Showing posts with label Ordinations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ordinations. Show all posts

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Seminarian Ordained Deacon. Continues Road to Priesthood.

FARGO 29 April 2017 (ORCNS) - The Rev. Dom. Shane VanMeveren, TOR Mar. was ordained to the Holy Order of Deacons today during a low mass. The ordaining bishop was H.Em. Mgr. Rutherford Johnson, Cardinal Count of Sainte Animie, Patriarch of St. Stephen. The mass took place on a warm spring day following a late spring snowstorm that occurred a few days earlier. 

At the imposition of hands, the Holy
Spirit is transmitted to the ordinand,
who then becomes a Deacon. 

Dom. Shane is a seminarian at Pontifical Georgian College, the principal seminary of the Religious and Military Patriarchate of St. Stephen and is also pursuing a PhD at a secular institution. Additionally, he is a friar in the Franciscan Third Order Regular of the Brothers and Sisters of Penance of the Blessed Virgin Mary (TOR Mar). 

Mgr. Rutherford, Cardinal Patriarch of Saint
Stephen, ordaining Bishop, reads the introduction
to the ordination, explaining the significance
of the Order of Deacon and its duties. 

During the formal introduction to the ordination, read by Mgr. Rutherford, Cardinal Count of Sainte Animie as ordaining Bishop, Saint Stephen the First Deacon and Martyr was invoked. This is particularly significant not only for Deacons, but also for the Patriarchate, of which Blessed Stephen is the glorious celestial Patron. Also during the introduction, Dom. Shane was reminded that it was stated that the "Office of the Deacon is to assist at the altar, to baptize, and to preach." He was also reminded of the seriousness of his new office and state in life by being told that the "...Church, always ready for battle, wageth an unceasing warfare against her enemies, as the Apostle sayeth: 'Our wrestling is not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of the world of this darkness, against the spirits of wickedness in the high places.'" 

Dom. Shane reads the Gospel from the ambo
for the first time as a Deacon. Proclaiming the
Gospel and reading or singing it in the Holy Mass
is one of the chief duties of a Deacon.

The Order of Deacon is the first of the Major Orders of the Church and follows the Minor Orders of Porter, Lector, Acolyte, and Exorcist and the transitional Order of Sub Deacon. It derives from the ancient order of Levites in the Old Testament. The Christian Diaconate was instituted by the Apostles and is found in Scripture. Some clerics remain Deacons, being called to serve in that ministry. Others follow a different calling and continue to the priesthood. Dom. Shane is in the latter category, continuing intensive studies in theology, canon law, pastoral ministry, and liturgy necessary to be qualified for the priestly ministry. 

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Franciscan Brother and Seminarian Ordained as Porter

LEXINGTON, KY 13 May 2016 (ORCNS) - Rev. Br. Dom Elliott Francis, TOR Mar. received the First Tonsure as a cleric and was ordained to the Order of Porter in the Old Roman Catholic Patriarchate of St. Stephen at Christ Church Cathedral today. Br. Elliott is a member of the Franciscan Third Order Regular of the Brothers and Sisters of Penance of the Blessed Virgin Mary (TOR Mar) and a seminarian. The officiant was Mgr. Rutherford Cardinal Johnson, Patriarch of St. Stephen. The First Tonsure, now a snipping of the hair in five locations in the form of a cross, is symbolic of the full round shave area of the head typically worn by clerics and religious in the past and still some today. 

Mgr. Rutherford, Card. Patriarch of St. Stephen,
administers the First Tonsure to Dom Elliott Francis

It is traditionally through the First Tonsure that a candidate enters the clerical state. The Order of Porter is the first of the Minor Holy Orders and is also typically a stepping stone on the way to the priesthood. During the ordination of a Porter, the candidate receives the keys to the church, opens the church doors, and rings the church bells, all symbolic of the traditional and historic duties of that office. 

An audience was held by theCardinal Patriarch prior to the
ordination during which time Dom Elliott (right)
took the oaths of ordination

The Patriarchal See of St. Stephen is an ancient, autonomous, semi-autocephalous Old Roman Catholic Patriarchate with Anglican patrimony descended from the Roman Catholic See of Utrecht. The See of Utrecht has remained independent since 1145, when the Holy See in Rome granted autonomy. Modernly also known as the Anglican Rite Roman Catholic Church (ARRCC), the Patriarchate continues administrative independence while embracing as brethren other Catholic and Anglican bodies, such as the current Roman Communion (commonly referred to as the Roman Catholic Church), the Anglican Ordinariate, and the Anglican Communion.

Saturday, January 3, 2015

What does it take to become a true Catholic cleric?

PATRIARCHAL SEE 3 December 2014 (ORCNS) - There are many Old Catholic and even Old Roman Catholic jurisdictions today that seem to ordain anyone at the drop of a hat (or the drop of a coin). Formation in some places has all but gone, leaving some wondering "How do these people get ordained?"

Church-shopping has become equally prevalent among potential clergymen as it has among the laity. If Church A requires 4 years of training and Church B requires 6 years, then Church C starts looking might attractive, for it only requires 2 weeks! This, dear readers, isn't Catholic. It is nothing more than instant gratification.

