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Minister (Christianity)

In Christianity, a minister is a person authorised by a church or other religious organization to perform functions such as teaching of beliefs; leading services such as weddings, baptisms or funerals; or otherwise providing spiritual guidance to the community. The term is taken from Latin minister ("servant", "attendant").[1] In some church traditions the term is usually used for people who have been ordained, but in other traditions it can also be used for non-ordained people who have a pastoral or liturgical ministry.

A Lutheran minister wearing a Geneva gown and bands. In many churches, ministers wear distinctive clothing, called vestments, when presiding over services of worship.
A Methodist minister wearing a cassock, vested with a surplice and stole, with preaching bands attached to his clerical collar

In Catholic, Orthodox (Eastern and Oriental), Anglican and Lutheran churches, the concept of a priesthood is emphasized. In other denominations such as Baptist, Methodist and Calvinist churches (Congregationalist and Presbyterian), the term "minister" usually refers to a member of the ordained clergy who leads a congregation or participates in a role in a parachurch ministry; such a person may serve as an elder (presbyter), pastor, preacher, bishop, or chaplain.

With respect to ecclesiastical address, many ministers are styled as "The Reverend"; however, some use "Pastor" or "Father" as a title.

Roles and duties

The Church of England defines the ministry of priests as follows:

Priests are called to be servants and shepherds among the people to whom they are sent. With their Bishop and fellow ministers, they are to proclaim the word of the Lord and to watch for the signs of God's new creation. They are to be messengers, watchmen and stewards of the Lord; they are to teach and to admonish, to feed and provide for his family, to search for his children in the wilderness of this world's temptations, and to guide them through its confusions, that they may be saved through Christ forever. Formed by the word, they are to call their hearers to repentance and to declare in Christ's name the absolution and forgiveness of their sins.
With all God's people, they are to tell the story of God's love. They are to baptize new disciples in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and to walk with them in the way of Christ, nurturing them in the faith. They are to unfold the Scriptures, to preach the word in season and out of season, and to declare the mighty acts of God. They are to preside at the Lord's table and lead his people in worship, offering with them a spiritual sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. They are to bless the people in God's name. They are to resist evil, support the weak, defend the poor, and intercede for all in need. They are to minister to the sick and prepare the dying for their death. Guided by the Spirit, they are to discern and foster the gifts of all God's people, that the whole Church may be built up in unity and faith.[2]

Ministers may perform some or all of the following duties:

  • assist in co-ordinating volunteers and church community groups
  • assist in any general administrative service
  • conduct marriage ceremonies, funerals and memorial services, participate in the ordination of other clergy, and confirming young people as members of a local church
  • encourage local church endeavors
  • engage in welfare and community services activities of communities
  • establish new local churches
  • keep records as required by civil or church law
  • plan and conduct services of public worship
  • preach
  • pray and encourage others to be theocentric (that is, God-focused)
  • preside over sacraments (also called ordinances) of the church. Such as:
    • the Lord's Supper (a name derived from 1 Corinthians 11:20), also known as the Lord's Table (taken from 1 Corinthians 10:21), or Holy Communion, and
    • the Baptism of adults or children (depending on the denomination)
  • provide leadership to the congregation, parish or church community, this may be done as part of a team with lay people in roles such as elders
  • refer people to community support services, psychologists or doctors
  • research and study religion, Scripture and theology
  • supervise prayer and discussion groups, retreats and seminars, and provide religious instruction
  • teach on spiritual and theological subjects
  • train leaders for church, community and youth leadership
  • work on developing relationships and networks within the religious community
  • provide pastoral care in various contexts
  • provide personal support to people in crises, such as illness, bereavement and family breakdown
  • visit the sick and elderly to counsel and comfort them and their families
  • administer Last Rites when designated to do so[3]
  • the first style of ministering is the player coach style. In this style, the pastor is a "participant in all the processes that the church uses to reach people and see them transformed
  • the second style of ministering is the delegating style, in which the minister develops members of the church to point that they can be trusted
  • the third style of ministering is the directing style where the minister gives specific instructions and then supervises the congregation closely
  • the last and fourth style of ministering is the combination style, which a minister allows directional ministering from a pastoral staff member
  • mention prayer of salvation to those interested in becoming a believer

Training and qualifications

Depending on the denomination, the requirements for ministry vary. All denominations require the minister to have a vocation, a sense of calling. In regards to training, denominations vary in their requirements, from those that emphasize natural gifts to those that also require advanced tertiary education qualifications; for example, from a seminary, theological college or university.[citation needed]

New Testament

One of the clearest references is found in 1 Timothy 3:1-16, which outlines the requirements of a bishop (episkopos: Koine Greek ἐπίσκοπος, interpreted as elder by some denominations):

This is a true saying, if a man desire the office of a bishop, he desireth a good work. A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good behaviour, given to hospitality, apt to teach; Not given to wine, no striker, not greedy of filthy lucre; but patient, not a brawler, not covetous; One that ruleth well his own house, having his children in subjection with all gravity; (For if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he take care of the church of God?) Not a novice, lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the devil. Moreover he must have a good report of them which are without; lest he fall into reproach and the snare of the devil. Likewise must the deacons be grave, not doubletongued, not given to much wine, not greedy of filthy lucre; Holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience. And let these also first be proved; then let them use the office of a deacon, being found blameless. Even so must their wives be grave, not slanderers, sober, faithful in all things. Let the deacons be the husbands of one wife, ruling their children and their own houses well.

[non-primary source needed]

Related titles and types of Christian ministries

Bishops, priests, and deacons

The Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Anglican, Lutheran, Calvinist and some Methodist churches have applied the formal, church-based leadership or an ordained clergy in matters of either the church or broader political and sociocultural import. The churches have three orders of ordained clergy:

  • Bishops are the primary clergy, administering all sacraments and governing the church.
  • Priests administer the sacraments and lead local congregations; they cannot ordain other clergy, however, nor consecrate buildings.
  • In some denominations, deacons play a non-sacramental and assisting role in the liturgy.

Until the Reformation, the clergy were the first estate but were relegated to the secular estate in Protestant Northern Europe. After compulsory celibacy was abolished during the Reformation, the formation of a partly hereditary priestly class became possible, whereby wealth and clerical positions were frequently inheritable.[citation needed] Higher positioned clergy formed this clerical educated upper class.

