Tag: Vocations

Christian Witness, PNCC, , ,

Meet my new Bishop

From the Times-Tribune: Central Diocese of Polish National Catholic Church to welcome new bishop in February

The Central Diocese of the Polish National Catholic Church and its mother cathedral, St. Stanislaus in South Scranton, will welcome a new bishop and pastor on Feb. 1.

Bishop John Mack has served for the past four years as the auxiliary bishop of the Buffalo-Pittsburgh Diocese and has been a pastor in Western Pennsylvania for two decades.

The current bishop of the Central Diocese, the Most Rev. Anthony Mikovsky, was elected Prime Bishop of the church in October, leaving a vacancy at the head of the diocese that stretches from Maryland to New York. Bishop Mack was assigned to take his place at the end of the denomination-wide synod in October.

He will take charge of what he notes is the largest parish and the largest diocese in the denomination.

“It’s quite daunting,” he said.

Bishop Mack was born and raised in the Polish National Catholic Church in the greater Detroit area and attended Savonarola Theological Seminary in Scranton.

Although he has never served as a pastor in the Central Diocese, Bishop Mack said the relatively small size of the Polish National Catholic Church and the frequency with which people throughout the denomination meet at events means he knows at least a few families here.

“Our church, in its smallness, it has a family feel to it because you get to meet people from all around the denomination when you go to various national events,” he said. “You keep these friends through all the years.”

Because Scranton was the site of the denomination’s break from the Roman Catholic Church and its founding as a new church, parishioners here tend to have an acute sense of the denomination’s first principles, including its democratic structure, he said.

“Many of those parishioners, their grandparents, great-grandparents, great-great-grandparents, were some of the founding members of the first parish,” he said, “so there’s a heightened awareness there of the overall purpose of our denomination, why it began.”

As he prepares for his new role and its spiritual challenges, Bishop Mack has also had to adapt to the earthly logistics of a 300-mile move after decades in the same region.

Priests in the Polish National Catholic Church can marry and Bishop Mack and his wife have three children, aged 17, 20 and 23. In his other fatherly role, Bishop Mack was faced with how to let his 17-year-old son stay in the Pittsburgh area with his 23-year-old sister while he finishes high school.

“That’s one of the things that was the most difficult, and I’m still feeling that a bit in the pit of my stomach,” he said.

Having to make such hard family choices can help the denomination’s priests connect to parishioners who face similar struggles.

“You have a great deal of empathy for them when you’ve been through some of the sleepless nights, and little ones, middle-aged ones and teenagers,” he said. “You have, what do they call that, battle experience?”

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St. Francis, Denver, attacked again

From the Denver Post: Griego: Little church’s St. Francis statue a target for vandals
By Tina Griego

Someone’s got it out for St. Francis. Or just the little church named in his honor. Or the church as a whole. Who knows? Maybe just fiberglass statues depicting humble saints who turn their backs on wealth to live in poverty.

It’s hard to know the mind of a vandal. This doesn’t keep Father John Kalabokes from trying.

Not quite five months ago, someone stole the bolted statue of St. Francis from its concrete base outside the St. Francis of Assisi Polish National Catholic Church. You might remember this story. The little church sits just below Leetsdale Avenue at South Jersey Street, across from a McDonald’s. Father John speculated the thief or thieves wrapped a chain around the 5-foot-tall statue, secured the other end to a vehicle and hit the gas.

This is a poor church, not affiliated with the Catholic Archdiocese of Denver as it has its differences — small but significant — with Roman Catholicism.

When the news got out, people sent in donations, and about two months after the statue was stolen, the church dedicated a new one: St. Francis, gleaming white, a blue bird perched on his hand.

Credit: John Prieto, The Denver Post
And now this.

“St. Francis was attacked again,” Father John tells me in an e-mail.

I call him in disbelief. “What?”

The statue wasn’t stolen this time, he says. This time, someone or someones went after it with some kind of tool until the head smashed and the face came off.

“This was brutal,” he says, sounding weary. “Somebody has real issues. Whoever did it just beat on the statue, just beat on the head. The whole face came off in one piece.”

