Holy Orders
Holy Orders is the sacrament through which
the mission entrusted by Christ to his apostles continues to
be exercised in the Church until the end of time: thus it is
the sacrament of apostolic ministry. It includes three
degrees: episcopate, presbyterate, and diaconate.
The word order in Roman
antiquity designated an established civil body, especially a
governing body. Ordinatio means incorporation into an ordo.
In the Church there are established bodies which Tradition,
not without a basis in Sacred Scripture, has since ancient
times called taxeis (Greek) or ordines. And so the liturgy
speaks of the ordo episcoporum (order of bishops), the ordo
presbyterorum (order of priests), the ordo diaconorum (order
of deacons). Other groups also receive this name of ordo:
catechumens, virgins, spouses, widows, etc.
Integration into one of
these bodies in the Church was accomplished by a rite called
ordinatio, a religious and liturgical act which was a
consecration, a blessing or a sacrament. Today the word
"ordination" is reserved for the sacramental act
which integrates a man into the order of bishops,
presbyters, or deacons, and goes beyond a simple election,
designation, delegation, or institution by the community,
for it confers a gift of the Holy Spirit that permits the
exercise of a "sacred power" (sacra potestas)
which can come only from Christ himself through his Church.
Ordination is also called consecratio, for it is a setting
apart and an investiture by Christ himself for his Church.
The laying on of hands by the bishop, with the consecratory
prayer, constitutes the visible sign of this ordination.
(From the Catechism of the
Cathlic
Church
)
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