The
Fourteenth Precept, on the Sacrament of Holy Orders
The orders are seven in number, four minor orders and three greater; the highest of which, called the priesthood, is divided into two; those who are Bishops, are higher than others who are simple priests. Before all the orders, the tonsure is first received, which is as it were the gate to all the rest; this properly makes men Clerics. And since what is required from Clerics, in order that they may lead a good and religious life, is with greater reason required of those who have received minor orders, and especially the priesthood or episcopacy; therefore I shall be content with considering those duties that relate to clerics.
Two points seem to require explanation; first, the ceremony by which
clerics are made; secondly, the office they have to discharge in the church.
The ceremony, as it is described in the Pontifical, consists in first cutting
the hair of the head; by which rite is signified, the laying aside of all vain
and superfluous desires, such as thoughts and desires of temporal goods,
riches, honours, and pleasures, and others of the same nature: and at the same
time, those whose hair is being cut, are required to repeat the fifth verse of
the xv. Psalm: "The Lord is the portion of my inheritance and of my cup:
it is Thou that will restore my inheritance to me." Then the Bishop orders
a white surplice to be brought, which he puts on the cleric, saying these words
of the Apostle to the Ephesians: "Put on the new man, who according to
God, is created in justice and holiness of truth"(chap iv. 24.) There is
no particular office appointed for a cleric: but it is customary for him to
serve the priest at his private mass.
Let us now consider what degree of perfection is required in a cleric;
and if so much is required of him, how much in an acolyte, subdeacon, deacon,
priest, and Bishop! I am horrified to think, how many priests scarcely possess
what is strictly required in a simple cleric. He is exhorted to cast away all
idle thoughts and desires, which belong only to men of the world; that is, to
men who are of the world, who are continually thinking of worldly things.
The good cleric is exhorted to seek for no other inheritance than God,
that He alone "may be the portion of his inheritance;" and the cleric
may be truly said to be "the portion and inheritance" of God alone.
O! how high is the clerical state which renounces the whole world that it may
possess God alone, and may in return be possessed by God alone! "This is
the meaning of the words of the Psalmist: "The Lord is the portion of my
inheritance and of my cup." That is said to be "the portion of
inheritance," which in the division of a property among relations, falls
to the share of each one. Wherefore, the sense of the word is, not that the
cleric wishes to take God as a portion of his inheritance, and to make worldly
riches another portion; but that from the bottom of his heart he desires to
transfer to his good God, his whole inheritance, that is, whatever may belong
to him in this world. Between cup and inheritance there seems to be this
difference, that a cup relates to pleasures and delights, and inheritance to
riches and honours.
"Wherefore, the general sense is this: O Lord, my God! from this
time whatever riches, or pleasures, or other temporal goods I can hope for in
this world, I desire to possess all in Thee alone. Thou alone art sufficient
for me. And since he cannot have an abundance of spiritual good things here on
earth, therefore the cleric continues praying: "It is Thou that wilt
restore my inheritance to me." What I have despised and rejected for Thee,
or given to the poor, or forgiven my debtors, Thou wilt faithfully preserve for
me, and restore to me in due season, not in corruptible gold, but in Thyself,
who art the inexhaustible fountain of all good.
But lest any one should doubt my words, I will add two authorities much
greater than mine without any exception, viz. St. Jerome and St. Bernard. St.
Jerome, in his Epistle to Nepotianus, speaking on a clerical life, thus writes:
"Let a cleric, who serves the Church of Christ, first explain his name;
and its definition being known, he must endeavour to be what it is called: the
Greek is KληῥOS(), and in Latin Sors, which means inheritance: wherefore they
are called clerics, either because they are chosen by the Lord, or because the
Lord is their inheritance. But he who hath the Lord for his inheritance, ought
so to conduct himself, that he may possess the Lord, and may be possessed by
Him.
And he that possesses the Lord, and says with the prophet, "The
Lord is my portion," can possess nothing out of God. But if he have any
thing beside God, the Lord will not be his portion: as, for example, if he
possess gold, or silver, or land, or various goods, the Lord his inheritance
will not deign to be with these other portions. Thus St. Jerome; and if we read
his whole epistle we shall find that great perfection is required in clerics.
St. Bernard comes next: he not only approves of the language of St. Jerome,
but he sometimes uses his words, although he does not mention his name. Thus he
speaks in his very long Sermon on the words of St. Peter, "Behold we have
left all things," which occur in the Gospel of St. Matthew: "A
cleric," he says, "who hath any part with the world, will have no
inheritance in heaven: if he possess anything beside God, the Lord will not be
his inheritance." And a little below he proceeds, declaring what a cleric
can retain of ecclesiastical benefices: "Not to give the property of the
poor to the poor, is the same as the crime of sacrilege: whatever ministers and
dispensers not lords and possessors receive out of church property beyond mere
food and clothing, is by a sacrilegious cruelty taken from the patrimony of the
poor." Thus St. Bernard perfectly agrees with St. Jerome.
The ceremony of putting on the white surplice follows, with these words
of the apostle: "Put on the new man, who according to God, is created in
justice and holiness of truth." It is not sufficient for clerics, not to
be in love with riches; their life must also be innocent and without stain,
because they are dedicated to the ministry of the altar, on which is immolated
the Lamb without spot. Now, to put on "the new man," means nothing
else than to cast off the ways of the old Adam, who hath corrupted his way, and
to put on the new Adam, that is Christ, who being born of the Blessed Virgin,
pointed out a new way "in justice and holiness of truth;" which
means, not only in moral justice but also in the most perfect and supernatural
holiness, such as Christ showed Himself to us, who according to St. Peter,
"Did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth." (chap. ii. 1
Epist.) Would that many clerics were to be found now, who clothed in their
white surplice, might show it in their life and manners.
In fine, another office of clerics is, to assist with devotion,
reverence, and attention, at the Divine Sacrifice, in which the Lamb of God is
daily sacrificed. I know that there are many pious clerics to be found in the
Church; but I not only know, but I have often seen many assisting at the altar
of the Lord, with roving eyes and improper demeanour, as if the service were a
mean and common thing, and not most sacred and terrible! And perhaps the cleric
is not so much to blame as the priest himself, who sometimes says mass in such
a hurried manner and with so little devotion, as to seem not to be aware of
what he is doing. Let such hear what St. Chrysostom says on this matter:
"At that time angels surround the priest, and the whole heavenly powers
sing aloud, and gather round the altar, in honour of Him who is immolated
thereon." (Lib. vi. De Sacerdotio). This we may easily believe, when we
consider the greatness of the Sacrifice. St. Gregory also thus speaks in the
fourth book of his Dialogues: "Who amongst the faithful can hesitate in
believing, that at the moment of immolation when the priest pronounces the
word, the heavens open and choirs of angels descend: that heavenly things are
joined with earthly, visible with invisible?"
taken from the Art of Dying Well, by Saint Robert Bellarmine
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your interest in our blog! Your comment will be viewed shortly to be added to our blog. :)