Deacons for Life
The Choice to Serve in the New Millenium
Deacon Keith A Fournier
In the "DIRECTORY FOR THE MINISTRY AND LIFE OF PERMANENT DEACONS"
the Congregation for the Clergy speaks of the JURIDICAL STATUS
OF THE DEACON as a Sacred Minister:
"1. The origin of the diaconate is the consecration and
mission of Christ, in which the deacon is called to share. Through
the imposition of hands and the prayer of consecration, he is
constituted a sacred minister and a member of the hierarchy. This
condition determines his theological and juridical status in the
Church."
For those who have been called to ordination as deacons of the
Church, something "ontological" changed when they were
ordained. Most deacons were fruitfully serving as lay men prior
to their ordination. That is why deacons usually deeply esteem and
value the wonderful renewed emphasis on the role of the "lay
members of Christ’s Faithful" proclaimed with particular power
and joy since the Second Vatican Council. However, deacons are no
longer laymen. They are also not priests. They are deacons.
I know (and I have heard similar experiences from many of my fellow
deacons) something profound happened within me with the imposition
of the hands of the Bishop. Not only did I change, but my call to
service changed.
Yes, we were chosen, along with all the faithful, at our Baptism.
However, at our diaconal ordination we were chosen - even once again
- by the "call" or "invitation" to orders!
We also responded to that invitation. We made the choice for ordered
service. We exercised our freedom and said "Yes". What
a fresh light this understanding of God’s call - and our response
in freedom - can shed upon our reading of those wonderful words
of Jesus, recorded in the Gospel of John:
"You did not choose me, I chose you and appointed you
that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should
abide’’ (John 15:16).
This passage follows His call to the disciples to "abide"
in Him and to allow His word to "abide" in them. The Greek
literally means, "to make a home." We are called to "make
our home" in Jesus and His Church. And He "makes His home"
in us! Home is the place of most security. It matters little who
or what may oppose or oppress you when you are at home. You can
be at peace and secure because you are at home.
As Deacons we are "at home" in the Lord and in His Church.
And as deacons we make a home for the Church in the midst of the
world. We serve as an order of clergy who go from the altar and
the ambo into the world.
"Deacons for Life" believes that deacons can serve an
important role, with the whole Church, in proclaiming the gospel
of life and building a new culture of life. We are called to uniquely
serve as a model of clergy in the midst of a world that is so desperately
in need of a witness of Jesus Christ who is the Servant of all.
We can be a bridge, called into a world bound by a Culture of Death
from a Church that is the sign of the culture of life and the civilization
of love and reveals the coming Kingdom.
As an order of clergy who are living, working and serving in the
midst of the world, we are uniquely positioned to confront that
culture and to transform it with the Gospel of Life.
The founder of "Deacons for Life", Fr. Frank Pavone expressed
this unique vocational calling with crystal clarity:
"Diaconate is service. The service of the deacon is his
giving, but a giving which has a special shape in our day. He
is to give his time, energy, and spoken word on behalf of the
most defenseless members of the human family, those still in the
womb.
The effort and sacrifice he makes on their behalf is itself
a witness that raises the value of the lives of these children
in the eyes of the world. It also expresses the Church's preferential
option for the poor.
The word "poor" does not simply refer to those who lack sufficient
material resources. It means those whose human dignity is not
recognized by others. The children in the womb have been declared
to be outside the realm of personhood. They are the poorest of
the poor.
Service is not service unless it serves where the need is
greatest. Love is not love unless it gives without counting the
cost
The Church needs deacons for many reasons. A world immersed
in the culture of death needs them for even more reasons."
It is a privilege to now join together with Father Pavone in the
building of "Deacons for Life." I know that that this
association will play a vital role, along with Priests and Seminarians
for Life, in the building up of the "Civilization of Love"
in the Third Christian Millennium.
What Choice?
Few principles are more cherished in our contemporary society than
freedom of choice. It is precisely in its adoption of the language
of "choice" that the movement to both legalize and normalize
the killing of children in the womb made its most profane "advance"
in its persistent efforts at cultural change.