High Church Anglicanism and High Church Lutheranism tend to emphasise the role of the clergy in dispensing the Christian sacraments. The countries that were once a part of the Swedish Empire, i.e. Finland and the Baltics have more markedly preserved Catholic traditions and introduced far less Calvinist traditions, hence the role of bishops, priests and deacons are notably more visible.

Bishops, priests and deacons have traditionally officiated over of acts worship, reverence, rituals and ceremonies. Among these central traditions have been baptism, confirmation, penance, anointing of the sick, holy orders, marriage, the mass or the divine service, and coronations. These so-called "social rituals" have formed a part of human culture for tens of thousands of years. Anthropologists see social rituals as one of many cultural universals.

The term rector (from the Latin word for ruler) or vicar may be used for priests in certain settings, especially in the Catholic and Anglican traditions.

In the Episcopal Church in the United States, a parish, which is responsible for its own finances, is overseen by a rector. A bishop is nominally in control of a financially assisted parish but delegates authority to a vicar (related to the prefix "vice" meaning substitute or deputy).

Pastors

The term "pastor" means "shepherd" and is used several times in the New Testament to refer to church workers. Many Protestants use the term as a prenominal title (e.g., Pastor Smith) or as a job title (like Senior Pastor or Worship Pastor).[citation needed]

Clergy

The English word clergy derives from the same root as clerk and can be traced to the Latin clericus which derives from the Greek word kleros meaning a "lot" or "portion" or "office". The term Clerk in Holy Orders is still the official title for certain Christian clergy and its usage is prevalent in canon law. Holy orders refer to any recipient of the sacrament of ordination, both the major orders (bishops, priests and deacons) and the now less known minor orders (acolyte, lector, exorcist and porter) who, save for certain reforms made at the Second Vatican Council in the Roman Catholic Church, were called clerics or clerk, which is simply a shorter form of cleric. Clerics were distinguished from the laity by having received, in a formal rite of introduction into the clerical state, the tonsure or corona (crown) which involved cutting hair from the top and side of the head leaving a circlet of hair which symbolised the Crown of Thorns worn by Christ at his crucifixion.

Though Christian in origin, the term can be applied by analogy to functions in other religious traditions. For example, a rabbi can be referred to as being a clergy member.

Parson is a similar term often applied to ordained priests or ministers. The word is a variant on the English word person from the Latin persona ("mask") used as a legal term for one having jurisdiction.

Dominie, Dominee, Dom, Don

The similar words "Dominie", "Dominee" and "Dom", all derived from the Latin domine (vocative case of Dominus "Lord, Master"), are used in related contexts. Dominie, derived directly from Dutch, is used in the United States, "Dominee", derived from Dutch via Afrikaans is used in South Africa as the title of a pastor of the Dutch Reformed Church. In Scottish English dominie is generally used to mean just schoolmaster. In various Romance languages, shortened forms of Dominus (Dom, Don) are commonly used for Catholic priests (sometimes also for lay notables as well) for example Benedictine Monks are titled Dom, as in the style Dom Knight.[4][5] Dom or Dominus, as well as the English equivalent, Sir were often used as titles for priests in England up to the 17th century who held Bachelor of Arts degrees.[6]

Chaplains and padres

Chaplain as in English or almoner (preferred in many other languages) or their equivalents refer to a minister who has another type of pastoral "target group" than a territorial parish congregation (or in addition to one), such as a military units, schools and hospitals.

The Spanish word Padre ("father") is often informally used to address military chaplains, also in English and Portuguese (Brazil).

Elder

Elders (in Greek, πρεσβυτερος [presbuteros]; see Presbyter) in Christianity are involved in the collective leadership of a local church or of a denomination.

Types of ministries in non-denominational church

  • Such as men's ministry, women's ministry, youth ministry, kids ministry, singles and campus ministries, married couples ministry, because it gives each congregation member of different backgrounds and age groups to have a chance to fellowship with people in a closer life group to them.[citation needed]

Leaders and pastoral agents

Lay people, volunteers, pastoral agents, community leaders are responsible to bring teaching the gospel in the forefront helping the clergy to evangelize people. Agents ramify in many ways to act and be in touch with the people in daily life and developing religious projects, socio-political and infrastructural.[citation needed]

  • Jehovah's Witnesses consider every baptized Witness to be a "minister"; the religion permits any qualified baptized adult male to perform a baptism, funeral, or wedding.[7] Typically, however, each such service is performed by an elder or a "ministerial servant" (that is, a deacon), one of the men appointed to "take the lead" in local congregations. Witnesses do not use "elder" or any other term as a title, and do not capitalize the term.[8] They do not accept payment and are not salaried employees or considered "paid clergy". They support themselves financially. Appointments are made directly by Circuit Overseers under the authority of the local Branch, and Governing Body; appointment is said to be "by holy spirit" because "the qualifications [are] recorded in God's spirit-inspired Word" and because appointing committees "pray for holy spirit".[9]
  • In many evangelical churches a group (multiple elders as opposed to a single elder)[10][non-primary source needed] of (non-staff) elders serve as the spiritual "shepherds" or caretakers of the congregation,[11][non-primary source needed] usually giving spiritual direction to the pastoral staff, enforcing church discipline, etc. In some denominations these elders are called by other names, i.e.; traditionally "Deacons" in many Baptist churches function as spiritual leaders.[12] In some cases these elders are elected and serve fixed terms. In other cases they are not elected but rather they are "recognized by the congregation as those appointed by the Holy Spirit (Acts 20:28) and meeting the qualifications of 1 Timothy 3:1-7."[13]

Monsignor

Monsignor is an ecclesiastical title of honor bestowed on some priests.[citation needed]

Prelate

  • A prelate is a member of the clergy having a special canonical jurisdiction over a territory or a group of people.[citation needed]
  • Usually, a prelate is a bishop. Prelate sometimes refers to the clergy of a state church with a formal hierarchy, and suggests that the prelate enjoys legal privileges and power as a result of clerical status.[citation needed]

Father

  • "Father" is a term of address for priests and deacons in some churches, especially the Catholic and Orthodox churches; it is also popular in some parts of the Anglican tradition.
  • "Padre" (Spanish word for father, used in Brazil too) is frequently used in the military of English-speaking countries.
  • A priest of the regular clergy.
  • A pre-Scholastic Christian writer accepted by the church as an authoritative witness to its teaching and practice (see Fathers of the Church: those who were not completely orthodox but nonetheless had a major impact on Christianity, such as Origen and Tertullian, are called "ecclesiastical writers" instead).
  • "Mama" is the local native language term for English speaking Anglican priests in the Anglican Church of Melanesia. It means "father" in several local languages in Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands.

