The Vocation and Mission of the People of God:
https://www.usccb.org/committees/ecumenical-interreligious-affairs/vocation-and-mission
The Vocation and Mission of the People of God:
THE NORTH AMERICAN ORTHODOX-CATHOLIC THEOLOGICAL CONSULTATION The Vocation and
Mission of the People of God: “A Chosen Race, a Royal Priesthood, a Holy Nation”
But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own people,
that you may declare the wonderful deeds of him who called you out of darkness
into his marvelous light.Once you were no people; once you had not received
mercy but now you have received mercy. (I Peter 2:9-10) Our Lord Jesus Christ
continues to call individuals to be his disciples, members of the “holy nation”
we call his Church. From the day of Pentecost, this saving relationship with
Christ has normally been established through the solemn and joyous event of
baptism and the gift of the Holy Spirit. A sacred rite, rich with deep
significance - baptism, in water and in the name of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit - ultimately proclaims that the newly baptized is united to Christ
and his people, participates in his death and resurrection, personally receives
the gift of the Spirit, and comes to know the generous love of the Father
expressed in the forgiveness of sin. Through these new relationships, the
believer now lives as a member of the Body of Christ (1 Cor 12:27), God’s
faithful people - a life which is manifested especially in the celebration of
Holy Eucharist. He or she is now a member of the Church which is “a chosen race,
a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own people.” These words from the
Epistle of Peter immediately point to the value and dignity of every member of
the Church. Baptism marks the beginning of a new life of holiness and
discipleship in Christ. Each member has been fully united to him, is blessed
with the gifts of the Spirit, and so is bound through Christ to other believers.
Each one now has a public mission: to “declare the wonderful deeds” of God the
Father, who “calls us out of darkness into his marvelous light.” So we reaffirm
what we agreed almost twenty years ago, solemnly recognizing the validity of
sacramental initiation in each other’s communities: “The Orthodox and Catholic
churches both teach the same understanding of baptism. This identical teaching
draws on the same sources in Scripture and Tradition, and it has not varied in
any significant way from the very earliest witnesses to the faith up to the
present day. A central element in this single teaching 2 is the conviction that
baptism comes to us as God's gift in Christ, through the Holy Spirit. It is
therefore not ‘of us,’ but from above.”1 In this present Agreed Statement, the
members of the North American Orthodox-Catholic Consultation want first to
affirm the vocation and ministry of each member of the Church: a vocation and a
ministry rooted in Christ’s call, first given through baptism and chrismation,
and lived out through the relationships, responsibilities and obligations each
of us encounters in daily life, in family, Church and society. Over the past
four years, our earlier, continuing examination of the dimensions of primacy and
conciliarity or synodality in the life of the Church has led us also to study
the People of God, who are that Church in its fullness.2 In the past, we
responded to the Lima document on Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry in 1984, and
spoke more at length about the significance of baptism in both of our Churches
in our Statement on “Baptism and Sacramental Economy” (1999). We have also
briefly spoken of the laity in our early Statement on “The 1 Agreed Statement on
Baptism and Sacramental Economy (1999). 2 One often sees references that derive
the word “layperson” from the biblical word laos, (ό) meaning “the people of
God” in contrast to the pagan nations. According to this view laypeople are
simply those persons who belong to the people consecrated to God. If this were
true, the word “lay” would be synonymous with “sacred.” But such an
interpretation rests on a double confusion. First, it presupposes that the word
“lay” arose within primitive Christian or contemporary Jewish circles, when it
fact it occurs 300 B.C. in Hellenistic papyri. The second presupposition is that
the adjective “lay” is always suggestive of the noun laos, which Christians
understand generally to mean “people of God.” However, the noun laos, in the
Bible as well as in secular texts, has a special meaning: not people in general,
but the common people in so far as they are distinguished from their leaders -
the equivalent of plebs. While the Greek word laos is a biblical term that
occurs frequently in Scripture, to designate the people of God in distinction
from the pagan nations, the word “layperson” (ό) is not a biblical word. It
occurs neither in the LXX nor in the New Testament, but is an ecclesiastical
word that appears for the first time in the first epistle of Clement, about the
year 96, to describe those members of the people of Israel who were neither
priests nor Levites: “Special ministries have been assigned to the high-priest;
a special place has been allotted to the priests; and the Levites have their own
duties. Lay people are bound by rules laid down for the laity.” Even though I
Clement identifies the laity here by distinguishing them from “priests and
Levites,” he gives them a place within the consecrated people, who are set apart
from the nonconsecrated “nations”. This identification as a consecrated people
opens the way for an identification of the laity with the “people of God” and
the “royal priesthood,” that is, to identify them as being consecrated persons.
