Directory-Deacons-en


Directory-Deacons-en

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CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION
CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY
BASIC NORMS FOR THE FORMATION
OF PERMANENT DEACONS
DIRECTORY FOR THE MINISTRY AND LIFE
OF PERMANENT DEACONS
LIBRERIA EDITRICE VATICANA
VATICAN CITY 1998
CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION
CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY
JOINT DECLARATION
AND
INTRODUCTION
JOINT DECLARATION
The permanent Diaconate, restored by the Second Vatican Council, in
complete continuity with ancient Tradition and the specific decision of the
Council of Trent, has flourished in these last decades in many parts of the
Church — with promising results, especially for the urgent
missionary work of new evangelisation. The Holy See and many
Episcopates, in promoting this ecclesial experience, have continually
afforded norms and guidelines for the life and formation of deacons. The
growth of the permanent Diaconate, however, now gives rise to a need for a
certain unity of direction and clarification of concepts, as well as for
practical encouragement and more clearly defined pastoral objectives. The
total reality of the Diaconate — embracing its fundamental doctrinal
vision, discernment of vocation, as well as the life, ministry, spirituality and
formation of deacons — calls for a review of the journey thus far
made, so as to arrive at a global vision of this grade of Sacred Orders
corresponding to the desire and intention of the Second Vatican Council.
Following the publication of the Ratio fundamentalis institutionis
sacerdotalis on priestly formation and the Directory on the Ministry and
Life of Priests, the Congregation for Catholic Education and the
Congregation for the Clergy, completing the treatment of what pertains to
the Diaconate and the Priesthood, the objects of their competence, now
wish to devote particular consideration to the subject of the permanent
Diaconate. Both Congregations, having consulted the Episcopate
throughout the world and numerous experts, discussed the permanent
Diaconate at their Plenary Assemblies in November 1995. The Cardinal

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Members together with the Archbishop and Bishop Members carefully
considered the various consultations and numerous submissions made in
the matter. As a result, the final texts of the Ratio fundamentalis
institutionis diaconorum permanentium and the Directory for the Ministry
and Life of Permanent Deacons were drafted by the two Congregations and
faithfully reflect points and proposals from every geographical area
represented at the Plenary Assemblies. The work of both Plenaries
illustrated convergence on many points and agreement concerning the clear
need for greater uniformity in training so as to ensure the pastoral
effectiveness of the Sacred Ministry in confronting the challenges which
face it on the eve of the Third Millenium. Therefore, both Dicasteries were
requested to undertake the drafting of these documents which are published
simultaneously and prefaced by a single, comprehensive introduction. The
Ratio fundamentalis institutionis diaconorum permanentium, prepared by
the Congregation for Catholic Education, is intended not only as a guideline
for the formation of permanent Deacons but also as a directive of which
due account is to be taken by the Episcopal Conferences when preparing
their respective “Rationes”. As with the Ratio fundamentalis
institutionis sacerdotalis, the Congregation offers this aid to the various
Episcopates to facilitate them in discharging adequately the prescriptions of
canon 236 of the Code of Canon Law and to ensure for the Church, unity,
earnestness and completeness in the formation of permanent Deacons.
The Directory for the Ministry and Life of Permanent Deacons, as in the
case of the Directory on the Ministry and Life of Priests, has, together with
its hortative character, juridically binding force where its norms
“recall disciplinary norms of the Code of Canon Law” or
“determine with regard to the manner of applying universal laws of
the Church, explicitate their doctrinal basis and inculcate or solicit their
faithful observance”.(1) In these specific cases, it is to be regarded
as a formal, general, executory Decree (cf. canon 32).
While retaining their proper identity and their own specific juridical quality,
both of these documents, published with the authority of the respective
Dicasteries, mutually reflect and complete each other by virtue of their
logical continuity. It is to be hoped that they will be presented, received and
applied everywhere in their entirety. The introduction, here conjointly
published with these documents, is intended as a reference point and a
normative source for both, while remaining an inextricable part of each
document.
The introduction restricts itself to the historical and pastoral aspects of the
permanent Diaconate, with specific reference to the practical dimension of
formation and ministry. The doctrinal reasons for the arguments advanced
are drawn from those expressed in the documents of the Second Vatican
Council and subsequent Magisterium.
The documents produced here are intended as a response to a widely felt
need to clarify and regulate the diversity of approaches adopted in
experiments conducted up to now, whether at the level of discernment and
training or at that of active ministry and ongoing formation. In this way it
will be possible to ensure a certain stability of approach which takes

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account of legitimate plurality and in turn guarantees that indispensable
unity, necessary for the success of the ministry of the permanent Diaconate
which has been fruitful and which, at the threshold of the Third Millenium,
promises to make an important contribution to New Evangelisation.
The directives contained in the following documents pertain to permanent
deacons of the secular clergy, although many, with due adaptation, may also
to be applied to permanent deacons who are members of institutes of
consecrated life or societies of apostolic life.
INTRODUCTION(2)
I. The Ordained Ministry
1. “In order to shepherd the People of God and to increase its
numbers without cease, Christ the Lord set up in the Church a variety of
offices which aim at the good of the whole body. The holders of office, who
are invested with a sacred power, are, in fact, dedicated to promoting the
interests of their brethren, so that all who belong to the People of God, and
are consequently endowed with true Christian dignity, may, through their
free and well-ordered efforts towards a common goal, attain to
salvation”.(3)
The Sacrament of Orders “configures the recipient to Christ by a
special grace of the Holy Spirit, so that he may serve as Christ's instrument
for his Church. By ordination he is enabled to act as a representative of
Christ, Head of the Church, in his triple office of priest, prophet and
king”.(4)
Through the Sacrament of Orders, the mission entrusted by Christ to his
Apostles continues to be exercised in the Church until the end of time. It is
thus the sacrament of apostolic ministry.(5) The sacramental act of
ordination surpasses mere election, designation or delegation by the
community, because it confers a gift of the Holy Spirit enabling the
exercise of sacred power which can only come from Christ himself through
his Church.(6) “The one sent by the Lord does not speak and act of
his own authority, but by virtue of Christ's authority; not as a member of the
community but speaking to it in the name of Christ. No one can bestow
grace on himself; it must be given and offered. This fact presupposes
ministers of grace, authorised and empowered by Christ”.(7)
The sacrament of apostolic ministry comprises three degrees. Indeed
“the divinely instituted ecclesiastical ministry is exercised in
different degrees by those who even from ancient times have been called
bishops, priests and deacons”.(8)
Together with priests and deacons as their helpers, the bishops have
received pastoral charge of the community, and preside in God's stead over
the flock of which they are shepherds in as much as they are teachers of
doctrine, priests of sacred worship and ministers of pastoral government.(9)
The sacramental nature of ecclesial ministry is such that it has

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“intrinsically linked...its character of service. Entirely dependant on
Christ who gives mission and authority, ministers are truly “slaves
of Christ” (cf. Rom. 1:11), in the image of him who freely took
“the form of a slave” for us (cf. Phil. 2:7)”.(10)
The sacred ministry also has a collegial form(11) and a personal
character(12) by which “sacramental ministry in the Church...is at
once a collegial and a personal service, exercised in the name of
Christ”.(13)
II. The Diaconate
2. The service of deacons in the Church is documented from apostolic
times. A strong tradition, attested already by St. Ireneus and influencing the
liturgy of ordination, sees the origin of the diaconate in the institution of the
“seven” mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles (6:1-6). Thus,
at the initial grade of sacred hierarchy are deacons, whose ministry has
always been greatly esteemed in the Church.(14) St. Paul refers to them and
to the bishops in the exordium of his Epistle to the Philippians (cf. Phil
1:1), while in his first Epistle to Timothy he lists the qualities and virtues
which they should possess so as to exercise their ministry worthily (cf. 1
Tim 3:8-13).(15)
From its outset, patristic literature witnesses to this hierarchical and
ministerial structure in the Church, which includes the diaconate. St
Ignatius of Antioch(16) considers a Church without bishop, priest or
deacon, unthinkable. He underlines that the ministry of deacons is nothing
other than “the ministry of Jesus Christ, who was with the Father
before time began and who appeared at the end of time”. They are
not deacons of food and drink but ministers of the Church of God. The
Didascalia Apostolorum,(17) the Fathers of subsequent centuries, the
various Councils(18) as well as ecclesiastical praxis(19) all confirm the
continuity and development of this revealed datum.
Up to the fifth century the Diaconate flourished in the western Church, but
after this period, it experienced, for various reasons, a slow decline which
ended in its surviving only as an intermediate stage for candidates
preparing for priestly ordination.
The Council of Trent disposed that the permanent Diaconate, as it existed in
ancient times, should be restored, in accord with its proper nature, to its
original function in the Church.(20) This prescription, however, was not
carried into effect.
The second Vatican Council established that “it will be possible for
the future to restore the diaconate as a proper and permanent rank of the
hierarchy....(and confer it) even upon married men, provided they be of
more mature age, and also on suitable young men for whom, however, the
law of celibacy must remain in force”,(21) in accordance with
constant tradition. Three reasons lay behind this choice: (i) a desire to
enrich the Church with the functions of the diaconate, which otherwise, in
many regions, could only be exercised with great difficulty; (ii) the

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intention of strengthening with the grace of diaconal ordination those who
already exercised many of the functions of the Diaconate; (iii) a concern to
provide regions, where there was a shortage of clergy, with sacred
ministers. Such reasons make clear that the restoration of the permanent
Diaconate was in no manner intended to prejudice the meaning, role or
flourishing of the ministerial priesthood, which must always be fostered
because of its indispensability.
With the Apostolic Letter Sacrum diaconatus ordinem(22) of 18 June 1967,
Pope Paul VI implemented the recommendations of the Second Vatican
Council by determining general norms governing the restoration of the
permanent Diaconate in the Latin Church. The Apostolic Constitution
Pontificalis Romani Recognitio(23) of 18 June 1968 approved the new rite
of conferring the Sacred Orders of the Episcopate, the Presbyterate and the
Diaconate and determined the matter and form of these sacramental
ordinations. Finally, the Apostolic Letter Ad pascendum(24) of 15 August
1972 clarified the conditions for the admission and ordination of candidates
to the diaconate. The essential elements of these norms subsequently passed
into the Code of Canon Law promulgated by Pope John Paul II on 25
January 1983.(25)
In the wake of this universal legislation, several Episcopal Conferences,
with the prior approbation of the Holy See, have restored the permanent
Diaconate in their territories and have drawn up complementary norms for
its regulation.
III. The Permanent Diaconate
3. The experience of the Church over several centuries has generated the
norm of conferring the priesthood only on those who have already received
the Diaconate and exercised it appropriately.(26) The Order of deacons,
however, “should not be considered merely a step towards the
Priesthood”.(27)
“One of the fruits of the Second Vatican Council was the desire to
restore the diaconate as a proper and stable rank of the hierarchy”.
(28) On the basis of the “historical circumstances and pastoral
purposes noted by the Council Fathers, the Holy Spirit, protagonist of the
Church's life, worked mysteriously to bring about a new and more complete
actualization of the hierarchy which traditionally consists of bishops, priests
and deacons. In this manner the Christian community was revitalized,
configured more closely to that of the Apostles which, under the influence
of the Paraclete, flourished as the Acts of the Apostles(29) testifies.
The permanent Diaconate is an important enrichment for the mission of the
Church.(30) Since the munera proper to deacons are necessary to the
Church's life,(31) it is both convenient and useful, especially in mission
territories,(32) that men who are called to a truly diaconal ministry in the
Church, whether liturgical or pastoral, charitable or social, “be
strengthened by the imposition of hands, which has come down from the
Apostles, and more closely united to the altar so as to exercise their
ministry more fruitfully through the sacramental grace of the

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diaconate”.(33)
Vatican City, 22 February 1998, Feast of the Chair of Peter.
Congregation for Catholic Education
Pio Card. Laghi
Prefect
+ José Saraiva Martins
Titular Archbishop of Tuburnica
Secretary
Congregation for the Clergy
Darío Card. Castrillón Hoyos
Prefect
+ Csaba Ternyák
Titular Archbishop of Eminenziana
Secretary
****
CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION
RATIO FUNDAMENTALIS
INSTITUTIONIS
DIACONORUM PERMANENTIUM
BASIC NORMS
FOR THE FORMATION
OF PERMANENT DEACONS
INTRODUCTION
1. The paths of formation
1. The first indications about the formation of permanent deacons were
given by the Apostolic Letter Sacrum diaconatus ordinem.(1)
These indications were then taken up and further refined in the Circular
Letter of the Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education of 16 July 1969,
Come è a conoscenza, in which were foreseen “different types of
formation” according to the “different types of
diaconate” (for celibates, married people, “those destined for
mission territories or for countries which were still developing”,
those called “to carry out their function in countries with a certain
level of civilisation and a fairly developed culture”). Regarding
doctrinal formation, it was specified that it must be above that required for
a simple catechist and, in some way, analogous to that of the priest. The
material which had to be taken into consideration when drawing up the