All men and women long for freedom. It is our inheritance and our
highest aspiration. Yet few consider the real purpose of this God-given
freedom. Is "free choice" principally about our own self
interests - or is it given to us for a higher, more lasting purpose?
It is the Christian revelation that reveals the true "end"
of our freedom. It also exposes the reality of sin and death that
so impedes our ability to exercise our freedom rightly. Finally
and most importantly it is the Christian claim alone that provides
the way to a recovery of authentic freedom in the One who alone
can set us free from both sin and death by His Cross and Resurrection.
Every exercise of freedom must be made within a moral structure.
It must be exercised in conformity to truth. The real question is
not choice but….what choice?
This capacity for freedom, inscribed within our being, shows that
we are made in the image of God. Because of that we bear the responsibility
that this gift of freedom entails - to always choose in conformity
to truth and with the love of God.
This capacity to choose is what reflects the very "Imago Dei"
(the Image of God) in us. It sets human persons apart from every
other living creature. The God who is Love wants us to love Him
and one another (even those who hurt us) and to choose to do so
FREELY!
In a particular way all ordained clergy - bishops, priests, and
deacons - "incarnate" the choice to serve that is at the
heart of each Christian’s vocation. But in a unique way deacons,
though at the "lowest" order of the clergy, have a particular
vocation to be configured to Christ the servant and make this wonderful
truth about the nature of God’s love, revealed in Him, present in
the world.
Diaconal Spirituality
There is a "diaconal spirituality". "Deacons for
Life" seeks to foster it among our members and demonstrate
it in our mission.
The call to diaconal spirituality is profoundly Marian, in the
sense that she is the model of the exercise of freedom in deference
to the love of God. She is the one whose "Fiat" opened
the gates of heaven and allowed the gift of heaven to come to earth
through her.
She said "Yes." As a free person she could have said
"No." The early fathers of the Church understood the significance
of that response so much more than many contemporary Christians.
That is why one of her most ancient titles was "the second
Eve." Her "yes" they maintained turned back the tide
of disobedience unleashed by the "No" of the first Eve.
That blessed "Yes" made possible the great mystery that
we recently celebrated in the wonderful feasts of the Incarnation,
Christmas and the Epiphany. That is why the affirmation of Our Lady,
as the "Theotokos" at the Council of Ephesus, has a prophetic
implication for each one of us as Deacons.
When she said, "Fiat, let it be to me according to your Word"
(Luke 1:38), she opened the way for all of us. In that wonderful
exercise of freedom we find the pattern for our own vocation as
deacons, "Fiat…. Magnificat…. Theotokos" -- the trajectory
of love. Our "Yes" leads to a life of poured out love
and praise and makes us fruitful, in a sense, bearing the word of
God through our witness and our work.
This is a key to understanding the invitation to diaconal life,
ministry and spirituality.
In a sense, all of history (human history and the history of our
own life) falls between two trees: the tree in Eden (where Eve chose
to say "no" to the Father’s invitation to love … and then
attempted to blame another) or the second tree of Calvary (where
the "second Eve" - Mary - stood in pure love).
At the heart of the contemporary "culture of death" (of
which, in the words of John Paul II, abortion is the cutting edge)
is the wrong choice, the choice of selfishness, the choice that
always leads to death.
John Paul II spoke of the great implications of the exercise of
freedom:
"History is not simply a fixed progression toward what
is better - but rather, an event of freedom. Specifically, it
is a struggle between freedoms that are in mutual conflict: a
conflict between two loves - the love of God to the point of disregarding
self and the love of self to the point of disregarding God (John
Paul II, Christian Family in the Modern World, n. 6)"
The recurring questions of Eden echo in our contemporary culture.
How will we exercise our "freedom"? At which tree will
we worship? Will it be the tree of disobedience or the tree of obedience?
The choice we must make as deacons is the choice of freely given,
kenotic love.
Of course, the greatest example to us of this love is Christ, the
"deacon" who St. Paul writes to the Philippians:
"Though he was in the form of God, did not count equality
with God, a thing to be grasped, but emptied Himself, taking the
form of a servant’’ (Philippians 2:6).
