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Mission Statement
The service of deacons in the Church is documented from Apostolic
times. A strong tradition, attested already by St. Ireneus and influencing the
liturgy of ordination, sees the origin of the diaconate in the institution of
the “seven” mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles (6:1-6). Thus,
at the initial grade of sacred hierarchy are deacons, whose ministry has always
been greatly esteemed in the Church. St. Paul refers to them and to the bishops
in the exordium of his Epistle to the Philippians (cf. Phil 1:1), while in his
first Epistle to Timothy he lists the qualities and virtues which they should
possess so as to exercise their ministry worthily (cf Tim 3:8-13).
From the outset, patristic literature witnesses to this hierarchical
and ministerial structure in the Church, which includes the diaconate. St. Ignatius
of Antioch considers a Church without bishop, priests or deacon, unthinkable.
He underlines that the ministry of deacons is nothing other than ”the
ministry of Jesus Christ who was with the Father before time began and who appeared
at the end of time”. They are not deacons of food and drink but ministers
of the Church of God. The Didascalia Apostolorum, the Fathers of subsequent
centuries, the various Councils, as well as and ecclesiastical praxis, all confirm
the continuity and development of this revealed datum.
Up to the fifth century the Diaconate flourished in the western
Church, but after this period, it experienced, for various reasons, a slow decline,
which ended in its surviving only as an intermediate stage for candidates preparing
for priestly ordination.
The Council of Trent disposed that the permanent Diaconate,
as it existed in ancient times, should be restored, in accord with its proper
nature, to its original function in the Church. This prescription, however,
was not carried into effect. The second Vatican Council established that “it
will be possible for the future to restore the diaconate as a proper and permanent
rank of the hierarchy” (and confer it) even upon married men, provided
they be of more mature age, and also suitable young men for whom, however, the
law of celibacy must remain in force” in accordance with constant tradition.
Three reasons lay behind this choice: (i) a desire to enrich the Church with
the functions of the diaconate, which otherwise, in many regions, could only
be exercised with great difficulty; (ii) the intention of strengthening with
the grace of diaconal ordination those who already exercised many of the functions
of the Diaconate; (iii) a concern to provide regions, where there is shortage
of clergy, with sacred ministers. Such reasons make clear that the restoration
of the permanent Diaconate was in no manner intended to prejudice the meaning,
role or flourishing of the ministerial priesthood, which must always be fostered
because of its indispensability.
With the Apostolic Letter, Sacrum diaconatuus ordinem, of 18
June 1967, Pope Paul VI implemented the recommendations of the Second Vatican
Council by determining general norms governing the restoration of the permanent
Diaconate in the Latin Church. The Apostolic Constitution Pontificalis Romani
Recognitio of 18 June 1968 approved the new rite of conferring the Sacred Orders
of the Episcopate, the Presbvterate and the Diaconate and determined the matter
and form of these sacramental ordinations. Finally, the Apostolic Letter, Ad
pascendum, of 15 August 1972 clarified the conditions for the admissions and
ordination of candidates to the diaconate. The essential elements of these norms
subsequently passed in the Code of Canon Law promulgated by Pope John Paul II
on 25 January 1983.
In the wake of this universal legislation, several Episcopal
Conferences, with the prior approbation of the Holy See, have restored the permanent
Diaconate in their territories and have drawn up complementary norms for its
regulation.
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