Rite For Ordination of Priests
Rite For Ordination of Priests
Rite For Ordination of Priests
{In the first place the bishop addresses himself to the clergy and
the people, consulting with them about the fitness of the men who
are being presented for ordination. This is reminiscent of olden
times when the custom prevailed of having priests and other clergy
chosen by the will of the people. It must be kept in mind, then, that
in the present discipline of the Church the people can merely raise
objections, but it is the bishop who makes the choice.}
The bishop addresses the clergy and the people as follows:
My dear brethren, since the captain of a ship and its passengers
alike have reason to feel safe or else in danger on a voyage, they
ought to be of one mind in their common interests. Not without
reason, then, have the fathers decreed that the people too should
be consulted in the choice of those who are to be raised to the
ministry of the altar.
For sometimes it happens that one or another person has
knowledge about the life and conduct of a candidate that is not
generally known. And the people will necessarily be more inclined
to be loyal to a priest if they have given consent to his ordination.
As far as I can judge, the conduct of these deacons, who with God's
help are to be ordained to the priesthood, is commendable and is
pleasing to God. In my opinion, then, they are deserving of being
promoted to a higher honor in the Church. Yet it is well to consult
the people as a whole, rather than to rely on one or a few, whose
approval might be a consequence of partiality or of misjudgment.
Be perfectly free, then, to say what you know about the conduct
and character of the candidates and what you think of their fitness.
But let your approval of their elevation to the priesthood be based
more on their merits than on your own affection for them.
Consequently, if anyone has anything against them, let him for
God's honor and in God's name come forward and sincerely speak
his mind. Only let him remember his own state.
After a brief pause the bishop continues, addressing himself now in
exhortation to the candidates:
and sanctify
Then the bishop kneels again at the faldstool, and the chanters
finish the litany up to "Lord, have mercy. Christ, have mercy. Lord
have mercy," inclusive.
The Laying-on of Hands
{When the litany is ended the candidates rise and go in pairs to
kneel before the bishop. The bishop places both his hands on the
head of each candidate in turn, without saying anything. This very
Hear us, we pray, O Lord God, and pour out on these servants of
yours the blessing of the Holy Spirit and the power of priestly
grace. And now as we present them for consecration in your benign
presence, may you sustain them forever by the bounty of your gifts.
We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and
reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God,
Here the bishop extends his hands and chants or recites the
conclusion to the preceding prayer and the following versicles:
B: Forever and ever.
All: Amen.
B: The Lord be with you.
All: May He also be with you.
B: Lift up your hearts.
All: We have lifted them up to the Lord.
B: Let us give thanks to the Lord our God.
All: It is fitting and right to do so.
The Solemn Prayer and Form of the Sacrament
{This very beautiful prayer, also called the consecratory preface, is
the actual form of the sacrament, and in early times the Roman rite
for ordination had nothing more than a prayer or prayers of this
kind, along with the imposition of hands. A theology of the
sacrament could quite easily be constructed on this prayer. In brief,
it asks for God's grace, for He is the source of all honors and
dignities, as also of all growth and order. It states the principle that
God's loving providence guides His rational creatures through
stages of gradual progress and perfection. It points out how this
principle operated in the Old Testament, in God's choosing Moses
and the seventy elders to assist Him; and in the New, in Christ's
choosing the apostles and their successors to carry out the ministry
of His Church. Then follows a petition that the bishop may have
the priestly office received from you, O God, and by their own lives
suggest a rule of life to others.
Here the bishop resumes the chant of the rest of the preface:
May they be prudent fellow-workers in our ministry. May they shine
in all the virtues, so that they will be able to give a good account of
the stewardship entrusted to them. and finally attain the reward of
everlasting blessedness.
The bishop recites the conclusion in a low voice, but loud enough to
be heard by those near him:
We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and
reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, forever and
ever.
All: Amen.
Investiture of the New Priests
Now the newly ordained priests go and kneel before the bishop one
by one. The bishop is seated on the faldstool and is wearing the
mitre. He takes the stole, until now worn by the newly ordained on
the left shoulder, draws it over the right shoulder, and arranges it
in the form of a cross over the chest (in the manner worn by a
priest). As he does so he says to each one:
Take the yoke of the Lord, for His yoke is sweet and His burden
light.
Next he invests each one with the chasuble, leaving it folded and
pinned at the back but hanging down in front. As he does so he
says:
Take the vestment of priesthood which signifies charity; for God is
able to advance you in charity and in perfection.
To this the ordained adds: Thanks be to God.
The bishop rises, removes the mitre, and says the following prayer,
during which all the others kneel:
O God, the source of all holiness, whose consecration is ever
effective, whose blessing is ever fulfilled, pour out on these
servants of yours, whom we now raise to the dignity of the
priesthood, the gift of your blessing. By their noble and exemplary
lives let them prove that they are really elders of the people, and
true to the norms laid down by Paul to Timothy and Titus. Let them
meditate on your law day and night, so that they may believe what
they have read, and teach what they have believed, and practice
what they have taught. May justice, constancy, mercy, courage, and
all the other virtues be reflected in their every way of acting. May
they inspire others by their example, and hearten them by their
admonitions. May they keep pure and spotless the gift of their high
calling. For the worship of your people may they change bread and
wine into the body and blood of your Son by a holy consecration.
