Communion and the United Methodist Church Mainline Christian traditions EditIn the Catholic Scandinavian Lutheran Anglican Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches the diaconate is one of the major orders the others being bishop presbyter priest and historically subdeacon 11 Deacons assist priests in their pastoral and administrative duties but often report directly to the bishops of their diocese They have a distinctive role in the liturgy of the Eastern and Western Churches Latin Catholicism Edit Beginning around the fifth century there was a gradual decline in the diaconate as a permanent state of life in the Latin Church 12 The development of a cursus honorum sequence of offices found men entering the clerical state through tonsure then ordination to the minor orders of lector porter exorcist acolyte before ordination to the major orders of sub deacon and deacon all stages on the path to priesthood Only men destined for priesthood were permitted to be ordained deacons As seminaries developed following the Council of Trent to contemporary times the only men ordained as deacons were seminarians who were completing the last year or so of graduate theological training so called transitional deacons Following the recommendations of the Second Vatican Council Lumen gentium 29 and the instigation of the Josephites whose work with African Americans necessitated increased vocational opportunity for married men in 1967 Pope Paul VI issued the motu proprio Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem reviving the practice of ordaining to the diaconate men who were not candidates for priestly ordination These men are known as permanent deacons in contrast to those continuing their formation who were then called transitional deacons There is no sacramental or canonical difference between the two however as there is only one order of deacons 13 The period of formation to the permanent diaconate varies from diocese to diocese as determined by the local ordinary but it usually entails a period of prayerful preparation and several years of study 14 Diaconal candidates receive instruction in philosophy theology study of the Bible homiletics sacramental studies evangelization ecclesiology counseling and pastoral care and ministry before ordination They may be assigned to work in a parish by the diocesan bishop where they are under the supervision of the parish pastors or in diocesan ministries 15 Unlike most clerics permanent deacons who also have a secular profession have no right to receive a salary for their ministry 16 but many dioceses opt to remunerate them anyway 17 During the mass the deacon s responsibilities include assisting the priest proclaiming the Gospel announcing the General Intercessions and distributing Communion They may also preach the homily 18 As clerics deacons are required to pray the Liturgy of the Hours Deacons like priests and bishops are ordinary ministers of the sacrament of Baptism and may witness at the sacrament of holy matrimony outside of mass Deacons may lead funeral rites outside mass such as the final commendation at the gravesite or the reception of the body at a service in the funeral home and may assist the priest at the requiem mass They can also preside over various services such as Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament and they may give certain blessings While in ancient history their tasks and competencies varied today deacons cannot hear confession and give absolution anoint the sick or celebrate mass Ornately embroidered dalmatic the proper vestment of the deacon shown from the back with an appareled amice The vestments most particularly associated with the Western Rite Catholic deacon are the alb stole and dalmatic Deacons like priests and bishops must wear their albs and stoles deacons place the stole over their left shoulder and it hangs across to their right side while priests and bishops wear it around their necks The dalmatic a vestment especially associated with the deacon is worn during the celebration of the mass and other liturgical functions its use is more liberally applied than the corresponding vestment of the priest the chasuble At certain major celebrations such as ordinations the diocesan bishop wears a dalmatic under his chasuble to signify that he enjoys the fullness of the three degrees of holy orders deacon priest and bishop A Catholic deacon wearing his dalmatic and birettaThe diaconate is conferred on seminarians continuing to the priesthood no sooner than 23 years of age canon 1031 of the Code of Canon Law As a permanent state the diaconate can be conferred on single men 25 or older and on married men 35 or older but an older age can be required by the episcopal conference 19 If a married deacon is widowed he must maintain the celibate state Under some very rare circumstances however deacons who have been widowed can receive permission to remarry This is most commonly done when the deacon is left as a single father In some cases a widowed deacon will seek priestly ordination especially if his children are grown 20 A deacon is not styled Father as a priest would be but as Deacon 21 abbreviated variously as Dn or Dcn This preferred method of address is stated in the 2005 document of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops National Directory for the Formation Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons in the United States The proper address in written correspondence for all deacons of the