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programme of studies was then listed.(2)
The subsequent Apostolic Letter Ad pascendum specified that “in
regard to the course of theological studies that are to precede the ordination
of permanent deacons, the Episcopal Conferences, according to the local
situation, are competent to issue the appropriate norms and submit them to
the Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education for approval”.(3)
The new Code of Canon Law brought together the essential elements of this
norm into canon 236.
2. After about thirty years from the first directives, and with the
contribution of subsequent experiences, it has been thought opportune now
to draw up the present Ratio fundamentalis institutionis diaconorum
permanentium. Its purpose is that of providing an instrument for guiding
and harmonising, while respecting legitimate diversity, the educational
projects drawn up by the Episcopal Conferences and dioceses, which at
times vary greatly from one to another.
2. Reference to a sure theology of the diaconate
3. The effectiveness of the formation of permanent deacons depends to a
great extent on the theological understanding of the diaconate that underlies
it. In fact it offers the co-ordinates for establishing and guiding the
formation process and, at the same time, lays down the end to be attained.
The almost total disappearance of the permanent diaconate from the Church
of the West for more than a millennium has certainly made it more difficult
to understand the profound reality of this ministry. However, it cannot be
said for that reason that the theology of the diaconate has no authoritative
points of reference, completely at the mercy of different theological
opinions. There are points of reference, and they are very clear, even if they
need to be developed and deepened. Some of the most important of these
will now follow, without, however, any claim to completeness.
4. First of all we must consider the diaconate, like every other Christian
identity, from within the Church which is understood as a mystery of
Trinitarian communion in missionary tension. This is a necessary, even if
not the first, reference in the definition of the identity of every ordained
minister insofar as its full truth consists in being a specific participation in
and representation of the ministry of Christ.(4) This is why the deacon
receives the laying on of hands and is sustained by a specific sacramental
grace which inserts him into the sacrament of Orders.(5)
5. The diaconate is conferred through a special outpouring of the Spirit
(ordination), which brings about in the one who receives it a specific
conformation to Christ, Lord and servant of all. Quoting a text of the
Constitutiones Ecclesiae Aegypticae, Lumen gentium (n. 29) defines the
laying on of hands on the deacon as being not “ad sacerdotium sed
ad ministerium”,(6) that is, not for the celebration of the eucharist,
but for service. This indication, together with the admonition of Saint
Polycarp, also taken up again by Lumen gentium, n. 29,(7) outlines the

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specific theological identity of the deacon: as a participation in the one
ecclesiastical ministry, he is a specific sacramental sign, in the Church, of
Christ the servant. His role is to “express the needs and desires of
the Christian communities” and to be “a driving force for
service, or diakonia”,(8) which is an essential part of the mission of
the Church.
6. The matter of diaconal ordination is the laying on of the hands of the
Bishop; the form is constituted by the words of the prayer of ordination,
which is expressed in the three moments of anamnesis, epiclesis and
intercession.(9) The anamnesis (which recounts the history of salvation
centred in Christ) goes back to the “levites”, recalling
worship, and to the “seven” of the Acts of the Apostles,
recalling charity. The epiclesis invokes the power of the seven gifts of the
Spirit so that the ordinand may imitate Christ as “deacon”.
The intercession is an exhortation to a generous and chaste life.
The essential form of the sacrament is the epiclesis, which consists of the
words: “Lord, send forth upon them the Holy Spirit, that they may
be strengthened by the gift of your sevenfold grace to carry out faithfully
the work of the ministry”. The seven gifts originate in a passage of
Isaiah 11:2, from the fuller version given by the Septuagint. These are the
gifts of the Spirit given to the Messiah, which are granted to the newly
ordained.
7. Insofar as it is a grade of holy orders, the diaconate imprints a character
and communicates a specific sacramental grace. The diaconal character is
the configurative and distinguishing sign indelibly impressed in the soul,
which configures the one ordained to Christ, who made himself the deacon
or servant of all.(10) It brings with it a specific sacramental grace, which is
strength, vigor specialis, a gift for living the new reality wrought by the
sacrament. “With regard to deacons, 'strengthened by sacramental
grace they are dedicated to the People of God, in conjunction with the
bishop and his body of priests, in the service (diakonia) of the liturgy, of the
Gospel and of works of charity'”.(11) Just as in all sacraments which
imprint character, grace has a permanent virtuality. It flowers again and
again in the same measure in which it is received and accepted again and
again in faith.
8. In the exercise of their power, deacons, since they share in a lower grade
of ecclesiastical ministry, necessarily depend on the Bishops, who have the
fullness of the sacrament of orders. In addition, they are placed in a special
relationship with the priests, in communion with whom they are called to
serve the People of God.(12)
From the point of view of discipline, with diaconal ordination, the deacon is
incardinated into a particular Church or personal prelature to whose service
he has been admitted, or else, as a cleric, into a religious institute of
consecrated life or a clerical society of apostolic life.(13) Incardination
does not represent something which is more or less accidental, but is
characteristically a constant bond of service to a concrete portion of the
People of God. This entails ecclesial membership at the juridical, affective

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and spiritual level and the obligation of ministerial service.
3. The ministry of the deacon in different pastoral contexts
9. The ministry of the deacon is characterised by the exercise of the three
munera proper to the ordained ministry, according to the specific
perspective of diakonia.
In reference to the munus docendi the deacon is called to proclaim the
Scriptures and instruct and exhort the people.(14) This finds expression in
the presentation of the Book of the Gospels, foreseen in the rite of
ordination itself.(15)
The munus sanctificandi of the deacon is expressed in prayer, in the solemn
administration of baptism, in the custody and distribution of the Eucharist,
in assisting at and blessing marriages, in presiding at the rites of funeral and
burial and in the administration of sacramentals.(16) This brings out how
the diaconal ministry has its point of departure and arrival in the Eucharist,
and cannot be reduced to simple social service.
Finally, the munus regendi is exercised in dedication to works of charity
and assistance (17) and in the direction of communities or sectors of church
life, especially as regards charitable activities. This is the ministry most
characteristic of the deacon.
10. As can be seen from original diaconal practice and from conciliar
indications, the outlines of the ministerial service inherent in the diaconate
are very well defined. However, even if this inherent ministerial service is
one and the same in every case, nevertheless the concrete ways of carrying
it out are diverse; these must be suggested, in each case, by the different
pastoral situations of the single Churches. In preparing the formation to be
imparted, these should obviously be taken into account.
4. Diaconal spirituality
11. The outlines of the specific spirituality of the deacon flow clearly from
his theological identity; this spirituality is one of service.
The model “par excellence” is Christ the servant, who lived
totally at the service of God, for the good of men. He recognised himself as
the one announced in the servant of the first song of the Book of Isaiah (cf
Lk 4:18-19), he explicitly qualified his action as diakonia (cf Mt 20:28; Lk
22:27; Jn 13:1-17; Phil 2:7-8; 1 Pet 2:21-25) and he entrusted his disciples
to do the same (cf Jn 13:34-35; Lk 12:37).
The spirituality of service is a spirituality of the whole Church, insofar as
the whole Church, in the same way as Mary, is the “handmaid of the
Lord” (Lk 1:28), at the service of the salvation of the world. And so
that the whole Church may better live out this sprituality of service, the
Lord gives her a living and personal sign of his very being as servant. In a
specific way, this is the spirituality of the deacon. In fact, with sacred
ordination, he is constituted a living icon of Christ the servant within the

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Church. The Leitmotiv of his spiritual life will therefore be service; his
sanctification will consist in making himself a generous and faithful servant
of God and men, especially the poorest and most suffering; his ascetic
commitment will be directed towards acquiring those virtues necessary for
the exercise of his ministry.
12. Obviously such a spirituality must integrate itself harmoniously, in each
case, with the spirituality related to the state of life. Accordingly, the same
diaconal spirituality acquires diverse connotations according to whether it
be lived by a married man, a widower, a single man, a religious, a
consecrated person in the world. Formation must take account of these
variations and offer differentiated spiritual paths according to the types of
candidates.
5. The role of Episcopal Conferences
13. “It is the competence of legitimate assemblies of Bishops or
Episcopal Conferences to decide, with the consent of the Supreme Pontiff,
whether and where the diaconate is to be established as a permanent rank in
the hierarchy for the good of souls”.(18)
The Code of Canon Law likewise attributes to the Episcopal Conferences
the competence to specify, by means of complementary dispositions, the
discipline regarding the recitation of the liturgy of the hours,(19) the
required age for admission (20) and the formation given; can. 236 is
dedicated to this. The canon lays down that it is the Episcopal Conferences,
on the basis of local circumstances, which issue the appropriate norms to
ensure that candidates for the permanent diaconate, whether young or of a
more mature age, whether single or married are “...formed in the
spiritual life and appropriately instructed in the fulfilment of the duties
proper to that order...”.
14. To assist the Episcopal Conferences in preparing a formation which, as
well as being attentive to diverse particular situations, will still be in
harmony with the universal direction of the Church, the Congregation for
Catholic Education has prepared the present Ratio fundamentalis
institutionis diaconorum permanentium, which is intended as a point of
reference for defining the criteria of vocational discernment and the various
aspects of formation. This document—by its very nature—
establishes only some basic guidelines of a general character, which
constitute the norm to which the Episcopal Conferences must make
reference for the preparation or eventual perfecting of their respective
national rationes. In this way the principles and criteria on the basis of
which the formation of permanent deacons can be programmed with surety
and in harmony with the other Churches shall be illustrated, without stifling
the creativity or originality of the particular Churches.
15. In the same way that the Second Vatican Council established for the
rationes institutionis sacerdotalis,(21) with this document, the Episcopal
Conferences which have restored the permanent diaconate are requested to
submit their respective rationes institutionis diaconorum permanentium for
examination and approval by the Holy See. The same will approve them,

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firstly, ad experimentum, and, then for a specified number of years, so as to
guarantee periodic revisions.
6. Responsibility of Bishops
16. The restoration of the permanent diaconate in a nation does not imply
the obligation of restoring it in all its dioceses. The diocesan Bishop will
proceed or not in this regard, after having prudently heard the
recommendation of the Council of Priests and, if it exists, the Pastoral
Council, and taking account of concrete needs and the specific situation of
his particular Church.
If he opts for the restoration of the permanent diaconate, he will take care to
promote a suitable catechesis on the subject, both among laity and priests
and religious, in such a way that the diaconal ministry may be fully
understood. In addition, he will provide for the setting up of the structures
necessary for the work of formation and for nominating suitable associates
to assist him by being directly responsible for formation, or, according to
circumstances, he will commit himself to employing the formation
structures of other dioceses, or those of the region or nation.
The Bishop will then take care that, on the basis of the national ratio and
actual experience, an appropriate rule be drafted and periodically revised.
7. The permanent diaconate in institutes of consecrated life and in
societies of apostolic life
17. The institution of the permanent diaconate among the members of
institutes of consecrated life and societies of apostolic life is regulated by
the norms of the Apostolic Letter Sacrum diaconatus ordinem. It establishes
that “Institution of the permanent diaconate among religious is a
right reserved to the Holy See, which alone is competent to examine and
approve the votes of general chapters in the matter”.(22) The
document continues: “Whatever is said...is to be understood as
applying to the members of other institutes professing the evangelical
counsels”.(23)
Each institute or society which has obtained the right to re-establish the
permanent diaconate assumes the responsibility of guaranteeing the human,
spiritual, intellectual and pastoral formation of its candidates. Such an
institute or society must commit itself therefore to preparing its own
formation programme which incorporates the specific charism and
spirituality of the institute or society and, at the same time, is in harmony
with the present Ratio fundamentalis, especially as regards intellectual and
pastoral formation.
The programme of each institute or society should be submitted for
examination and approval to the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated
Life and Societies of Apostolic Life or the Congregation for the
Evangelization of Peoples and the Congregation for the Oriental Churches
for territories where they are competent. The competent Congregation,
having obtained the opinion of the Congregation for Catholic Education as

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regards intellectual formation, will approve it, firstly ad experimentum, and
then for a specific number of years, so as to guarantee periodic revisions.
I
THOSE INVOLVED IN THE FORMATION
OF PERMANENT DEACONS
1. The Church and the Bishop
18. The formation of deacons, like that of other ministers and all the
baptised, is a duty which involves the whole Church. Hailed by the Apostle
Paul as “the heavenly Jerusalem” and like Mary “our
mother” (Gal 4:26), “by preaching and baptism she brings
forth sons, who are conceived of the Holy Spirit and born of God, to a new
and immortal life”.(24) And not only this: imitating the motherhood
of Mary, she accompanies her children with maternal love and cares for
them so that they all may come to the fullness of their vocation.
The Church's care for her children is expressed in the offering of the Word
and sacraments, in love and solidarity, in prayer and in the solicitude of the
various ministries. However, in this care, which is, so to speak, visible, the
care of the Holy Spirit is made present. In fact “the social structure
of the Church serves the Spirit of Christ who vivifies it, in the building up
of the body”,(25) both in its universality and in the singularity of its
members.
In the Church's care for her children, the first figure, therefore, is the Spirit
of Christ. It is He who calls them, accompanies them and moulds their
hearts so that they can recognise his grace and respond generously to it. The
Church must be well aware of this sacramental relevance of its educational
work.
19. In the formation of permanent deacons, the first sign and instrument of
the Spirit of Christ is the proper Bishop (or the competent Major Superior).
(26) He is the one ultimately responsible for their discernment and
formation.(27) While ordinarily exercising this duty through the assistants
who have been chosen, nevertheless he will he commit himself, as far as is
possible, to knowing personally those who are preparing for diaconate.
2. Those responsible for formation
20. Those persons who, in dependence upon the Bishop (or competent
Major Superior) and in strict collaboration with the diaconal community,
have a special responsibility in the formation of candidates for the
permanent diaconate are: the director of formation, the tutor (where the
number requires it), the spiritual director and the pastor (or the minister to
whom the candidate is entrusted for the diaconal placement).
21. The director of formation, nominated by the Bishop (or the competent
Major Superior) has the task of co-ordinating the different people involved
in the formation, of supervising and inspiring the whole work of education