This word rendered "Servant" in this text is the same
word for Deacon in the original Greek. This choice of self emptying,
of kenosis, of pouring out His life, is now to become our choice.
It is that choice that lies at the heart of the diaconal vocation.
It is the choice that leads to a life of true freedom.
The Choice for the Future
In this age so transfixed on the "right to choose" the
choices we make will determine our future. Though we are "free
to choose," (as those of this age are so fond of proclaiming)
we are not free to declare the objects of our choice "good"
or "evil."
God alone has that prerogative.
The concept of a "right to choose" has all too often been subverted,
causing a new bondage in the lives of countless millions
We CHOOSE our future through the exercise of our freedom. In the
words of the Catholic Catechism:
"Freedom makes man a moral subject. When he acts deliberately,
man is, so to speak, the father of his acts" (CCC, n. 1749).
This extraordinary "power" of choice, what philosophers
call the reflexive nature of human choice, has been the subject
of deep reflection in the Christian tradition. An early father of
the Church opined:
Now, human life is always subject to change: it needs to be
born ever anew…but here birth does not come about by a foreign
intervention, as is the case with bodily beings, it is the result
of a free choice. Thus we are in a certain way our own parents,
creating ourselves as we will, by our decisions." - St. Gregory
of Nyssa
When we choose in a way that is contrary to Gods plan and purpose
and opposed to the way of love, we sin. Sin is an abuse of the freedom
to choose given to us by God (cf. CCC, n. 1730-1738).
It seems no matter where you turn these days someone is demanding
a "right to choose."
There are the new libertines who mistake "freedom" with the right
to do anything that "feels good." There are the self-deluded champions
of new "rights"-which are not rights at all -- such as requiring
that consensual prolonged sexual acts between practicing homosexuals
(or unmarried heterosexuals) be afforded the same treatment as a
marriage by the State.
The clamor for these mistaken notions of "choice", and others,
grows louder every day.
What does all of this tell us about ourselves and our future?
What are we choosing, and who are we becoming in the process? What
kind of nation will we become?
Tragically, we are all too often making the wrong choices becoming
corrupted, individually and collectively, in the process. Why? Partly
because we have lost the foundational philosophical and moral understanding
of the true obligations which authentic freedom entails along with
the effect of the "reflexive" nature of our choices on who we become,
both as individuals and as a nation.
Like the Biblical son of Isaac, Esau, we have sold our birthright
for a bowl of stew.
This story is told in the first book of the Bible, Genesis (see
Genesis 25:29-34). Esau came in from hunting one day famished. Unable
to control his own disordered appetites, he, the firstborn who stood
to inherit his fathers' estate, sold that birthright for a bowl
of red stew made from wild game.
He made a wrong choice.
That was why he would later be called Edom, which means "red".
That choice defined him and literally changed his "name", which
in biblical terms entails character and identity. His wrong choice
not only lost him a future but also changed his very identity.
As a nation, America was birthed in an understanding of freedom
that implied both a "freedom from" intrusive government but also
a "freedom for" responsible and virtuous living. Our founders understood
the obligations of social solidarity.
Birthed from the Western tradition, the American idea of "ordered
liberty" contained within it the deeper understanding of the person
as a responsible agent whose choices defined his or her character.
Additionally, the framework our founders structured for national
self-government was dependent upon- and subordinated to- the existence
of self-government on a personal, family and local level.
In a real sense our choices make us--- we actually become what
we choose! In other words our choices not only affect the "outside"
world but the "inside" world as well. In the very act of choosing
we change ourselves-we become what we choose!
American literature is laced with reflections rooted in the truth
concerning the reflexive nature of human choice. For example, most
children, at some point in their formal education, read the "Portrait
of Dorian Gray." The story revolves around a young artist who is
painting a self-portrait. He keeps it hidden away and works on it
throughout his life.