Latin Roman Rite Catholic Church in the United States is Deacon Name 22 although it is not uncommon to see Rev Mr sometimes used Rev Mr however is more often used to indicate a transitional deacon i e preparing for ordination to the priesthood or one who belongs to a religious institute while Rev Deacon is used as the honorific for permanent deacons in many dioceses e g Rev Deacon John Smith or Deacon John Smith The decision as to whether deacons wear the Roman collar as street attire is left to the discretion of each bishop for his own diocese Where clerical garb is approved by the bishop the deacon can choose to wear or not wear the collar citation needed Deacons like seminarians religious and the two other orders bishops and priests pray the Liturgy of the Hours however deacons are usually only required to pray morning and evening prayer 23 Eastern Orthodoxy and Eastern Catholicism Edit Greek Orthodox deacon in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem wearing an orarion over his sticharion On his head he wears the clerical kamilavka Syrian Orthodox deacon with the Orarion above the alb a censer and the Gospel In addition to proclaiming the Gospel and assisting in the distribution of holy communion the deacon censes the icons and people calls the people to prayer leads the litanies and has a role in the dialogue of the anaphora In keeping with Eastern tradition he is not permitted to perform any sacred mysteries sacraments on his own except for Baptism in extremis in danger of death conditions under which anyone including the laity may baptize When assisting at a normal baptism it is often the deacon who goes down into the water with the one being baptized Acts 8 38 In contrast to the Roman Catholic Church deacons in the Eastern Churches may not preside at the celebration of marriages as in Eastern theology the sacrament is conferred by the nuptial blessing of a priest Diaconal vestments are the sticharion dalmatic the orarion deacon s stole and the epimanikia cuffs The last are worn under his sticharion not over it as does a priest or bishop The deacon usually wears a simple orarion which is only draped over the left shoulder but if elevated to the rank of archdeacon he wears the doubled orarion meaning it is passed over the left shoulder under the right arm and then crossed over the left shoulder see photograph right In modern Greek practice a deacon wears this doubled orarion from the time of his ordination Also in the Greek practice he wears the clerical kamilavka cylindrical head covering with a rim at the top In Slavic practice a hierodeacon monastic deacon wears the simple black kamilavka of a monk without the rim but he removes the monastic veil see klobuk when he is vested a married deacon would not wear a kamilavka unless it is given to him by the bishop as an ecclesiastical award the honorary kamilavka is purple in colour and may be awarded to either married or monastic clergy As far as street clothing is concerned immediately following his ordination the deacon receives a blessing to wear the exorasson Arabic Jib be Slavonic riassa an outer cassock with wide sleeves in addition to the anterion Slavonic podraznik the inner cassock worn by all orders of clergy In the Slavic practice married clergy may wear any of a number of colours but most often grey while monastic clergy always wear black In certain jurisdictions in North America and Western Europe a Roman collar is often worn although this is not a traditional or widespread practice A protodeacon Greek prwtodiakonos protodiakonos first deacon is a distinction of honor awarded to senior deacons usually serving on the staff of the diocesan bishop An archdeacon is similar but is among the monastic clergy Protodeacons and archdeacons use a double length orarion even if it is not the local tradition for all deacons to use it In the Slavic tradition a deacon may be awarded the doubled orarion even if he is not a protodeacon or archdeacon Painting of a Russian Orthodox deacon leading an ektenia litany According to the practice of the Greek Orthodox Church of America in keeping with the tradition of the Ecumenical Patriarchate the most common way to address a deacon is Father 24 Depending on local tradition deacons are addressed as either Father Father Deacon Deacon Father or if addressed by a bishop simply as Deacon The tradition of kissing the hands of ordained clergy extends to the diaconate as well This practice is rooted in the holy eucharist and is in acknowledgement and respect of the eucharistic role members of the clergy play in preparing handling and disbursing the sacrament during the Divine Liturgy and in building and serving the church as the Body of Christ Anciently the Eastern churches ordained women as deaconesses This practice fell into desuetude in the second millennium but has been revived in some Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches Nectarios of Aegina ordained a number of nuns as deaconesses in convents Deaconesses would assist in anointing and baptising women and in ministering to the spiritual needs of the women of the community As churches discontinued ordaining women as deacons these duties largely fell to the nuns and to the priests wives Lutheranism Edit In the Lutheran Churches of the Scandinavian tradition there is a threefold ministry of bishops priests and deacons 11 Until the 1960s deacons in the Church of Sweden were required to be celibate 11 For deacons vows made at ordination involve