D
Dolphin
Guest
I know priests are forever even after death and in Heaven, are deacons also?
Fortunately, we’re discussing a response to God’s callingNothing a human chooses is permanent…
A priestly vocation is God’s choice and man’s response (or lack of response) to the call.Nothing a human chooses is permanent…
Every PERMANENT deacon I know or have heard speak or write on it would strongly disagree with the comment I have highlighted above.If a man becomes a Deacon he IS on his way to the Priesthood!
The Diaconate is the 1st step every priest ever consecrated has to take.
The “Consecrated Clergy” rungs are: Deacon, Priest, Bishop.
Acolyte is the final stage in the preparation to become Deacon.
If a Deacon is married and becomes widow he cannot remarry.
And of course if he is single and wants to marry he will need to ask for the dispensation from Rome. If he is of the Roman Rite. Other rites not so sure.
Peace!
I’m a deacon that will likely never be a priest and I would agree with JerryZ in concept that all deacons are on the path to the priesthood. Now many may never step closer to priestly ordination than their diaconal ordination, but it drives me nuts when people treat “transitional” deacons as a completely different beast from “permanent” deacons. There is no route to the priesthood that does not lead through the diaconate and the ontological change for a “permanent” vs “Transitional” deacon is identical.Every PERMANENT deacon I know or have heard speak or write on it would strongly disagree with the comment I have highlighted above.
I’m not sure about that. Part of the reason for religious vows is to be set apart from the world for the salvation of souls. Upon death there is no longer a need for the soul to be set apart. The vows of the evangelical councels really don’t seem like they’d apply in the heavenly realm.I know they are still lay people but I thought the vows did carry over after death.
In Heaven everyone is a saint.I know priests are forever even after death and in Heaven, are deacons also?
I understand what you mean, and this is meant as no disrespect to my brother deacons, but they continue to distort the theology of Holy Orders by creating this artificial division based on ones end goals. The vehement defense of some of my brothers strikes me as a form of pride hidden under the guise of humility. The call to Holy Orders is a call to serve God’s people through his Church. It is not up to me to put limits on how God calls me which is exactly what I’d be doing if I said “Nope, I’m a permanent deacon so I could never be a priest.” I am called as a servant to God and if he later called me to the priesthood (and circumstances allowed) then so be it.My point was that the permanent deacons that I know tend to be sensitive (offended?) by the idea that they pursued the diaconate in the hopes of being priests some day in the future and not as a specific vocation in itself.