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in its various dimensions, and of maintaining contacts with the families of
married aspirants and candidates and with their communities of origin. In
addition, he has the responsibility of presenting to the Bishop (or to the
competent Major Superior) the judgement of suitability on aspirants for
their admission among the candidates, and on candidates for their
promotion to the order of diaconate after having heard the opinion of the
other formators,(28) excepting the spiritual director.
Because of his decisive and delicate duties, the director of formation must
be chosen with great care. He must be a man of lively faith and a strong
ecclesial sense, have had a wide pastoral experience and have given proof
of wisdom, balance and capacity for communion; in addition he must have
acquired a solid theological and pedagogical competence.
He could be a priest or a deacon and, preferably, not be at the same time
also responsible for ordained deacons. In fact, it would be better for this
responsibility to remain distinct from that of forming aspirants and
candidates.
22. The tutor, designated by the director of formation from among the
deacons or priests of proven experience and nominated by the Bishop (or
the competent Major Superior), is the direct companion of each aspirant
and of each candidate. He is charged with closely following the formation
of each one, offering his support and advice for the resolution of any
problems which may arise and for helping to make personal the various
moments of formation. He is also called to collaborate with the director of
formation in the programming of the different formational activities and in
the preparation of the judgement of suitability to be presented to the Bishop
(or the competent Major Superior). According to circumstances, the tutor
will be responsible for only one person or for a small group.
23. The spiritual director is chosen by each aspirant or candidate and must
be approved by the Bishop or Major Superior. His task is that of discerning
the workings of the Spirit in the soul of those called and, at the same time,
of accompanying and supporting their ongoing conversion; he must also
give concrete suggestions to help bring about an authentic diaconal
spirituality and offer effective incentives for acquiring the associated
virtues. Because of all this, aspirants and candidates are invited to entrust
themselves for spiritual direction only to priests of proven virtue, equipped
with a good theological culture, of profound spiritual experience, of marked
pedagogical sense, of strong and refined ministerial sensibility.
24. The pastor (or other minister) is chosen by the director of formation in
agreement with the other members of the formation team and taking
account of the different situations of the candidates. He is called to offer to
the one who has been entrusted to him a lively ministerial communion and
to introduce him to and accompany him in those pastoral activities which
he considers most suitable; he will also be careful to make a periodic check
on the work done with the candidate himself and to communicate the
progress of the placement to the director of formation.
3. Professors

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25. The professors contribute in a relevant way to the formation of the
future deacons. In fact by teaching the sacrum depositum held by the
Church, they nourish the faith of the candidates and qualify them to be
teachers of the People of God. For that reason they must occupy themselves
not only with acquiring the necessary scientific competence and an
adequate pedagogical ability, but also with witnessing with their lives to the
Truth which they teach.
In order to harmonise their specific contribution with the other dimensions
of formation, it is important that they be willing, depending on
circumstances, to collaborate and be open to discussion with the others
involved in formation. In this way they will contribute to providing the
candidates with a unified formation and help them in the necessary work of
synthesis.
4. The formation community of permanent deacons
26. Aspirants and candidates for the permanent diaconate, naturally
constitute a unique context, a distinct ecclesial community which strongly
influences the formation process.
Those entrusted with the formation must take care that this community be
characterised by a profound spirituality, a sense of belonging, a spirit of
service and missionary thrust, and have a definite rhythm of meetings and
prayer.
The formation community of permanent deacons can thus be for aspirants
and candidates for the diaconate a precious support in the discernment of
their vocation, in human growth, in the initiation to the spiritual life, in
theological study and pastoral experience.
5. Communities of origin
27. The communities of origin of aspirants and candidates for the diaconate
can exercise some influence on their formation.
For younger aspirants and candidates, the family can be an extraordinary
help. It must be invited to “...accompany the formative journey with
prayer, respect, the good example of the domestic virtues and spiritual and
material help, especially in difficult moments... Even in the case of parents
or relatives who are indifferent or opposed to the choice of a vocation, a
clear and calm facing of the situation and the encouragement which derives
from it can be a great help to the deeper and more determined maturing of
a...vocation”.(29) As far as married aspirants and candidates are
concerned, their commitment must be such that their married communion
might contribute in a real way to inspiring their formation journey towards
the goal of the diaconate.
The parish community is called to accompany the path of its member
towards the diaconate with the support of prayer and an appropriate
catechesis which, while it makes the faithful aware of this ministry, gives to
the candidate a strong aid to his vocational discernment.

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Those other ecclesial groupings from which aspirants and candidates for the
diaconate come can also continue to be for them a source of help and
support, of light and warmth. However, they must show, at the same time,
respect for the ministerial call of their members, not obstructing them, but
rather promoting in them the maturing of an authentic diaconal spirituality
and readiness.
6. Aspirant and candidate
28. Finally, the man preparing for diaconate “...is a necessary and
irreplaceable agent in his own formation: all formation...is ultimately a self-
formation”.(30)
Self-formation does not imply isolation, closure to or independence from
formators, but responsibility and dynamism in responding with generosity
to God's call, valuing to the highest the people and tools which Providence
puts at one's disposition.
Self-formation has its root in a firm determination to grow in life according
to the Spirit and in conformity with the vocation received, and it is
nourished in being humbly open to recognising one's own limitations and
one's own gifts.
II
CHARACTERISTICS OF CANDIDATES
FOR THE PERMANENT DIACONATE
29. “The history of every priestly vocation, as indeed of every
Christian vocation, is the history of an inexpressible dialogue between God
and human beings, between the love of God who calls and the freedom of
individuals who respond lovingly to him”.(31) However, alongside
God's call and the response of individuals, there is another element
constitutive to a vocation, particularly a ministerial vocation: the public call
of the Church. “Vocari a Deo dicuntur qui a legitimis Ecclesiae
ministris vocantur”.(32) The expression should not be understood in
a predominantly juridical sense, as if it were the authority that calls which
determines the vocation, but in a sacramental sense, that considers the
authority that calls as the sign and instrument for the personal intervention
of God, which is realised with the laying on of hands. In this perspective,
every proper election expresses an inspiration and represents a choice of
God. The Church's discernment is therefore decisive for the choice of a
vocation; how much more so, due to its ecclesial significance, is this true
for the choice of a vocation to the ordained ministry.
This discernment must be conducted on the basis of objective criteria,
which treasure the ancient tradition of the Church and take account of
present day pastoral needs. For the discernment of vocations to the
permanent diaconate, some requirements of a general nature and others
responding to the particular state of life of those called should be taken into
account.

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1. General requirements
30. The first diaconal profile was outlined in the First Letter of Saint Paul
to Timothy: “Deacons likewise must be serious, not double-tongued,
not addicted to much wine, not greedy for gain; they must hold the mystery
of the faith with a clear conscience. And let them also be tested first; then if
they prove themselves blameless let them serve as deacons...Let deacons be
the husband of one wife, and let them manage their children and their
households well; for those who serve well as deacons gain a good standing
for themselves and also great confidence in the faith which is in Jesus
Christ” (1 Tim 3:8-10.12-13).
The qualities listed by Paul are prevalently human, almost as if to say that
deacons could carry out their ministry only if they were acceptable models
of humanity. We find echoes of Paul's exhortation in texts of the Apostolic
Fathers, especially in the Didachè and Saint Polycarp. The Didachè urges:
“Elect for yourselves therefore bishops and deacons worthy of the
Lord, meek men, not lovers of money, honest and proven”,(33) and
Saint Polycarp counsels: “In like manner should the deacons be
blameless before the face of his righteousness, as being the servants of God
and Christ, and not of men. They must not be slanderers, double-tongued,
or lovers of money, but temperate in all things, compassionate, industrious,
walking according to the truth of the Lord, who was the servant of
all”.(34)
31. The Church's tradition subsequently finalised and refined the
requirements which support the authenticity of a call to the diaconate.
These are firstly those which are valid for orders in general: “Only
those are to be promoted to orders who...have sound faith, are motivated by
the right intention, are endowed with the requisite knowledge, enjoy a good
reputation, and have moral probity, proven virtue and the other physical and
psychological qualities appropriate to the order to be received”.(35)
32. The profile of candidates is then completed with certain specific human
qualities and evangelical virtues necessary for diakonia. Among the human
qualities which should be highlighted are: psychological maturity, capacity
for dialogue and communication, sense of responsibility, industriousness,
equilibrium and prudence. Particularly important among the evangelical
virtues: prayer, Eucharistic and Marian devotion, a humble and strong
sense of the Church, love for the Church and her mission, spirit of poverty,
capacity for obedience and fraternal communion, apostolic zeal, openness
to service,(36) charity towards the brothers and sisters.
33. In addition, candidates for the diaconate must be active members of a
Christian community and already have exercised praiseworthy commitment
to the apostolate.
34. They may come from every social grouping and carry out any work or
professional activity, providing that it is not, according to the norms of the
Church and the prudent judgement of the Bishop, inconsistent with the
diaconal state.(37) Furthermore, such activity must be compatible in
practice with commitments of formation and the effective exercise of the

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ministry.
35. Regarding the minimum age, the Code of Canon Law prescribes that:
“the candidate for the permanent diaconate who is not married may
be admitted to the diaconate only when he has completed at least his
twenty-fifth year; if he is married, not until he has completed at least his
thirty-fifth year”.(38)
Lastly, candidates must be free of irregularities and impediments.(39)
2. Requirements related to the candidate's state of life
a) Unmarried
36. “On the basis of Church law, confirmed by the same Ecumenical
Council, young men called to the diaconate are obliged to observe the law
of celibacy”.(40) This is a particularly appropriate law for the sacred
ministry, to which those who have received the charism freely submit.
The permanent diaconate, lived in celibacy, gives to the ministry a certain
unique emphasis. In fact, the sacramental identification with Christ is
placed in the context of the undivided heart, that is within the context of a
nuptial, exclusive, permanent and total choice of the unique and greatest
Love; service of the Church can count on a total availability; the
proclamation of the Kingdom is supported by the courageous witness of
those who have left even those things most dear to them for the sake of the
Kingdom.
b) Married
37. “In the case of married men, care should be taken that only those
are promoted to the diaconate who have lived as married men for a number
of years and have shown themselves to be capable of running their own
homes, and whose wives and children lead a truly Christian life and have
good reputations”.(41)
Moreover. In addition to stability of family life, married candidates cannot
be admitted unless “their wives not only consent, but also have the
Christian moral character and attributes which will neither hinder their
husbands' ministry nor be out of keeping with it”.(42)
c) Widowers
38. “Those who have received the order of deacon, even those who
are older, may not, in accordance with traditional Church discipline, enter
into marriage”.(43) The same principle applies to deacons who have
been widowed.(44) They are called to give proof of human and spiritual
soundness in their state of life.
Moreover, a precondition for accepting widowed candidates is that they
have already provided, or have shown that they are capable of providing
adequately for, the human and Christian upbringing of their children.