As his life proceeds he "pays his money and he makes his choices"--
most of which proceed from his narcissistic worldview. To the onlooker,
he is living the life of sensual and professional "success"-but
he knows what the portrait reveals when he is home alone.
When the artist is eventually found dead, his self-portrait is
also found. It revealed the interior truth of what his life choices
had made him to become on the inside. The figure on the canvas is
hideous, corrupt and lecherous.
It is interesting to note that the author of the book, Oscar Wilde,
was for much of his life, a practicing homosexual. He later converted
to Catholicism and died in a state of grace. The choices we make
determine not only our character but also pave the road to our eternal
destiny.
Many other biblical narratives capture this poignant insight about
human choice.
The Eden story of the fall is all about the errant exercise of
freedom, the making of a wrong choice, at that tree in the garden.
An invitation to love from a God who cherishes our capacity for
freedom was rebuffed and the whole human race, collectively, through
our first parents, chose a counterfeit notion of freedom as a raw
power to do as we choose, regardless of truth, over an invitation
into an ongoing relationship with God.
That choice gets repeated throughout our personal and collective
histories to this very hour!
The Sacred texts of the New Testament are also filled with the
insight. We "become" adulterers when we look at a woman with lust
(Mt. 5:28); what comes out of our "heart" (The "heart" is the biblical
center where freedom is exercised, human choices are made and character
formed) is what makes us "unclean" (Mk 7:14-23).
There is a self-determining character to our exercise of choice.
In that sense, freedom is not free… it always costs. Our wrong choices
corrupt us.
So, in this age in which we have all too often chosen to worship
the golden calf of unencumbered "choice" we should stop and ask
ourselves some very serious questions. Who are we making ourselves
to be - as individuals and as a nation - in the choices we are making?
We choose to discard "unwanted" children who are not even allowed
the freedom to be born; we choose to kill those who have killed,
when bloodless means of punishment and protection of the common
good are available, for vengeance; we choose to denigrate women
(and now men) as sexual objects and defame the beauty of sexual
intimacy; we choose to ignore the cry of the widow, the orphan,
the poor and the oppressed while we chase the golden ring of consumerism
and self-ism--- and we call of these choices "rights" and an exercise
of our "freedom"?
On the national level, we are making ourselves a nation of killers,
harlots, and gluttons.
That imprinted character, which we have painted on our national
self portrait, can only be changed when we make a contrary choice
to hear the cry of the poor, respect again every human life from
conception to natural death, and rededicate ourselves to a true
understanding of equal justice.
On the personal level we are dangerously close to the fate of
the young artist of American novel or the first born in the biblical
account. There is a real choice to be made by everyone of us… and
we will make ourselves in making it-- it is the choice to truly
love.
Those of us who are Christians understand the heart of that choice
because Love became a Person and made the ultimate choice on the
second tree where He emptied Himself so that we might live (see
Phil 2:5-11). Because of that we have a higher obligation to continue
His choice through our poured out lives.
Those who are deacons have an even higher obligation. We are called
into the world corrupted by the wrong exercise of choice to proclaim
and point to another way, the way of love.
Ordained for word, service and sacrament, we are particularly
invited by the Church to the works of charity and justice. We are
called to reach out to the "poor."
Again in the words of the founder of "Deacons for Life",
Fr Frank Pavone:
The word "poor" does not simply refer to those who lack sufficient
material resources. It means those whose human dignity is not
recognized by others. The children in the womb have been declared
to be outside the realm of personhood. They are the poorest of
the poor.
Service is not service unless it serves where the need is
greatest. Love is not love unless it gives without counting the
cost
"Deacons for Life" is an invitation to deacons to "give
without counting the cost."
It is our turn to choose to become what He has invited the whole
human race to become. In that choice to follow Jesus Christ the
Deacon we also choose to conform our lives, and our choices, to
His. Some "incarnate" that vocation as bishops, priests,
or deacons - in ordained service. As deacons, we have a particular
vocation to service.
The choice is ours.
We can help to reverse the downward cultural spiral and set the
captives of this age of "choice" and counterfeit freedom truly free-
by inviting them back to a relationship with the God who made them.
