Thank you, Father. Would that same logic apply to confirmation and the diaconate or is that somehow different since has the faculty of baptism? As I think about it, it would seem logical and theologically consistent that any cleric who has received holy orders could–if the Church decided to change the canon law–confirm young people with sacred oil blessed by the ordinary. I know priests can be the extraordinary minister of confirmation, but was there ever a time when only the bishop did this? If there were (I don’t know if there was) a time when priests did not confirm, but now do, could the same occur for the diaconate in theory as to confirmation? I mention this because baptism and confirmation are so closely tied together. I also know what the Church’s canon law says on this, but would this ever be a sacrament deacons might be able to be permitted to perform as an extraordinary minister over time? I know one poster who would say no and, indeed, I view it as a closed question at present. But another poster got me thinking about the evolution of faculties granted to different clergy.
It’s a good question. Might deacons confirm at some point in the future? Offhand, I’m not sure. My theological instincts are telling me “no” but it’s something I never actually thought about until this thread, so I don’t have a ready answer.
Before getting into the actual question directly, though, we have to keep in mind that there is a significant difference between seeing the priest as an extra-ordinary minister (of something reserved to the bishop) and the deacon as an extra-ordinary minister (of something reserved to a sacerdos).
The question of “what is a bishop?” was actually an open question throughout most of the Church’s history (odd as that might seem). There were 2 schools of thought. One saw the episcopacy as an order unto itself, the other saw the episcopacy as a being a priest-with-jurisdiction. It was not until Vatican II that the question was finally settled: the order of bishop is an order by itself, and a bishop is not (merely) a presbyter with the power of governance.
Since the notion of seeing a bishop as a priest-with-jurisdiction was the view accepted by St Thomas, it was the prevailing view in Catholic thought and practice–and it certainly pre-dates St Thomas. It was the most common. Remember though that it was not a settled matter until Vatican II determined that the view was not correct. The most obvious expression of that was that we used to refer to the ceremony of making a new bishop as a “consecration” (and some still do use the word) instead of an “ordination.” We now understand that a bishop must be ordained to that order, and not simply that a priest is promoted to the office.
That means that before Vatican II, when a presbyter was granted the faculties to perform some episcopal function, this was seen merely as a matter of discipline. All the priest needed was permission, and not the power of orders; since he “already had” all the power of orders by virtue of priestly ordination. Effectively, the thought was that there were only 2 orders in the Church: priest and deacon. Vatican II clarified that to state that there are 3 orders bishop, deacon, and priest. (I’m leaving out sub-deacon and the minor orders because they’re not relevant here).
All of that background is the reason why we cannot draw complete parallels between a deacon as extra-ordinary minister and a priest as extra-ordinary minister.
When we ask “what may a deacon do?” we must ask that within the context of seeing the diaconate as an order unto itself, with its own proper ministry. We’ve all heard Catholics say that a deacon is an “almost priest” or heard deacons described as “priests except that they cannot say Mass or hear confessions”; we know those are not accurate descriptions of the diaconate. We know they are not accurate, yet we continue to hear them said.
So, when we get back to the question “Can a deacon confirm?” we have to remember that the question is really about “is it the proper ministry of the deacon to confirm?” and not about “why can’t the Church just give them permission to confirm?”
As I wrote in my opening comments, my instincts are telling me “no” but I have to look into it a little more before I can provide anything substantive to support that.