3 Church” (1974) and in our Statement on “Conciliarity and Primacy” (1989). We
also referred to the distinctive vocation of the Christian laity in our
Statement, “Steps towards a Reunited Church: A Sketch of an Orthodox-Catholic
Vision for the Future” (2010). The International Orthodox-Catholic dialogue,
too, in 2007, made a number of valuable references to the specific participation
of the laity in the life of the Church in its Statement, “Ecclesiological and
Canonical Consequences of the Sacramental Nature of the Church: Ecclesial
Communion, Conciliarity and Authority” (The “Ravenna Statement,” 2007) and our
Consultation responded to that Statement in 2009. We believe, however, that
discussion of the basic constitution of the Church, and of the specific role of
the laity, remains somewhat underdeveloped in our previous statements, as well
as in the statements of the International Commission. On the one hand, the topic
has not been a ‘church-dividing’ issue between Orthodoxy and Catholicism.
Rather, in both our Churches in recent decades there have been continuing
discussions about the proper role of the laity in worship, administration and
witness. So the Second Vatican Council, in its Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy, expressed the Catholic Church’s desire “that all believers be brought
to that full, conscious, and active participation in liturgical celebrations
which is required by the nature of the liturgy itself and to which the Christian
people… have, in virtue of baptism, a right and a duty.” (Sacrosanctum Concilium
14) Second, we recognize that both of our churches have often been affected by a
strong emphasis on the vocation and ministry of the clergy, even to the neglect
of the ministry of the laity. A lay person has frequently been assumed, as in I
Clement, simply to be one who is not ordained (see above, n. 2). This
perspective appears to neglect the proper, wider vocation of every Christian
disciple, as that is rooted in Christ’s call and in baptism. We have come,
therefore, to recognize the need to articulate together a common perspective on
the People of God and the vocation and ministry of lay persons and the ordained
within it, especially in light of contemporary challenges both in the Church and
in society. From the beginning of our Consultation in 1965, lay theologians,
both women and men, have been full and active participants. We gratefully affirm
their contributions, and believe that our North American Consultation can take a
distinctive part in this important discussion. It is in that spirit that we
respectfully submit this statement to our churches. 4 I. The Mystery of Baptism
Baptism, as the central act of Christian initiation, is a rite rich in
significance. At its heart are two fundamental affirmations. First, baptism,
celebrated with water in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit
and completed by chrismation and the reception of the Eucharist, brings about
our union with God in Christ and our sharing in Christ’s death and resurrection.
It is the act that marks the beginning of every distinctively Christian life;
so, with the Apostle Paul, we affirm: “As many of you who have been baptized in
Christ have put on Christ” (Gal.3:27). Second, baptism thus marks our entry into
the Church, which is the People of God. Our mysterious union with Christ our
Lord through baptism is, at the same time, a union with all those who are ‘in
Christ’ (Phil.1:1). If Christ is the head, then the Church is his Body (Col.