seeking and helping anyone in bodily or spiritual need defending the rights of all standing beside the oppressed and exhorting God s people to all good works so that the love of God is made visible in the world 11 An ordained deacon s charism includes visits helps and supports those in bodily or spiritual need gives Christian nurture and teaching in the faith is a sign of merciful kindness in the parish and society at large and in all things serves Christ in the neighbour 11 Anglicanism Edit An Anglican priest vested as a deacon with an alb and a purple stole over his left shoulder In Anglican churches including the Free Church of England deacons are permitted to marry freely before or after ordination as are Anglican priests Most deacons are transitional that is preparing for the priesthood and they are usually ordained priests about a year after their diaconal ordination However there are some deacons who do not go on to receive priestly ordination recognising a vocation to remain in the diaconate A permanent deacon is also known as a distinctive deacon or a vocational deacon 25 26 Many provinces of the Anglican Communion ordain both women and men as deacons Many of those provinces that ordain women to the priesthood previously allowed them to be ordained only to the diaconate The effect of this was the creation of a large and overwhelmingly female diaconate for a time as most men proceeded to be ordained priests after a short time as a deacon Certificate of ordination as a deacon in the Church of England given by Richard Terrick the Bishop of London to Gideon Bostwick February 24 1770 Anglican deacons may baptize and in some dioceses are granted licences to solemnize matrimony usually under the instruction of their parish priest and bishop Deacons are not able to preside at the eucharist but can lead worship with the distribution of already consecrated communion elements where this is permitted nor can they pronounce God s absolution of sin or pronounce the Trinitarian blessing 27 In most cases deacons minister alongside other clergy An Anglican deacon wears an identical choir dress to an Anglican priest cassock surplice tippet and academic hood However liturgically deacons usually wear a stole over their left shoulder and fastened on the right side of their waist This is worn both over the surplice and the alb A deacon might also wear a dalmatic Church of England deacons are supported through the CofE Network of Distinctive Deacons CENDD 26 Bishop James Newcome of Carlisle is the Distinctive Deacons Champion in the House of Bishops 28 Methodist churches Edit In Methodism deacons began as a transitional order before ordination as elders presbyters In 1996 the United Methodist Church ended the transitional deacon and established a new Order of Deacons to be equal in status with the Order of Elders Both men and women may be ordained as deacons Deacons serve in a variety of specialized ministries including but not limited to Christian education music communications and ministries of justice and advocacy Unlike United Methodist elders deacons must find their own place of service Nevertheless the bishop does officially approve and appoint deacons to their selected ministry 29 Deacons may assist the elder in the administration of Sacraments but must receive special approval from a bishop before presiding over Baptism and holy communion 30 United Methodist deacons are present in North America Europe and Africa The Methodist Church of Great Britain also has a permanent diaconate based on an understanding of the New Testament that deacons have an equal but distinct ministry from presbyters Deacons are called to a ministry of service and witness and to hold before them the needs and concerns of the world The Methodist Diaconal Order is both an order of ministry and a religious order within the Methodist Church in Britain It was formed in 1989 as a successor to the Wesley Deaconess Order and is open to both women and men Diaconal ministry is one of two ordained ministries within the Methodist Church 31 The original Wesleyan Deaconess Order was founded by Thomas Bowman Stephenson in 1890 following observation of new ministries in urban areas in the previous years 32 The order continued as the Wesley Deaconess Order following Methodist Union in 1932 but following the admission of women to The Ministry as presbyteral ministry is commonly termed in the Methodist Church a number of deaconesses transferred and recruitment for the WDO ceased from 1978 The 1986 Methodist Conference re opened the order to both men and women and the first ordinations to the renewed order occurred during the 1990 Conference in Cardiff which coincided with celebrations of 100 years of diaconal service in British Methodism deaconesses had previously been ordained at their annual convocation 32 The Methodist Church of Southern Africa ordains deacons who constitute a diaconal order similar to that in the British church 33 Reformed churches EditChurch of Scotland Edit There are two distinct offices of deacon in the Church of Scotland The best known form of diaconate are trained and paid pastoral workers The permanent diaconate was formerly exclusively female and it was in 1988 the centenary year of the diaconate that men were admitted to the office of deacon The offices of deacon and minister are now both open to both women and men deacons are now ordained they were previously commissioned The other office of deacon can be found in congregations formerly