When Father John first discovered it Wednesday, he called a television reporter and a short piece aired. Afterward, he wondered whether it was the right thing to do. He wonders, even now, whether more publicity will just gratify the culprit. I don’t try to persuade him one way or another. As I said, it’s hard to know the mind of a vandal. Maybe, Father John decides, more publicity will prompt someone to come forward.

“Let’s face it,” he says. “These kind of crimes only get solved because someone comes forward, a witness or someone who knows something.”

It might not be the same person as last time, I say.

“There’s no way of knowing,” he says. “We suspect it’s an ongoing crime. It’s hard to accept that there would be more than one person out there who would do this.”

He tells me something he didn’t reveal before. About a week and a half after the statue was stolen, someone left a note on its concrete base. The letters were cut out of newspaper like a movie-version of a ransom note and said something like: ” ‘You will be struck,’ ” Father John said. “The police have it now.

“I’m a little discouraged and depressed,” he says. “I don’t understand the joy someone would get out of that. It’s a hateful action. It’s an act against the faithful.”

On Sunday, most of the congregation got its first look at the headless St. Francis. It’s a startling sight. Church members are angered and baffled and they compare it to recent attacks on statues at the Mother Cabrini Shrine in Golden.

After Mass, Father John talks to the congregation. “I’m sure most of you, if not all of you, noticed that St. Francis was attacked again,” he starts, and the woman next to me starts to cry. He says he can’t figure out why someone would do this and that he no longer thinks this is a teenage prank. He says the good news, such as it is, is the statue might be reparable, but the church needs to figure out a way to protect it.

Someone out there is troubled, he says, so pray for him or her. Good came from bad last time, he tells them. It can again.

You may contact St. Francis Parish via their website to express your prayers and support.

Christian Witness, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

The R.C. Church in Poland – one Dominican speaks

From Gazeta Wyborcza: A Dominican’s dramatic letter: The Sins of My Church (Dramatyczny list dominikanina: Winy mojego Kościoła)

Dominikanin o. Ludwik Wiśniewski, fot. Krzysztof Kuczyk/Agencja FORUM
Dominican Father Ludwik Wiśniewski sent a letter in September to the Vatican’s representative in Poland, Archbishop Celestina Migliore, recounting the major problems facing the Roman Catholic Church in Poland.

“All is not well with the Polish Church. It is large, colorful, impressive – but really is artificially inflated like a balloon. I’m afraid we do not appreciate the risks.”

Rev. Wiśniewski is a famous university chaplain who, in Communist times, signed the first declaration of the Civil Rights movement in Poland. The East German secret police, Stasi, considered him one of the sixty most dangerous persons in the Polish opposition.

The eight page letter presents an unusually severe diagnosis of the Polish Church’s problems. Among the problems he notes:

  • Scandalous division within the Polish episcopate: Bishops work against each other by using the facade of Catholic faith to divide society and the Church into rival political camps and causes. These efforts are in effect “pagan as they inflame and divide society and the Church itself.” He noted the recent example of some Bishops writing to major newspapers in support of the “Defenders of the Cross” protests in front of Poland’s Presidential Palace.
  • Politics over the Gospel: Half of the priests are “infected with xenophobia, nationalism and shamefully hidden anti-Semitism.” He notes that these priests have lost sight of the boundaries between the gospel and politics. They use vulgarities in the pulpit to condemn or support specific political parties and politicians.
  • A lack of discipline: By example he notes the unresolved issue of Radio Maryja, where in addition to prayer, people “learn fanaticism, resentment and even hatred for those who think differently” from a member of the clergy.
  • An inability to communicate: The hierarchy is unable to communicate with changing world. Their communications are meant to convey pronounced conviction, zeal, zest, and great confidence, but in the opinion of professionals, they come across as incompetent.

Rev. Wiśniewski proposes a “great debate” that will “restore the true” face “of the church.” This debate should be given to the care of special teams under the auspices of one of the major bishops. This should include a team “to address the issue of education and religious education of children and young people” as well as an assessment of the activity of clergy in the media, particularly that of Rev. Tadeusz Rydzyk, director of Radio Maryja.

