What
does it mean
to be ordained?
Presbyterian
beliefs about ordination have changed significantly over the years
By J. Frederick Holper
What Presbyterians believe about ordination has changed--sometimes
rather significantly--over time. For example, the ordination of
women as ministers, elders and deacons--something considered unthinkable
earlier in our history--has become not only acceptable but expected.
Three
unchanging beliefs
Presbyterians have remained open to change regarding
our understanding of ordination because of three unchanging beliefs:
1. We believe that God is the source and summit of all ministry
in the church. For Presbyterians ordination is not synonymous with
ministry. We believe all Christians are called by God and equipped
by the Spirit for service in the world when they are joined to the
ministry of Jesus Christ at their baptism. On the other hand, not
every member is called or equipped by God for the exercise of particular
offices of ministry within the church.
2. Presbyterians hold the conviction, voiced in chapter 1 of the
Book of Order, that "truth is in order to goodness." Truth
includes our shared convictions about who should be ordained, to
what offices, for what purposes, and with what preparation and standards
of accountability. The measure of this truth, however, does not
depend upon logical coherence or philosophical argument, but from
the character of the fruit it bears.
3. Presbyterians believe that ordained ministry should be collegial
(shared with others), non-hierarchical (shared by clergy and laity),
and communal (representing the whole church and not merely a congregation).
We also believe those called to ordained offices in the church should
be subjected to a process in which their calls are tested and confirmed
by the church.
Men
and women together?
In 1789, when the first General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church in the United States of America met in Philadelphia, all
church officers-- deacons, elders and ministers--were, by both custom
and church law, male. The very notion of women holding office was
considered preposterous. Indeed, some early 19th-century church
"worthies" became quite worked up over the possibility
that women might lead prayer in "promiscuous assemblies"
(gatherings where men would be present).
Women were prohibited from serving as elders or deacons until the
1930s--or the 1960s in the Presbyterian Church in the U.S. (PCUS).
Ordaining women to the gospel ministry took an additional 20-30
years.
Today, however, the proportion of women and men serving in ordained
offices is nearly 50 percent each, a development that is mirrored
in the enrollment figures of the 10 Presbyterian theological institutions.
Whose
hands?
Until the 1830s no one seriously challenged the notion
that only pastors (also called bishops until 1957) were permitted
to join in the laying on of hands in the ordination of new pastors,
elders and deacons. Professor Charles Hodge of Princeton Theological
Seminary, who opposed letting elders take part in the process, was
fond of quoting an old Latin proverb: Nemo det quod non habet (no
one may give what he does not have). Hodge's argument was cast aside
by the PCUS in the 1860s, but Presbyterians in the "Northern"
stream steadfastly clung to it until the 1950s.
Today ordination is explicitly defined as an act done by a governing
body made up of ministers and elders who jointly exercise the power
of jurisdiction, rather than as an act done by persons who possess
a power of order only they can transmit.
Service
for life
For the first century of American Presbyterianism, congregations
were unable to change entrenched leadership on the session or board
of deacons. Elders and deacons served on their boards until they
died (or were convicted of an offense that stripped them of their
ordination). Finally, in the middle of the 19th century, churches
were given permission to opt out of the lifetime service model in
favor of a rotating limited-term service (the PCUS would take nearly
a century to provide the same option to its congregations).
Today, limited-term service is now mandatory, and congregations
that wish to be exempted from this requirement must make their request
to the presbytery.
Radical
roles for elders
During the same general era a then-radical notion began
to take root: that elders should be able to be moderators of governing
bodies above the level of the session. Although the idea eventually
carried the day, a debate opened up almost immediately: How, it
was asked, could a lay person serve as moderator since the retiring
moderator each year was required to preach? Because elders had not
been given the power of order needed to preach, any retiring elder-moderator
was expected to deputize a minister member or commissioner to preach
the retiring moderator's sermon!
Today elders are not only regularly elected to serve as moderators
of higher governing bodies but often serve as commissioned lay pastors,
preaching the Word and presiding at sacramental celebrations for
congregations without pastors. Moreover, elders are as likely as
ministers to be elected to service as presbytery, synod and General
Assembly executives.
More
ministry options
When American Presbyterians adopted their first Book
of Order in 1789, only two options existed for those who had prepared
themselves for ordination to the gospel ministry. Those with a call
from an existing congregation would be ordained by the presbytery
as pastors (or bishops). Those without a call would be ordained
as evangelists, charged with gathering and organizing a new congregation.
Today those preparing to serve as ministers of the Word and Sacrament
are faced with an array of specialized forms of ministry, many of
which have no formal ties or links to local congregations or agencies
of higher governing bodies.
Testing
what we believe
Picture a child's top. When the top is not spinning,
all sorts of clever lines and designs can be seen, but once it is
set to spinning, we see something altogether different. When we
look only at what our confessional and governance documents say
about ordination, we can see all kinds of logical connections and
easy-to-understand categories. When all of these are put in motion
by virtue of applying them to particular persons, with particular
gifts, called by particular communities of God's people to lead
them at a particular time in history, the lines and the categories
begin to blur. The strengths and weaknesses of these provisions
come to light in ways that matter to people.
Some in our church feel strongly that Christian educators ought
to be ordained. The church also is deeply divided over the question
of whether openly gay and lesbian persons may be ordained to offices
of ministry. We may wish these debates would just go away, but they
are the way we Presbyterians go about testing what we believe to
be the truth. If and when the debates finally come to an end, it
will come from putting everything that matters to us into play and
then testing the fruits born of each side's understanding and practice
of ministry.
J. Frederick Holper is professor of preaching and
worship at McCormick Theological Seminary, Chicago, Ill. Illustration
by Anita Dufalla. The articles on this page are from the May 2001
Edition of Presbyterians Today magazine.
What
is ordination?
The act by which the church sets apart leaders to serve in particular
offices. The word ordination is derived from order. In ordination
the church orders itself for ministry.
For what offices is ordination required?
Minister of the Word and Sacrament, elder, deacon.
Who does the ordaining?
The presbytery ordains ministers. The church session ordains deacons
and elders.
How does the process of ordination work?
Those called to an ordained office in the church are subjected
to a four-stage process of admission to that office. Presbyterian
ordination rites have always included each aspect of this fourfold
process:
- Articulation of a clear inner sense that God is calling the
person to an office of ministry requiring ordination.
- Testing of that inner call by the church itself. In practice,
this has included an examination not only of the person's knowledge
and gifts, but also of his or her way of life.
- Election to office by a particular community of God's people,
ordinarily a congregation.
- Admission to the office (ordination) in the context of public
worship, through prayer, with the laying on of hands.
What kind of leadership does the church need?
The two key words here are gifts and service.
"Leaders in the church are identified and called to office
in terms of their gifts. It is expected that these gifts, coming
from God, are to be exercised in the particular tasks and office.
It is also to be expected that the gifts of the leader will be cultivated
and developed in obedience to the guidance of the Spirit and in
the service of the church. Leaders are also called on to empower
and enhance the exercise and development of the gifts of all of
the members of the community."--A Proposal for Considering
the Theology and Practice of Ordination in the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.), commended for churchwide study by the 1992 General Assembly
"The purpose and pattern of leadership in the church in all
its forms of ministry shall be understood not in terms of power
but of service, after the manner of the servant ministry of Jesus
Christ."--Book of Order, G-14.0103
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