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d) Members of institutes of consecrated life and of societies of apostolic life
39. Permanent deacons belonging to institutes of consecrated life or to
societies of apostolic life (45) are called to enrich their ministry with the
particular charism which they have received. In fact, their pastoral activity,
while being under the jurisdiction of the local Ordinary,(46) is nevertheless
characterised by particular traits of their religious or consecrated state of
life. They will therefore commit themselves to integrating their religious or
consecrated vocation with the ministerial vocation and to offering their
special contribution to the mission of the Church.
III
THE PATH OF FORMATION
TOWARDS THE PERMANENT DIACONATE
1. The presentation of aspirants
40. The decision to undertake the path of diaconal formation can come
about either upon the initiative of the aspirant himself or by means of an
explicit proposal of the community to which the aspirant belongs. In each
case, the decision must be accepted and shared by the community.
On behalf of the community, it is the pastor (or the superior in religious
houses) who must present to the Bishop (or competent Major Superior) the
aspirant to the diaconate. He will do so accompanying the candidacy with
an illustration of the motivations which support it and with a curriculum
vitae and pastoral history of the aspirant.
The Bishop (or competent Major Superior), after having consulted the
director of formation and the formation team, will decide whether or not to
admit the aspirant to the propaedeutic period.
2. The propaedeutic period
41. With admission among the aspirants to diaconate there begins a
propaedeutic period, which must be of an appropriate length. During this
period the aspirants will be introduced to a deeper knowledge of theology,
of spirituality and of the ministry of deacon and they will be led to a more
attentive discernment of their call.
42. The director of formation is responsible for the propaedeutic period;
depending on the cases, he may entrust the aspirants to one or more tutors.
It is to be hoped that, where circumstances permit, the aspirants may form
their own community, with its own cycle of meetings and prayer which also
foresees times in common with the community of candidates.
The director of formation will ensure that each aspirant is accompanied by
an approved spiritual director and will make contact with the pastor of each
one (or another priest) in order to programme the pastoral placement. In
addition, he will make contact with the families of married aspirants to
make sure of their openness to accepting, sharing and accompanying the

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vocation of their relative.
43. The programme of the propaedeutic period, usually, should not provide
school lessons, but rather meetings for prayer, instructions, moments of
reflection and comparison directed towards ensuring the objective nature of
the vocational discernment, according to a well structured plan.
Even during this period, care should be taken, wherever possible, to involve
the wives of the aspirants.
44. The aspirants are invited to carry out a free and self conscious
discernment, basing it on the requirements necessary for the diaconal
ministry, without allowing themselves to be conditioned by personal
interests or external pressures of any sort.(47)
At the end of the propaedeutic period, the director of formation, after
having consulted the formation team and taking account of all the elements
in his possession, will present to the proper Bishop (or competent Major
Superior) a declaration which outlines the profile of the aspirants'
personalities and also, on request, a judgement of suitability.
For his part, the Bishop (or the competent Major Superior) will enlist
among the candidates for the diaconate only those about whom he will have
reached a moral certainty of suitability, whether because of personal
knowledge or because of information received from the formators.
3. The liturgical rite of admission to candidacy for ordination as deacon
45. Admission to candidacy for ordination as deacon comes about by means
of a special liturgical rite, “by which one who aspires to the
diaconate or priesthood publicly manifests his will to offer himself to God
and the Church, so that he may exercise sacred orders. The Church,
accepting this offering, chooses and calls him to prepare himself to receive
a sacred order, and in this way he is rightly numbered among candidates for
the diaconate”.(48)
46. The competent superior for this acceptance is the Bishop himself or, for
members of a clerical religious institute of pontifical rite or of a clerical
society of apostolic life of pontifical right, the Major Superior.(49)
47. By reason of its public character and its ecclesial significance, the rite is
to be held in proper esteem and celebrated preferably on a feast day. The
aspirant is to prepare himself for it by a spiritual retreat.
48. The liturgical rite of admission must be preceded by a request for
enrolment among the candidates, which must be prepared and personally
signed by the aspirant himself and accepted in writing by the proper Bishop
or Major Superior to whom it is addressed.(50)
Enrolment among the candidates for the diaconate does not constitute any
right necessarily to receive diaconal ordination. It is a first official
recognition of the positive signs of the vocation to the diaconate, which

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must be confirmed in the subsequent years of formation.
4. Time of formation
49. The formation programme must last at least three years, in addition to
the propaedeutic period, for all candidates.(51)
50. The Code of Canon Law prescribes that young candidates receive their
formation residing “for at least three years in a special house, unless
the diocesan Bishop for grave reasons decides otherwise”.(52)
“The Bishops of a region—or, where it would be useful,
those of several regions in the same country—should join in
establishing a college of this kind, depending on local circumstances. They
should choose particularly well-fitted men to be in charge of it and should
make clear rules regarding discipline and studies”.(53) Care should
be taken that these candidates have good relationships with the deacons of
the diocese to which they belong.
51. For those more mature candidates, whether single or married, the Code
of Canon Law prescribes that they “prepare for three years in a
manner determined by the Episcopal Conference”.(54) Where
circumstances permit, this preparation must be undertaken in the context of
a full participation in the community of candidates, which will have its own
calendar of meetings for prayer and formation and will also foresee
meetings in common with the community of aspirants.
Different ways of organising the formation are possible for these
candidates. Due to work and family commitments, the most common
models foresee formational and scholastic meetings in the evenings, during
weekends, at holiday time or with a combination of the various
possibilities. Where geographical factors might present particular
difficulties it will be necessary to consider other models, extending over a
longer time period or making use of modern means of communication.
52. For candidates belonging to institutes of consecrated life or societies of
apostolic life, formation will be carried out according to the directives of
the eventual ratio of the person's institute or society, or by using the
structures of the diocese in which the candidates are to be found.
53. In the cases in which the above-mentioned ways of formation might not
be set up or be impracticable, “then the candidate should be
entrusted to some priest of outstanding judgement who will take a special
interest in him and teach him, and who will be able to testify to his maturity
and prudence. Great care must always be taken that only those who have
enough learning and are suitable are enrolled in the sacred order”.
(55)
54. In all cases the director of formation (or the priest responsible) will
check that during the whole time of formation every candidate will
maintain his commitment to spiritual direction with his own approved
spiritual director. In addition, he will ensure the accompaniment, evaluation
and eventual modification of each one's pastoral internship.

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55. The formation programme, which will be outlined in general in the next
chapter, must integrate in a harmonious manner the different areas of
formation (human, spiritual, theological and pastoral), it must be
theologically well founded, have a specific pastoral finality and be adapted
to local needs and pastoral programmes.
56. The wives and children of married candidates and the communities to
which they belong should also be involved in appropriate ways. In
particular, there should be also a specific programme of formation for the
wives of candidates, to prepare them for their future mission of
accompanying and supporting their husband's ministry.
5. Conferral of the ministries of lectorate and acolytate
57. “Before anyone may be promoted to the diaconate, whether
permanent or transitory, he must have received the ministries of lector and
acolyte, and have exercised them for an appropriate time”,(56) so
that he may “be better disposed for the future service of the word
and the altar”.(57) In fact the Church “considers it to be very
opportune that both by study and by gradual exercise of the ministry of the
word and of the altar, candidates for sacred orders should through intimate
contact understand and reflect upon the double aspect of the priestly office.
Thus it comes about that the authenticity of the ministry shines out with the
greatest effectiveness. In this way the candidates come to sacred orders
fully aware of their vocation, 'fervent in spirit, serving the Lord, constant in
prayer and aware of the needs of the faithful' (Rm 12:11-13)”.(58)
The identity of these ministries and their pastoral relevance are illustrated
in the Apostolic Letter Ministeria quaedam, to which reference should be
made.
58. Aspirants to lectorate and acolytate, on the invitation of the director of
formation, will make a request for admission, which has been compiled and
signed freely, and present it to the Ordinary (the Bishop or Major Superior)
who has the authority to accept it.(59) Having accepted the request, the
Bishop or Major Superior will proceed to the conferral of the ministries,
according to the rite of the Roman Pontifical.(60)
59. It is appropriate that a certain period of time elapse between the
conferring of lectorate and acolytate in such a way that the candidate may
exercise the ministry he has received.(61) “Between the conferring
of the ministry of acolyte and the diaconate there is to be an interval of at
least six months”.(62)
6. Diaconate ordination
60. At the conclusion of the formation journey, the candidate who, in
agreement with the director of formation, considers himself to have the
necessary pre-requisites for ordination, may address to the proper Bishop or
competent Major Superior “a declaration written in his own hand
and signed by him, in which he attests that he is about to receive the sacred
order freely and of his own accord and will devote himself permanently to

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the ecclesiastical ministry, asking at the same time that he be admitted to
receive the order”.(63)
61. With this request the candidate must enclose the certificate of baptism,
of confirmation and of the ministries mentioned in can. 1035, and the
certificate of studies duly completed in accordance with can. 1032.(64) If
the ordinand to be promoted is married, he must present his marriage
certificate and the written consent of his wife.(65)
62. Having received the request of the ordinand, the Bishop (or competent
Major Superior) will evaluate his suitability by means of a diligent scrutiny.
First of all he will examine the certificate which the director of formation is
obliged to present to him “concerning the qualities required in the
candidate for the reception of the order, namely sound doctrine, genuine
piety, good moral behaviour, fitness for the exercise of the ministry;
likewise, after proper investigation, a certificate of the candidate's state of
physical and psychological health”.(66) “The diocesan
Bishop or Major Superior may, in order properly to complete the
investigation, use other means which, taking into account the circumstances
of time and place, may seem useful, such as testimonial letters, public
notices or other sources of information”.(67)
After having verified the suitability of a candidate and having been assured
that he is aware of the new obligations which he is assuming,(68) the
Bishop or competent Major Superior will promote him to the order of the
diaconate.
63. Before ordination, unmarried candidates must assume publicly, in the
prescribed rite, the obligation of celibacy; (69) candidates belonging to an
institute of consecrated life or a society of apostolic life who have taken
perpetual vows or other form of definitive commitment in the institute or
society are also obliged to this.(70) All candidates are bound personally,
before ordination, to make a profession of faith and an oath of fidelity,
according to the formulae approved by the Apostolic See, in the presence of
the Ordinary of the place or his delegate.(71)
64. “Each candidate is to be ordained...to the diaconate by his proper
Bishop, or with lawful dimissorial letters granted by that Bishop”.
(72) If the candidate belongs to a clerical religious institute of pontifical
right or to a clerical society of apostolic life of pontifical right it belongs to
the Major Superior to grant him dimissorial letters.(73)
65. The ordination, carried out according to the rite of the Roman
Pontifical,(74) is to be celebrated during solemn Mass, preferably on a
Sunday or holyday of obligation, and generally in the Cathedral Church.
(75) The ordinands prepare themselves for it by making “a retreat
for at least five days, in a place and in the manner prescribed by the
Ordinary”.(76) During the rite special attention should be given to
the participation of the wives and children of the married ordinands.
IV

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THE DIMENSIONS OF THE FORMATION
OF PERMANENT DEACONS
1. Human formation
66. The scope of human formation is that of moulding the personality of the
sacred ministers in such a way that they become “a bridge and not
an obstacle for others in their meeting with Jesus Christ the Redeemer of
man”.(77) Accordingly they must be educated to acquire and perfect
a series of human qualities which will permit them to enjoy the trust of the
community, to commit themselves with serenity to the pastoral ministry, to
facilitate encounter and dialogue.
Similar to the indications of Pastores dabo vobis for the formation of
priests, candidates for the diaconate, too, must be educated “to love
the truth, to be loyal, to respect every person, to have a sense of justice, to
be true to their word, to be genuinely compassionate, to be men of integrity
and, especially, to be balanced in judgement and behaviour”.(78)
67. Of particular importance for deacons, called to be men of communion
and service, is the capacity to relate to others. This requires that they be
affable, hospitable, sincere in their words and heart, prudent and discreet,
generous and ready to serve, capable of opening themselves to clear and
brotherly relationships, and quick to understand, forgive and console.(79) A
candidate who was excessively closed in on himself, cantankerous and
incapable of establishing meaningful and serene relationships with others
must undergo a profound conversion before setting off with conviction on
the path of ministerial service.
68. At the root of the capacity to relate to others is affective maturity, which
must be attained with a wide margin of certainty in both celibate and
married candidates. Such a maturity presupposes in both types of candidate
the discovery of the centrality of love in their own lives and the victorious
struggle against their own selfishness. In reality, as Pope John Paul II wrote
in the Encyclical Redemptor hominis, “man cannot live without
love. He remains a being that is incomprehensible for himself, his life is
senseless, if love is not revealed to him, if he does not encounter love, if he
does not experience it and make it his own, if he does not participate
intimately in it”.(80) As the Pope explains in Pastores dabo vobis,
this is a love which involves all the aspects of the person, physical,
psychological and spiritual and which therefore demands full dominion
over his sexuality, which must become truly and fully personal.(81)
For celibate candidates, to live love means offering the totality of one's
being, of one's energies and readiness, to Christ and the Church. It is a
demanding vocation, which must take into account the inclinations of
affectivity and the pressures of instinct and which therefore requires
renunciation, vigilance, prayer and fidelity to a precise rule of life. A
decisive assistance can come from the presence of true friends, who
represent a precious help and a providential support in living out one's own
vocation.(82)

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For married candidates, to live love means offering themselves to their
spouses in a reciprocal belonging, in a total, faithful and indissoluble union,
in the likeness of Christ's love for his Church; at the same time it means
welcoming children, loving them, educating them and showing forth to the
whole Church and society the communion of the family. Today, this
vocation is being hard tested by the worrying degradation of certain
fundamental values and the exaltation of hedonism and a false conception
of liberty. To be lived out in all its fullness, the vocation to family must be
nourished by prayer, the liturgy and a daily offering of self.(83)
69. A pre-condition for an authentic human maturity is training in freedom,
which is expressed in obedience to the truth of one's own being.
“Thus understood, freedom requires the person to be truly master of
himself, determined to fight and overcome the different forms of selfishness
and individualism which threaten the life of each one, ready to open out to
others, generous in dedication and service to one's neighbour”.(84)
Training in freedom also includes the education of the moral conscience,
which prepares one to listen to the voice of God in the depths of one's heart
and to adhere closely to it.
70. These many aspects of human maturity—human qualities,
ability to relate, affective maturity, training in freedom and education of the
moral conscience—must be considered, taking into account the age
and previous formation of the candidates, when planning programmes
tailored to the individual. The director of formation and the tutor will
contribute in the area of their competence; the spiritual director will take
these aspects into consideration and check them during spiritual direction.
Encounters and conferences which encourage development and give some
incentive to maturity are also of use. Community life—in the
various forms in which it can be programmed—will constitute a
privileged forum for fraternal checks and correction. In those cases where it
may be necessary, in the judgement of the formators, and with the consent
of the individual concerned, recourse may be made to a psychological
consultation.
2. Spiritual formation
71. Human formation leads to and finds its completion in spiritual
formation, which constitutes the heart and unifying centre of every
Christian formation. Its aim is to tend to the development of the new life
received in Baptism.
When a candidate begins the path of formation for the diaconate, generally
he has already had a certain experience of the spiritual life, such as,
recognition of the action of the Spirit, listening to and meditating upon the
Word of God, the thirst for prayer, commitment to service of the brothers
and sisters, willingness to make sacrifices, the sense of the Church,
apostolic zeal. Also, according to his state of life, he will already have
matured a certain defined spirituality: of the family, of consecration in the
world or of consecration in the religious life. The spiritual formation of the
future deacon, therefore, cannot ignore this experience which he has
already had, but must seek to affirm and strengthen it, so as to impress upon

