Denominations have varied conceptions of holy orders. In some Lutheran and Anglican churches the traditional orders of bishop, priest and deacon are bestowed using ordination rites contained withinordinals. The extent to which ordination is considered sacramental in these traditions has, however, been a matter of some internal dispute. Baptists are among the denominations that do not considerministry as being sacramental in nature[3] and would not think of it in terms of "holy orders" as such. Historically, the word "order" (Latinordo) designated an established civil body or corporation with a hierarchy, andordinatio meant legal incorporation into anordo. The word "holy" refers to the church. In context, therefore, a holy order is set apart for ministry in the church. Other positions, such aspope,patriarch,cardinal,monsignor,archbishop,archimandrite,archpriest,protopresbyter,hieromonk,protodeacon andarchdeacon, are not sacramental orders but specialized ministries.
TheAnglican churches hold their bishops to be inapostolic succession, although there is some difference of opinion with regard to whether ordination is to be regarded as a sacrament. The AnglicanArticles of Religion hold that only baptism and the Lord's Supper are to be counted as sacraments of the gospel, and assert that other rites 'commonly called sacraments' by other denominations (e.g. Catholicism), were not ordained by Christ in the Gospel.[4] They do not have the nature of a sacrament of the Gospel in the absence of any physical matter such as the water in baptism and the bread and wine in the Eucharist. Various editions of theBook of Common Prayer and other Anglican liturgical texts provide rites for ordination of bishops, priests and deacons. Only bishops may ordain people. Within Anglicanism, three bishops are normally required for ordination to the episcopate, while one bishop is sufficient for performing ordinations to the priesthood and diaconate.
The ministerial orders of theCatholic Church include the orders ofbishops,deacons andpresbyters, which inLatin issacerdos.[5] The ordained priesthood and common priesthood (or priesthood of all the baptized) are different in function and essence.[6]
A distinction is made betweenpriest andpresbyter. In the1983 Code of Canon Law, "The Latin wordssacerdos andsacerdotium are used to refer in general to the ministerial priesthood shared by bishops and presbyters. The wordspresbyter, presbyterium and presbyteratus refer to priests [in the English use of the word] and presbyters".[7]
While theconsecrated life is neither clerical nor lay by definition,[8] clerics can also be incardinated in an institute of consecrated life or society endowed with this faculty from the Apostolic see.[9]
MetropolitanHilarion (Kapral) performs the laying on of hands (Cheirotonia), conferring the holy order ofpresbyter (priest) upon an Orthodoxdeacon.After the transmutation of the Holy Gifts, the bishop presents to the newly ordained priest a portion of the Lamb (i.e., the Body of Christ).The laying on of hands (Cheirotonia), conferring the holy order ofdeacon upon an Orthodoxsubdeacon.
TheEastern Orthodox Church considers ordination (known ascheirotonia, "laying on of hands") to be asacred mystery (μυστήριο, what in the West is called a sacrament). Although all other mysteries may be performed by a presbyter, ordination may only be conferred by a bishop, and the ordination of a bishop may only be performed by several bishops together.Cheirotonia always takes place during thedivine liturgy.
The Eastern Orthodox teach that it was the mission of theapostles to go forth into all the world and preach theGospel, baptizing those who believed in the name of theHoly Trinity.[10] In theearly Church those who presided over congregations were referred to variously asepiscopos (bishop) orpresbyteros (priest). These successors of the apostles were ordained to their office by thelaying on of hands, and according toEastern Orthodox theology formed a living, organic link with the apostles, and through them withJesus Christ himself.[11]
The Eastern Orthodox Church also has ordination tominor orders (known ascheirothesia, "imposition of hands") which is performed outside of the Divine Liturgy, typically by a bishop, although certainarchimandrites ofstavropegial monasteries may bestow cheirothesia on members of their communities.
In Eastern Orthodoxy, a bishop is the collector of the money of the diocese and the living Vessel of Grace through whom theenergeia (divine grace) of the Holy Spirit flows into the rest of the church.[11] A bishop isconsecrated through the laying on of hands by several bishops; although, with the consent of several other bishops, a single bishop has performed the ordination of another bishop in emergency situations, such as times ofpersecution.