belonging to the pre 1900 Free Church of Scotland with a Deacons Court having responsibility for financial and administrative oversight of congregations Only a few congregations still retain this constitutional model with most having since adopted the Church of Scotland s Model Constitution with a Kirk Session and Congregational Board or Unitary Congregation with just a Kirk Session Most of the Free Church congregations united with the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland in 1900 creating the United Free Church of Scotland which itself united with the Church of Scotland in 1929 The congregations of the post 1900 Free Church of Scotland which did not join the UF Church in 1900 continue to have Deacons Presbyterian churches Edit One of John Calvin s legacies was to restore the diaconate as a servant ministry 34 Individual congregations of the various Presbyterian denominations such as the Presbyterian Church USA Presbyterian Church in America and Orthodox Presbyterian Church also elect deacons along with elders However in some churches the property functions of the diaconate and session of elders is commended to an independent board of trustees 35 Dutch Reformed churches Edit In many Dutch Reformed churches deacons are charged with ministries of mercy As such the deacons are also members of the local church council A special feature of the Dutch Reformed churches is the fact that the diaconate of each local church is its own legal entity with its own financial means separated from the church itself and governed by the deacons Uniting Church in Australia Edit In the Uniting Church in Australia the diaconate is one of two offices of ordained ministry The other is Minister of the Word Deacons in the Uniting Church are called to minister to those on the fringes of the church and be involved in ministry in the community Deacons offer leadership in a ministry of service to the world The primary focus of the ministry of deacons is on care and compassion for the poor and oppressed and in seeking social justice for all people They take both an active role in leadership in such actions themselves but are also play a key role in encouraging other Uniting Church members in similar action Some examples of service that deacons may take include prison chaplaincy acting as youth or community workers in community service agencies in schools and hospitals or in mission placements in Australia or overseas Although the primary responsibility for worship in congregations lies with the Ministers of the Word deacons have a liturgical role appropriate to their distinctive ministry including ministries where their main leadership is within a congregation In the Uniting Church both ministers of the word and deacons are styled The Reverend The Uniting Church has recognised deacons since union but it was not until the 6th Assembly in 1991 that the Uniting Church began ordaining deacons This was partly because the historical theological and sociological roles of deaconesses and deacons was being widely discussed in Churches throughout the world at the time that the Basis of Union was being drafted 36 Other traditions EditDeacons are also appointed or elected in other denominations though this is less commonly seen as a step towards the clerical ministry The role of deacon in these denominations varies greatly from denomination to denomination often there will be more emphasis on administrative duties than on pastoral or liturgical duties In some denominations deacons duties are only financial management and practical aid and relief Elders handle pastoral and other administrative duties Amish Edit The Amish have deacons they are elected by a council and receive no formal training Church of the Brethren Edit The Church of the Brethren also have deacons as do other Brethren denominations They are elected by the congregation to serve in ministries of compassion They are elected for life in some congregations Baptists Edit Baptists traditionally recognize two ordained positions in the church elders pastors and deacons as per 1 Timothy 3 Some Baptist churches in the Reformed tradition recognize elder and pastor as separate offices Baptists have traditionally practised congregationalism giving each church the ability to discern for themselves the interpretation of scripture Thus Baptist churches hold a wide variety of views on the qualifications and activities of deacons some Baptist churches have the deacons decide many of the church affairs while others have deacons in serving roles only The predominant view among Baptist churches especially theologically conservative ones including the majority of Southern Baptist and Independent Baptist churches is that a deacon must be a male and married or a widower and not divorced previously If a deacon subsequently divorces he must relinquish his office but if his wife dies he may continue to serve However there are Baptist churches where women are allowed to be deacons or deaconesses primarily in the United Kingdom and in the United States among African American and theologically moderate churches In the General Association of Regular Baptist Churches deacons can be any adult male member of the congregation who is in good standing In some African American Missionary Baptist churches and in churches affiliated with the National Baptist Convention USA Inc male and female deacons serve as one board Other churches may have two separate boards of deacons and deaconesses Most often the deacon