1:18). The two share one life. For every believer, growth in holiness takes
place both through our relationship with Christ and through our sharing this
relationship with fellow members of the Church. As we have previously said:
“Baptism is not a human work, but the rebirth from above, effected through
‘water and the Spirit,’ that introduces us into the life of the Church. It is
that gift by which God grounds and establishes the Church as the community of
the New Covenant, the ‘Israel of God’ (Gal 6:16), by engrafting us into the body
of the crucified and risen Messiah (Rom 6:3-11; 11:17-24), into the one
sacrament (mysterion) which is Christ himself (Eph 1:3; 3:3; Col 1:27 and
2:2).”3 A number of the Fathers, both Eastern and Western, have spoken about
Christ’s saving work in terms of his three “offices”: of Priest, Prophet and
King. As priest, Christ is the one who offers himself up for the salvation of
the world. As prophet, he is the one who proclaims the truth to us about God and
the human person. As king, he is the one who leads his faithful people to the
Father. The same Fathers of the Church also remind us that, through baptism, the
faithful themselves share in these offices of Christ. So St. John Chrysostom
says: “Through baptism, you have become king, and priest and prophet: a king, in
that you have dashed to earth all the deeds 3 Agreed Statement on Baptism and
Sacramental Economy (1999). 5 of wickedness and slain your sins; a priest, in
that you offer yourself to God; a prophet, knowing what shall be, and being
inspired by God and sealed.” (Homily 3:4-5 on II Cor) A prayer from the Roman
rite of baptism, accompanying the “sealing” of a newly baptized person with
sacred chrism, says: “God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, has freed you
from sin, given you a new birth by water and the Holy Spirit, and welcomed you
into his holy people. He now anoints you with the chrism of salvation. As Christ
was anointed Priest, Prophet, and King, so may you live always as a member of
his body, sharing everlasting life.” Our understanding of the fundamental
vocation and ministry of all Christian men and women is rooted in the call of
Christ as it is manifested in the sacrament of baptism. By this sacred rite, we
are bound to the Lord and his people, and blessed with the gifts of his Spirit.
II. The People of God The people of God are distinguished both by charisms (1
Cor 12:7; 14:26), or interior gifts, and by public ministries; both of these
serve to build up the community. The New Testament mentions distinctive roles of
leadership in the community, such as ministers (I Cor 4.1; 2 Cor 3.6; 6.4),
presidents (Rom 12.8; I Thes 5.12; Heb 13.7, 17, 24; Acts 12.1; 20.28), pastors
(Eph 4.11), elders (Tit 1.5), and teachers (Acts 12.1; I Cor 12.28) as gifts of
the Spirit, given to some individuals in the community for the sake of all. The
charisms of all the baptized, above and beyond these special roles, are linked
with their participation in the prophetic, priestly and kingly role of Christ,
enabling all to be witnesses to him through lives of faith. “The manifestation
of the Spirit received by each person,” St. Paul reminds us, “is given for the
common good” (1 Cor 12:7). But all these charisms “equip the saints for the work
of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until all of us come to the
unity of faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to maturity, to the
measure of the full stature of Christ” (Eph 4.11-12) The diverse ministries
carried out in the Church are all forms of service, the focus being on our
common mission rather than on anyone’s particular identity. Reflection beginning
with the people of God as a whole, then, rather than with the notion of “the
laity” as distinct from “the clergy,” replaces the “priesthood-laity” divide
with an emphasis on the necessity of all ministries for “the building up of the
Body of Christ,” as that Body serves the world. A genuinely dialogical Church,
formed from these ministries, is thus characterized by mutual listening, mutual
witnessing, and mutual respect, as well as by 6 distinctions in office and
function. Ecclesial structures, such as bishops’ synods and regional or
ecumenical councils, maintain and foster the unity in faith of the Body of
Christ. The terms “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own
people” apply to all the baptized, before there are further distinctions within
the community, and emphasize the unitary nature of the community, founded on a
common baptism and common confirmation or chrismation. The people addressed in I
Peter 2.9-10 are therefore not the “laity,” but the faithful Christian people.