The consecration of a bishop takes place near the beginning of the liturgy, since a bishop can, in addition to performing the mystery of the Eucharist, also ordain priests and deacons. Before the commencement of the liturgy, the bishop-elect professes, in the middle of the church before the seated bishops who will consecrate him, in detail the doctrines of the Eastern Orthodox faith and pledges to observe the canons of the apostles and councils, theTypikon and customs of the Eastern Orthodox Church and to obey ecclesiastical authority. After theLittle Entrance, the archpriest and archdeacon conduct the bishop-elect before the church's royal gates where he is met by the bishops and kneels before the altar on both knees. TheGospel Book is laid over his head and theconsecrating bishops lay their hands upon the Gospel Book, while the prayers of ordination are read by the eldest bishop. After this, the newly consecrated bishop ascends thesynthranon (bishop's throne in the sanctuary) for the first time.[12] Customarily, the newly consecrated bishop ordains a priest and a deacon at the liturgy during which he is consecrated.
A priest may serve only at the pleasure of his bishop. A bishop bestowsfaculties (permission to minister within hisdiocese) giving a priestchrism and anantimins; he may withdraw faculties and demand the return of these items. Theordination of a priest occurs before theAnaphora (Eucharistic Prayer) in order that he may on the same day take part in the celebration of the Eucharist:[12] during theGreat Entrance, the candidate for ordination carries theAër (chaliceveil) over his head (rather than on his shoulder, as a deacon otherwise carries it then) as a symbol of giving up his diaconate, and comes last in theprocession and stands at the end of the pair of lines of the priests. After the Aër is taken from the candidate to cover the chalice anddiskos, a chair is brought for the bishop to sit on by the northeast corner of theholy table (altar). Two deacons go to priest-elect who, at that point, had been standing alone in the middle of the church, and bow him down to the west (to the people) and to the east (to the clergy), asking their consent by saying "Command ye!" and then lead him through the holy doors of the altar where the archdeacon asks the bishop's consent, saying, "Command, most sacred master!" after which a priest escorts the candidate three times around the altar, during which he kisses each corner of the altar or holy table as well as the bishop'sepigonation and right hand and prostrates himself before the holy table at each circuit. The candidate is then taken to the southeast corner of the holy table and kneels on both knees, resting his forehead on the edge of the Holy Table. The ordaining bishop then places hisomophor and right hand over the ordinand's head and recites aloud the firstPrayer of Cheirotonia and then prays silently the other two prayers of cheirotonia while a deacon quietly recites alitany and the clergy, then the congregation, chant "Lord, have mercy". Afterwards, the bishop brings the newly ordained priest to stand in theholy doors and presents him to the faithful. He then clothes the priest in each of his sacerdotalvestments, at each of which the people sing,Worthy!. Later, after theepiklesis of the liturgy, the bishop hands him a portion of theLamb (Host) saying:[13]
Receive thou this pledge, and preserve it whole and unharmed until thy last breath, because thou shalt be held to an accounting therefore in the second and terrible Coming of our great Lord, God, and Saviour, Jesus Christ.
A deacon may not perform any sacrament and performs no liturgical services on his own but serves only as an assistant to a priest and may not even vest without the blessing of a priest. The ordination of a deacon occurs after the anaphora (eucharistic prayer) since his role is not in performing the mystery or sacrament but consists only in serving;[12] the ceremony is much the same as at the ordination of a priest, but the deacon-elect is presented to the people and escorted to the holy doors by two sub-deacons (his peers, analogous to the two deacons who so present a priest-elect), is escorted three times around the altar by a deacon, and he kneels on only one knee during thePrayer of Cheirotonia. After being vested as a deacon and given aliturgical fan(ripidion or hexapterygion), he is led to the side of the altar where he uses the ripidion to gently fan the holy gifts (the consecratedBody and Blood of Christ).
Ordination to holy orders is considered to be either asacrament orrite in the Lutheran churches, depending on the churchmanship.[2] According to theBook of Concord, an explication of the doctrine of theLutheran churches: "But if ordination be understood as applying to the ministry of the Word, we are not unwilling to call ordination a sacrament. For the ministry of the Word has God's command and glorious promises, Rom. 1:16: The Gospel is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth. Likewise, Isa. 55:11: So shall My Word be that goeth forth out of My mouth; it shall not return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please. ...If ordination be understood in this way, neither will we refuse to call the imposition of hands a sacrament. For the Church has the command to appoint ministers, which should be most pleasing to us, because we know that God approves this ministry, and is present in the ministry [that God will preach and work through men and those who have been chosen by men]."[14]
The Lutheran reforms are considered to be the most conservative of those that emerged in the Reformation. As such, much of Lutheranism follows the threefold office of deacon, priest, and bishop.[15] The Lutheran archbishops of Finland, Sweden, etc. and Baltic countries are the historic national primates and some ancient cathedrals and parishes in the Lutheran church were constructed many centuries before the Reformation.