Archbishop

Issues

There are contrasting views on the level of compensation given to ministers relative to the religious community. There is often an expectation that they and their families will shun ostentation. However, there are situations where they are well rewarded for successfully attracting people to their religious community or enhancing the status or power of the community.

The ordination of women has increasingly become accepted within many global religious faith groups, with some women now holding the most senior positions in these organizational hierarchies. There is disagreement between various global church denominations, and within membership of denominations, regarding whether women can be ministers. In 2021 excavations at the site of a Byzantine-era Christian basilica revealed floor mosaics which provide evidence of women serving as ministers, including deacons, in the church.[14]

There was notable contention over the issue of ordination of non-celibate gay people in the 1980s within the United Church of Canada, and in the 1990s and early 21st century within the Presbyterian Church USA. The Episcopal Church (United States), the American branch of the worldwide Anglican Communion, was as of 2016 divided over the issue of ordination of non-celibate gay people. This conflict severely damaged relationships between Anglicans in North America and in the third world, especially Africa and southeast Asia, and has caused a schism in the American Anglican church.

Styles and forms of address

In the majority of churches, ordained ministers are styled "The Reverend". However, as stated above, some are styled "Pastor" and others do not use any religious style or form of address, and are addressed as any other person, e.g. as Mr, Ms, Miss, Mrs or by name.[citation needed]

Anglican

 
An Anglican minister delivers a homily, dressed in choir habit with Canterbury cap

In Anglican churches, the style for ordained ministers varies according to their office, as below.[15][16]

  • Priests and deacons, from ordination onwards—The Reverend
  • Priests and deacons appointed as canonsThe Reverend Canon
  • Deans (or Provosts) of a cathedral church—The Very Reverend
  • Archdeacons of a diocese or region—The Venerable
  • Bishops (diocesan, suffragan, or coadjutor)—The Right Reverend
  • Archbishops (and other primate bishops)—The Most Reverend

In all cases, the formal style should be followed by a Christian name or initial, e.g. the Reverend John Smith, or the Reverend J. Smith, but never just the Reverend Smith.

These are formal styles. In normal speech (either addressing the clergy or referring to them) other forms of address are often used. For all clergy, this may include the titles "Father" (male) or "Mother" (female), particularly in the Anglo-Catholic tradition, or simply the appropriate secular title (Mister, Doctor, etc.) for that person, particularly in the Evangelical tradition; it is also increasingly common to dispense with formal addresses and titles in favour of verbal address simply by given name. Bishops may be addressed as "My Lord", and less formally as "Bishop". Similarly, archbishops may be addressed as "Your Grace", and less formally as "Archbishop". The titles "My Lord" and "Your Grace" refer to the places held by these prelates in the Church of England within the order of precedence of the state; however, the same titles are also extended to bishops and archbishops of other Anglican churches, outside England. As Anglicanism represents a broad range of theological opinion, its presbyterate includes priests who consider themselves no different in any respect from those of the Catholic Church, some parishes and dioceses in "Low Church" or Evangelical circles prefer to use the title presbyter or "minister" in order to distance themselves from the more sacrificial theological implications which they associate with the word "priest". While priest is the official term for a member of the presbyterate in every Anglican province worldwide, the ordination rite of certain provinces (including the Church of England) recognizes the breadth of opinion by adopting the title The Ordination of Priests (also called Presbyters).[17]

Catholic

In the Catholic Church, the form of address depends on the office the person holds, and the country in which he is being addressed as they are usually identical to the titles used by their feudal or governmental equals. In most English-speaking countries, the forms of address are:

  • A priest is usually referred to as Father, and sometimes as Your Reverence or Reverend Father.
  • A monsignor is addressed as "Monsignor."
  • A Canon is usually referred to as "Canon."
  • A bishop is addressed as Your Excellency or, less formally, Excellency. In Britain and some other countries they are formally addressed as My Lord or My Lord Bishop.
  • An archbishop is also addressed as Your Excellency or, less formally, Excellency. In Britain and some other countries they are formally addressed as Your Grace.
  • A cardinal is addressed as Your Eminence.
  • The Pope of the Roman Catholic Church is often addressed as Holy Father or Your Holiness.

In France, secular priests (diocesan priests) are addressed "Monsieur l'Abbé" or, if a parish priest, as "Monsieur le Curé". In Germany and Austria priests are addressed as "Hochwürden" (meaning "very worthy") or with their title of office (Herr Pfarrer, i.e. Mr. Parson). in Italy as "Don" followed by his name (e.g. "Don Luigi Perrone").

Religious priests (members of religious orders) are addressed "Father" in all countries (Père, Pater, Padre etc.).

Up until the 19th century, secular clergy in English-speaking countries were usually addressed as "Mister" (which was, in those days, a title reserved for gentleman, those outside the gentry being called by name and surname only), and only priests in religious orders were formally called "Father". In the early 19th century it became customary to call all priests "Father".

In the Middle Ages, before the Reformation, secular priests were entitled as knights, with the prefix "Sir". See examples in Shakespeare's plays like Sir Christopher Urswick in Richard III. This is closer to the Italian and Spanish "Don" which derives from the Latin "Dominus" meaning "Lord;" in English, the prefix "Dom" is used for priests who are monks, a prefix which was spelled "Dan" in Middle English. The French "Monsieur" (like the German "Mein Herr", the Italian "Signor" and the Spanish "Señor") also signifies "My Lord", a title commonly used in times past for any person of rank, clerical or lay.