According to I Peter, the spiritual rebirth of Christians occurs through the
resurrection of Christ, in which Christians share through baptism and
chrismation (see Rom 6:3- 11). This is the basic identity that defines all
groupings within the community, whether those groups be identified as the laity,
the clergy, monks, or religious. Every member of the Church has a dignity and
value rooted in baptism. The Spirit also endows each baptized Christian with
spiritual gifts, which are meant to contribute to the wellbeing of the Body and
to the salvation of the world. While these spiritual gifts serve to highlight
each person’s unique identity, they are not meant to harm the bond of unity
which each baptized person has with the rest in Christ (1 Cor. 12:4-11). Each
gift is given, ultimately, not for the benefit of any one person alone, but for
the well-being of all the members of the Body of Christ. As St. Basil the Great
says: “We are all members one of another, having different gifts according to
the grace of God which has been given to us…All the members together make up the
Body of Christ in the unity of the Spirit, and render to one another the
necessary service according to their gifts” (On the Holy Spirit, 26). Baptism
and Orders. Among the many particular gifts of the Spirit, some persons are
appointed to exercise a special leadership role within the community, as
bishops, priests and deacons. Both Orthodox and Catholics affirm that these
orders are essential to the life of the Church. Yet, the ordained ministry is
itself but one of the many gifts of the Spirit to the Church. The
differentiation between clergy and laity itself rests on a gift, which serves as
the basis for liturgical ministry. Those who are called to the ordained ministry
continue to be fellow members of the Body of Christ and People of God, together
with all who are baptized. At the same time, the gift of ordained ministry
itself builds the distinctive relationship between the one ordained and the
other members of the Eucharistic community. Each ordained minister is involved
in a special ministry of service “for the building up of the Body of Christ” 7
(Eph. 4:12). So St. John Chrysostom says to the clergy: “If lay people need us,
in the same way we as ministers exist for their sake, appointed for their
spiritual needs. We need each other: the leaders need the support of the people
and those in office equally need the contribution of the flock. To be a leader
implies that persons be taken care of and be helped. Nobody exists as
selfsufficient, assuming that he himself can do all. … Therefore, the Church as
a conciliar assembly can do much more than one single person. All that one
person alone cannot do, rather, he or she can do together with others.” (Homily
30 on 1 Corinthians, 7) So we speak of the clergy as being “set apart,” but not
as “above” or separate from the body of believers. Indeed, it could be also said
that every baptized believer is “set apart” to serve God in the Church and in
wider human society. This means that the clergy are called to serve the other
members of the community with the gift of the Spirit in a distinctive manner,
which is sanctioned and blessed by the Church itself through the rites of
election and ordination. Yet the fact that every ordination takes place within
the context of the community’s Eucharist, and with the assent of the community,
reminds us that an ordained person is intimately related to the entire Body of
the Church. God calls the one who is ordained from the midst of the Church for
the service of the Church. There is always a profound, intimate connection,
then, between those who are ordained and those to whom and with whom their
ministry is offered. St. Augustine expressed this reciprocal relationship when
he boldly declared: “Although I am terrified by what I am for you, I am consoled
by what I am with you. For you, I am your bishop; with you I am a Christian. The
former is a title of an office which has been undertaken, the latter is a title
of grace. The first is a danger, the second salvation…Precisely as we struggle
in this office we find rest in the common good…. It consoles me more that I have
been redeemed with you than that I have been placed over you…Aid us by your
prayers and your obedience, that we may rejoice not so much in overseeing you as
in serving you.” (Sermon 340:1) The Eucharistic Community This intimate
relationship of the bishop and priest with the laity is most clearly expressed
each time the Church gathers to celebrate the Eucharist. The bishop or priest
who presides at the Eucharist represents Christ as the head of the Church, which
is his body. As president of the Eucharistic assembly, it is the bishop’s or
priest’s responsibility to preside before the altar, to 8 proclaim the Gospel,
to preach and interpret the word of God, to receive and offer the bread and
wine, and to intone the great Eucharistic prayer. At the same time, the
Eucharist is not the action of the bishop or priest alone, separated from the
community. Rather, the Eucharist is, properly speaking, the priestly act of the
entire People of God, gathered at a particular place in obedience to the Lord’s
command to do this in his memory (1 Cor.11:24). So all the members of the
assembly truly celebrate the Eucharist, led by the bishop or priest. The prayers