Lutherans universally believe that "no one should publicly teach in the Church or administer the Sacraments unless he be regularly called".[16] The Lutheran churches in Scandinavia, and those established in other parts of the world as a result of Scandinavian Lutheran missionary activity (such as theEvangelical Lutheran Church in Kenya), practice episcopal succession in which the bishop whose holy orders can be traced back to the Apostles, performs ordinations.[17][18][19]
Additionally,Martin Luther taught that each individual was expected to fulfill his God-appointed task in everyday life. The modern usage of the termvocation as a life-task was first employed by Martin Luther.[20] ThereforeLuther's Small Catechism provides passages of Scripture to encourage those in holy orders, including bishops, pastors, preachers, as well as those in governmental offices, citizens, husbands, wives, children, employees, employers, young people, andwidows.[21]
The sequence in which holy orders are received are:minor orders, deacon, priest, bishop.
For Catholics, it is typical in the years ofseminary training that a man will be ordained to the diaconate, which Catholics since the Second Vatican Council sometimes call the "transitional diaconate" to distinguish men bound for priesthood frompermanent deacons. They are licensed to preach sermons (under certain circumstances a permanent deacon may not receive faculties to preach), to performbaptisms, and to witnessCatholic marriages, but to perform no other sacraments. They assist at the eucharist or theMass, but are not able to consecrate the bread and wine. Normally, after six months or more as a transitional deacon, a man will be ordained to the priesthood.[22] Priests are able topreach, performbaptisms,confirm (with special dispensation from their ordinary), witness marriages, hearconfessions and giveabsolutions,anoint the sick, and celebrate the Mass.[23]
Eastern Orthodox seminarians are typicallytonsured asreaders before entering the seminary, and may later be made subdeacons or deacons; customs vary between seminaries and between Eastern Orthodox jurisdictions. Some deacons remain permanently in the diaconate while most subsequently are ordained as priests. Orthodox clergy are typically either married ormonastic.[24][25][26][27] Monastic deacons are calledhierodeacons, monastic priests are calledhieromonks. Eastern Orthodox clergy who marry must do so prior to ordination to the subdiaconate (or diaconate, according to local custom) and typically one is either tonsured a monk or married before ordination. A deacon or priest may not marry, or remarry if widowed, without abandoning his clerical office.[28] Often, widowed priests takemonastic vows. Eastern Orthodox bishops are always monks; a single or widowed man may be elected a bishop but he must be tonsured a monk before consecration as a bishop.[29]
For Anglicans, a person is usually ordained adeacon once he (or she) has completed training at a theological college.[30] The historic practice of a bishop tutoring a candidate himself ("reading for orders") is still to be found. The candidate then typically serves as an assistantcurate and may later be ordained as apriest at the discretion of the bishop. Other deacons may choose to remain in this order. Anglican deacons can preach sermons, performbaptisms and conduct funerals, but, unlike priests, cannot celebrate the eucharistic liturgy.[31] In most branches of the Anglican church, women can be ordained as priests, and in some of them, can also be ordainedbishops.[32]
Anointment of the hands of a newly ordained priest.
Bishops are chosen from among priests in churches that adhere to Catholic usage. In the Catholic Church, bishops, like priests, are celibate and thus unmarried; further, a bishop is said to possess the fullness of the sacrament of holy orders, empowering him to ordain deacons, priests, and—with papal consent—other bishops. If a bishop, especially one acting as an ordinary—a head of a diocese or archdiocese—is to be ordained, three bishops must usually co-consecrate him with one bishop, usually an archbishop or the bishop of the place, being the chief consecrating prelate.
Among Eastern Rite Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, which permit married priests, bishops must either be unmarried or agree to abstain from contact with their wives. It is a common misconception that all such bishops come fromreligious orders; while this is generally true, it is not an absolute rule. In the case of both Catholics—(Western and) Eastern Catholic, Oriental Orthodox and Eastern Orthodox, they are usually leaders of territorial units calleddioceses (or its equivalent in the east, aneparchy). Only bishops can validly administer the sacrament of holy orders.