The term "minister" is used by the Catholic Church in some cases, such as the head of the Franciscans being the Minister General.[18]

In the Greek-Catholic Church, all clergy are called "Father", including deacons, who are titled "Father Deacon", "Deacon Father", or simply "Father". Depending on the institution, seminarians may be titled "Brother", "Brother Seminarian", "Father Seminarian" or simply "Father". Their wives are usually addressed as "presvytera", "matushka" or "khourriyye" as in the Orthodox world and also by their first names. Greek-Catholic Patriarchs are addressed as Your Beatitude. Eastern clergy are usually addressed by their Christian or ordination name, not their surname.

Orthodox

Greek and other Orthodox churches

The form of address for Orthodox clergy varies according to order, rank and level of education. The most common forms are the following:[19]

Addressee's Title Form of Address Salutation
The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople His All Holiness ... Archbishop of Constantinople and New Rome, Ecumenical Patriarch Your All Holiness
Other Patriarchs His Beatitude Patriarch ... of ... Your Beatitude
Archbishops of independent Churches, Greece, Cyprus, etc. His Beatitude Archbishop ... of ... Your Beatitude
Archbishops of Crete, America, Australia, England (under Ecumenical Patriarchate) His Eminence Archbishop ... of ... Your Eminence
Metropolitans His Eminence Metropolitan ... of ... Your Eminence
Titular Metropolitans His Excellency Metropolitan ... of ... Your Excellency
Bishop / Titular Bishop His Grace Bishop ... of ... Your Grace
Archimandrite The Very Reverend Father Dear Father
Priest (Married and Celibate) Reverend Father Dear Father
Deacon Reverend Deacon Dear Father
Abbot The Very Reverend Abbot Dear Father
Abbess The Reverend Mother Superior Reverend Mother
Monk Father Dear Father
Nun Sister Dear Sister

Armenian Apostolic

The form of address to the clergy of the Armenian Apostolic Church (belongs to the family of Oriental Orthodox Churches[20]) is almost the same.

Addressee's Title Form of Address Salutation
Catholicos of All Armenians[21] His Holiness, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians[22] Your Holiness
Catholicos of Cilicia[23] His Holiness, Catholicos of Cilicia[24] Your Holiness
Patriarch[25] His Beatitude, the Armenian Patriarch of ... Your Beatitude
Archbishop His Eminence Your Eminence
Bishop His Grace Your Grace
Supreme Doctor Monk (Tsayraguyn Vardapet; Armenian: ծայրագույն վարդապետ) The Right Reverend Father Right Reverend Father
Doctor Monk (Vardapet; Armenian: վարդապետ) The Right Reverend Father Right Reverend Father
Celibate priest (Armenian: աբեղայ) The Very Reverend Father Very Reverend Father
Archpriest (Armenian: ավագ քահանայ) Archpriest Father Dear Father
Priest (Married; Armenian: քահանայ) Reverend Father Dear Father
Deacon Reverend Father Dear Father
Monk Brother Dear Brother
Nun Sister Dear Sister

See also

References

  1. ^ The word goes back via Old French ministre to Latin minister 'servant, attendant'. Cf. ministerialis, administration etc.
  2. ^ Common Worship Ordination Services Paperback. Church House Publishing. 2007. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-7151-2131-3.
  3. ^ "Last Rites explanation". Beliefnet.com. 17 February 2011. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  4. ^ "Dominie". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  5. ^ "Dom". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  6. ^ "Sir". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  7. ^ "Applying the General Priesthood Principle", The Watchtower, February 1, 1964, page 86, "Among the witnesses of Jehovah any adult, dedicated and baptized male Christian who is qualified may serve in such ministerial capacities as giving public Bible discourses and funeral talks, performing marriages and presiding at the Lord's evening meal or supper. There is no clergy class."
  8. ^ "Jehovah's Sheep Need Tender Care", The Watchtower, January 15, 1996, page 15, "Christian elders are appointed by the Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses, and care is exercised not to use such terms as "pastor," "elder," or "teacher" as titles."
  9. ^ "Chapter 4: Why Respect Authority?", "Keep Yourselves in God's Love", ©2008 Watch Tower, page 43, "Elders are appointed by holy spirit. (Acts 20:28) How so? In that such men must first meet the qualifications recorded in God's spirit-inspired Word. (1 Timothy 3:1-7, 12; Titus 1:5-9) Further, the elders who evaluate a brother's qualifications pray earnestly for the guidance of Jehovah's holy spirit."
  10. ^ See Acts 20:17; Titus 1:5; James 5:14; 1 Peter 5:1 for examples of a plurality of elders in a church
  11. ^ See Acts 20:28; 1 Peter 5:2
  12. ^ Though this is changing as many churches desire to become increasingly "influenced by a more biblically informed hermeneutic" http://www.xpastor.org/cases/2006_deacons_mark_%20hudgins.pdf 2009-08-16 at the Wayback Machine, see pg. 6
  13. ^ Biblical Eldership, A.Strauch, Littleton, CO: Lewis & Roth, 1995.
  14. ^ David, Ariel. Byzantine Basilica With Graves of Female Ministers and Baffling Mass Burials Found in Israel Haaretz, Nov. 15, 2021.
  15. ^ See "How to address the Clergy" in Crockford Clerical Directory, including the online version.
  16. ^ Forms of clerical address outlined at Debretts Archived 2012-07-23 at archive.today etiquette guide.
  17. ^ Anglican Church of Canada. "Minister or Priest?".
  18. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Minister" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 June 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2008.
  20. ^ See Orthodox Churches (Oriental) 2008-07-24 at the Wayback Machine and A List of Eastern and Oriental Orthodox WCC Member Churches.
  21. ^ See Catholicos of All Armenians.
  22. ^ For official documents such as Encyclicals, the lengthened title is as follows: ..., Servant of Jesus Christ, By the Mercy of God and the Will of the Nation, Chief Bishop and Catholicos of All Armenians, Supreme Patriarch of the Pan-National Pre-Eminent Araratian See, the Apostolic Mother Church of Universal Holy Etchmiadzin. See Catholicos of All Armenians Archived 2011-07-05 at archive.today
  23. ^ See Catholicos of Cilicia.
  24. ^ See Biographical sketch of H. H. Aram I Keshishian, Catholicos of Cilicia 2008-06-11 at the Wayback Machine.
  25. ^ There are two patriarchal sees in the [Armenian Apostolic Church] - the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem and the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople.