or deacon candidate is a long standing member of the church being middle aged but younger deacons may be selected from among members of a family that has had several generations in the same church They are elected by quorum vote annually Their roles are semi pastoral in that they fill in for the pastor on occasion or support the pastor vocally during his sermon They may also lead a special prayer service generally known as The deacon s Prayer Their other roles are to accompany the pastor during Communion by handing out the remembrances of bread and wine or grape juice and to set a good example for others to follow Their administrative duties sometimes include oversight of the treasury Sunday school curriculum transportation and various outreach ministries See Baptist Distinctives for a more detailed treatment of deacons in churches in other associations particularly the UK The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Edit Main article Deacon Latter Day Saints The office of deacon is generally open to all 12 and 13 year old male members of the LDS church all are encouraged to become deacons Duties include Gather fast offerings Pass the sacrament Serve as the bishop s messenger Care for the grounds and physical facilities of the church Assist in service projects or welfare assignments as assigned by the bishop Watch over the church and act as standing ministers see D amp C 84 111 Be involved in missionary and reactivation efforts see D amp C 20 58 59 Assist teachers in all their duties as needed see D amp C 20 53 57 Church of Christ Edit In accordance with Church of Christ doctrine and practice only males may serve as deacons deaconesses are not recognized and must meet Biblical qualifications generally I Timothy 3 8 13 is the Biblical text used to determine if a male is qualified to serve as deacon A deacon may also be qualified to serve as an elder and in fact may move into that role after a period of time if his service as deacon is considered acceptable The role of the deacon varies depending on the local congregation Generally a deacon will have responsibility for a specific non spiritual function e g finance building and grounds benevolence however the deacons like the rest of the congregation are under the subjection of the elders who have spiritual and administrative authority over the deacon s function In congregations which lack qualified elders where in their absence the men of the congregation handle leadership duties often there also are no deacons as they are usually appointed by the elders of the church New Apostolic Church Edit In the New Apostolic Church the deacon ministry is a local ministry A deacon mostly works in his home congregation to support the priests If a priest is unavailable a deacon will hold a divine service without the act of communion Only priests and up can consecrate holy communion Iglesia ni Cristo Edit Iglesia ni Cristo s deacons serve as worship service s strict etiquette checkers in male s seatings deaconesses are their female counterparts They also serve as offering collectors and other church duties during worship services Deacons are required to be married people of strong faith and good example There is also a head deacon who leads the congregation in prayer before the sermon and the prayer for voluntary offerings They were also can be promoted to Bishops if they are faithful to the rules Jehovah s Witnesses Edit Deacons among Jehovah s Witnesses are referred to as ministerial servants claiming it preferable to translate the descriptive Greek term used in the Bible rather than merely transliterate it as though it were a title 37 Appointed ministerial servants aid elders in congregational duties Like the elders they are adult baptized males 38 and serve voluntarily 39 Quakers Edit Deacons in the structure of most meetings of the Religious Society of Friends Quakers are called overseers This is not an ordained role but rather a temporary ministry that is discerned every three years They are responsible for coordinating pastoral care within a community while elders the equivalent of the Biblical presbyterate take care of the spiritual concerns of the meeting Other names include pastoral care or care and counsel Deaconesses EditMain article Deaconess Saint Stephen detail of the bishops and deacons windows by Jozef Mehoffer in the cathedral of Fribourg The title woman deacon or deaconess appears in many documents from the early church period particularly in the East Their duties were often different from that of male deacons women deacons prepared adult women for baptism and they had a general apostolate to female Christians and catechumens typically for the sake of modesty 40 Women appear to have been ordained as deacons to serve the larger community until about the 6th century in the West 41 Liturgies for the ordination of women deacons had similarities with as well as differences from those for male deacons 42 Opinions on the sacramental nature of the ordination vary some scholars argue that the ordination of women deacons would have been equally sacramental to that of male deacons 43 while others say that women deacons of history were not sacramentally ordained in the full sense as determined in the Catholic Church by Canons 1008 and 1009 of the Code of Canon Law 44 The Catholic Church presently does not recognise the validity of female ordinations be it to the diaconate or any other clerical order In August 2016 the Catholic Church established a Study Commission