The Catholic Church unconditionally recognizes the validity of ordinations in the Eastern churches. Some Eastern Orthodox churches reordain Catholic priests who convert while others accept their Catholic ordination using the concept ofeconomia (church economy). In 1988, the Ordination Joint Committee of Orthodox and Catholic Bishops stated the following:[33]
With either the Roman Catholic understanding of character or the Orthodox understanding of the creation of a permanent hindrance due to sin, "reordination" is impossible. Even in cases when a Roman Catholic cleric may lose clerical status either through cause or petition, the sacred Ordination never becomes invalid. For both Orthodox Christians and Roman Catholics, when a member of the clergy who has been ordained in a church that shares with them an understanding of the Priesthood and by a Bishop in an unquestionable apostolic succession is received into either the Orthodox or the Roman Catholic Church, his ordination should be recognized. It should be noted, however, that until such time when the practice of the Orthodox Church will be unified, these cases will be decided by each Autocephalous Orthodox Church.
Anglican churches claim to have maintained apostolic succession.[34] The succession of Anglican bishops is not universally recognized, however. The Catholic Church judged Anglican orders invalid whenPope Leo XIII in 1896 wrote inApostolicae curae that Anglican orders lack validity because the rite by which priests were ordained was not correctly worded from 1547 to 1553 and from 1559 to the time of ArchbishopWilliam Laud (Archbishop of Canterbury 1633–1645). The papacy claimed the form and matter was inadequate to make a Catholic bishop. The actual "mechanical" succession, prayer and laying on hands, was not disputed. Two of the four consecrators ofMatthew Parker in 1559 had been consecrated using theEdwardine Ordinals and two using theRoman Pontifical. Nonetheless, they believed that this caused a break of continuity in apostolic succession, making all further ordinations null and void.
Eastern Orthodox bishops have, on occasion, granted "economy" when Anglican priests convert to Eastern Orthodoxy. Various Eastern Orthodox churches have also declared Anglican orders valid subject to a finding that the bishops in question did indeed maintain the true faith, the Orthodox concept of apostolic succession being one in which the faith must be properly adhered to and transmitted, not simply that the ceremony by which a man is made a bishop is conducted correctly.[35] Some Eastern Orthodox have also considered holy orders from canonically unrecognized or disputed, or independent Eastern Orthodox churches as valid.[36][37][38][39]
Several Eastern Orthodox patriarchs and synods have recognized the validity of Anglican orders. In 1922, the Ecumenical PatriarchMeletios IV issued a statement recognizing that Anglican ordinations were "of the same validity as those of the Roman, Old Catholic, and Armenian Churches."[40] The 1923 Synod of Constantinople reaffirmed this position. Following this statement from Constantinople, the Holy Synod of theChurch of Cyprus recognized the validity of Anglican orders in 1923,[41] as did the patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem,Damian I, and the synod of his church, in the same year.[42] The Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Alexandria officially recognized the validity of Anglican orders in 1930.[43] In 1936, the Holy Synod of theRomanian Orthodox Church formally recognized the validity of Anglican orders.[44] Ecumenical dialogues between the Eastern Orthodox and Anglican churches on the recognition of orders are ongoing.
Changes in the Anglican ordinals since KingEdward VI, and a fuller appreciation of the pre-Reformation ordinals, suggest that the correctness of the enduring dismissal of Anglican orders is questionable.[45] To reduce doubt concerning Anglican apostolic succession, especially since the 1931Bonn agreement between the Anglican and Old Catholic churches, some Anglican bishops have included among their consecrators bishops of theOld Catholic Church, whose holy orders are recognised as valid and regular by the Catholic Church.
Neither Catholics nor Anglicans recognize the validity of ordinations of ministers in Protestant churches that do not maintain apostolic succession; but some Anglicans, especially Low Church orEvangelical ones, commonly treat Protestant ministers and their sacraments as valid. Rome also does not recognize the apostolic succession of those Lutheran bodies which retained apostolic succession.[citation needed]
Officially, theAnglican Communion accepts the ordinations of those denominations which are in full communion with their own churches, such as theLutheran state churches of Scandinavia. Those clergy may preside at services requiring a priest if one is not otherwise available.
Married men may be ordained to the diaconate as permanent deacons, but in theLatin Church of theCatholic Church generally may not be ordained to the priesthood. In theEastern Catholic Churches and in theEastern Orthodox Church, married deacons may be ordained priests but may not become bishops. Bishops in the Eastern Rites and the Eastern Orthodox churches are almost always drawn from amongmonks, who have taken a vow of celibacy. They may be widowers, though; it is not required of them never to have been married.