minister, christianity, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Minister Christianity news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Minister Christianity news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In Christianity a minister is a person authorised by a church or other religious organization to perform functions such as teaching of beliefs leading services such as weddings baptisms or funerals or otherwise providing spiritual guidance to the community The term is taken from Latin minister servant attendant 1 In some church traditions the term is usually used for people who have been ordained but in other traditions it can also be used for non ordained people who have a pastoral or liturgical ministry A Lutheran minister wearing a Geneva gown and bands In many churches ministers wear distinctive clothing called vestments when presiding over services of worship A Methodist minister wearing a cassock vested with a surplice and stole with preaching bands attached to his clerical collar In Catholic Orthodox Eastern and Oriental Anglican and Lutheran churches the concept of a priesthood is emphasized In other denominations such as Baptist Methodist and Calvinist churches Congregationalist and Presbyterian the term minister usually refers to a member of the ordained clergy who leads a congregation or participates in a role in a parachurch ministry such a person may serve as an elder presbyter pastor preacher bishop or chaplain With respect to ecclesiastical address many ministers are styled as The Reverend however some use Pastor or Father as a title Contents 1 Roles and duties 2 Training and qualifications 2 1 New Testament 3 Related titles and types of Christian ministries 3 1 Bishops priests and deacons 3 2 Pastors 3 3 Clergy 3 4 Dominie Dominee Dom Don 3 5 Chaplains and padres 3 6 Elder 3 7 Types of ministries in non denominational church 4 Leaders and pastoral agents 4 1 Monsignor 4 2 Prelate 4 3 Father 4 4 Archbishop 5 Issues 6 Styles and forms of address 6 1 Anglican 6 2 Catholic 6 3 Orthodox 6 3 1 Greek and other Orthodox churches 6 3 2 Armenian Apostolic 7 See also 8 ReferencesRoles and duties EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Church of England defines the ministry of priests as follows Priests are called to be servants and shepherds among the people to whom they are sent With their Bishop and fellow ministers they are to proclaim the word of the Lord and to watch for the signs of God s new creation They are to be messengers watchmen and stewards of the Lord they are to teach and to admonish to feed and provide for his family to search for his children in the wilderness of this world s temptations and to guide them through its confusions that they may be saved through Christ forever Formed by the word they are to call their hearers to repentance and to declare in Christ s name the absolution and forgiveness of their sins With all God s people they are to tell the story of God s love They are to baptize new disciples in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit and to walk with them in the way of Christ nurturing them in the faith They are to unfold the Scriptures to preach the word in season and out of season and to declare the mighty acts of God They are to preside at the Lord s table and lead his people in worship offering with them a spiritual sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving They are to bless the people in God s name They are to resist evil support the weak defend the poor and intercede for all in need They are to minister to the sick and prepare the dying for their death Guided by the Spirit they are to discern and foster the gifts of all God s people that the whole Church may be built up in unity and faith 2 Ministers may perform some or all of the following duties assist in co ordinating volunteers and church community groups assist in any general administrative service conduct marriage ceremonies funerals and memorial services participate in the ordination of other clergy and confirming young people as members of a local church encourage local church endeavors engage in welfare and community services activities of communities establish new local churches keep records as required by civil or church law plan and conduct services of public worship preach pray and encourage others to be theocentric that is God focused preside over sacraments also called ordinances of the church Such as the Lord s Supper a name derived from 1 Corinthians 11 20 also known as the Lord s Table taken from 1 Corinthians 10 21 or Holy Communion and the Baptism of adults or children depending on the denomination provide leadership to the congregation parish or church community this may be done as part of a team with lay people in roles such as elders refer people to community support services psychologists or doctors research and study religion Scripture and theology supervise prayer and discussion groups retreats and seminars and provide religious instruction teach on spiritual and theological subjects train leaders for church community and youth leadership work on developing relationships and networks within the religious community provide pastoral care in various contexts provide personal support to people in crises such as illness bereavement and family breakdown visit the sick and elderly to counsel and comfort them and their families administer Last Rites when designated to do so 3 the first style of ministering is the player coach style In this style the pastor is a participant in all the processes that the church uses to reach people and see them transformed the second style of ministering is the delegating style in which the minister develops members of the church to point that they can be trusted the third style of ministering is the directing style where the minister gives specific instructions and then supervises the congregation closely the last and fourth style of ministering is the combination style which a minister allows directional ministering from a pastoral staff member mention prayer of salvation to those interested in becoming a believerTraining and qualifications EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Depending on the denomination the requirements for ministry vary All denominations require the minister to have a vocation a sense of calling In regards to training denominations vary in their requirements from those that emphasize natural gifts to those that also require advanced tertiary education qualifications for example from a seminary theological college or university citation needed New Testament Edit One of the clearest references is found in 1 Timothy 3 1 16 which outlines the requirements of a bishop episkopos Koine Greek ἐpiskopos interpreted as elder by some denominations This is a true saying if a man desire the office of a bishop he desireth a good work A bishop then must be blameless the husband of one wife vigilant sober of good behaviour given to hospitality apt to teach Not given to wine no striker not greedy of filthy lucre but patient not a brawler not covetous One that ruleth well his own house having his children in subjection with all gravity For if a man know not how to rule his own house how shall he take care of the church of God Not a novice lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the devil Moreover he must have a good report of them which are without lest he fall into reproach and the snare of the devil Likewise must the deacons be grave not doubletongued not given to much wine not greedy of filthy lucre Holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience And let these also first be proved then let them use the office of a deacon being found blameless Even so must their wives be grave not slanderers sober faithful in all things Let the deacons be the husbands of one wife ruling their children