Bishop Tadeusz Pieronek called the letter a moving call to repair the church.

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PNCC Jubilarians — God bless you and many years!

May God bless the hard working priests, senior priests, and bishops of the PNCC, and in particular the Rt. Rev. Anthony Rysz, Very Rev. Fryderyk Banas, and Rev. John P. Kowalczyk, Jr. who celebrated anniversaries of their ordination to the Holy Priesthood over the past few months. Szczęść Boże i Sto Lat!

Rt. Rev. Anthony M. Rysz

Bishop Anthony Rysz, born in Old Forge, Pennsylvania is the son of the late Aniela (Szmyd) Rysz and the late Joseph Rysz. He was educated in local schools and attended the University of Scranton. During the Second World War he served with the Fifth Amphibious Force of the Pacific Theater with the United States Navy.

Long involved in the activities of the Polish National Catholic Church, his calling prompted him to enter the Savonarola Theological Seminary of the P.N.C.C. During his seminary days he taught Polish language to the students at the Cathedral schools located in a number of locations in the vicinity of Scranton. He was ordained to the priesthood on October 19, 1950 by the Rt. Rev. John Misiaszek in St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr Cathedral. He served as the assistant pastor of the Cathedral and secretary to Prime Bishop Francis Hodur.

In February 1954 he was assigned to the pastorate of Holy Mother of Sorrows Parish in Dupont, PA. During his time in Dupont, Father Rysz served as chaplain to the United Y.M.S. of R. and United Girls Sodalities. On November 11, 1964 he was elevated to the rank of Senior Priest by Prime Bishop Leon Grochowski, and he served as the Administrative Senior of the Scranton Seniorate. At the 12th General Synod held in Manchester, NH in October 1967, Fr. Sr. Anthony Rysz was elected to the office of bishop. In February 1968, he assumed the pastorate of St. Stanislaus Cathedral Parish and was raised to the episcopate on June 26, 1968 and appointed Coadjutor Bishop of the Central Diocese. He held this position until assuming the responsibilities of Bishop Ordinary upon the death of Prime Bishop Leon Grochowski in July of 1969.

He has served on various commissions of the Church, including the United Polish School Societies, the National Commission for the School of Christian Living, the Bishop Hodur History and Archives Commission and the Board of Trustees of Savonarola Theological Seminary. He also lectured on Church History in Savonarola Theological Seminary. He oversaw St. Stanislaus Elementary School as well as fulfilling the pastoral obligations of the largest parish in the P.N.C.C. He was the personal secretary to the First Bishop of the Polish National Catholic Church, Bishop Francis Hodur, as well as his successor, Prime Bishop Leon Grochowski. He was secretary to the General Synods held in 1954, 1958, 1963, 1967 and 1971.

As an ardent supporter of God’s Field, the official organ of the Church, Bishop Rysz served as editor from 1969 to 1999 and was a frequent writer.

Bishop Rysz made many trips to Poland. From 1959 to 1966, he spent many months as the consignee for Aid to Poland, under the American-Polish National Relief Program. Later, he worked in building the Bishop Hodur Memorial Church in Zarki, Poland. Bishop Rysz attended the Congresses of the Old Catholic Church in Europe and was a frequent participant in the lnternational Bishop Conferences of the Union of Utrecht. Until his retirement he was active as co-chairman of the Polish National Catholic – Roman Catholic Dialogue.

Bishop Rysz retired from the pastorate of St. Stanislaus Cathedral and as Bishop Ordinary of the Central Diocese in 1999 to Old Forge, PA. At the present time Bishop Rysz serves as pastor of Holy Name of Jesus Parish in Nanticoke, PA.

Bishop Anthony Rysz is married to the former Marie V. Bednash.

Very Rev. Fryderyk S. Banas

Father Senior Fryderyk S. Banas son of the late Stanislaw Banas and the late Waleria (Szczepanek) Banas was born in Chicopee, Massachusetts and attended Holy Mother of the Rosary Parish there. After his education in local schools he took up his calling and enrolled in Savonarola Theological Seminary in Scranton, PA. He was ordained to the priesthood on October 19, 1950 by Rt. Rev. John Misiaszek, Bishop Ordinary of the Central Diocese.