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it the specific traits of diaconal spirituality.
72. The element which most characterises diaconal spirituality is the
discovery of and sharing in the love of Christ the servant, who came not to
be served but to serve. The candidate must therefore be helped
progressively to acquire those attitudes which are specifically diaconal,
though not exclusively so, such as simplicity of heart, total giving of self
and disinterest for self, humble and helpful love for the brothers and sisters,
especially the poorest, the suffering and the most needy, the choice of a life-
style of sharing and poverty. Let Mary, the handmaid of the Lord, be
present on this journey and be invoked as mother and auxiliatrix in the
daily recitation of the Rosary.
73. The source of this new capacity to love is the Eucharist, which, not by
chance, characterises the ministry of the deacon. In fact, service of the poor
is the logical consequence of service of the altar. Therefore the candidate
will be invited to participate every day, or at least frequently, within the
limits of his family and professional commitments, in the celebration of the
Eucharist and will be helped to penetrate ever deeper into its mystery.
Within the context of this Eucharistic spirituality, care will be taken to give
adequate appreciation to the sacrament of Penance.
74. Another characteristic element of diaconal spirituality is the Word of
God, of which the deacon is called to be an authoritative preacher, believing
what he proclaims, teaching what he believes, living what he teaches.(85)
The candidate must therefore learn to know the Word of God ever more
deeply and to seek in it constant nourishment for his spiritual life by means
of its loving and thorough study and the daily exercise of lectio divina.
75. There should also be an introduction to the meaning of the Prayer of the
Church. Indeed praying in the name of the Church and for the Church is
part of the ministry of the deacon. This requires a reflection on the
uniqueness of Christian prayer and the meaning of the Liturgy of the Hours,
but especially a practical initiation into it. To this end, it is important that
time be dedicated to this prayer during all meetings of the future deacons.
76. Finally, the deacon incarnates the charism of service as a participation
in the ministry of the Church. This has important repercussions on his
spiritual life, which must be characterised by obedience and fraternal
communion. A genuine education in obedience, instead of stifling the gifts
received with the grace of ordination, will ensure ecclesial authenticity in
the apostolate. Communion with his ordained confreres is also a balm for
supporting and encouraging generosity in the ministry. The candidate must
therefore be educated to a sense of belonging to the body of ordained
ministers, to fraternal collaboration with them and to spiritual sharing.
77. The means for this formation are monthly retreats and annual spiritual
exercises; instructions, to be programmed according to an organic and
progressive plan, which takes account of the various stages of the
formation; and spiritual accompaniment, which must be constant. It is a
particular task of the spiritual director to assist the candidate to discern the
signs of his vocation, to place himself in an attitude of ongoing conversion,

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to bring to maturity the traits proper to the spirituality of the deacon,
drawing on the writings of classical spirituality and the example of the
saints, and to bring about a balanced synthesis of his state of life, his
profession and the ministry.
78. Moreover, provision should be made that wives of married candidates
may grow in awareness of their husbands' vocation and their own mission
at his side. They are to be invited, therefore, to participate regularly in the
spiritual formation meetings.
Appropriate efforts should also be directed towards educating children
about the ministry of the deacon.
3. Doctrinal formation
79. Intellectual formation is a necessary dimension of diaconal formation
insofar as it offers the deacon a substantial nourishment for his spiritual life
and a precious instrument for his ministry. It is particularly urgent today, in
the face of the challenge of the new evangelization to which the Church is
called at this difficult juncture of the millennium. Religious indifference,
obscuring of values, loss of ethical convergence, and cultural pluralism
demand that those involved in the ordained ministry have an intellectual
formation which is complete and serious.
In the Circular Letter of 1969, Come è a conoscenza, the Congregation for
Catholic Education invited Episcopal Conferences to prepare a doctrinal
formation for candidates to the diaconate which would take account of the
different situations, personal and ecclesial, yet at the same time would
absolutely exclude “a hurried or superficial preparation, because the
duties of the Deacon, as laid down in the Constitution Lumen gentium (n.
29) and in the Motu Proprio (n. 22),(86) are of such importance as to
demand a formation which is solid and effective”.
80. The criteria which must be followed in preparing this formation are:
a) necessity for the deacon to be able to explain his faith and bring to
maturity a lively ecclesial conscience;
b) attention to his formation for the specific duties of his ministry;
c) importance of acquiring the capacity to read a situation and an adequate
inculturation of the Gospel;
d) usefulness of knowing communication techniques and group dynamics,
the ability to speak in public, and to be able to give guidance and counsel.
81. Taking account of these criteria, the following contents must be taken
into consideration: (87)
a) introduction to Sacred Scripture and its right interpretation; the theology
of the Old and New Testament; the interrelation between Scripture and
Tradition; the use of Scripture in preaching, catechesis and pastoral activity

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in general;
b) introduction to the study of the Fathers of the Church and an elementary
knowledge of the history of the Church;
c) fundamental theology, with illustration of the sources, topics and
methods of theology, presentation of the questions relating to Revelation
and the formulation of the relationship between faith and reason, which will
enable the future deacons to explain the reasonableness of the faith;
d) dogmatic theology, with its various treatises: Trinity, creation,
Christology, ecclesiology and ecumenism, mariology, Christian
anthropology, sacraments (especially theology of the ordained ministry),
eschatology;
e) Christian morality, in its personal and social dimensions and, in
particular, the social doctrine of the Church;
f) spiritual theology;
g) liturgy;
h) canon law.
According to particular situations and needs, the programme of studies will
be integrated with other disciplines such as the study of other religions,
philosophical questions, a deepening of certain economic and political
problems.(88)
82. For theological formation, use may be made, where possible, of
institutes of religious sciences which already exist or of other institutes of
theological formation. Where special schools for the theological formation
of deacons must be instituted, this should be done in such a way that the
number of hours of lectures and seminars be not less than a thousand in the
space of the three years. The fundamental courses at least are to conclude
with an examination and, at the end of the three years there is to be a final
comprehensive examination.
83. For admission to this programme of formation, a previous basic
formation is required; this is to be determined according to the cultural
situation of the country.
84. Candidates should be predisposed to continuing their formation after
ordination. To this end, they are encouraged to establish a small personal
library with a theological-pastoral emphasis and to be open to programmes
of ongoing formation.
4. Pastoral formation
85. In the wide sense, pastoral formation coincides with spiritual formation:
it is formation for an ever greater identification with the diakonia of Christ.
This attitude must guide the articulation of the various aspects of formation,

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integrating them within the unitary perspective of the diaconal vocation,
which consists in being a sacrament of Christ, servant of the Father.
In the strict sense, pastoral formation develops by means of a specific
theological discipline and a practical internship.
86. This theological discipline is called pastoral theology. It is “a
scientific reflection on the Church as she is built up daily, by the power of
the Spirit, in history; on the Church as the 'universal sacrament of
salvation', as a living sign and instrument of the salvation wrought by
Christ through the word, the sacraments and the service of charity”.
(89) The scope of this discipline, therefore, is the presentation of the
principles, the criteria and the methods which guide the apostolic-
missionary work of the Church in history.
The pastoral theology programmed for the deacons will pay particular
attention to those fields which are eminently diaconal, such as:
a) liturgical praxis: administration of the sacraments and sacramentals,
service at the altar;
b) proclamation of the Word in the varied contexts of ministerial service:
kerygma, catechesis, preparation for the sacraments, homily;
c) the Church's commitment to social justice and charity;
d) the life of the community, in particular the guidance of family teams,
small communities, groups and movements, etc.
Certain technical subjects, which prepare the candidates for specific
ministerial activities, can also be useful, such as psychology, catechetical
pedagogy, homiletics, sacred music, ecclesiastical administration,
information technology, etc.(90)
87. At the same time as (and possibly in relationship with) the teaching of
pastoral theology a practical internship should be provided for each
candidate, to permit him to meet in the field what he has learned in his
study. It must be gradual, tailored to the individual and under continual
supervision. For the choice of activities, account should be taken of the
instituted ministries received, and their exercise should be evaluated.
Care is to be taken that the candidates be actively introduced into the
pastoral activity of the diocese and that they have periodic sharing of
experiences with deacons already involved in the ministry.
88. In addition, care should be taken that the future deacons develop a
strong missionary sensitivity. In fact, they too, in an analogous way to
priests, receive with sacred ordination a spiritual gift which prepares them
for a universal mission, to the ends of the earth (cf Acts 1:8).(91) They are
to be helped, therefore, to be strongly aware of their missionary identity and
prepared to undertake the proclamation of the truth also to non-Christians,
particularly those belonging to their own people. However, neither should

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the prospect of the mission ad gentes be lacking, wherever circumstances
require and permit it.
CONCLUSION
89. The Didascalia Apostolorum recommends to the deacons of the first
century: “As our Saviour and Master said in the Gospel: let he who
wishes to be great among you, make himself your servant, in the same way
as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve and give his life as a
ransom for many, you deacons must do the same, even if that means giving
your life for your brothers and sisters, because of the service which you are
bound to fulfil”.(92) This invitation is most appropriate also for
those who are called today to the diaconate, and urges them to prepare
themselves with great dedication for their future ministry.
90. May the Episcopal Conferences and Ordinaries of the whole world, to
whom the present document is given, ensure that it becomes an object of
attentive reflection in communion with their priests and communities. It
will be an important point of reference for those Churches in which the
permanent diaconate is a living and active reality; for the others, it will be
an effective invitation to appreciate the value of that precious gift of the
Spirit which is diaconal service.
The Supreme Pontiff John Paul II has approved this “Ratio
fundamentalis institutionis diaconorum permanentium”, and ordered
it to be published.
Rome, given at the Offices of the Congregations, 22 February 1998, Feast
of the Chair of Peter.
Pio Card. Laghi
Prefect
+ José Saraiva Martins
Titular Archbishop of Tuburnica
Secretary
CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY
DIRECTORIUM PRO MINISTERIO ET VITA
DIACONORUM PERMANENTIUM
DIRECTORY
FOR THE MINISTRY AND LIFE
OF PERMANENT DEACONS
1
THE JURIDICAL STATUS OF THE DEACON

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Sacred Minister
1. The origin of the diaconate is the consecration and mission of Christ, in
which the deacon is called to share.(34) 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.
Incardination
2. At the time of admission to the diaconate, all candidates shall be required
to express clearly in writing their intention to serve the Church(35) for the
rest of their lives in a specific territorial or personal circumscription, in an
institute of consecrated life or in a society of apostolic life which has the
faculty to incardinate.(36) Written acceptance of a request for incardination
is reserved to him who has authority to incardinate and determines the
candidate's Ordinary.(37)
Incardination is a juridical bond. It has ecclesiological and spiritual
significance in as much as it expresses the ministerial dedication of the
deacon to the Church.
3. A deacon already incardinated into one ecclesiastical circumscription
may be incardinated into another in accordance with the norm of law.(38)
Written authorization must be obtained from both the bishop a quo and the
bishop ad quem in the case of deacons who, for just reasons, wish to
exercise their ministry in a diocese other than that into which they were
incardinated. Bishops should encourage deacons of their own dioceses who
wish to place themselves either permanently or for a specified time period
at the service of other particular Churches with a shortage of clergy. They
should also support in a particular way those who, after specific and careful
preparation, seek to dedicate themselves to the missio ad gentes. The terms
on which deacons afford such service should be duly regulated by contract
and agreed upon by the bishops concerned.(39)
It is a duty incumbent on the bishop to care for the deacons of his diocese
with particular solicitude.(40) This is to be discharged either personally or
through a priest acting as his delegate. Special pastoral care should always
be shown to those in particular difficulties because of personal
circumstances.
4. The deacon incardinated into an institute of consecrated life or society of
apostolic life shall exercise ministry under the jurisdiction of the bishop in
all that pertains to the pastoral ministry, acts of public worship and the
apostolate. He is, however, also subject to his own superiors' competence
and to the discipline of his community.(41) When a deacon is transferred to
a community in another diocese, the superior shall be obliged to present
him to the local Ordinary and obtain permission for him to exercise his
ministry in accordance with the procedures agreed upon, between the
bishop and the superior.
5. The specific vocation to the permanent Diaconate presupposes the