What, then, does it take to become a true Catholic cleric? Let's answer that by explaining what the Anglican Rite Roman Catholic Church requires. So what all is involved in becoming a cleric in this traditional Old Roman Catholic Patriarchate? Let's find out!


What it takes to become a true Catholic cleric can be summed up in three words... Formation, Formation, Formation! Now let's look at what that means in a bit more detail.

First it is essential for the candidate to be strong in the true Catholic Faith. He (and only men can validly receive Catholic Holy Orders) must embrace all that is meant by the Nicene and Athanasian Creeds. It must be at the core of his identity. It must bring the man to his knees. It is from this perspective that discernment of a clerical vocation can begin.

Once a vocation is initially discerned (and that is an ongoing process throughout formation), formal application must be made to the Patriarchate. This requires a 7-page application, plus a large amount of supporting documentation. All candidates must be recommended by a Catholic priest who knows them personally and pass a thorough background investigation performed (at the candidate's expense) by Oxford Document Management (a firm with a long legacy of service to Roman Catholic, Anglican, and other churches). They must also pass a psychological examination performed by a licensed psychiatrist or clinical psychologist. Also with the application must be submitted a series of signed oaths. Before an officer of a civil court (usually a Notary), the candidate must sign an statement of intent and truthfulness and an oath of voluntary permanent submission to the laws of the Patriarchate. The Candidate must also sign the Oath against Modernism of Pope Pius X and the Clerical Oath. 

Once this is completed, then the candidate must participate in an in-person interview. If the candidate is subsequently admitted as a postulant, he must then make formal petition and take the clerical oath kneeling before the throne of his Bishop with his hands placed on the Book of Gospels. At this point he is admitted as a Minor Seminarian at the Patriarchate's official seminary, Pontifical Georgian College. The Minor Seminary program is approximately 2 years long. It may be done during the junior and senior year of the candidate's regular bachelor's program at another university or else after graduation if he already possesses a baccalaureate degree. Typically new seminarians are presented wearing lay attire to their Bishop, who blesses their clerical cassock and invests them with it.

During Minor Seminary, the postulants typically are eligible to become clerics through the conferral of First Tonsure after their first year, and then to be ordained as Porters 6 months to a year later. Each level of ordination requires a formal petition and oath to be taken upon the Book of Gospels, kneeling in front of the throne of the candidate's Bishop. After Minor Seminary, the successful student receives the degree of Diplomate of Sacred Theology and enters Major Seminary.


The Major Seminary program is approximately 4 years long. Training includes theology, Latin, canon law, pastoral work, homiletics, pastoral counseling, history, liturgy, and more. After the first year, successful seminarians are usually ordained to the next two Minor Orders, Lector and Exorcist. Six months later they enter the Sub-Diaconate. Before being ordained to the Sub-Diaconate, the cleric must also take a practical examination in which he demonstrates proficiency, devotion, and competence in the liturgical duties of a Sub-Deacon. Once ordained as Sub-Deacons, the laws of the Patriarchate forbid marriage if the cleric is not already married.

After three years of Major Seminary (5 years of study including Minor Seminary), the Sub-Deacons are eligible to be considered for admission to the Major Holy Order of Deacon. This requires another practical examination in the liturgical duties of a Deacon, a written liturgical exam, a written General Ordination Exam, and an interview. These Deacons are often called "transitional" Deacons because they are planning to become Priests.

The Sacred Vessels are presented to a new priest at his ordination.

In the final year of Major Seminary, the Deacons intensify their studies directly for a ministry as a Priest. Upon successful completion, they receive the degree of Licentiate of Sacred Theology. Then they are eligible to make a formal petition for admission and ordination to the priesthood. Deacon-Candidates for the priesthood are also required to pass both a written and a practical liturgical examination on all sacramental duties of priests, a written General Ordination Examination, and an oral exam before a Board of Examining Chaplains. The final decision of ordination is made by the Deacon's Bishop. The successful Deacon is then ordained to the priesthood. In the ancient rites of ordination, the new priest prostrates before the altar and receives the laying on of hands. His palms are anointed for the sacred work he is to perform, and the Sacred Vessels of the Holy Mass are presented.

Becoming a cleric at any level, especially a priest, is not easy. It is not and cannot be an overnight endeavor. He who seeks Holy Orders through the path of least resistance does himself a great disservice and harms those whom he otherwise could help. Men with a true vocation seek constantly to make themselves better and to study, that their knowledge may benefit the salvation of others. Seminary is not the end. Priests are required by canon law to continue studying in their vocation on their own.

So there you have it. This is what it takes to become a true priest through the Patriarchate of St. Stephen. It is not an easy path. Many are called - few are chosen.

Monday, August 19, 2013

New cleric receives First Tonsure

17 August 2013 (ORCNS) - Dennis J. Klinzing of Anniston, Alabama, was admitted as a cleric of the Anglican Rite Roman Catholic Church through the rite of First Tonsure. Following his bachelor's degree in theology, he has just begun his four years of seminary studies towards the priesthood. The ancient rite of First Tonsure is a ceremonial cutting of the hair in five places in the form of a cross, symbolizing the former layman entering the clerical state.