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Cheirotonia and Ordination

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2009

Extract

The verb ordinare and its cognates have been used for the setting apart of church officers ever since Latin began to be an ecclesiastical language. It is significant that the names of the offices were transliterated; cheirotonia, the laying-on-of-hands, was not. This no doubt may be very simply explained. Actions with the hands were used in healing, in the reconciliation of penitents, in the ceremonies in and after baptism. A distinction of terms was needed; the choice of a term points forward to the whole history of Latin Christendom.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 1956

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References

page 175 note 1 Epistle 29.

page 175 note 2 See especially the prayer at the consecration of a bishop in Hippolytus, Apostolic Tradition, ed. Dix, pp. 5–6, where the Greek of the Apostolic Constitutions, but not the Latin of the Verona fragment, has ‘to give lots’, as part of the bishop's office.

page 177 note 1 See the chapter on ‘Monasticism in Byzantine polity’ in J. M. Hussey, Church and Learning in the Byzantine Empire, Oxford, 1937.

page 177 note 2 See Bury, J. B., Life of S. Patrick, 1905, pp. 142144, 240–3.Google Scholar

page 177 note 3 For its anthropological significance see E. O. James, Christian Myth and Ritual, 1933, especially chapter III.

page 178 note 1 S.T. Supplement, Q.37, art. 5.

page 178 note 2 Les Reordinations, Paris, 1907, p. 367.

page 179 note 1 M.P.G. 3, c. 509.

page 180 note 1 e.g. Zonaras on the First Apostolic Canon in M.P.G., 137, c. 37.

page 180 note 2 e.g. in the Supplement to the Summa Theologica of S. Thomas, Q.. 37, art. 2, ‘Whether there are seven orders’.

page 180 note 3 In his Origines Ecclesiasticae, Vol. II, 1640, pp. 463464Google Scholar. His edition of the letters of Photius was published in 1651.

page 180 note 4 His edition was included in Migne's Patrologia, P.G. 137–8.

page 180 note 5 Dissertation on Liturgies (1720). Brett was also the author of A Review of the Lutheran Principles (1714) and The Divine Right of Episcopacy (1718).

page 181 note 1 This began in Russia, where churches were low and had no room for icons on the walls. It came south only in the Turkish period.