After ordination, Fr. Banas was assigned as assistant pastor of Holy Mother of the Rosary Cathedral in Buffalo, NY and the administrator of Holy Trinity Parish in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

In August 1953 he was assigned as interim pastor of St. John the Baptist Parish in Hazleton, PA and administrator of SS. Peter and Paul Parish in McAdoo, PA. He was transferred to St. Adalbert’s Parish in Dickson City, PA in September 1953. From January 1957 he also served as administrator of Holy Trinity Parish in Throop, PA. While in Dickson City he was elevated to the rank of Senior Priest on August 5, 1964 by Prime Bishop Leon Grochowski. During the time of his pastorate in Dickson City, St. Adalbert’s Parish was renovated with many improvements and cemetery lands were purchased. Holy Trinity Parish in Throop, PA was also remodeled following a fire in 1959.

Fr. Sr. Banas served as chaplain to the Central Diocese United Choirs, recording secretary of the Central Diocesan Clergy Conference, a member of the Central Committee of the United Polish National Schools Societies and a director on the board for the Home for the Aged and Disabled (the Manor at Waymart). He was and still is active in the life of the Polish National Union. Fr. Sr. Banas also lectured in Moral Theology at Savonarola Theological Seminary.

Fr. Sr. Banas journeyed to Poland in 1959 as the first delegate for the American-Polish National Relief for Poland to sign agreements between this humanitarian organization and the Polish government. He also accompanied Prime Bishop Leon Grochowski on his last missionary trip to Poland in 1969.

On May 1, 1977 Fr. Sr. Banas was assigned as pastor of Holy Mother of the Rosary Cathedral in Buffalo, NY and served as Administrator of the Buffalo-Pittsburgh Diocese.

In February of 1979 Fr. Sr. Banas transferred to the Eastern Diocese where he served as pastor of Blessed Virgin Mary Parish to May 1989. He presently serves as pastor of Holy Cross Parish in Ware, MA.

Fr. Sr. Banas has been and continues to be an avid supporter of God’s Field having written articles for the official organ of the Church for many years.

Rev. John P. Kowalczyk, Jr.

Rev. Kowalczyk is the pastor of St. Michael The Archangel National Catholic Church commemorated his 25th Anniversary of Ordination to the Holy Priesthood of the Polish National Catholic Church on December 4, 2010.

A Holy Mass of Thanksgiving was offered at the interim worship location for St. Michael The Archangel Parish in the Great Oaks Banquet Center, lower level, located at 13109 Wicker Avenue, Cedar Lake, Indiana. Following Mass, a banquet honoring Rev. Kowalczyk was held at the same location, upstairs in the banquet hall.

Joining with Rev. Kowalczyk at Holy Mass was the Most Rev. John F. Swantek, Prime Bishop Emeritus of the Polish National Catholic Church, as well as the Rt. Reverend Anthony D. Kopka, Bishop Ordinary of the Western Diocese of the Polish National Catholic Church, as well as other Clergy and Ecumenical Guests.

Rev. Kowalczyk was ordained to the Holy Priesthood on December 11, 1985 at St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr Cathedral of the Polish National Catholic Church in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Father Kowalczyk had served in parishes in New York prior to his transfer to St. Michael’s Cedar Lake, formerly East Chicago, in June 2000. In December of 2003, under the leadership of Fr. Kowalczyk, the members of St. Michael The Archangel voted and approved the relocation of their parish to Cedar Lake, Indiana. Currently, construction of the new St. Michael church is underway with a completion estimate of Spring 2011. Father Kowalczyk currently serves as the Chaplain of the Cedar Lake Fire Department, as well as the Chaplain for Cedar Lake and East Chicago Police Departments.

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Vocations: a growth sector

A story in the US News and World Report: 20 Industries Where Jobs Are Coming Back notes that jobs in religious and charitable institutions (with vocations being the largest share of jobs in that sectors) is among the top 20 areas with job growth. In fact, that sector has shown growth since before the recession began.

