DEACONS/ELDERS 514.9, 504, 531.1-2, 531.4, 532, and 532.1
514.9. Administer
the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper at least once a quarter. Pastors are encouraged to move toward a more
frequent celebration of this means of grace.
A licensed minister who has not complied fully with the provisions of
530.7 (see also 802) shall arrange for the administration of the sacrament by
an ordained [minister] elder.
Consideration should be given for extending the Lord’s Supper to
homebound persons, under supervision of the pastor.
504. The Church of the Nazarene recognizes the order of
elder and the order of deacon [only one order of preaching ministry, that
of elder]. It also recognizes that the
member of the clergy may serve the church in various capacities. (Ephesians 4:11-12) The church recognizes the following
categories of service in which a district assembly may place an elder, deacon,
or, as circumstances warrant, a licensed minister: pastor, evangelist,
missionary, teacher, administrator, chaplain, and special service. Ministerial training and ordination are
normally required, or greatly desired, to fulfill these categories as an “assigned
minister.” The Sourcebook on Ordination shall
provide guidelines for each category of ministry that will aid district boards
in identifying the qualifications necessary for consideration to be an assigned
minister. Only assigned ministers shall
be voting members of the district assembly.
531.1. [The deacon does not witness to a specific
call to preach.] The church recognizes,
on the basis of Scripture and experience, that God calls some
individuals to a lifetime ministry [who do not witness to such a
specific call] of Word and Service, and believes that individuals so
called to [such ministries] the ministry of a deacon should be
recognized and confirmed by the church and should meet requirements, and be granted
responsibilities, established by the church.
This is a permanent order of ministry.
531.2. The deacon must meet the requirements of the order for
education, exhibit the appropriate gifts and graces, and be recognized and
confirmed by the church. The deacon
shall be vested with the authority to administer the sacrament[s] of baptism
[and the Lord’s Supper], to assist the elder in the distribution of the
Lord’s Supper, to officiate at marriages where the laws of the state do not
prohibit, and on occasion to
conduct worship and to preach. It is
understood that the Lord and the church may use this person’s gifts and graces
in various associate ministries. As a
symbol of the servant ministry of the Body of Christ, the deacon may also use
his or her gifts in roles outside the institutional church. (30.2[, 514.9-514.10])
531.4. If in the pursuance of his or her ministry, the
ordained deacon feels called to the [preaching] ministry of elder, he or
she may be ordained [elder] as such upon completion of the requirements
for that credential and the return of the deacon credential.
532. An elder is a minister whose call of God to preach,
gifts, and usefulness have been demonstrated and enhanced by proper training
and experience, and who has been separated for the ministry of Word and
Table and to the service of Christ through His church by the vote of a
district assembly and by the solemn act of ordination, and thus has been fully
invested to perform all functions of the Christian ministry.
532.1 [We recognize but one order of preaching ministry –
that of elder.] The order of elder [this]
is a permanent order in the church. The
elder is to rule well in the church, to preach the Word, to administer the
sacraments of baptism and the Lord’s Supper, and to solemnize matrimony, all in
the name of, and in subjection to, Jesus Christ, the great Head of the
Church. (30-30.4, 32, 513-14.3, 514.9-514.10,
536.12)
FOR THE FOLLOWING REASONS:
1. Throughout the history of the Church, from
ancient times up to and including our own lineage of John Wesley’s Anglicanism
and American Methodism, the distinction
between the order of deacon and the order of elder has been: a.) the deacon is
called to a ministry focused on service, and b.) the
elder is vested with the authority to administer the sacrament of the Lord’s
Supper. This has been expressed as the ministry of
“Word and Service,” on the one hand, and the ministry of “Word and Table,” on
the other hand.
2. This is this distinction that holds nearly
universally in the larger Wesleyan/Methodist tradition (cf. the Disciplines of the African Methodist Episcopal, African
Methodist Episcopal Zion, Christian Methodist Episcopal, and United Methodist
churches).
3. This is the main distinction that seems to be held ecumenically, and is stated as such in the reports of the ecumenical dialogues between the World Methodist Council (of which the Church of the Nazarene is a member) and the Anglican Communion, and it is the main distinction that seems to be held in the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions, as well.
4. Our current distinction between the two orders (viz., preaching), seems to have been assumed due to the statement in par. 532.1 that “We recognize but one order of preaching ministry – that of elder.” - However, making preaching the distinction between the two orders when we developed the order of deacon was an erroneous assumption. The statement found in par. 429.1 was not intended to distinguish the order of elder from any other order. Rather, that statement was meant to reinforce that we had only ONE order; that of elder. We did not have TWO preaching orders (viz., elder and deacon), as did the Methodist Episcopal Church of the time. We only had ONE preaching order (viz., elder).
5. To identify the distinction between the elder
and deacon as one of a call to preach, not only disregards the historic
position of the larger Christian Church universal, but is
very difficult to maintain when the deacon, according to par. 531.2, may also
preach, and when we are a part of a tradition that
involves lay preachers (cf. par. 503.1).
6. The proposed changes will bring us much
closer to alignment with the usage of the terms in Scripture, the distinctions
throughout the history of the Christian Church, the
ecumenical consensus, and our own Wesleyan heritage.
No comments:
Post a Comment