and their own houses well King James Version non primary source needed Related titles and types of Christian ministries EditBishops priests and deacons Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Catholic Eastern Orthodox Anglican Lutheran Calvinist and some Methodist churches have applied the formal church based leadership or an ordained clergy in matters of either the church or broader political and sociocultural import The churches have three orders of ordained clergy Bishops are the primary clergy administering all sacraments and governing the church Priests administer the sacraments and lead local congregations they cannot ordain other clergy however nor consecrate buildings In some denominations deacons play a non sacramental and assisting role in the liturgy Francis of Assisi with the ecclesiastical tonsure Francis was an ordained deacon Gilbert White Anglican priest and pioneering naturalist and ornithologist Metropolitan Vladimir of Kiev the first bishop to be martyred at the time of the Russian RevolutionUntil the Reformation the clergy were the first estate but were relegated to the secular estate in Protestant Northern Europe After compulsory celibacy was abolished during the Reformation the formation of a partly hereditary priestly class became possible whereby wealth and clerical positions were frequently inheritable citation needed Higher positioned clergy formed this clerical educated upper class High Church Anglicanism and High Church Lutheranism tend to emphasise the role of the clergy in dispensing the Christian sacraments The countries that were once a part of the Swedish Empire i e Finland and the Baltics have more markedly preserved Catholic traditions and introduced far less Calvinist traditions hence the role of bishops priests and deacons are notably more visible Bishops priests and deacons have traditionally officiated over of acts worship reverence rituals and ceremonies Among these central traditions have been baptism confirmation penance anointing of the sick holy orders marriage the mass or the divine service and coronations These so called social rituals have formed a part of human culture for tens of thousands of years Anthropologists see social rituals as one of many cultural universals Scene of baptism Stained glass from the Sainte Chapelle of Paris last quarter of the 12th century A bishop administering Confirmation Rogier van der Weyden The Seven Sacraments detail c 1445 Wedding of Maria Feodorovna and Alexander III of Russia Painting by Mihaly Zichy 1867 Extreme Unction Rogier van der Weyden The Seven Sacraments detail c 1445 Consecration of William Evan Sanders as Episcopal Bishop Coadjutor of Tennessee 1962 A penitent confessing his sins in the former Latin rite of the Bernhardines in Lviv Ukraine Funeral of Manfred von Richthofen Bertangles Cemetery France 22 April 1918 The term rector from the Latin word for ruler or vicar may be used for priests in certain settings especially in the Catholic and Anglican traditions In the Episcopal Church in the United States a parish which is responsible for its own finances is overseen by a rector A bishop is nominally in control of a financially assisted parish but delegates authority to a vicar related to the prefix vice meaning substitute or deputy Pastors Edit The term pastor means shepherd and is used several times in the New Testament to refer to church workers Many Protestants use the term as a prenominal title e g Pastor Smith or as a job title like Senior Pastor or Worship Pastor citation needed Clergy Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The English word clergy derives from the same root as clerk and can be traced to the Latin clericus which derives from the Greek word kleros meaning a lot or portion or office The term Clerk in Holy Orders is still the official title for certain Christian clergy and its usage is prevalent in canon law Holy orders refer to any recipient of the sacrament of ordination both the major orders bishops priests and deacons and the now less known minor orders acolyte lector exorcist and porter who save for certain reforms made at the Second Vatican Council in the Roman Catholic Church were called clerics or clerk which is simply a shorter form of cleric Clerics were distinguished from the laity by having received in a formal rite of introduction into the clerical state the tonsure or corona crown which involved cutting hair from the top and side of the head leaving a circlet of hair which symbolised the Crown of Thorns worn by Christ at his crucifixion Though Christian in origin the term can be applied by analogy to functions in other religious traditions For example a rabbi can be referred to as being a clergy member Parson is a similar term often applied to ordained priests or ministers The word is a variant on the English word person from the Latin persona mask used as a legal term for one having jurisdiction Dominie Dominee Dom Don Edit The similar words Dominie Dominee and Dom all derived from the Latin domine vocative case of Dominus Lord Master are used in related contexts Dominie derived directly from Dutch is used in the United States Dominee derived from Dutch via Afrikaans is used in South Africa as the title of a pastor of the Dutch Reformed Church In Scottish English dominie is generally used to mean just schoolmaster In various Romance languages shortened forms of Dominus Dom Don are commonly used for Catholic priests sometimes also for lay notables as well for example Benedictine Monks are titled Dom as in the style Dom Knight 4 5 Dom or Dominus as well as the English equivalent Sir were often used as titles for priests in England up to the 17th century who held Bachelor of Arts degrees 6 Chaplains and padres Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Chaplain as in English or almoner preferred in many other languages or their equivalents refer to a minister who has another type of pastoral target group than a territorial parish congregation or in addition to one such as a military units schools and hospitals The Spanish word Padre father is often informally used to address military chaplains also in English and Portuguese Brazil Elder Edit Elders in Greek presbyteros presbuteros see Presbyter in Christianity are involved in the collective leadership of a local church or of a denomination Some Reformed non mainline Presbyterian denominations Anglican and some Methodists call their ministers teaching elders as well In Reformed tradition Ruling elders are also ordained laymen who govern the church along with the teaching elders as the Church session citation needed In the Assemblies of God and the Metropolitan Community Church Elders are the most senior leaders serving leading and supervising the worldwide denomination In the Metropolitan Community Church an Elder can be a lay person or clergy citation needed Types of ministries in non denominational church Edit Such as men s ministry women s ministry youth ministry kids ministry singles and campus ministries married couples ministry because it gives each congregation member of different backgrounds and age groups to have a chance to fellowship with people in a closer life group to them citation needed Leaders and pastoral agents EditLay people volunteers pastoral agents community leaders are responsible to bring teaching the gospel in the forefront helping the clergy to evangelize people Agents ramify in many ways to act and be in touch with the people in daily life and developing religious projects socio political and infrastructural citation needed Jehovah s Witnesses consider every baptized Witness to be a minister the religion permits any qualified baptized adult male to perform a baptism funeral or wedding 7 Typically however each such service is performed by an elder or a ministerial servant that is a deacon one of the men appointed to