Monday, January 25, 2010

Renewed in service...

The Order of Deacons was restored as a permanent order in the Catholic Church as a result of the second Vatican Council. Though the order of deacons has been part of the structure of the church from the Apostolic era (see Acts VI), it had primarily been relegated to simple transitional status -- a milepost along the path to priesthood -- in the Latin Church since the middle ages.
In the 40 years since the council, the restored diaconate, particularly in the United States where it has come into broadest use, has had the unique challenge or opportunity of defining its role in the modern church. The liturgical functions of deacons are very well defined. However, as living icons of Christ the servant, deacons are called to be engaged with the world as the voice for the poor and marginalized and as the local bishop's eyes and ears. Those roles tend to play out in as many varied ways as there are deacons, and frequently individual deacons find the majority of their ministry ends up being conducted far removed from a parish setting and apart from their connections with their brother deacons.
This is part of the reason that I found the Deacon Convocation of the Archdiocese of Chicago on January 23-24, 2010 such a special event. For one thing, the convocation brought together nearly 400 deacons plus about 300 deacon's wives for what may have been the largest ever gathering of deacons in the United States. More important was the palpable level of energy shared among those so actively engaged in prayer, service and evangelization.
The deacons present varied widely in age, race, language, experience, income level and national origin. The diaconate mirrors the diversity of the universal church. These men and their wives all share a love of Christ, His Church and His people.
There were deacons who run soup kitchens and homeless shelters; others are involved in immigrant rights, others in prison ministry. Among the groups specifically ministered to by deacons are infants, the elderly, men, women, teens, the mentally ill, the physically and sexually abused, the unemployed, widows and orphans. Their work directly touches the lives of people not only in Chicago, but throughout the United States and the world. They are involved in programs to provide clothing, housing, employment, job skills, education, legal assistance, nutrition, medical care, tax assistance, addiction recovery, grief counseling and much more. Most frequently these deacons work as individual ministers even when they function within or as part of large organizations.
The convocation allowed for the opportunity for all those present to re-engage as a community of ministers motivated by a shared desire to witness to Jesus as servant. I left this weekend humbled by the love and service rendered by my brother deacons, and re-energized in my own ministry. Indeed, God is good!

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