of the Eucharistic liturgy, in both our traditions, are normally addressed to
God in the first-person plural, because they are rightfully the community’s
words; so while the bishop or priest speaks the prayers aloud, all the members
of the community give their assent by responding together “Amen.” While the
bishop or priest offers the bread and wine, as the Byzantine liturgy expresses
it, “on behalf of all and for all,” it is the faithful who present these gifts
to be offered. All respond to his greeting, “The Lord be with you,” by replying
“And with your Spirit,” confirming their conviction that he presides by the
grace of the Holy Spirit, given in ordination; all exchange the ‘kiss of peace’
and profess with the presider their common faith. And while the bishop or priest
is the first to receive the Holy Communion, all the members partake of the same
bread and the same cup. In these liturgical actions, the synodal or conciliar
structure of the Church is expressed in a way which does not deny or diminish
the genuine primacy of the bishop or priest. It is within the Eucharistic
context, in fact, that one can clearly see operative the mutual relationship of
clergy and laity, as well as the principles of both primacy and conciliarity in
the Church as a whole. So St. John Chrysostom says that “during the most
awe-inspiring mysteries, the priest prays for the people and the people pray for
the priest, for the words ‘with your spirit’ are nothing else but that. The
offering of the Eucharist is in common, for it is not the priest alone who gives
thanks, but the whole people. He first speaks in their voice, then they add that
it is ‘fitting and right’ to do this. Then, the Eucharist begins.” (Homily 18 on
II Corinthians 8.24). And in another homily, he declares: “With us, all things
are equal. The saving life that sustains our souls is given with equal honor to
both you and me. I do not, after all, partake of one Lamb and you of another,
but we partake of the same. We all have the same baptism. We have been promised
the same Spirit. We are all hastening to the same Kingdom. We are all alike
brothers and sisters in Christ, sharing all things in common!” (Homily 4 on II
Thessalonians 3.2 ) 9 The image of an intimate mutual relationship of giving and
receiving, modeled on the circuminsessio or perichoresis of the Persons of the
Holy Trinity, may even be apt to describe the relationship of the various
charisms, ministries, and states of life among the faithful in the Eucharistic
community. Within the diversity whose source is the Spirit of unity, all work
together to build up the Body of Christ. III. The Ministry and Mission of the
Laity While the entire people of God is called to minister in and for the
church, as early as the Apostolic Tradition one finds a distinction between
clerical and lay ministries evidenced through the distinction between the
ordination of bishops, presbyters, and deacons, through a laying-on of hands,
and the simple installation or institution of lay ministers such as widows and
readers. So in both the Orthodox and Catholic churches, liturgical ministry
includes not simply the presiders but altar servers, cantors, lectors, and the
choir. Beyond these liturgical roles, increasing numbers of lay people today
teach the faith, serve in peace and justice networks, in soup kitchens and
shelters, in administrative positions, and in various parish programs. In the
Catholic Church, for example, lay persons are regularly involved in the liturgy
as extraordinary Eucharistic ministers, and in some places are responsible for
leading Sunday worship in the absence of a priest. In the Orthodox Church, lay
persons are involved in parish, diocesan, and national church assemblies
(Clergy-Laity congresses), and function as short-term and long-term
missionaries. Through our union with Christ in baptism, every disciple has an
obligation to be a defender of the apostolic faith through the way we live out
our relationships and responsibilities in family, Church and society. As the
recent Ravenna statement of our international OrthodoxCatholic dialogue says:
“The whole community and each person in it bears the ‘conscience of the Church’
(ekklesiastike syneidesis), as Greek theology calls it - the sensus fidelium in
Latin terminology. By virtue of baptism and confirmation (chrismation) each
member of the Church exercises a form of authority in the Body of Christ. In
this sense, all the faithful (and not just the bishops) are responsible for the
faith professed at baptism. It is our common teaching that the people of God,
having received ‘the anointing which comes from the Holy One’ (1 John 2, 20 and
27), in communion with their pastors, cannot err in matters of faith (cf. John
16, 13).” 4 4 “Ecclesiological and Canonical Consequences of the Sacramental
Nature of the Church: Ecclesial Communion, Conciliarity and Authority” 7
(Ravenna, October 13, 2007.) 10 The participation of the laity in councils, the
consultation of the faithful in matters of discipline and faith, and their
longer-term involvement in the reception of doctrinal definitions, so that they
become embedded in the life, worship, and teaching of the Church, reflects the
role that the whole people of God, as a single Body, ultimately must play.
