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Certain ministries were established by the Church even in the most
ancient times for the purpose of suitably giving worship to God and
for offering service to the people of God according to their needs.
By these ministries, the offices to be carried out in the liturgy and
the practice of charity, deemed suitable to varying circumstances,
were entrusted to the faithful. The conferring of these functions
often took place by a special rite, in which, after God's blessing
had been implored, a Christian was established in a special class or
rank for the fulfillment of some ecclesiastical function.
Some of these functions, which were more closely connected with
the liturgical celebration, slowly came to be considered as a
training in preparation for the reception of sacred orders. As a
result, the offices of porter, reader, exorcist, and acolyte were
called minor orders in the Latin Church in relation to the
subdiaconate, diaconate, and priesthood, which were called major
orders. Generally, though not every where, these minor orders were
reserved to those who received them as steps toward the
priesthood.
Nevertheless, since the minor orders have not always been the same
and many functions connected with them, as at present, have also been
exercised by the laity, it seems fitting to reexamine this practice
and to adapt it to contemporary needs. What is obsolete in these
offices will thus be removed and what is useful retained; also
anything new that is needed will be introduced and at the same time
the requirements for candidates for holy orders will be
established.
While Vatican Council II was in preparation, many bishops of the
Church requested that the minor orders and subdiaconate be revised.
Although the Council did not decree anything concerning this for the
Latin Church, it stated certain principles for resolving the issue.
There is no doubt that the norms laid down by the Council regarding
the general and orderly reform of the liturgy [1] also
include those areas that concern ministries in the liturgical
assembly, so that the very arrangement of the celebration itself
makes the Church stand out as being formed in a structure of
different orders and ministries. [2] Thus Vatican Council II
decreed that "in liturgical celebrations each one, minister or
layperson, who has an office to perform, should do all of, but only,
those parts which pertain to that office by the nature of the rite
and the principles of liturgy." [3]
With this assertion is closely connected what was written a little
earlier in the same Constitution: "The Church earnestly desires that
all the faithful be led to that full, conscious, and active
participation in liturgical celebrations called for by the very
nature of the liturgy. Such participation by the Christian people as
'a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a purchased
people' (I Pt 2:9; see 2:4-5) is their right and duty by reason of
their baptism. In the reform and promotion of the liturgy, this full
and active participation by all the people is the aim to be
considered before all else. For it is the primary and indispensable
source from which the faithful are to derive the true Christian
spirit and therefore pastors must zealously strive in all their
pastoral work to achieve such participation by means of the necessary
instruction." [4]
Among the particular offices to be preserved and adapted to
contemporary needs are those that are in a special way more closely
connected with the ministries of the word and of the altar and that
in the Latin Church are called the offices of reader and
acolyte and the subdiaconate. It is fitting to preserve and
adapt these in such a way, that from this time on there will be two
offices: that of reader and that of acolyte, which will include the
functions of the subdiaconate.
In addition to the offices universal in the Latin Church, the
conferences of bishops may request others of the Apostolic See, if
they judge the establishment of such offices in their region to be
necessary or very useful because of special reasons. To these belong,
for example, the ministries of porter, exorcist,
catechist, [5] as well as others to be conferred on those who
are dedicated to works of charity, where this ministry had not been
assigned to deacons.
It is in accordance with the reality itself and with the
contemporary outlook that the above-mentioned ministries should no
longer be called minor orders; their conferral will not be called
ordination, but institution. Only those who have
received the diaconate, however, will be clerics in the true sense
and will be so regarded. This arrangement will bring out more clearly
the distinction between clergy and laity, between what is proper and
reserved to the clergy and what can be entrusted to the laity. This
will also bring out more clearly that mutuality by which "the
universal priesthood of believers and the ministerial or hierarchic
priesthood, though they differ from one another in essence and not
only in degree, are nonetheless interrelated: each of these in its
own special way is a sharing in the one priesthood of
Christ." [6]
After weighing every aspect of the question, seeking the opinion
of experts, consulting with the conferences of bishops and taking
their views into account, and after taking counsel with our esteemed
brothers who are members of the congregations competent in this
matter, by our apostolic authority we enact the following norms,
amending-if and in so far as is necessary-provisions of the Codex
Iuris Canonici now in force, and we promulgate them through this
Motu Proprio.
- First tonsure is no longer conferred; entrance into the
clerical state is joined to the diaconate.