If you’ve been paying close attention to the economy and you’re inclined to look on the bright side, well, finally there is one.

As President Obama has been eager to point out, the private sector has been adding jobs for several months in a row. It’s still way too early to declare the return of prosperity, since nearly 15 million Americans remain unemployed and some key industries are still mired in recession. But the good news is finally starting to outweigh the bad, and economists hope that a virtuous cycle will soon replace a culture of gloom: Gradual hiring eventually makes consumers more optimistic, and as they spend more, business confidence grows as well. If that happens, companies are likely to keep on hiring.

Everybody wants to know where the jobs are, of course, so I analyzed data from the Department of Labor on employment levels in dozens of industries over the last three years. In most industries, the trend is similar: Job losses have stopped, but hiring hasn’t really picked up. So I looked for industries that have shown a notable increase in jobs over the last year.

In most of these fields, total employment is still far below the levels at the end of 2007, when the recession began. That illustrates how far we need to go until the economy is truly healthy again. But a recovery has to start somewhere, and these industries are the first to feel a hint of optimism. Here are 20 fields where jobs are starting to return:

Religious and nonprofit groups. Donations dipped during the recession, but religious, nonprofit, social, and business organizations have fared okay lately as endowments linked to the stock market have recovered and other sources of funding have stabilized. Clergy—a somewhat recessionproof calling—represent the single largest profession within this group.

Jobs gained in 2010: 56,000

Change since 2007: 9,000 jobs gained

For those seeking, both out of school, on second or third careers, or in retirement, the Savonarola Theological Seminary offers scholarships and other assistance so you can attend.

To find out more about vocations to the diaconate and the priesthood, please contact the Savonarola Theological Seminary of the Polish National Catholic Church, 1031 Cedar Ave, Scranton, PA 18505. School, (570) 961-9288, Office, (570) 343-0100. You may also E-mail me and I will get your E-mail to the right people.

PNCC

God bless you and Sto Lat!

Two anniversaries were celebrated in Scranton, PA. last week.

The Rt. Rev. Anthony Rysz, Bishop Emeritus of the Central Diocese, celebrated the 60th anniversary of his ordination to the Holy Priesthood with Holy Mass at St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr Cathedral.

Prime Bishop Emeritus, Robert Nemkovich, celebrated his 16th anniversary of consecration as Bishop on Monday, October 18th, at the National Church Center.

May God bless you both for your faithful service, your answer to His call, and grant you many more years!

Christian Witness, PNCC, , ,

Of your prayers for health and healing

I ask of all my readers your prayers for two priests of the Polish National Catholic Church, Father Augustin Sicard and Father Amaro Rojas of Saint Marin and Saint Rose Parish in San Antonio, Texas.

Father Amaro, together with his wife Rosie, and their children Fernanda and Regina, have prayerfully considered a great and generous gift to Father Augustin. By the grace of God, Fr. Amaro felt the call to donate one of his kidneys to Father Augustine. Both priests underwent the transplant procedure this past week.

The generosity of the Puerto Rican community in San Antonio, and a number of parish members, has also become evident in that they have gathered to help raise funds for both priest’s costs.

Father Augustine made a promise to Our Lady, to shave his head completely when the final decision was made for the transplant.

O Holy Lord, Father Almighty, everlasting God, who by pouring the grace of Thy blessing upon sick bodies, dost preserve by Thy manifold goodness, the work of Thy hands; graciously draw near to us as we call upon Thy name, beseeching Thee to behold, visit, heal and deliver from sickness Thy priests Augustine and Amaro, and according to the multitude of Thy tender mercy, look with favor upon them, grant unto them patience, strengthen them by Thy might, defend them by Thy power, cast out from them all pain of mind and body, and mercifully restore them full health both inwardly and outwardly, that having recovered by the help of Thy loving kindness, they may be enabled to return again to their daily ministry and glorify Thee in Thy Holy Church. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. — A Prayer for a Sick Person from A Book of Devotions and Prayers According to the Use of the Polish National Catholic Church.