on the Women s Diaconate to study the history of female deacons and to study the possibility of ordaining women as deacons 45 Until today the Armenian Apostolic Church is still ordaining religious sisters as deaconesses the last monastic deaconess was Sister Hripsime Sasounian died in 2007 and on 25 September 2017 Ani Kristi Manvelian a twenty four year old woman was ordained in Tehran s St Sarkis Mother Church as the first lay deaconess after many centuries 46 The Russian Orthodox Church had a female subdiaconate into the 20th century The Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church of Greece restored a monastic female subdiaconate in 2004 47 And on 16 November 2016 the Holy Synod of the Greek Orthodox patriarchate of Alexandria also restored the female diaconate actually for subdeaconesses only 48 Cognates EditThe Greek word diakonos diakonos gave rise to the following terms from the history of Russia not to be confused with each other dyak podyachy dyachok in addition to deacon and protodeacon Scots usage EditIn Scots the title deacon is used for a head workman a master or chairman of a trade guild or one who is adept expert and proficient The term deaconry refers to the office of a deacon or the trade guild under a deacon The most famous holder of this title was Deacon Brodie who was a cabinet maker and president of the Incorporation of Wrights and Masons as well as being a Burgh councillor of Edinburgh but at night led a double life as a burglar He is thought to have inspired the story of The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde See also Edit Christianity portalArchdeacon Cardinal deacon Deaconess Diakonissa Protodeacon Subdeacon GabbaiFootnotes Edit deacon The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 4th ed Bartleby 2000 Archived from the original on 25 January 2009 Retrieved 17 August 2008 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1889 An Intermediate Greek English Lexicon Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 910206 6 Retrieved 18 October 2007 Acts 6 Thurston Herbert 1913 Deacons In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 18 October 2007 Hopko Thomas Holy Orders Archived from the original on 21 October 2007 Retrieved 18 October 2007 Romans 16 1 2 a b Madigan Kevin 2011 Ordained Women in the Early Church Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 8018 7932 6 1 Timothy 3 1 13 Deacon Deaconess Baker s Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology Online Acts 8 26 40 a b c d e Ministry and Ministries Church of Sweden Retrieved 12 May 2021 A Short History of the Permanent Diaconate Archdiocese of Newark Archived from the original on 26 December 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2019 Charles M Wilson A few additional observations Archived from the original on 21 June 2008 Retrieved 31 August 2008 Latona Mike 2 May 2022 Diocese of Rochester deacons guide potential candidates Catholic Courier Retrieved 12 August 2022 USCCB Diaconate FAQ Section 5 Is a Deacon ordained for the Parish or the Diocese Archived from the original on 24 February 2008 Retrieved 9 March 2008 Canon 281 3 Details about the permanent diaconate in the United States are outlined in a 2005 document of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops National Directory for the Formation Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons in the United States url 1 Divine Worship www usccb org Archived from the original on 6 August 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Pope Paul VI 18 June 1967 Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem www vatican va Archived from the original on 27 October 2014 Retrieved 26 April 2018 National Directory for the Formation Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons in the United States 2005 p 36 Deacon Trinidad Soc Church of Our Lady of Sorrows bulletin May 3 2015 p 1 The Official Catholic Directory 2013 A 30 Hall Christine 1992 The Deacon s Ministry Gracewing Publishing p 18 ISBN 978 0 85244 182 4 deacons are usually only required to pray Morning and Evening Prayer Etiquette and Protocol Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Archived from the original on 2 April 2009 Retrieved 21 March 2009 The Diocese of Sheffield Distinctive Deacons accessed 31 May 2022 a b Kimber G What is a Distinctive Deacon Answering some questions CofE Network of Distinctive Deacons accessed 31 May 2022 The Christian Faith Ch 63 Ordination 2 As a Sacrament www katapi org uk Archived from the original on 29 December 2016 Retrieved 26 April 2018 CofE Network of Distinctive Deacons About the Network accessed 30 May 2022 Deacons and Diaconal Ministers General Board of Higher Education and Ministry The United Methodist Church Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2017 The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church 2008 para 328 Deacons and Presbyters Methodist Diaconal Order Archived from the original on 27 December 2013 Retrieved 23 February 2017 a b History of the MDO Methodist Diaconal Order Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2017 The Order of Deacons The Methodist Church of Southern Africa Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 Apple David S 2005 The Role of the Deaco PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 April 2014 Retrieved 23 October 2013 Book of Church Order BCO Presbyterian Church in America Administrative Committee www pcaac org Archived from the original on 7 October 