The effectiveness of the hierarchy for governance and day to day functioning is not at question. What was at question was the thought that the higher you moved up the food chain, the better chance you had at getting to heaven.
The hierarchy with the Holy Father at the top is not how the Church actually looks at the structure of Christâs body, not how the Church understands herself as having been established by Christ. The Pope is at the top for governance but that he calls himself the âServant of the Servants of Godâ should give us a clue as to how the Church views herself.
At the top of the church is Christ. Just below Christ are the poor, whom Christ had a particualar affinity with. Below the poor are the laity, then the priests, bishops, the Holy Father, and lastly the deacons, who are the servants of the entire Church.
The hierarchical structure of the Church where one âRises through the ranksâ was not how the early church was constructed but rather an application of
cursus honorum which was adapted from Roman politics and the Roman military. The early Church did not function that way to the extent that it does now.
We honor the Holy Father, and the Bishops, and love our priest, but the structure of the church in terms of Christâs body is different from the hierarchical structure of the Church established for practical matters of running the worlds largest religious organization. The poor, martyrs, those who are persecuted, those who are ill and those who suffer - these are at the top of Christâs body because Crist himself loved these and ministered to these, and the Church continues the work of Christ on earth. That is what the Book of Acts is about, the Church continuing the work of Christ on earth. The first line of the Book of Acts talks about what Jesus âBeganâ to do. The Church now continues this work, ministering to and serving sinners, the poor and those who suffer.
The prodigal son got a feast. The faithful son was expected to keep working. The 72 who were sent out were told not to bring a money bag, that they should expect nothing but hard work. The Auxilliary Bishop in Atlanta was given a car and driver and he said, âNo thanks. Iâll take my Honda.â
Clericalism says that the laity exists for the priests. Christ set it up the other way, telling the Apostles that they must not âLord it overâ others and must put themselves last.
-Tim-