take the lead in local congregations Witnesses do not use elder or any other term as a title and do not capitalize the term 8 They do not accept payment and are not salaried employees or considered paid clergy They support themselves financially Appointments are made directly by Circuit Overseers under the authority of the local Branch and Governing Body appointment is said to be by holy spirit because the qualifications are recorded in God s spirit inspired Word and because appointing committees pray for holy spirit 9 In many evangelical churches a group multiple elders as opposed to a single elder 10 non primary source needed of non staff elders serve as the spiritual shepherds or caretakers of the congregation 11 non primary source needed usually giving spiritual direction to the pastoral staff enforcing church discipline etc In some denominations these elders are called by other names i e traditionally Deacons in many Baptist churches function as spiritual leaders 12 In some cases these elders are elected and serve fixed terms In other cases they are not elected but rather they are recognized by the congregation as those appointed by the Holy Spirit Acts 20 28 and meeting the qualifications of 1 Timothy 3 1 7 13 Monsignor Edit Monsignor is an ecclesiastical title of honor bestowed on some priests citation needed Prelate Edit A prelate is a member of the clergy having a special canonical jurisdiction over a territory or a group of people citation needed Usually a prelate is a bishop Prelate sometimes refers to the clergy of a state church with a formal hierarchy and suggests that the prelate enjoys legal privileges and power as a result of clerical status citation needed Father Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Father is a term of address for priests and deacons in some churches especially the Catholic and Orthodox churches it is also popular in some parts of the Anglican tradition Padre Spanish word for father used in Brazil too is frequently used in the military of English speaking countries A priest of the regular clergy A pre Scholastic Christian writer accepted by the church as an authoritative witness to its teaching and practice see Fathers of the Church those who were not completely orthodox but nonetheless had a major impact on Christianity such as Origen and Tertullian are called ecclesiastical writers instead Mama is the local native language term for English speaking Anglican priests in the Anglican Church of Melanesia It means father in several local languages in Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands Archbishop Edit In Christianity an archbishop is an elevated bishop responsible for all churches belonging to a religious group of a particular district citation needed A bishop at the head of an ecclesiastical province or one of equivalent honorary rank citation needed Issues EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message There are contrasting views on the level of compensation given to ministers relative to the religious community There is often an expectation that they and their families will shun ostentation However there are situations where they are well rewarded for successfully attracting people to their religious community or enhancing the status or power of the community The ordination of women has increasingly become accepted within many global religious faith groups with some women now holding the most senior positions in these organizational hierarchies There is disagreement between various global church denominations and within membership of denominations regarding whether women can be ministers In 2021 excavations at the site of a Byzantine era Christian basilica revealed floor mosaics which provide evidence of women serving as ministers including deacons in the church 14 There was notable contention over the issue of ordination of non celibate gay people in the 1980s within the United Church of Canada and in the 1990s and early 21st century within the Presbyterian Church USA The Episcopal Church United States the American branch of the worldwide Anglican Communion was as of 2016 update divided over the issue of ordination of non celibate gay people This conflict severely damaged relationships between Anglicans in North America and in the third world especially Africa and southeast Asia and has caused a schism in the American Anglican church Styles and forms of address EditMain article Ecclesiastical titles and styles In the majority of churches ordained ministers are styled The Reverend However as stated above some are styled Pastor and others do not use any religious style or form of address and are addressed as any other person e g as Mr Ms Miss Mrs or by name citation needed Anglican Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message An Anglican minister delivers a homily dressed in choir habit with Canterbury cap In Anglican churches the style for ordained ministers varies according to their office as below 15 16 Priests and deacons from ordination onwards The Reverend Priests and deacons appointed as canons The Reverend Canon Deans or Provosts of a cathedral church The Very Reverend Archdeacons of a diocese or region The Venerable Bishops diocesan suffragan or coadjutor The Right Reverend Archbishops and other primate bishops The Most ReverendIn all cases the formal style should be followed by a Christian name or initial e g the Reverend John Smith or the Reverend J Smith but never just the Reverend Smith These are formal styles In normal speech either addressing the clergy or referring to them other forms of address are often used For all clergy this may include the titles Father male or Mother female particularly in the Anglo Catholic tradition or simply the appropriate secular title Mister Doctor etc for that person particularly in the Evangelical tradition it is also increasingly common to dispense with formal addresses and titles in favour of verbal address simply by given name Bishops may be addressed as My Lord and less formally as Bishop Similarly archbishops may be addressed as Your Grace and less formally as Archbishop The titles My Lord and Your Grace refer to the places held by these prelates in the Church of England within the order of precedence of the state however the same titles are also extended to bishops and archbishops of other Anglican churches outside England As Anglicanism represents a broad range of theological opinion its presbyterate includes priests who consider themselves no different in any respect from those of the Catholic Church some parishes and dioceses in Low Church or Evangelical circles prefer to use the title presbyter or minister in order to distance themselves from the more sacrificial theological implications which they associate with the word priest While priest is the official term for a member of the presbyterate in every Anglican province worldwide the ordination rite of certain provinces including the Church of England recognizes the breadth of opinion by adopting the title The Ordination of Priests also called Presbyters 17 Catholic Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Minister Catholic Church In the Catholic Church the form of address depends on the office the person holds and the country in which he is being addressed as they are usually identical to the titles used by their feudal or governmental equals In most English speaking countries the forms of address are A priest is usually referred to as Father and sometimes as Your Reverence or Reverend Father A monsignor is addressed as Monsignor A Canon is usually referred to as Canon A bishop is addressed as Your Excellency or less formally Excellency In Britain and some other countries they are formally addressed as My Lord or My Lord Bishop An archbishop is also addressed as Your Excellency or less formally Excellency In Britain and some other countries