2017 Retrieved 26 April 2018 McCaughey J D Commentary on the Basis of Union Uniting Church Press Melbourne 1980 Questions From Readers The Watchtower June 15 1962 pp 383 84 The religious words or titles bishop and deacon are simply words that have been more or less closely transliterated into the English language that is they are carried over much like the way they appear in the Greek instead of being translated These two words are episkopos and diakonos However at an early time the apostate church made titles out of these designations and applied them to men who held positions known as bishops and deacons New World Translation as well as certain others such as An American Translation do not render episkopos and diakonos as titles but according to the meaning of the words as overseers or superintendents and as assistants or ministerial servants emphasis retained from original Those Acquiring a Fine Standing Our Kingdom Ministry September 1978 p 1 The Bible sets high standards for a ministerial servant 1 Tim 3 8 10 12 Brothers recommended should clearly be meeting these Becoming a ministerial servant is no routine thing it is not as if almost every adult baptized male should have the position as a sort of titleholder Ministerial servants should be exemplary spiritual men Congregations for Building Up in Love and Unity Doing God s Will 1986 Watch Tower p 12 As in the first century so today qualified mature and experienced Christian men are designated as elders or overseers among Jehovah s Witnesses These supervise the congregation and look after its spiritual needs They are assisted by other faithful men known as ministerial servants These men receive no salary or other financial benefit but serve voluntarily meeting their own expenses John Wijngaards The Tasks of Women Deacons url Untitled Document Archived from the original on 25 November 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2011 and Duane L C M Galles Women Deacons Are they Possible url Duane L C M Galles Archived from the original on 21 June 2008 Retrieved 31 August 2008 Matthew Smythe Deaconesses in Late Antique Gaul url Untitled Document Archived from the original on 25 November 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2011 Thurston Herbert 1908 Deaconesses The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol IV New York Robert Appleton Company Archived from the original on 26 May 2007 Retrieved 23 June 2007 R Gryson The Ministry of Women in the Early Church Collegeville 1976 p 120 C Vagaggini L Ordinazione delle diaconesse nella tradizione greca e bizantina Orientalia Christiana Periodica 40 1974 145 89 here p 188 P Hunermann Conclusions regarding the Female Diaconate Theological Studies 36 1975 325 33 here pp 327 28 A Thiermeyer Der Diakonat der Frau Theologisch Quartalschrift 173 1993 226 36 here pp 233 34 P Hofrichter Diakonat und Frauen im kirchlichen Amt Heiliger Dienst 50 1996 140 58 esp 152 54 A Jensen Das Amt der Diakonin in der kirchlichen Tradition der ersten Jahrtausend Diakonat Ein Amt fur Frauen in der Kirche Ein frauengerechtes Amt Ostfildern 1997 pp 33 52 here p 49 D Ansorge Der Diakonat der Frau Zum gegenwartigen Forschungsstand in T Berger A Gerhards ed Liturgie und Frauenfrage St Odilien 1990 31 65 here pp 46 47 Chr Bottigheimer Der Diakonat der Frau Munchener Theologische Zeitschrift 47 1996 253 66 here pp 261 62 K Karidoyanes Fitzgerald Women Deacons in the Orthodox Church Brookline 1998 pp 120 21 P Zagano Holy Saturday An Argument for the Restoration of the Female Diaconate in the Catholic Church New York 2000 pp 98 102 D Reininger Diakonat der Frau in der einen Kirche Ostfildern 1999 p 126 G Macy W T Ditewig P Zagano Women Deacons Past Present Future Mahwah NJ Paulist Press 2010 and J Wijngaards Women Deacons in the Early Church Historical Texts and Contemporary Debates Herder amp Herder New York 2002 Aime Georges Martimort Deaconesses An Historical Study Ignatius Press 1986 ISBN 0 89870 114 7 Francis institutes commission to study female deacons appointing gender balanced membership ncronline org 2 August 2016 Archived from the original on 7 April 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Tchilingirian Hratch 16 January 2018 Historic Ordination Tehran Prelacy of the Armenian Church Ordains Deaconess The Armenian Weekly Retrieved 6 December 2020 Zagano Phyllis 7 February 2005 Grant Her Your Spirit PDF America Magazine Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2008 Retrieved 31 August 2008 Greek Orthodox www patriarchateofalexandria com Retrieved 22 November 2020 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deacons Look up deacon in Wiktionary the free dictionary Church of Christ Edit Introducing the Church of Christ Star Bible Publications Fort Worth Texas 76182 Evangelicalism amp the Stone Campbell Movement William R Baker ed Downers Grove InterVarsity Press 2002 for essays on Church of Christ ecclesiology Thatcher Tom The Deacon in the Pauline Church in Christ s Victorious Church Essays on Biblical Ecclesiology and Eschatology Jon A Weatherly ed Eugene OR Wipf and Stock Publishers 2001 Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church Edit Deacons St Mary s Malankara Orthodox Syrian Cathedral Philadelphia PA US Lutheran Church Edit Concordia Deaconess Conference Lutheran Deaconess Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deacon amp oldid 1133128827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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