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Installation of our new Prime Bishop

The Most Rev. Dr. Anthony Mikovsky will be formally installed as the Seventh Prime Bishop of the Polish National Catholic Church on Sunday, November 21st at 3pm in Saint Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Cathedral, the Mother Church of the PNCC in Scranton, PA.

All are invited and encouraged to attend this event which only happens in our Church about once every decade. Please continue to pray for Prime Bishop Mikovsky, all of our Bishops, clergy, members and friends, for vocations to the priesthood, and for the entire Holy Polish National Catholic Church.

O God, the pastor and ruler of all the faithful, mercifully look upon Thy servant Anthony, who Thou has been pleased to set as bishop in Thy Church; grant him, we beseech Thee, to be in word and conversation a wholesome example to the people committed to his charge, that he with them may attain everlasting life. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. — A Prayer for a Bishop from A Book of Devotions and Prayers According to the Use of the Polish National Catholic Church.

Perspective,

An analysis of the Diaconal vocation

From the Pastoral Review: Deacons and the Servant Myth by Anthony Gooley

It is frequently argued that the distinctive character of deacons is that they are servants called to the charitable and social justice ministry of the Church. The belief that service is distinctive of deacons is the servant myth. It is based on a false reading of Acts 6 and it has consequences for the way in which the Church receives the ministry of deacons. Breaking down this myth is the first step in restoring an authentic diaconate in the life of the Church…

What happens in Acts 6.1-7? Is Acts 6 the starting point for the ministry of deacons and what is their ministry? Frequently readers assume that the Seven were called to meet the material needs of the Greek widows who were neglected at the daily distribution and that this form of charitable service establishes the authentic and distinctive character of deacons. This is the beginning of the deacon as ‘servant myth’. This myth is a belief that the distinctive and defining characteristic of a deacon and diaconal ministry is service, usually in the form of charity, especially to the poor and those on the margins of Church and society. It is a myth that continues to distort our understanding of the diaconate and hampers the full reception of the fruits of this restored ministry. Curiously it never seems to touch the transitional diaconate, which is accepted without question or indeed much reflection, at least in the Roman Catholic tradition. If service is the distinctive quality of the diaconate, what does this say about the service dimension of the other ordained ministries and the mission life of the Church? Diakonia is a word Roman Catholics use to describe the ministry of the bishop without any sense that the word is restricted to social justice or charity (Lumen gentium 24). Surely all ministers are called to imitate Christ the servant and a similar attitude should pervade the whole church. I do not argue that deacons cannot have or will not have a charitable or service role, only that it is not the distinctive character of their ministry. The myth does not have its genesis in Acts but is shaped by the revival of the diaconate in the nineteenth century German Lutheran church; reinforced by translators’ choices which shape our understanding of Acts and reflections of diaconate in post-war Germany in the 1940s and 50s. In this article I intend to explore the origins of the myth and suggest why it is not a sound basis for a theology and praxis of the diaconate. The most recent documents of the Roman Catholic tradition on diaconate contain layers of tradition, but it is possible to perceive an outline of diaconate that is balanced and avoids the servant myth as a foundation.

Making sense of Acts

In making sense of Acts 6.1-7 translators in English take some liberties with the Greek text. The choices translators make have influenced the way we hear and make meaning of this text. In verse one the cause for the complaint of the Greek speaking Christians is variously given as a neglect of the widows in the daily distribution of food (NRSV), of funds (GNB) and of food (JB). The RSV is happy to leave the neglect simply at an unspecified distribution. The Greek does not add the preposition of or the terms food and funds and in this the RSV reflects the original text. The text does not say what is being missed in the daily distribution and it has to be inferred from the whole context of Acts. It would hardly seem likely that either food or funds could be intended because Acts 5 deals with what happens to disciples who try to neglect others in the distribution of the material goods of the community. In verse 2 the apostles complain about not wanting to neglect the word and wait on tables (NRSV), neglect the preaching and manage finances (GNB) neglect the word to give out food (JB) and to give up preaching to serve tables (RSV). Again it is the RSV which resists the temptation to add anything to the text and it does not insert a preposition which is not found in the Greek between serve and tables or add references to finances or food. In verse 4 all translators are certain about prayer and with dealing with the word we are most interested in; diakonia, which is translated in the way it is most normally used in Acts and the letters of Paul. Diakonia is translated as ministry, and in the context of the whole sentence a ministry of the word (diakonia tou logou).