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stability of this Order. Hence ordination to the Priesthood of non-married or
widowed deacons must always be a very rare exception, and only for
special and grave reasons. The decision of admission to the Order of
Presbyters rests with the diocesan bishop, unless impediments exist which
are reserved to the Holy See.(42) Given the exceptional nature of such
cases, the diocesan bishop should consult the Congregation for Catholic
Education with regard to the intellectual and theological preparation of the
candidate, and also the Congregation for the Clergy concerning the
programme of priestly formation and the aptitude of the candidate to the
priestly ministry.
6. By virtue of their ordination, deacons are united to each other by a
sacramental fraternity. They are all dedicated to the same purpose —
building up the Body of Christ — in union with the Supreme
Pontiff(43) and subject to the authority of the bishop. Each deacon should
have a sense of being joined with his fellow deacons in a bond of charity,
prayer, obedience to their bishops, ministerial zeal and collaboration.
With the permission of the bishop and in his presence or that of his
delegate, it would be opportune for deacons periodically to meet to discuss
their ministry, exchange experiences, advance formation and encourage
each other in fidelity. Such encounters might also be of interest to
candidates to the permanent Diaconate. The local Ordinary should foster a
“spirit of communion” among deacons ministering in his
diocese and avoid any form of “corporatism” which was a
factor in the decline and eventual extinction of the permanent Diaconate in
earlier centuries.
7. The Diaconate brings with it a series of rights and duties as foreseen by
canons 273-283 of the Code of Canon Law with regard to clerics in general
and deacons in particular.
8. The rite of ordination includes a promise of obedience to the bishops:
“Do you promise respect and obedience to me and to my
successors?”.(44) In making this promise to his bishop the deacon
takes Christ, obedient par excellence (cf. Phil 2: 5-11), as his model. He
shall conform his own obedience in listening (Hb 10, 5ff; John 4:34) and in
radical availability (cf. Lk 9:54ff and 10:1ff) to the obedience of Christ. He
shall therefore dedicate himself to working in complete conformity with the
will of the Father and devote himself to the Church by means of complete
availability.(45) In a spirit of prayer, with which he should be permeated,
the deacon, following the example of the Lord who gave himself
“unto death, death on a cross” (Phil 2:8), should deepen
every day his total gift of self. This vision of obedience also predisposes
acceptance of a more concrete detailing of the obligation assumed by the
deacon at ordination, in accordance with the provisions of law:
“Unless excused by a lawful impediment, clerics are obliged to
accept and faithfully fulfil the office committed to them by their
Ordinary”.(46) This obligation is based on participation in the
bishop's ministry conferred by the Sacrament of Holy Orders and by
canonical mission. The extent of obedience and availability is determined
by the diaconal ministry itself and by all that is objectively, immediately

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and directly in relation to it.
The Deacon receives office by a decree of the bishop. In his decree of
appointment, the bishop shall ascribe duties to the deacon which are
congruent with his personal abilities, his celibate or married state, his
formation, age, and with his spiritually valid aspirations. The territory in
which his ministry is to be exercised or those to whom he is to minister
should be clearly specified. The decree must also indicate whether the
office conferred is to be discharged on a partial or full-time basis and the
priest who has the “cura animarum” where the deacon's
ministry is exercised, must be named.
9. Clerics are obliged to live in the bond of fraternity and of prayer,
collaborate with each other and with the bishop to recognise and foster the
mission of the faithful in the Church and in the world(47) and live in a
simple, sober manner which is open to fraternal giving and sharing.(48)
10. Unlike deacons to be ordained to the priesthood,(49) who are bound by
the same norms as priests in the matter,(50) permanent deacons are not
obliged to wear clerical garb. Deacons who are members of institutes of
consecrated life or societies of apostolic life shall adhere to the norms
prescribed for them by the Code of Canon Law.(51)
11. In its canonical discipline, the Church recognises the right of deacons to
form associations among themselves to promote their spiritual life, to carry
out charitable and pious works and pursue other objectives which are
consonant with their sacramental consecration and mission.(52) As with
other clerics, deacons are not permitted to found, participate in or be
members of any association or group, even of a civil nature, which is
incompatible with the clerical state or which impedes the diligent execution
of their ministerial duties. They shall also avoid all associations whose
nature, objectives and methods are insidious to the full hierarchical
communion of the Church. Likewise, associations which are injurious to
the identity of the diaconate and to the discharge of its duties for the
Church's service, as well as those groups or associations which plot against
the Church, are to be avoided.(53)
Associations too which, under the guise of representation, organize deacons
into a form of trade(s) unions or pressure groups, thus reducing the sacred
ministry to a secular profession or trade, are completely irreconcilable with
the clerical state. The same is true of any form of association which would
prejudice the direct and immediate relationship between every deacon and
his bishop.
All such associations are forbidden because they are injurious to the
exercise of the sacred ministry, which, in this context, is considered as no
more than a subordinate activity, and because they promote conflict with
the bishops who are similarly regarded purely as employers.(54)
It should be recalled that no private association may be considered an
ecclesial association unless it shall have obtained prior recognitio of its
statutes by the competent ecclesiastical authority.(55) Such authority has

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the right and duty to be vigilant concerning associations and the fulfilment
of their statutory ends.(56)
Deacons who come from ecclesial associations or movements may continue
to enjoy the spiritual benefits of such communities and may continue to
draw help and support from them in their service of a particular Church.
12. The professional activity of deacons assumes a significance which
distinguishes it from that of the lay faithful.(57) Thus the secular work of
permanent deacons is in some sense linked with their ministry. They should
be mindful that the lay members of the faithful, in virtue of their own
specific mission, are “particularly called to make the Church present
and fruitful in those places and circumstances where it is only through them
that she can become the salt of the earth”.(58)
Derogating from what is prescribed for other clerics,(59) the present
discipline of the Church does not prohibit to permanent deacons professions
which involve the exercise of civil authority or the administration of
temporal goods or accountable secular offices. Particular law, however,
may determine otherwise, should such derogation prove inopportune.
In those commercial and business activities(60) permitted under particular
law, deacons should exhibit honesty and ethical rectitude. They should be
careful to fulfil their obligations to civil law where it is not contrary to the
natural law, to the Magisterium or to the canons of the Church and to her
freedom.(61)
The aforementioned derogation is not applicable to permanent deacons who
are incardinated into institutes of consecrated life or societies of apostolic
life.(62)
Permanent deacons must make prudent judgements and they should seek
the advice of their bishops in more complex instances. Some professions,
while of undoubted benefit to the community, can, when exercised by a
permanent deacon, in certain circumstances, become incompatible with the
pastoral responsibilities of his ministry. The competent authority, bearing in
mind the requirements of ecclesial communion and of the fruitfulness of
pastoral ministry, shall evaluate individual cases as they arise, including a
change of profession after ordination to the permanent Diaconate.
Where there is conflict of conscience, deacons must act in conformity with
the doctrine and discipline of the Church, even if this should require of
them great sacrifices.
13. As sacred ministers, deacons are required to give complete priority to
their ministry and to pastoral charity and “do their utmost to foster
among people peace and harmony based on justice”.(63) Active
involvement in political parties or trades unions, in accordance with the
dispositions of the Episcopal Conference,(64) may be permitted in
particular circumstances “for the defence of the rights of the Church
or to promote the common good”.(65) Deacons are strictly
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movements which are founded on ideologies, policies or associations
incompatible with Church doctrine.
14. Should a deacon wish to absent himself from his diocese for “a
considerable period of time”, he should normally obtain the
permission of his Ordinary or Major Superior in accordance with the
provisions of particular law.(66)
15. Deacons who are professionally employed are required to provide for
their own upkeep from the ensuing emoluments.(67)
It is entirely legitimate that those who devote themselves fully to the
service of God in the discharge of ecclesiastical office,(68) be equitably
remunerated, since “the labourer is deserving of his
wage”(Lk 10:7) and the Lord has disposed that those who proclaim
the Gospel should live by the Gospel (cf. 1 Cor 9:14). This does not
however exclude the possibility that a cleric might wish to renounce this
right, as the Apostle himself did (1 Cor 9:12), and otherwise make
provision for himself.
It is not easy to draw up general norms concerning the upkeep of deacons
which are binding in all circumstances, given the great diversity of
situations in which deacons work, in various particular Churches and
countries. In this matter, due attention must also be given to possible
stipulations made in agreements between the Holy See or Episcopal
Conferences and governments. In such circumstances, particular law should
determine appropriately in the matter.
16. Since clerics dedicate themselves in an active and concrete way to the
ecclesiastical ministry, they have a right to sustenance which includes
“a remuneration that befits their condition”(69) and to social
security.(70)
With regard to married deacons the Code of Canon Law provides that:
“married deacons who dedicate themselves full-time to the
ecclesiastical ministry deserve remuneration sufficient to provide for
themselves and their families. Those, however, who receive remuneration
by reason of a secular profession which they exercise or have exercised are
to see to their own and to their families' needs from that income”.
(71) In prescribing “adequate” remuneration, parameters of
evaluation are also: personal condition, the nature of the office exercised,
circumstances of time and place, material needs of the minister (including
those of the families of married deacons), just recompense of those in his
service — the same general criteria, in fact, which apply to all
clerics.
In order to provide for the sustenance of clerics ministering in dioceses,
every particular Church is obliged to constitute a special fund which
“collects offerings and temporal goods for the support of the
clergy”.(72)
Social security for clerics is to be provided by another fund, unless other

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provision has been made.(73)
17. Celibate deacons who minister full-time in a diocese, have a right to be
remunerated according to the general principle of law(74) should they have
no other source of income.
18. Married deacons who minister full-time and who do not receive income
from any other source are to be remunerated, in accordance with the
aforementioned general principle, so that they may be able to provide for
themselves and for their families.(75)
19. Married deacons who minister full-time or part-time and who receive
income from a secular profession which they exercise or have exercised are
obliged to provide for themselves and for their families from such income.
(76)
20. It is for particular law to provide opportune norms in the complex
matter of reimbursing expenses, including, for example, that those entities
and parishes which benefit from the ministry of a deacon have an obligation
to reimburse him those expenses incurred in the exercise of his ministry.
Particular law may also determine the obligations devolving on the diocese
when a deacon, through no fault of his own, becomes unemployed.
Likewise, it will be opportune to define the extent of diocesan liability with
regard to the widows and orphans of deceased deacons. Where possible,
deacons, before ordination, should subscribe to a mutual assurance
(insurance) policy which affords cover for these eventualities.
21. Trusting to the perennial fidelity of God, the deacon is called to live his
Order with generous dedication and ever renewed perseverance. Sacred
ordination, once validly received, can never be rendered null. Nevertheless,
loss of the clerical state may occur in conformity with the canonical norms.
(77)
2
THE DIACONAL MINISTRY
Diaconal functions
22. The Second Vatican Council synthesized the ministry of deacons in the
threefold “diaconia of the liturgy, the word and of charity”.
(78) In this way diaconal participation through the ordained ministry in the
one and triple munus of Christ is expressed. The deacon “is teacher
in so far as he preaches and bears witness to the word of God; he sanctifies
when he administers the Sacrament of Baptism, the Holy Eucharist and the
sacramentals, he participates at the celebration of Holy Mass as a
“minister of the Blood”, and conserves and distributes the
Blessed Eucharist; he is a guide in as much as he animates the community
or a section of ecclesial life.(79) Thus deacons assist and serve the bishops
and priests who preside at every liturgy, are watchful of doctrine and guide
the people of God.

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The ministry of deacons, in the service of the community of the faithful,
should “collaborate in building up the unity of Christians without
prejudice and without inopportune initiatives”.(80) It should
cultivate those “human qualities which make a person acceptable to
others, credible, vigilant about his language and his capacity to dialogue, so
as to acquire a truly ecumenical attitude”.(81)
Diaconia of the word
23. The bishop, during the rite of ordination, gives the book of the Gospels
to the deacon saying: “Receive the Gospel of Christ whose herald
you have become”.(82) Like priests, deacons are commended to all
by their conduct, their preaching of the mystery of Christ, by transmitting
Christian doctrine and by devoting attention to the problems of our time.
The principal function of the deacon, therefore, is to collaborate with the
bishop and the priests in the exercise of a ministry(83) which is not of their
own wisdom but of the word of God, calling all to conversion and holiness.
(84) He prepares for such a ministry by careful study of Sacred Scripture,
of Tradition, of the liturgy and of the life of the Church.(85) Moreover, in
interpreting and applying the sacred deposit, the deacon is obliged to be
directed by the Magisterium of those who are “witnesses of divine
and Catholic truth”,(86) the Roman Pontiff and the bishops in
communion with him,(87) so as to teach and propose the mystery of Christ
fully and faithfully.(88)
It is also necessary that he learn the art of communicating the faith
effectively and integrally to contemporary man, in diverse cultural
circumstances and stages of life.(89)
24. It is for the deacon to proclaim the Gospel and preach the word of God.
(90) Deacons have the faculty to preach everywhere, in accordance with the
conditions established by law.(91) This faculty is founded on the Sacrament
of Ordination and should be exercised with at least the tacit consent of the
rector of the churches concerned and with that humility proper to one who
is servant and not master of the word of God. In this respect the warning of
the Apostle is always relevant: “Since we have this ministry through
the mercy shown to us, we are not discouraged. Rather we have renounced
shameful, hidden things; not acting deceitfully or falsifying the word of
God, but by the open declaration of the truth we commend ourselves to
everybody's conscience in the sight God” (2 Cor 4: 1-2).(92)
25. When the deacon presides at a liturgical celebration, in accordance with
the relevant norms,(93) he shall give due importance to the homily, since it
“proclaims the marvels worked by God in the mystery of Christ,
present and effective in the liturgical celebrations”.(94) Deacons
should be trained carefully to prepare their homilies in prayer, in study of
the sacred texts, in perfect harmony with the Magisterium and in keeping
with the situation of those to whom they preach.
In order to assist the Christian faithful to grow in knowledge of their faith
in Christ, to strengthen it by reception of the sacraments and to express it in
their family, professional and social lives,(95) much attention must be given