- What up to now were called minor orders are henceforth to be
called ministries.
- Ministries may be assigned to lay Christians; hence they are
no longer to be considered as reserved to candidates for the
sacrament of orders.
- Two ministries, adapted to present-day needs, are to be
preserved in the whole Latin Church, namely, those of reader and
acolyte. The functions heretofore assigned to the subdeacon are
entrusted to the reader and the acolyte; consequently, the major
order of subdiaconate no longer exists in the Latin Church. There
is, however, no reason why the acolyte cannot be called a
subdeacon in some places, at the discretion of the conference of
bishops.
- The reader is appointed for a function proper to him, that of
reading the word of God in the liturgical assembly. Accordingly,
he is to proclaim the readings from sacred Scripture, except for
the gospel in the Mass and other sacred celebrations; he is to
recite the psalm between the readings when there is no psalmist;
he is to present the intentions for the general intercessions in
the absence of a deacon or cantor; he is to direct the singing and
the participation by the faithful; he is to instruct the faithful
for the worthy reception of the sacraments. He may also, insofar
as may be necessary, take care of preparing other faithful who are
appointed on a temporary basis to read the Scriptures in
liturgical celebrations. That he may more fittingly and perfectly
fulfill these functions, he is to meditate assiduously on sacred
Scripture.
Aware of the office he has undertaken, the reader is to make
every effort and employ suitable means to acquire that
increasingly warm and living love [7] and knowledge of
Scripture that will make him a more perfect disciple of the
Lord.
- The acolyte is appointed in order to aid the deacon and to
minister to the priest. It is his duty therefore to attend to the
service of the altar and to assist the deacon and the priest in
liturgical celebrations, especially in the celebration of Mass; he
is also to distribute communion as a special minister when the
ministers spoken of in the Codex Iuris Canonici can. 845
are not available or are prevented by ill health, age, or another
pastoral ministry from performing this function, or when the
number of communicants is so great that the celebration of Mass
would be unduly prolonged. In the same extraordinary circumstances
an acolyte may be entrusted with publicly exposing the blessed
sacrament for adoration by the faithful and afterward replacing
it, but not with blessing the people. He may also, to the extent
needed, take care of instructing other faithful who on a temporary
basis are appointed to assist the priest or deacon in liturgical
celebrations by carrying the missal, cross, candles, etc., or by
performing other such duties. He will perform these functions more
worthily if he participates in the holy eucharist with
increasingly fervent devotion, receives nourishment from it, and
deepens his knowledge about it.
As one set aside in a special way for the service of the altar,
the acolyte should learn all matters concerning public divine
worship and strive to grasp their inner spiritual meaning: in that
way he will be able each day to offer himself entirely to God, be
an example to all by his gravity and reverence in church, and have
a sincere love for the Mystical Body of Christ, the people of God,
especially for the weak and the sick.
- In accordance with the ancient tradition of the Church,
institution to the ministries of reader and acolyte is reserved to
men.
- The following are requirements for admission to the
ministries:
- the presentation of a petition that has been
freely made out and signed by the aspirant to the Ordinary (the
bishop and, in clerical institutes, the major superior) who has
the right to accept the petition;
- a suitable age and special qualities to be determined by
the conference of bishops;
- a firm will to give faithful service to God and the
Christian people.
- The ministries are conferred by the Ordinary (the bishop and,
in clerical institutes, the major superior) through the liturgical
rite De institutione lectoris and De institutione
acolythi as revised by the Apostolic See.
- An interval, determined by the Holy See or the conferences of
bishops, shall be observed between the conferring of the
ministries of reader and acolyte whenever more than one ministry
is conferred on the same person.
- Unless they have already done so, candidates for ordination as
deacons and priests are to receive the ministries of reader and
acolyte and are to exercise them for a suitable time, in order to
be better disposed for the future service of the word and of the
altar. Dispensation from receiving these ministries on the part of
such candidates is reserved to the Holy See.
- The conferring of ministries does not bring with it the right
to support or remuneration from the Church.
- The rite of institution of readers and acolytes will soon be
published by the competent department of the Roman Curia.
The effective date of these norms is 1 January 1973.
We command as established and confirmed whatever this Motu Proprio
has decreed, all things to the contrary notwithstanding.
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 15 August 1972, the Solemnity
of the Assumption, the tenth year of our pontification.
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