Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T12:26:43.865Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Rebirth of the Diaconate

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2024

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

There are two ways of reinstituting the diaconate: having full-time deacons without any other occupation and having part-time ones whose main job is something else. Gradations between the two are also possible. The full-time deacon may, if necessary, do a certain amount of other work, whereas the part-time one may fulfil his duties say just in the mornings, or only in his spare time (evenings or weekends). Neither type, however, would be satisfactory by itself. There is a danger that the part-time deacon would lack the necessary firmness of purpose without the example of a full-time one, and that his attitude to the work could degenerate into a take-it-or-leave-it casualness. On the other hand, the church would be unable to manage with full-time deacons only, for economic reasons. It would be impossible to supply them to small mission stations, to the many churches in Latin America which lack a priest, or to the small diaspora areas on the continent. In these cases the only feasible thing is to have a local man as part-time deacon. A full-time one has to be guaranteed an income, while someone working part-time in an honorary capacity would compensate for this outlay, as in his case there would simply be the cost of his training. As part-time deacons men would be considered whose occupations were readily compatible with this work: teachers, social workers, lay preachers who give religious instruction at schools, etc. But the choice of part-time deacons should not be limited to men of these professions. There are men in every walk of life who are suitable for this work. Now that the worker-priests have been suppressed, could not the church make use of the worker-deacon, as a representative of the hierarchy in the world of labour

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1964 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Diarconia in Christo: Über die Erneuerung des Diakonates, edited by Karl Rahner, s.J., and Herbert Vorgrimler (Frieburg 1962), pp . 285-324.

2 Diaconia: Erneuerung der Niederen Weihen?, pp. 575-620.

3 Diaconia: Diakonat und Zölibat, pp. 325-339.

4 Diuconia, p. 109.

5 Alfons Auer in Diaconia, p. 331 and I. F. Görres in Laiengedanken zum Zölibat, p. 37.

6 Holstein in Etudes, September 1960.

7 M.Gomm in Der Rheinische Merkur. 38/62.

8 Religionsunterricht an Höheren Schulen, 1961, p. 202.

9 Diaconia: Das Diakonenseminar, p. 548ff.

10 Diaconia, p. 450.

11 Diaconia: Aus der Geschichte des Diakonats, pp. 92-128.