That choice is the path to true freedom and a future of hope.
Because God, who is a Father, did not want the obedience of puppets,
but rather the love of sons and daughters, he does not coerce our
response. He invites us into a relationship of love with Him and
with one another. We learn to live - and to love- by conforming
our choices to what is true. This is a lifetime vocation. It is
called the Christian life. We all live it according to our states
of life, but within what the Church calls "the Universal Call
to Holiness."
A Community of Deacons:
As a new association of deacons we are a response to the invitation
of the Church to form a diaconal community, a "family of deacons"
where we can strengthen one another for the work of service.
All of us have labored in the "pro-life movement" and
many of us are weary. We are building a community of support among
deacons where we can be revitalized in order to continue the pro-life
work.
Deacons know that the call can get lonely. That is particularly
true because, at least in the Western Church, the diaconal vocation
is still fairly unknown and often misunderstood.
Though ancient, it fell out of practical application in the western
Church until reinstituted by the Second Vatican Council. Consequently
many deacons feel isolated and misunderstood within their own Church.
"Deacons for life" will be a place where we can support
one another and renew our resolve to say "Yes", no matter
the cost.
No matter how many times you may hear discouraging comments such
as "Father doesn’t ‘believe’ in deacons," remember the
only choice is to love. Our vocation does not depend on whether
a particular priest "believes" in our office or forgets
that, even though he has been called to ordination as a priest,
he is still a deacon - you do not lose the order.
Our vocation and place in the Church, and our call into the world,
was settled when the hands of Jesus, acting through his bishop,
were imposed upon us. All that is left for us to do is to make the
choice of service.
Last year I attended the ordination of a friend to the Diaconate,
for service in the Melkite Catholic Church. It was a beautiful service,
and it gave me an opportunity to renew my own "yes" to
the Lord and to His Church.
The ancient Byzantine Catholic Liturgy was filled with the beauty
and symbols of ancient worship. For many of us ordained in the Roman
Catholic Church, we remember various moments in the ordination liturgy.
It was more than we had imagined it could ever be. I remember, as
though it were yesterday, how I experienced the extraordinary power
of God break forth as I lay prostrate before the altar, hearing
the ancient litany of saints and crying out in my heart of hearts,
"Here I am Lord - FIAT."
Though the service differs in the East, the symbol used at that
moment communicates the same profound truth: that our lives are
no longer our own. In the East, the sub-deacon candidate lays his
head on the altar. This follows the procession with his brother
deacons who, after pushing his head to the floor at several stops
along the way, lead him to a profound bow.
At each stop of reverence, I felt my own heart break with love
for the One who walked the way of the Cross - and I experienced
a new resolve to offer my ordained service to His plan for the "New
Evangelization."
I know that I may be writing to men who experienced that same call
and made the same choice. I also know it is not a "one time"
choice. It is made over and over again, in the midst of both the
joy of ministry and the pain of disappointment. It is made at the
"high" points - perhaps, for example, after you have had
the privilege of bringing someone to the Faith, or home to the Church,
or seen the power of the Gospel of Life convince a mother to carry
her child to term and not to abort.
It is also made at the "low" times, perhaps when you
hear a colleague in the priesthood questioning the very need for
your own ordered service. Or, perhaps you have experienced the rebuff
of a lay minister who is threatened by your presence on the altar.
This choice for kenotic love is made daily, in the "heroic
moment" upon opening your eyes to greet the day, throughout
each waking moment and at the final invitation to rest.
I have a wonderful Bishop friend who maintains that there are two
types of people in this world. You can tell them apart in that first
moment of the day. Those who say, "Good morning, Lord!"
and those who say, "Good Lord, its morning!"
Our entire life is a series of choices.
This is particularly important for those who have been ordained
to the order of deacon during this time in history. Our call to
service is literally being shaped for the future of the Church through
the choices we make today.
As we respond to the invitation to build a new "culture of
life" that the Holy Father speaks of in the third Christian
millennium, deacons have a tremendous opportunity to play a vital
role.
"Deacons for Life" is one way.
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