If we take the Greek text, as it is reproduced in RSV, we are able to construct a better picture of what is really happening in Acts 6.1-7. The Greek speaking Christians are complaining that their widows are being neglected in the daily diakonia. In Acts the diakonia is the proclamation of the Gospel. They are neglected for two reasons, the Aramaic speaking Apostles predominantly concentrate their proclamation in the Temple and the widows, who cannot comprehend the language and for social reasons are mostly restricted to the home, are overlooked in this daily diakonia. The solution proposed by the Apostles and agreed to by the whole Church is to appoint seven from among the Greek speaking community to do that daily diakonia in the homes of the Greek widows or as the expression in the Greek has it, to minister tables. Both the Apostles and the Seven had been entrusted with the same diakonia which is to minister or proclaim the word. To underscore this interpretation we see that Stephen immediately commences to proclaim the Gospel to the point of giving witness with his life (Acts 6-7.50) and Philip commences his diakonia of the word in proclaiming the Gospel, catechising the Ethiopian and baptising (Acts 8). The laying on of hands becomes the concrete sign that the ministry entrusted to the Apostles is to be entrusted to the Seven. The one thing we do not see the Seven do is charitable works or distributing food or funds to the widows, in fact we do not see anyone in the New Testament with the title of diakonos engaged in a specifically charitable service activity. This should give us some clues as we address the servant myth.

Whether or not the Seven were the first deacons, as Eusebius calls them, is debatable. The one word that Luke does not use of them is diakonos, the noun from which we get our word deacon. Proclaiming the word, leading communities, representing communities and taking messages between communities and other forms of ministry are associated with those who are called diakonos in the New Testament as well as the clear delegation and imposition of a mandate for such ministry by the leaders of the community through the laying on of hands. Therefore it is reasonable to infer that the Seven may have been referred to as deacons in the early Church and that Eusebius is reflecting that understanding.

How did diakonia become service?

We do not have space here to review the many references to deacons in the first nine centuries of the Church, and in particular the first four centuries when so much of the structure of ministries in the early Church was taking shape. A few brief references, taken from the Fathers and used again in the recent Roman Catholic documents, are testament to an earlier tradition, before diakonia was defined as service and deacons as a kind of ordained social worker/charity worker. Three references will suffice to indicate the flavour of this early tradition. Ignatius to the Magnesians, ‘deacons entrusted with the ministry/d of Christ’ and to the Trallians, ‘deacons are not waiters (diakonoi) providing food and drink but executives (hyperetai) of the Church of God’ and finally to the Philadelphians, ‘take care to use only one Eucharist…there is one bishop in union with the presbyters and the deacon.’ The earliest witnesses of the tradition reflect the common Greek usage. Deacons were not thought of as having a distinctive servant orientation but as part of the broader understanding of the apostolic ministry and leadership of local churches.

A type of diaconate was revived in the nineteenth century in the Lutheran Church in Germany and gradually this pattern of diaconate was adopted in the Nordic Lutheran and some of the Reformed churches. The Lutheran Pastor Theodore Fliedner and his wife Frederike established a ministry to care for the homeless and poor who were increasing in number in the industrialised cities. This ministry was not an ordained ministry and was modelled somewhat on the lines of a Roman Catholic religious order. The Fliedners took their inspiration from their understanding of Acts 6 as a ministry of charity to the widows who, in their reading of the text, were neglected in the daily distribution of charity and the goods of the community. They called the women in this ministry deaconess and the men deacons.

Brodd argues that the identification of diakonia with charity (caritas) and social service developed into a functionalist understanding of diaconate, where the deacon is defined not from an ecclesiological foundation based on the Church as koinonia and situating ordination within this context but inductively from the sum of the functions performed. The result is that in the Lutheran and Reformed traditions the deacon came to be seen as a kind of ordained social worker. In his study Brodd concurs with the work of Collins and indicates that caritas and diakonia essentially belong to two different conceptual circles.