May they through persevering charity mature "unto the perfect
man, unto the measure of the age of the fulness of Christ," and rise
on the day of the just and eternal judgment of God with a good
conscience, true faith, and the full gifts of the Holy Spirit. We ask
this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns
with
you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, forever and ever.
All: Amen.
The bishop kneels, facing the altar, and intones the hymn, "Veni
Creator" which is then continued by the choir (for the music see the
music supplement):
Veni Creator
Come, Holy Ghost, Creator blest,
And in our souls take up your rest;
Come with your grace and heavenly aid
the ordained goes back to his place. The bishop cleanses his fingers
with a piece of bread.
Presentation of the Host and Chalice
The bishop now presents each of the ordained with a chalice
containing wine and water and a paten upon it with a host. The
ordained touches with the fore and middle fingers both the paten
and the cur of the chalice. During this ceremony the bishop says:
Receive the power to offer sacrifice to God, and to celebrate
Masses for the living and the dead, in the name of the Lord.
All: Amen.
Having cleansed his hands the bishop goes to the throne or to the
faldstool at the epistle side. Mass is resumed with the singing of the
last verse of the tract or sequence or alleluia verse.
Concelebration of the Mass
After the offertory antiphon the bishop puts on the mitre and is
seated before the middle of the altar. The ordained come to the
altar, and two by two kneel before the bishop and present him with
a lighted candle, kissing his hand as they do so. After this they
return to their places.
From now on all the newly ordained priests pray the Mass along
with the bishop, saying all prayers aloud, even those usually said in
a low voice. They receive the kiss of peace from the bishop at the
usual time. At holy communion the ordained, before receiving the
sacred host, say "Amen" to the formula and then kiss the bishop's
ring.
After receiving communion they go to the epistle side of the altar to
partake of some wine, not from the chalice which the bishop has
consecrated, but from another containing ordinary wine. One of the
assisting priests holds a chalice and a purificator in readiness for
this purpose.
After taking the ablution and washing his hands, the bishop
removes the mitre, stands at the epistle side, and intones the
following responsories, which are continued by the choir (for the
music see the music supplement):
Responsory
No longer do I call you servants * but my friends, for you have
known all things I have wrought in your midst, (alleluia).*
Receive the Holy Spirit, the Advocate, within you. * It is He whom
the Father will send to you, (alleluia).
V. You are my friends if you do the things that I command you. *
Receive the Holy Spirit, the Advocate, within you.
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit. * It is
He whom the Father will send to you, (alleluia).
The alleluia is omitted from Septuagesima to Easter.
Having said the responsory the bishop puts on the mitre, goes to
the middle of the altar, and turns to the ordained. The latter now
recite the Creed which is a summary of the faith they will
henceforth preach:
I believe in God, the Father almighty, Creator of heaven and earth;
and in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord; who was conceived by
the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius
Pilate, was crucified, died and was buried. He descended into hell,
the third day He arose again from the dead. He ascended into
heaven, and sits at the right hand of God the Father almighty, from
there He shall come to judge the living and the dead. I believe in
the Holy Spirit, the holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and life
everlasting. Amen.
The Commission to Absolve
When the Creed is finished the bishop sits on the faldstool at the
middle of the altar (he is wearing the mitre). As the ordained kneel
before him one by one, he places both his hands on the head of the
ordained and says to each one:
Receive the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are
forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained.
Then the bishop unfolds the chasuble, which the ordained has worn
folded on his shoulders until now; and as he lets the chasuble drop
at the back he says to each one:
The Lord clothe you with the robe of innocence.
The Promise of Obedience
Then each of the ordained comes again before the bishop, kneels
and places his folded hands between the hands of the bishop. If the
bishop is the Ordinary of the ordained he says to him:
Do you promise me and my successors reverence and obedience?
The priest replies: I promise.
But if the bishop is not the Ordinary of the newly ordained he says
to him as he holds his hands (if he is a secular priest):
Do you promise reverence and obedience to the bishop who is your
Ordinary for the time being? R: I promise.
Or he says to a priest of a religious order:
Do you promise reverence and obedience to the prelate who is your
Ordinary for the time being? R: I promise.
Then the bishop, still holding the newly ordained's hands within his
own, kisses him on the right cheek, saying:
The peace of the Lord be always with you.
The ordained responds: Amen.
Admonition and Blessing
Son,
and Holy
All: Amen.
Final Exhortation
The bishop sits down and speaks a final word to the ordained,
saying:
My dear sons, ponder well the order you have taken and the burden
laid on your shoulders. Strive to lead a holy and devout life, and to
please almighty God, that you may obtain His grace. May He in His
kindness deign to bestow it on you.
Now that you have been ordained to the priesthood, may I ask you,
after you have offered your first Mass, to celebrate three other
Masses, namely, one in honor of the Holy Spirit, a second in honor
of blessed Mary, ever a Virgin, and a third for the faithful departed.
I ask you also to pray to almighty God for me.
Mass is concluded as usual.