Priestly Ordination
PRIESTLY ORDINATION
by Fr. William Most
There are two avenues of approach to the question of ordination, one by the texts of the Magisterium, the other by mere human analysis of data in Scripture.
First of all, within texts of the magisterium, there are texts of the Councils:
Secondly, we turn to Scripture, Old and New Testaments, and to history;
In Acts 14. 23 we find that St. Paul on his return through Asia Minor
on his first mission established presbyters in every place. In 1 Thes
5. 12-13 he told the people to obey the authorities. Even if we are
not sure just what office it was, it is very significant. What of the
arguments that try to nullify the testimony of Acts? They can all be
answered: cf. Wm. Most,
We should add that in any field of knowledge it takes a long period
for highly specific terms to develop. At first we meet the generic
words
Next, Clement of Rome, in his
We might ask: Why not use the established Greek word
All this is in accord with what we find in the Old Testament. At Sinai, Moses was ordered (Exodus 19. 12-15) to set boundaries around the mountain: if anyone crossed, he was to be stoned. In Leviticus 8, God ordered Moses to ordain Aaron and his sons priests, with elaborate ceremonies. There was no thought that the community just picked men with "gifts" and no ordination was needed. Even after that, in Lev 6, when Aaron already was High Priest, and was going freely into the Holy of Holies, God warned through Moses (Leviticus 16) that Aaron could do that only once a year, with special ritual. The people did not just tell Aaron what to do. Even after their ordination, the sons of Aaron sinned by offering profane fire (Numbers 3). God slew them for that. The approval of their gifts by the community again meant nothing. Later, in Numbers 13, Miriam said God spoke through her as well as through Moses. She was made a leper of the spot. In Numbers 16 we see a similar claim by Korah, Dathan and Abiron. The earth opened and swallowed them up.
Still later King Saul, in 1 Samuel 13, dared to offer sacrifice. Through the prophet Samuel, God rejected Saul and his dynasty. Still later, 2 Kings 15. 5 says the Lord turned the King Uzziah into a leper. Josephus, Antiquities 9. 22, fills in saying Uzziah tried to offer sacrifice, even though the priests told him not to. God struck him with leprosy.
So the right to offer sacrifice depends not on some subjectively supposed "gifts" but on God's appointment. Hebrews 5. 4-6 says that even Jesus did not dare to take that on Himself, but was appointed by the Father, for no one can take on that honor unless appointed by God.
When Blessed Mother in her Magnificat says God had looked upon the
lowly estate of his handmaid, it was not for her merits that she was
chosen to be the Mother of God. Then, when a woman in the crowd
declared blessed the womb that bore Jesus, He replied: "Rather
blessed are they who hear the word of God and keep it." Vatican II,
in
As we said, the Council of Trent defined that at the last supper Jesus ordained the apostles. This of course is often denied, in spite of a solemn definition. Behind this sort of thing lie the claims that Jesus was ignorant, could not and did not make any plans for a church. As one tragic commentator said, we cannot be sure He shared "our sophistication." Instead, He expected the end very soon - and could not establish sacraments either.
On the contrary the Church has taught repeatedly that His human soul
from the first instant of conception saw the vision of God, in which
all knowledge is present. By repetition on the ordinary magisterium
level, this is to be rated an infallible teaching, even though it is
so widely denied today. (Cf. Wm. Most,
Still further, so that He could be ignorant, such commentators must
suppose His Mother did not know who He was. But as soon as Gabriel
said Her Son would reign over the house of Jacob forever, not just
she, but any ordinary Jew, would know that meant the Messiah. And so
there would begin to crowd into her mind all the messianic
prophecies. Very strangely, the ancient Jews, as shown in the
Targums, understood these remarkably well, better than our
It may be objected: we cannot take at face value the annunciation
account. But
Since she knew at least that much, of course she would have told Him, and then He would not have been so ignorant!
What of the lines of the Epistle to the Hebrews about just one priest? Protestants of course love those things, not having the guidance of an infallible Church. But we do. We have already seen what our Church teaches on priesthood. And any scholar knows that Hebrews, far from being a theological treatise, is of homiletic genre. It tells of the once-for-all earning of a title to all forgiveness and grace by the death of Jesus. But it is another thing to describe the process of giving it out. St. Paul does say much on that, in his syn Christo theme, e. g. , Romans 8. 17; 8. 9; 6. 1-6 plus Col 3. 1-4 and Eph 2. 5-6.
Opposition to the teaching of the Church on priesthood continues, especially from those who want the ordination of women. Sadly, it still continues even after the definition by John Paul II, who made clear in more than one way that his statement was definitive, that is, final. There is no hope of anything further to come to contradict it.
I seem to see two reasons for the rejection of the papal definition.
First, they appeal to Vatican II or to its spirit. But there are no
texts at all of Vatican II to support that idea. As we said above,
Secondly there is the desire of feminists for ordination. They claim
to have "gifts". But again, that counts for nil without the approval
of the Church. Really, I am astounded that any scholarly journal
would print anything at all by a feminist. One of the first
requisites for scholarly work is to try one's best to be free of
prejudice and bias. The feminists openly try to he biased. They do
not deserve a scholarly hearing at all. A tragic case is that of
Rosemary Reuther a prime feminist, quoted in
How could anyone call that sober unbiased scholarship. Or any scholarship at all?
Surely such things cannot outweigh the judgment of the Church, given in General Council, or of the Pope in defining.
I wonder too how the feminists can fail to see that the persons who have the least clout of all in the Church are priests. A priest can be washed out in a moment by any bishop at all, and sent to the boondocks, or can be fired. In contrast, the nuns get a hearing and are not mashed no matter what they say, even before the Pope in person when he appeared in the U. S the first time.
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