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to catechesis of the faithful of all stages of Christian living. With growing
secularization and the ever greater challenges posed for man and for the
Gospel by contemporary society, the need for complete, faithful and lucid
catechesis becomes all the more pressing.
26. Contemporary society requires a new evangelization which demands a
greater and more generous effort on the part of ordained ministers.
Deacons, “nourished by prayer and above all by love of the
Eucharist”,(96) in addition to their involvement in diocesan and
parochial programmes of catechesis, of evangelization and of preparation
for the reception of the Sacraments, should strive to transmit the word in
their professional lives, either explicitly or merely by their active presence
in places where public opinion is formed and ethical norms are applied
— such as the social services or organisations promoting the rights
of the family or life. They should also be aware of the great possibilities for
the ministry of the word in the area of religious and moral instruction in
schools,(97) in Catholic and civil universities(98) and by adequate use of
modern means of social communication.(99)
In addition to indispensable orthodoxy of doctrine, these new fields demand
specialized training, but they are very effective means of bringing the
Gospel to contemporary man and society. (100)
Finally, deacons are reminded that they are obliged to submit, before its
publication, written material concerning faith or morals, (101) to the
judgement of their Ordinaries. It is also necessary to obtain the permission
of the Ordinary before writing in publications which habitually attack the
Catholic religion or good morals. They are also bound to adhere to the
norms established by the Episcopal Conference (102) when involved in
radio or television broadcasts.
In every case, the deacon should hold before him the primary and
indefeasible necessity of always presenting the truth without compromise.
27. The deacon will be aware that the Church is missionary (103) by her
very nature, both because her origin is in the missions of the Son and the
Holy Spirit, according to the eternal plan of the Father and because she has
received an explicit mandate from the risen Lord to preach the Gospel to all
creation and to baptize those who believe (cf. Mk 16, 15-16; Mt 28:19).
Deacons are ministers of the Church and thus, although incardinated into a
particular Church, they are not exempt from the missionary obligation of
the universal Church. Hence they should always remain open to the missio
ad gentes to the extent that their professional or — if married
— family obligations permit. (104)
The deacon's ministry of service is linked with the missionary dimension of
the Church: the missionary efforts of the deacon will embrace the ministry
of the word, the liturgy, and works of charity which, in their turn, are
carried into daily life. Mission includes witness to Christ in a secular
profession or occupation.

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Diaconia of the liturgy
28. The rite of ordination emphasizes another aspect of the diaconal
ministry — ministry at the altar. (105)
Deacons receive the Sacrament of Orders, so as to serve as a vested
minister in the sanctification of the Christian community, in hierarchical
communion with the bishop and priests. They provide a sacramental
assistance to the ministry of the bishop and, subordinately, to that of the
priests which is intrinsic, fundamental and distinct.
Clearly, this diaconia at the altar, since founded on the Sacrament of
Orders, differs in essence from any liturgical ministry entrusted to the lay
faithful. The liturgical ministry of the deacon is also distinct from that of
the ordained priestly ministry. (106)
Thus, in the Eucharistic Sacrifice, the deacon does not celebrate the
mystery: rather, he effectively represents on the one hand, the people of
God and, specifically, helps them to unite their lives to the offering of
Christ; while on the other, in the name of Christ himself, he helps the
Church to participate in the fruits of that sacrifice.
Since “the liturgy is the summit towards which the activity of the
Church is directed and the font from which all her power flows”,
(107) this prerogative of diaconal ordination is also the font of sacramental
grace which nourishes the entire ministry. Careful and profound theological
and liturgical preparation must precede reception of that grace to enable the
deacon to participate worthily in the celebration of the sacraments and
sacramentals.
29. While exercising his ministry, the deacon should maintain a lively
awareness that “every liturgical celebration, because it is an action
of Christ the Priest and of his Body which is the Church, is a sacred action
surpassing all others. No other action of the Church can equal its efficacy
by the same title and to the same degree”. (108) The liturgy is the
source of grace and sanctification. Its efficacy derives from Christ the
Redeemer and does not depend on the holiness of the minister. This
certainty should cause the deacon to grow in humility since he can never
compromise the salvific work of Christ. At the same time it should inspire
him to holiness of life so that he may be a worthy minister of the liturgy.
Liturgical actions cannot be reduced to mere private or social actions which
can be celebrated by anybody since they belong to the Body of the
universal Church. (109) Deacons shall observe devoutly the liturgical
norms proper to the sacred mysteries so as to bring the faithful to a
conscious participation in the liturgy, to fortify their faith, give worship to
God and sanctify the Church. (110)
30. According to the tradition of the Church and the provisions of law, (111)
deacons “assist the bishop and priests in the celebration of the divine
mysteries”. (112) They should therefore work to promote liturgical
celebrations which involve the whole assembly, fostering the interior
participation of the faithful in the liturgy and the exercise of the various

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ministries. (113)
They should be mindful of the importance of the aesthetical dimension
which conveys to the whole person the beauty of what is being celebrated.
Music and song, even in its simplest form, the preached word and the
communion of the faithful who live the peace and forgiveness of Christ,
form a precious heritage which the deacon should foster.
The deacon is to observe faithfully the rubrics of the liturgical books
without adding, omitting or changing of his own volition (114) what they
require. Manipulation of the liturgy is tantamount to depriving it of the
riches of the mystery of Christ, whom it contains, and may well signify
presumption toward what has been established by the Church's wisdom.
Deacons, therefore, should confine themselves to those things, and only to
those things, in which they are properly competent. (115) For the Sacred
Liturgy they should vest worthily and with dignity, in accordance with the
prescribed liturgical norms. (116) The dalmatic, in its appropriate liturgical
colours, together with the alb, cincture and stole, “constitutes the
liturgical dress proper to deacons”. (117)
The ministry of deacons also includes preparation of the faithful for
reception of the sacraments and their pastoral care after having received
them.
31. The deacon, together with the bishop and priest, is the ordinary minister
of Baptism. (118) The exercise of this power requires either the permission
of the parish priest, since he enjoys the particular right of baptizing those
entrusted to his pastoral care, (119) or the presence of necessity. (120) In
preparing for the reception of this sacrament, the ministry of the deacon is
especially important.
Holy Eucharist
32. At the celebration of the Holy Eucharist, the deacon assists those who
preside at the assembly and consecrate the Body and Blood of the Lord
— that is the bishop and his priests (121) — according to the
norms established by the Institutio Generalis of the Roman Missal, (122)
and thus manifests Christ, the Servant. He is close to the priest during the
celebration of the Mass (123) and helps him, especially if the priest is blind,
infirm or feeble. At the altar he serves the chalice and the book. He
proposes the intentions of the bidding prayers to the faithful and invites
them to exchange the sign of peace. In the absence of other ministers, he
discharges, when necessary, their office too.
The deacon may not pronounce the words of the eucharistic prayer, nor
those of the collects nor may he use the gestures which are proper to those
who consecrate the Body and Blood of the Lord. (124)
The deacon properly proclaims from the books of Sacred Scripture. (125)
As an ordinary minister of Holy Communion, (126) the deacon distributes
the Body of Christ to the faithful during the celebration of the Mass and,

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outside of it, administers Viaticum (127) to the sick. He is equally an
ordinary minister of exposition of the Most Blessed Sacrament and of
eucharistic benediction. (128) It falls to the deacon to preside at Sunday
celebrations in the absence of a priest. (129)
33. The pastoral care of families, for which the bishop is primarily
responsible, may be entrusted to deacons. In supporting families in their
difficulties and sufferings, (130) this responsibility will extend from moral
and liturgical questions to difficulties of a social and personal nature, and
can be exercised at diocesan or, subject to the authority of the parish priest,
local level in promoting the catechesis of Christian marriage, the personal
preparation of future spouses, the fruitful celebration of marriage and help
offered to couples after marriage. (131)
Married deacons can be of much assistance in promoting the Gospel value
of conjugal love, the virtues which protect it and the practice of parenthood
which can truly be regarded as responsible, from a human and Christian
point of view.
Where deacons have been duly delegated by the parish priest or the local
Ordinary, they may assist at the celebration of marriages extra Missam and
pronounce the nuptial blessing in the name of the Church. (132) They may
also be given general delegation, in accordance with the prescribed
conditions, (133) which may only be subdelegated, however, in the manner
specified by the Code of Canon Law. (134)
34. It is defined doctrine, (135) that the administration of the Sacrament of
the Anointing of the Sick is reserved to bishops and priests since this
sacrament involves the forgiveness of sins and the worthy reception of the
Holy Eucharist, but, the pastoral care of the sick may be entrusted to
deacons. Active service to alleviate the suffering of the sick, catechesis in
preparation for the reception of the Sacrament of Anointing of the Sick,
preparing the faithful for death in the absence of a priest, and the
administration of Viaticum according to the prescribed rites, are means by
which deacons may bring the love of the Church to the suffering faithful.
(136)
35. Deacons have an obligation, established by the Church, to celebrate the
Liturgy of the Hours with which the entire Mystical Body is united to the
prayer Christ the Head offers to the Father. Mindful of this obligation, they
shall celebrate the Liturgy of the Hours every day according to the
approved liturgical books and in the manner determined by the respective
Episcopal Conference. (137) Furthermore, they should strive to promote
participation by the greater Christian community in this Liturgy, which is
never private, but an action proper to the entire Church, (138) even when
celebrated individually.
36. The deacon is the minister of sacramentals, that is of “sacred
signs which bear a resemblance to the sacraments (and) signify effects,
particularly of a spiritual nature, which are obtained through the Church's
intercession”. (139)

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The deacon may therefore impart those blessings most closely linked to
ecclesial and sacramental life which are expressly permitted to him by law.
(140) It is for the deacon to conduct exequies celebrated outside of Holy
Mass, as well as the rite of Christian burial. (141)
When a priest is present or available, however, such tasks must be given to
him. (142)
The Diaconia of Charity
37. In virtue of the Sacrament of Orders, deacons, in communion with the
bishop and the diocesan presbyterate, participate in the same pastoral
functions, (143) but exercise them differently in serving and assisting the
bishop and his priests. Since this participation is brought about by the
sacrament, they serve God's people in the name of Christ. For this reason,
they exercise it in humility and charity, and, according to the words of St
Polycarp, they must always be “merciful, zealous and let them walk
according to the truth of the Lord who became servant of all”. (144)
Their authority, therefore, exercised in hierarchical communion with the
bishop and his priests, and required by the same unity of consecration and
mission, (145) is a service of charity which seeks to help and foster all
members of a particular Church, so that they may participate, in a spirit of
communion and according to their proper charisms, in the life and mission
of the Church.
38. In the ministry of charity, deacons should conform themselves in the
likeness of Christ the Servant, whom they represent and, above all, they
should be “dedicated to works of charity and to
administration”. (146) Thus, in the prayer of ordination, the bishop
implores God the Father that they may be “full of all the virtues,
sincere in charity, solicitous towards the weak and the poor, humble in their
service... may they be the image of your Son who did not come to be served
but to serve”. (147) By word and example they should work so that
all the faithful, in imitation of Christ, may place themselves at the constant
service of their brothers and sisters.
Diocesan and parochial works of charity, which are among the primary
duties of bishops and priests are entrusted by them, as attested by Tradition,
to servants in the ecclesiastical ministry, that is, to deacons. (148) So too is
the service of charity in Christian education; in training preachers, youth
groups, and lay groups; in promoting life in all its phases and transforming
the world according to the Christian order. (149) In all of these areas the
ministry of deacons is particularly valuable, since today the spiritual and
material needs of man, to which the Church is called to respond, are greatly
diversified. They should, therefore, strive to serve all the faithful without
discrimination, while devoting particular care to the suffering and the
sinful. As ministers of Christ and of his Church, they must be able to
transcend all ideologies and narrow party interests, lest they deprive the
Church's mission of its strength which is the love of Christ. Diaconia
should bring man to an experience of God's love and move him to
conversion by opening his heart to the work of grace.