In some cases, widowed permanent deacons have been ordained to the priesthood. There have been some situations in which men previously married and ordained to the priesthood in anAnglican church or in aLutheran church have been ordained to the Catholic priesthood and allowed to function much as an Eastern Rite priest but in a Latin Church setting. This is neversub conditione (conditionally), as there is in Catholic canon law no true priesthood in Protestant denominations. Such ordination may only happen with the approval of the priest's Bishop and a special permission by the Pope.
Ordination ritual and procedures vary by denomination. Different churches and denominations specify more or less rigorous requirements for entering into office, and the process of ordination is likewise given more or less ceremonial pomp depending on the group. Many Protestants still communicate authority and ordain to office by having the existing overseers physically lay hands on the candidates for office.
The AmericanMethodist model is an episcopal system loosely based on the Anglican model, as the Methodist Church arose from the Anglican Church. It was first devised under the leadership of BishopsThomas Coke andFrancis Asbury of theMethodist Episcopal Church in the late 18th century. In this approach, anelder (or 'presbyter') is ordained to word (preaching and teaching), sacrament (administering Baptism and the Lord's Supper), order (administering the life of the church and, in the case of bishops, ordaining others for mission and ministry), and service. Adeacon is a person ordained only to word and service.
In theUnited Methodist Church, for instance, seminary graduates are examined and approved by the Conference Board of Ordained Ministry and then the Clergy Session. They are accepted as "probationary (provisional) members of the conference." The resident bishop may commission them to full-time ministry as "provisional" ministers. (Before 1996, the graduate was ordained as a transitional deacon at this point, a provisional role since eliminated. The order of deacon is now a separate and distinct clergy order in the United Methodist Church.) After serving the probationary period, of a minimum of two years, the probationer is then examined again and either continued on probation, discontinued altogether, or approved for ordination. Upon final approval by the Clergy Session of the Conference, the probationer becomes a full member of the Conference and is then ordained as an elder or deacon by the resident bishop. Those ordained as elders are members of the Order of Elders, and those ordained deacons are members of the Order of Deacons.
John Wesley appointed Thomas Coke (above mentioned as bishop) as 'Superintendent', his translation of the Greekepiscopos ("overseer") – which is normally translated 'bishop' in English. The British Methodist Conference has two distinct orders of presbyter and deacon. It does not have bishops as a separate order of ministry. TheBritish Methodist Church has more than 500 superintendents,[citation needed] who are not a separate order of ministry but a role within the order of presbyters. The roles normally undertaken by bishops are expressed in ordaining presbyters and deacons by the annual Conference through itspresident (or a past president); in confirmation by all presbyters; in local oversight bysuperintendents; in regional oversight by chairs of Districts.
Presbyterian churches, following theirScottish forebears, reject the traditions surrounding overseers and instead identify the offices of bishop (episkopos in Greek) and elder (presbuteros in Greek, from which the term "presbyterian" comes). The two terms seem to be used interchangeably in theBible (compareTitus 1.5–9 andI Tim. 3.2–7). Their form ofchurch governance is known aspresbyterian polity. While there is increasing authority with each level of gathering of elders ('Session' over a congregation or parish, then presbytery, then possibly a synod, then the General Assembly), there is no hierarchy of elders. Each elder has an equal vote at the court on which they stand.
Elders are usually chosen at their local level, either elected by the congregation and approved by the Session, or appointed directly by the Session. Some churches place limits on the term that the elders serve, while others ordain elders for life.
Presbyterians also ordain (by laying on of hands) ministers of Word and Sacrament (sometimes known as 'teaching elders'). These ministers are regarded simply as Presbyters ordained to a different function, but in practice they provide the leadership for the local Session.
Some Presbyterians identify those appointed (by the laying on of hands) to serve in practical ways (Acts 6.1–7) as deacons (diakonos in Greek, meaning 'servant'). In many congregations, a group of men or women is thus set aside to deal with matters such as congregational fabric and finance, releasing elders for more 'spiritual' work. These persons may be known as 'deacons', 'board members' or 'managers', depending on the local tradition. Unlike elders and ministers, they are not usually 'ordained', and are often elected by the congregation for a set period of time.