Engagement in society extends to all the baptized, insofar as all the baptized
are called to participate actively and responsibly in the church’s mission of
proclaiming salvation to the whole world. All are called to share their gifts
and talents in the family, the workplace, the civic community and the parish or
diocese. Not surprisingly, it is often the laity who are best able to provide
decisive Christian witness in these settings, and within the professional,
political, and cultural life of society. The Church has a mission to the world.
The people of God are sent out as “the light of the world” and “the salt of the
earth” (Mt 5:13-14). The relationship between the Church and the world is
perhaps best described as an interplay, an interpenetration, insofar as the
Church, along with the whole of humanity, shares the world’s lot even while it
serves as a leaven within human society, renewing it in Christ, and
collaborating with Christ to transform it in conformity with the Kingdom of God.
The whole Church’s mission, then, is ultimately the transformation of the world
into the Kingdom of God. Jesus proclaimed the coming of the Kingdom of God (Mark
1:9-15; Luke 3:21-4:14), identifying the transformation foretold by Isaiah
61:1-2: good news brought to the poor, captives released, the blind given sight,
and the oppressed freed. The Kingdom was revealed as present in the person and
actions of Jesus (Luke 4:21). The mission of the church participates in the
mission of Jesus, manifested at his baptism and assumed by Christians in their
own baptisms, in which they put on Christ and participate in his death and
resurrection. Precisely as members of the body of Christ, all the faithful share
in the anointing of the Spirit, are formed into a holy and royal priesthood,
offer “spiritual sacrifices to God through Jesus Christ” (I Pet 2.4-5), and have
a part to play in the mission of the body as a whole. The church then, is a sign
for the nations, and so has a mission that encompasses both the historical
reality of human community now and its ultimate union with God. So it is
oriented eschatologically, signifying the ultimate union of all, when
recapitulated in Christ at the end time. The Church in its most basic identity,
for both the Catholic and Orthodox traditions, is thus 11 called a sacramental
reality, in which God works actively in and through human beings and actions in
the midst of a concrete, historical community.5 Implications for Synodality The
identity of the whole Church, as participating in the threefold office of Christ
and as sharing in the inerrancy of the whole people of God in matters of faith,
6 bears implications for its conciliarity and synodality. As our own “Agreed
Statement on Conciliarity and Primacy in the Church” states, “The ordering of
charisms within the community is the basis of the Church’s structure, and the
reason why permanent offices of leadership have been divinely established with
the Eucharistic body, since apostolic times, as a service of love and a
safeguard of unity in faith and life.”7 While the term “conciliarity” primarily
refers to a gathering of bishops exercising their pastoral office, the Ravenna
document affirms the possibility of “taking the term in a more comprehensive
sense to refer to all the members of the Church (cf. the Russian term
sobornost)” and “as signifying that each member of the Body of Christ, by virtue
of baptism, has his or her place and proper responsibility in eucharistic
koinonia.”8 The Ravenna document identifies the ultimate foundation of
conciliarity to be the Trinitarian mystery, wherein the three persons of the
Trinity are “‘enumerated’ without the designation as ‘second’ or ‘third’ person
implying any diminution or subordination.”9 Similarly, an ordering among local
churches does not imply any inequality between them. While the Eucharist has
rightfully been identified as manifesting this order and koinonia within the
ecclesial community, we wish to assert here that a baptismal ecclesiology of the
people of God, endowed with various charisms, likewise provides a theological
foundation for the practice of conciliarity. 5
----------------------------------------------------------
https://www.usccb.org/committees/ecumenical-interreligious-affairs/vocation-and-mission
Comments
Post a Comment