they are formally addressed as Your Grace A cardinal is addressed as Your Eminence The Pope of the Roman Catholic Church is often addressed as Holy Father or Your Holiness In France secular priests diocesan priests are addressed Monsieur l Abbe or if a parish priest as Monsieur le Cure In Germany and Austria priests are addressed as Hochwurden meaning very worthy or with their title of office Herr Pfarrer i e Mr Parson in Italy as Don followed by his name e g Don Luigi Perrone Religious priests members of religious orders are addressed Father in all countries Pere Pater Padre etc Up until the 19th century secular clergy in English speaking countries were usually addressed as Mister which was in those days a title reserved for gentleman those outside the gentry being called by name and surname only and only priests in religious orders were formally called Father In the early 19th century it became customary to call all priests Father In the Middle Ages before the Reformation secular priests were entitled as knights with the prefix Sir See examples in Shakespeare s plays like Sir Christopher Urswick in Richard III This is closer to the Italian and Spanish Don which derives from the Latin Dominus meaning Lord in English the prefix Dom is used for priests who are monks a prefix which was spelled Dan in Middle English The French Monsieur like the German Mein Herr the Italian Signor and the Spanish Senor also signifies My Lord a title commonly used in times past for any person of rank clerical or lay The term minister is used by the Catholic Church in some cases such as the head of the Franciscans being the Minister General 18 In the Greek Catholic Church all clergy are called Father including deacons who are titled Father Deacon Deacon Father or simply Father Depending on the institution seminarians may be titled Brother Brother Seminarian Father Seminarian or simply Father Their wives are usually addressed as presvytera matushka or khourriyye as in the Orthodox world and also by their first names Greek Catholic Patriarchs are addressed as Your Beatitude Eastern clergy are usually addressed by their Christian or ordination name not their surname Orthodox Edit Greek and other Orthodox churches Edit The form of address for Orthodox clergy varies according to order rank and level of education The most common forms are the following 19 Addressee s Title Form of Address SalutationThe Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople His All Holiness Archbishop of Constantinople and New Rome Ecumenical Patriarch Your All HolinessOther Patriarchs His Beatitude Patriarch of Your BeatitudeArchbishops of independent Churches Greece Cyprus etc His Beatitude Archbishop of Your BeatitudeArchbishops of Crete America Australia England under Ecumenical Patriarchate His Eminence Archbishop of Your EminenceMetropolitans His Eminence Metropolitan of Your EminenceTitular Metropolitans His Excellency Metropolitan of Your ExcellencyBishop Titular Bishop His Grace Bishop of Your GraceArchimandrite The Very Reverend Father Dear FatherPriest Married and Celibate Reverend Father Dear FatherDeacon Reverend Deacon Dear FatherAbbot The Very Reverend Abbot Dear FatherAbbess The Reverend Mother Superior Reverend MotherMonk Father Dear FatherNun Sister Dear SisterArmenian Apostolic Edit The form of address to the clergy of the Armenian Apostolic Church belongs to the family of Oriental Orthodox Churches 20 is almost the same Addressee s Title Form of Address SalutationCatholicos of All Armenians 21 His Holiness Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians 22 Your HolinessCatholicos of Cilicia 23 His Holiness Catholicos of Cilicia 24 Your HolinessPatriarch 25 His Beatitude the Armenian Patriarch of Your BeatitudeArchbishop His Eminence Your EminenceBishop His Grace Your GraceSupreme Doctor Monk Tsayraguyn Vardapet Armenian ծայրագույն վարդապետ The Right Reverend Father Right Reverend FatherDoctor Monk Vardapet Armenian վարդապետ The Right Reverend Father Right Reverend FatherCelibate priest Armenian աբեղայ The Very Reverend Father Very Reverend FatherArchpriest Armenian ավագ քահանայ Archpriest Father Dear FatherPriest Married Armenian քահանայ Reverend Father Dear FatherDeacon Reverend Father Dear FatherMonk Brother Dear BrotherNun Sister Dear SisterSee also Edit Christianity portalAnglican ministry Ecclesiastical titles and styles Ministers and elders of the Church of Scotland Quaker Recorded MinisterReferences Edit The word goes back via Old French ministre to Latin minister servant attendant Cf ministerialis administration etc Common Worship Ordination Services Paperback Church House Publishing 2007 p 37 ISBN 978 0 7151 2131 3 Last Rites explanation Beliefnet com 17 February 2011 Retrieved 3 September 2013 Dominie Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Dom Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Sir Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Applying the General Priesthood Principle The Watchtower February 1 1964 page 86 Among the witnesses of Jehovah any adult dedicated and baptized male Christian who is qualified may serve in such ministerial capacities as giving public Bible discourses and funeral talks performing marriages and presiding at the Lord s evening meal or supper There is no clergy class Jehovah s Sheep Need Tender Care The Watchtower January 15 1996 page 15 Christian elders are appointed by the Governing Body of Jehovah s Witnesses and care is exercised not to use such terms as pastor elder or teacher as titles Chapter 4 Why Respect Authority Keep Yourselves in God s Love c 2008 Watch Tower page 43 Elders are appointed by holy spirit Acts 20 28 How so In that such men must first meet the qualifications recorded in God s spirit inspired Word 1 Timothy 3 1 7 12 Titus 1 5 9 Further the elders who evaluate a brother s qualifications pray earnestly for the guidance of Jehovah s holy spirit See Acts 20 17 Titus 1 5 James 5 14 1 Peter 5 1 for examples of a plurality of elders in a church See Acts 20 28 1 Peter 5 2 Though this is changing as many churches desire to become increasingly influenced by a more biblically informed hermeneutic http www xpastor org cases 2006 deacons mark 20hudgins pdf Archived 2009 08 16 at the Wayback Machine see pg 6 Biblical Eldership A Strauch Littleton CO Lewis amp Roth 1995 David Ariel Byzantine Basilica With Graves of Female Ministers and Baffling Mass Burials Found in Israel Haaretz Nov 15 2021 See How to address the Clergy in Crockford Clerical Directory including the online version Forms of clerical address outlined at Debretts Archived 2012 07 23 at archive today etiquette guide Anglican Church of Canada Minister or Priest Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Minister Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Greetings amp Salutations to Orthodox Clergy Archived from the original on 12 June 2011 Retrieved 28 November 2008 See Orthodox Churches Oriental Archived 2008 07 24 at the Wayback Machine and A List of Eastern and Oriental Orthodox WCC Member Churches See Catholicos of All Armenians For official documents such as Encyclicals the lengthened title is as follows Servant of Jesus Christ By the Mercy of God and the Will of the Nation Chief Bishop and Catholicos of All Armenians Supreme Patriarch of the Pan National Pre Eminent Araratian See the Apostolic Mother Church of Universal Holy Etchmiadzin See Catholicos of All Armenians Archived 2011 07 05 at archive today See Catholicos of Cilicia See Biographical sketch of H H Aram I Keshishian Catholicos of Cilicia Archived 2008 06 11 at the Wayback Machine There are two patriarchal sees in the Armenian Apostolic Church the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem and the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople Retrieved from https en 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