Other Presbyterians have used an 'order of deacons' as full-time servants of the wider Church. Unlike ministers, they do not administer sacraments or routinely preach. TheChurch of Scotland has recently begun ordaining deacons to this role.
Unlike the Episcopalian system, but similar to the United Methodist system described above, the two Presbyterian offices are different inkind rather than indegree, since one need not be a deacon before becoming an elder. Since there is no hierarchy, the two offices do not make up an 'order' in the technical sense, but the terminology of holy orders is sometimes still developed.
Congregationalist churches implement different schemes, but the officers usually have less authority than in the presbyterian or episcopalian forms. Some ordain only ministers and rotate members on an advisory board (sometimes called a board of elders or a board of deacons). Because the positions are by comparison less powerful, there is usually less rigor or fanfare in how officers are ordained.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) accepts the legal authority of clergy to perform marriages but does not recognize any other sacraments performed by ministers not ordained to the Latter-day Saint priesthood. Although the Latter-day Saints do claim a doctrine of a certain spiritual "apostolic succession," it is significantly different from that claimed by Catholics and Protestants since there is no succession or continuity between the first century and the lifetime of Joseph Smith, the founder of the LDS church. Mormons teach that the priesthood was lost in ancient times not to be restored by Christ until the nineteenth century when it was given to Joseph Smith directly.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has a relatively open priesthood, ordaining nearly all worthy adult males and boys of the age of twelve and older. Latter-day Saint priesthood consists of two divisions: the Melchizedek Priesthood and Aaronic Priesthood. The Melchizedek Priesthood because Melchizedek was such a great high priest. Before his day it was called the Holy Priesthood, after the Order of the Son of God. But out of respect or reverence to the name of the Supreme Being, to avoid the too frequent repetition of his name, the church, in ancient days, called that priesthood after Melchizedek. The lesser priesthood is an appendage to the Melchizedek Priesthood. It is called the Aaronic Priesthood because it was conferred on Aaron and his sons throughout all their generations.[48]The offices, or ranks, of the Melchizedek order (in roughly descending order) include apostle, seventy, patriarch, high priest, and elder. The offices of the Aaronic order are bishop, priest, teacher, and deacon. The manner of ordination consists of the laying on of hands by two or more men holding at least the office being conferred while one acts as voice in conferring the priesthood or office and usually pronounces a blessing upon the recipient. Teachers and deacons do not have the authority to ordain others to the priesthood. All church members are authorized to teach and preach regardless of priesthood ordination so long as they maintain good standing within the church. The church does not use the term "holy orders."
Community of Christ has a largely volunteer priesthood, and all members of the priesthood are free to marry (as traditionally defined by the Christian community). The priesthood is divided into two orders, the Aaronic priesthood and the Melchisedec priesthood. The Aaronic order consists of the offices of deacon, teacher and priest. The Melchisedec Order consists of the offices of elder (including the specialized office of seventy) and high priest (including the specialized offices of evangelist, bishop, apostle, and prophet). Paid ministers include "appointees" and the general officers of the church, which include some specialized priesthood offices (such as the office of president, reserved for the three top members of the church leadership team). As of 1984, women have been eligible for priesthood, which is conferred through the sacrament of ordination by the laying-on-of-hands. While there is technically no age requirement for any office of priesthood, there is no automatic ordination or progression as in the LDS Church. Young people are occasionally ordained as deacon, and sometimes teacher or priest, but generally most priesthood members are called following completion of post secondary school education. In March 2007 a woman was ordained for the first time to the office of president.
TheCatholic Church, in accordance with its interpretation of the theological tradition on the issue, and the definitive clarification found in the encyclical letterOrdinatio sacerdotalis (1994) written byPope John Paul II, officially teaches that it has no authority toordain women as priests and thus there is no possibility of women becoming priests at any time in the future. "Ordaining" women as deaconesses is not a possibility in any sacramental sense of the diaconate, for a deaconess is not simply a female who is a deacon but instead holds a position of lay service. As such, she does not receive the sacrament of holy orders. Many Lutheran, Anglican and other Protestant churches ordain women,[49] but in many cases, only to the office of deacon.