It is the intersection of four elements that provide us with the final clues as to how diakonia became service. The first is the development of the functionalism in the eighteenth century as a way describing ministry. The second is the practice of diakonia that was revived in this charitable, social work form in northern Europe. The third is the influence of the authoritative work of Bauer, The Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and other Early Christian Literature, which defined diakonia as service. He was perhaps influenced in this by his association with the Lutheran deacon movement. The fourth element is the development of role theory in psychology and sociology and the attempt to account for ministries in the church in terms of roles. What emerged was an understanding of diaconate not based on Scripture and the early tradition of the Church but one developed from the practice of the charitable diaconate movement.

Restoring the diaconate

‘The almost total disappearance of the permanent diaconate from the Church of the West for more than a millennium has certainly made it more difficult to understand the profound reality of this ministry. However, it cannot be said for that reason that the theology of the diaconate has no authoritative points of reference, completely at the mercy of theological opinion.’ …

The one essential reference point must be the recovery of the meaning of diakonia and diakonos from the Scriptures and the early documents of the Church. In order to do this through the Scriptural path churches, deacons and others interested in ministry must go through the work of John N Collins…

The International Theological Commission in its paper, From the Diakonia of Christ to the Diakonia of the Apostles, suggests that the Second Vatican Council intended to implement the principle and not any particular historical form of the diaconate. That is Laurence of Rome or Francis of Assisi or a Nicholas Ferrar might give us some idea of how deacons have exercised their ministry in the past but we may not want to copy their ministry as the model diaconal ministry. What we are looking for is a diaconate for today. It should also be a ministry that includes women in all of the Churches since we know from the Scriptures and the early Church and its laws that women were deacons…

An interesting analysis that provides substance to the ministry of deacon as proclaimer of the Word. Much of what the great deacon saints (most being martyrs) did was exactly that. It may have been exhibited in stories highlighting the service role, for instance Lawrence, but that shouldn’t overshadow the proclamation that was made real as a result of the service. Stephen, as noted in the article, fully proclaimed the Word above his life.

I’ve often half-joked that the deacon’s role is to be the big mouth and troublemaker, the one who stirs up those who are against the Church, exactly by his witness. Whether it was a king, mayor, soldier, or pope, the deacon was there, again, to bear witness to the clear truth of the Word. The deacon himself could be ignored, but the deacon with the Word was a mighty force whop had to be put down.

Deacon Gooley is off-base on the women as deacon issue, and it is too bad he didn’t further develop his article before taking it political. I would have liked to see more on the threefold role of Bishop and the deacon’s share of that ministry. He might have better explored the deacon and his tie to Jesus Christ in Trinitarian formulation, thus supporting the deacon’s role in proclaiming the Word.

On the deaconess issue, credible research and scholarship indicate that the deaconess was non-ministerial, assisting at baptisms (full immersion in the early Church) for the purpose of modesty as well as other liturgical and charitable functions pertaining to the women of the Church, but never serving at the altar. Their role was indeed focused on servanthood. The rite for installing the deaconess was different from that of the deacon, a blessing rather than an ordination (but with some dispute on this issue). The Greek Orthodox make some allowance for women deacons, but only in cloistered communities of nuns where priests cannot frequently visit due to distance or for other reasons (the nuns would go without the Eucharist otherwise since they are not going to handle the mysteries like bread in a cafeteria line). [T]he Holy Synod decided that women could be promoted to the diaconate only in remote monasteries and at the discretion of individual bishops.From ‘Grant Her Your Spirit,’ America, February 7, 2005 – a generally liberal magazine whose reporting may be clouded by agenda. They are, in effect, glorified “eucharistic ministers.” Whatever the Protestant Churches have done on the issue is of no consequence because, as the Young Fogey frequently points-out, everything in those Churches, including the very bases of faith (Jesus is God, Trinitarian doctrine) is only one vote away from being tossed out with the trash.