Various branches of the Eastern Orthodox churches, including the Greek Orthodox, currently set aside vows of deaconesses. Some churches are internally divided on whether the Scriptures permit the ordination of women. When one considers the relative size of the traditions (1.1 billion Catholics, 300 million Orthodox, 590 million Protestants), it is a minority of Christian churches that ordain women. Protestants constitute about 27 percent of Christians worldwide, and most of their churches that do ordain women have only done so within the past century; moreover, denominations within the same tradition may differ with respect to women's ordination. For example, inMethodism, thePrimitive Methodist Church does not ordain women, while theFree Methodist Church does ordain women.[50][51]
In some traditions women may be ordained to the same orders as men. In others women are restricted from certain offices. Women may be ordained bishop in the Old Catholic churches and in the Anglican/Episcopal churches in Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Cuba, Brazil, South Africa, Canada, US, Australia, Aotearoa New Zealand and Polynesia. The Church of Ireland had installedPat Storey in 2013. On 19 September 2013, Storey was chosen by the House of Bishops to succeedRichard Clarke asBishop of Meath and Kildare.[52] She was consecrated to the episcopate atChrist Church Cathedral, Dublin, on 30 November 2013.[53] She is the first woman to be elected as a bishop in the Church of Ireland and the first woman to be anAnglican Communion bishop inIreland andGreat Britain.[52][53][54] The Church of England's General Synod voted in 2014 to allow women to be ordained to the episcopate, withLibby Lane being the first woman to be ordained bishop.Continuing Anglican churches of the world do not permit women to be ordained. In some Protestant denominations,women may serve as assistant pastors but not as pastors in charge of congregations. In some denominations, women can be ordained to be anelder ordeacon. Some denominations allow for the ordination of women for certain religious orders. Within certain traditions, such as the Anglican and Lutheran, there is a diversity of theology and practice regarding ordination of women.
The ordination oflesbian,gay,bisexual ortransgender clergy who are sexually active, and open about it, represents a fiercely contested subject within manymainline Protestant communities. The majority of churches are opposed to such ordinations because they viewhomosexuality as asin and incompatible with Biblical teaching and traditional Christian practice. Yet there are an increasing number of Christian congregations and communities that are open to ordaining people who are gay or lesbian. These areliberal Protestantdenominations, such as theEpiscopal Church, theUnited Church of Christ, and theEvangelical Lutheran Church in America, plus the smallMetropolitan Community Church, founded as a church intending to minister primarily to LGBT people, and theChurch of Sweden where such clergy may serve in senior clerical positions. TheChurch of Norway has for many years had both gay and lesbian priests, even bishops, and in 2006 the first woman who was appointed a bishop in Norway came out as an active homosexual herself, and that she had been a homosexual since before she joined the church.[55]
^abBecker, Matthew L. (25 January 2024).Fundamental Theology: A Protestant Perspective. Bloomsbury Publishing.ISBN978-0-567-70572-3.Confessional Lutherans also recognize absolution and holy orders (ordained pastoral ministry) as additional sacraments, and some will acknowledge that the anointing of the sick with oil has a sacramental character.
^Church of England."Articles of Religion". Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Article 25.Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved6 October 2022.
^abWilliams, Father Gregory (1979),The Sacramental Life: An Orthodox Christian Perspective (3rd ed.), Liberty TN: St. John of Kronstadt Press (published 1986), pp. 43–47
^Hapgood, Isabel F. (1922).Service Book of the Holy Orthodox-Catholic Apostolic Church (5th ed.). Englewood NJ:Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese (published 1975). p. 106.
^Melton, J. Gordon (2005).Encyclopedia of Protestantism. Infobase Publishing. p. 91.ISBN9780816069835.Martin Luther seemed personally indifferent to apostolic succession, but branches of the Lutheran Church most notably the Church of Sweden, preserve episcopal leadership and apostolic succession.
^"History".Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA.Archived from the original on 2025-03-07. Retrieved2025-03-07.In 1928 a second group of Ukrainian Orthodox faithful in the USA initiated a movement toward Orthodoxy. Because of the questions surrounding the status of Archbishop John, the group hesitated in affiliating itself with his already established jurisdiction even though it was thriving. The first Sobor of this group met in Allentown, PA in the spring of 1929 and established itself as the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in America. Rev. Dr. Joseph Zuk was elected as administrator to organize the diocese and at its second Sobor of 1931 in New York City he was elected as its first Bishop. Two hierarchs of the Syrian Orthodox Church in the USA consecrated Bishop Zuk in 1932 at St. Volodymyr Cathedral, on 14th Street in New York City. Unfortunately, Bishop Joseph lived less than two years following his consecration.