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The charitable function of deacons “also involves appropriate
service in the administration of goods and in the Church's charitable
activities. In this regard, deacons “discharge the duties of charity
and administration in the name of the hierarchy and also provide social
services”. (150) Hence, deacons may be appointed to the office of
diocesan oeconomus (151) and likewise nominated to the diocesan finance
council. (152)
The canonical mission of permanent deacons
39. The three contexts of the diaconal ministry, depending on
circumstances, may absorb, to varying degrees, a large proportion of every
deacon's activity. Together, however, they represent a unity in service at the
level of divine Revelation: the ministry of the word leads to ministry at the
altar, which in turn prompts the transformation of life by the liturgy,
resulting in charity. “If we consider the deep spiritual nature of this
diaconia, then we shall better appreciate the inter-relationship between the
three areas of ministry traditionally associated with the diaconate, that is,
the ministry of the word, the ministry of the altar and the ministry of
charity. Depending on the circumstances, one or other of these may take on
special importance in the individual work of a deacon, but these three
ministries are inseparably joined in God's plan for redemption”.
(153)
40. Throughout history the service of deacons has taken on various forms
so as to satisfy the diverse needs of the Christian community and to enable
that community to exercise its mission of charity. It is for the bishops alone,
(154) since they rule and have charge of the particular Churches “as
Vicars and legates of Christ”, (155) to confer ecclesiastical office on
each deacon according to the norm of law. In conferring such office, careful
attention should be given to both the pastoral needs and the personal,
family (in the case of married deacons), and professional situation of
permanent deacons. In every case it is important, however, that deacons
fully exercise their ministry, in preaching, in the liturgy and in charity to the
extent that circumstances permit. They should not be relegated to marginal
duties, be made merely to act as substitutes, nor discharge duties normally
entrusted to non-ordained members of the faithful. Only in this way will the
true identity of permanent deacons as ministers of Christ become apparent
and the impression avoided that deacons are simply lay people particularly
involved in the life of the Church.
For the good of the deacon and to prevent improvisation, ordination should
be accompanied by a clear investiture of pastoral responsibility.
Parish
41. While assuming different forms, the diaconal ministry, ordinarily finds
proper scope for its exercise in the various sectors of diocesan and
parochial pastoral action.
The bishop may give deacons the task of co-operating with a parish priest
in the parish (156) entrusted to him or in the pastoral care of several

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parishes entrusted in solidum to one or more priests. (157)
Where permanent deacons participate in the pastoral care of parishes which
do not, because of a shortage, have the immediate benefit of a parish priest,
(158) they always have precedence over the non-ordained faithful. In such
cases, it is necessary to specify that the moderator of the parish is a priest
and that he is its proper pastor. To him alone has been entrusted the cura
animarum, in which he is assisted by the deacon.
Deacons may also be called to guide dispersed Christian communities in
the name of the bishop or the parish priest. (159) “This is a
missionary function to be carried out in those territories, environments,
social strata and groups where priests are lacking or cannot be easily found.
In particular, in those areas where no priest is available to celebrate the
Eucharist, the deacon brings together and guides the community in a
celebration of the word with the distribution of Holy Communion which
has been duly reserved. (160) When deacons supply in places where there is
a shortage of priests, they do so by ecclesial mandate”. (161) At
such celebrations, prayers will always be offered for an increase of
vocations to the priesthood whose indispensable nature shall be clearly
emphasized. Where deacons are available, participation in the pastoral care
of the faithful may not be entrusted to a lay person or to a community of lay
persons. Similarly where deacons are available, it is they who preside at
such Sunday celebrations.
The competence of deacons should always be clearly specified in writing
when they are assigned office.
Those means which encourage constructive and patient collaboration
between deacons and others involved in the pastoral ministry should be
promoted with generosity and conviction. While it is a duty of deacons to
respect the office of parish priest and to work in communion with all who
share in his pastoral care, they also have the right to be accepted and fully
recognised by all. Where the bishop has deemed it opportune to institute
parish pastoral councils, deacons appointed to participate in the pastoral
care of such parishes are members of these councils by right. (162) Above
all else, a true charity should prevail which recognises in every ministry a
gift of the Spirit destined to build up the Body of Christ.
42. Numerous opportunities for the fruitful exercise of the ministry of
deacons arise at diocesan level. Indeed, when they possess the necessary
requirements, deacons may act as members of diocesan bodies, in particular
diocesan pastoral councils (163) and diocesan finance councils, and take
part in diocesan synods. (164)
They may not, however, act as members of the council of priests, since this
body exclusively represents the presbyterate. (165)
In the diocesan curia deacons in possession of the necessary requirements,
may exercise the office of chancellor, (166) judge, (167) assessor, (168)
auditor, (169) promotor iustitiae, defensor vinculi (170) and notary. (171)

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Deacons may not, however, be constituted judicial vicars, adjunct judicial
vicars or vicars forane, since these offices are reserved for priests. (172)
Other areas in which deacons may exercise their ministry include diocesan
commissions, pastoral work in specific social contexts — especially
the pastoral care of the family — or among particular groups with
special pastoral needs, such as ethnic minorities.
In the exercise of the above offices, the deacon should recall that every
action in the Church should be informed by charity and service to all. In
judicial, administrative and organizational matters, deacons should always
strive to avoid unnecessary forms of bureaucracy, lest they deprive their
ministry of pastoral meaning and value. Those deacons who are called to
exercise such offices should be placed so as to discharge duties which are
proper to the diaconate, in order to preserve the integrity of the diaconal
ministry.
3
THE SPIRITUALITY OF THE DEACON
Contemporary context
43. The Church, gathered together by Christ and guided by the Holy Spirit
according to the providence of God the Father, lives and proclaims the
Gospel in concrete historical circumstances. While present in the world, she
is nonetheless a pilgrim (173) on the way to the fullness of the Kingdom.
(174) “The world which she has in mind is the whole human family
seen in the context of everything which envelopes it: it is the world as the
theatre of human history, bearing the marks of its travail, its triumphs and
failures, the world, which in the Christian vision has been created and is
sustained by its Maker, which has been freed from the slavery of sin by
Christ, who was crucified and rose again in order to break the stranglehold
of the evil one, so that it might be fashioned anew according to God's
design and brought to its fulfilment”. (175)
The deacon, as a member and minister of the Church, should be mindful of
this reality in his life and ministry. He should be conversant with
contemporary cultures and with the aspirations and problems of his times.
In this context, indeed, he is called to be a living sign of Christ the Servant
and to assume the Church's responsibility of “reading the signs of
the time and of interpreting them in the light of the Gospel, so that, in
language intelligible to every generation, she may be able to answer the
ever-recurring questions which men ask about this present life and of the
life to come and how one is related to the other”. (176)
Vocation to holiness
44. The universal call to holiness has its origin in the “baptism of
faith” by which all are “truly made sons of God and sharers
in the divine nature and thus are made holy”. (177)

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By the Sacrament of Holy Orders, deacons receive a “a new
consecration to God” through which they are “anointed by
the Holy Spirit and sent by Christ” (178) to serve God's people and
“build up the Body of Christ” (Eph 4:12).
From this stems the diaconal spirituality with its source in what the Second
Vatican Council calls “the sacramental grace of the
diaconate”. (179) In addition to helping the deacon to fulfil his
functions this also affects his deepest being, imbuing it with a willingness
to give his entire self over to the service of the Kingdom of God in the
Church. As is indicated by the term “diaconate” itself, what
characterizes the inner feelings and desire of those who receive the
sacrament, is the spirit of service. Through the diaconate, what Jesus said of
his mission is continually realized: “The Son of Man did not come
to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many”
(Mt 20:28). (180) Thus, through his ministry, the deacon lives the virtue of
obedience: in faithfully carrying out those duties assigned to him, the
deacon serves the episcopate and the presbyterate in the munera of Christ's
mission and what he does is truly pastoral ministry, for the good of the
faithful.
45. Hence, the deacon should accept with gratitude the invitation to follow
Christ the Servant and devote himself to it throughout the diverse
circumstances of life. The character received in ordination conforms to
Christ to whom the deacon should adhere ever more closely.
Sanctification is a duty binding all the faithful. (181) For the deacon it has a
further basis in the special consecration received. (182) It includes the
practice of the Christian virtues and the various evangelical precepts and
counsels according to one's own state of life. The deacon is called to live a
holy life because he has been sanctified by the Holy Spirit in the
sacraments of Baptism and Holy Orders and has been constituted by the
same Spirit a minister of Christ's Church to serve and sanctify mankind.
(183)
For deacons the call to holiness means “following Jesus by an
attitude of humble service which finds expression not only in works of
charity but also in imbuing and forming thoughts and actions”. (184)
When “their ministry is consistent with this spirit (deacons) clearly
highlight that quality which best shows the face of Christ: service (185)
which makes one not only 'servants of God' but also servants of God in our
own brethren”. (186)
The Relations of Holy Order
46. By a special sacramental gift, Holy Order confers on the deacon a
particular participation in the consecration and mission of Him who became
servant of the Father for the redemption of mankind, and inserts him in a
new and specific way in the mystery of Christ, of his Church and the
salvation of all mankind. Hence the spiritual life of the deacon should
deepen this threefold relationship by developing a community spirituality
which bears witness to that communion essential to the nature of the

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Church.
47. The primary and most fundamental relationship must be with Christ,
who assumed the condition of a slave for love of the Father and mankind.
(187) In virtue of ordination the deacon is truly called to act in conformity
with Christ the Servant.
The eternal Son of the Father “emptied himself assuming the form
of a slave” (Phil 2:7) and lived this condition in obedience to the
Father (John 4:34) and in humble service to the brethren (John 13:4-15). As
servant of the Father in the work of salvation Christ constitutes the way, the
truth and the life for every deacon in the Church.
All ministerial activity is meaningful when it leads to knowing, loving and
following Christ in his diaconia. Thus deacons should strive to model their
lives on Christ, who redeemed mankind by his obedience to the Father, an
obedience “unto death, death on a cross” (Phil 2:8).
48. Indissolubly associated with this fundamental relationship with Christ is
the Church (188) which Christ loves, purifies, nourishes and cares for (cf.
Eph 5, 25:29). The deacon cannot live his configuration to Christ faithfully
without sharing His love for the Church “for which he cannot but
have a deep attachment because of her mission and her divine
institution”. (189)
The Rite of Ordination illustrates the connection which comes about
between the bishop and the deacon: the bishop alone imposes hands on the
candidate and invokes the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on him. Every
deacon, therefore, finds the point of reference for his own ministry in
hierarchical communion with the bishop. (190)
Diaconal ordination also underlines another ecclesial aspect: it
communicates a ministerial sharing in Christ's diaconia with which God's
people, governed by the Successor of Peter and those Bishops in
communion with him, and in co-operation with the presbyterate, continues
to serve the work of redemption. Deacons, therefore, are called to nourish
themselves and their ministry with an ardent love for the Church, and a
sincere desire for communion with the Holy Father, their own bishops and
the priests of their dioceses.
49. It must not be forgotten that the object of Christ's diaconia is mankind.
(191) Every human being carries the traces of sin but is called to
communion with God. “God so loved the world that He gave His
only Son, so that all who believe in Him might not die but have eternal
life” (John 3:16). It was for this plan of love, that Christ became a
slave and took human flesh. The Church continues to be the sign and
instrument of that diaconia in history.
In virtue of the Sacrament of Orders deacons are at the service of their
brothers and sisters needing of salvation. As mankind can see the fullness
of the Father's love by which they are saved in the words and deeds of
Christ the Servant, so too this same charity must be apparent in the life of

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the deacon. Growth in imitation of Christ's love for mankind —
which surpasses all ideologies — is thus an essential component of
the spiritual life of every deacon.
A “natural inclination of service to the sacred hierarchy and to the
Christian community” (192) is required of those who seek
admission to the diaconate. This should not be understood “in the
sense of a simple spontaneity of natural disposition...it is rather an
inclination of nature inspired by grace, with a spirit of service that
conforms human behaviour to Christ's. The sacrament of the diaconate
develops this inclination: it makes the subject to share more closely in
Christ's spirit of service and imbues the will with a special grace so that in
all his actions he will be motivated by a new inclination to serve his
brothers and sisters”. (193)
Aids to the Spiritual Life
50. The aforementioned points of reference emphasize the primacy of the
spiritual life. The deacon, mindful that the diaconia of Christ surpasses all
natural capacities, should continually commit himself in conscience and in
freedom to His invitation: “Remain in me and I in you. As the
branch cannot bear fruit unless it remain in the vine, so also with you unless
you remain in me” (John 15:4).
Following Christ in the diaconate is an attractive but difficult undertaking.
While it brings satisfaction and rewards, it can also be open to the
difficulties and trials experienced by the followers of the Lord Jesus Christ.
In order to live this ministry to the full, deacons must know Christ
intimately so that He may shoulder the burdens of their ministry. They must
give priority to the spiritual life and live their diaconia with generosity.
They should organize their ministry and their professional and, when
married, family obligations, so as to grow in their commitment to the
person and mission of Christ the Servant.
51. Progress in the spiritual life is achieved primarily by faithful and
tireless exercise of the ministry in integrity of life. (194) Such ministry not
only develops the spiritual life but promotes the theological virtues, a
disposition to selflessness, service to the brethren and hierarchical
communion. What has been said of priests, mutatis mutandis, also applies
to deacons: “Through the sacred actions they perform every
day....they are set on the right course to perfection of life. The very holiness
of priests is of the greatest benefit for the fruitful fulfilment of their
ministry”. (195)
52. The deacon should always be mindful of the exhortation made to him in
the Rite of Ordination: “Receive the Gospel of Christ of which you
are the herald; believe what you preach, teach what you believe and put into
practice what you teach”. (196) For a worthy and fruitful
proclamation of the word of God, deacons should “immerse
themselves in the Scriptures by constant sacred reading and diligent study.
For it must not happen that anybody becomes 'an empty preacher of the
word of God to others, not being a hearer of the word in his own heart'

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(197) when he should be sharing the boundless riches of the divine word
with the faithful committed to his care, especially in the sacred
Liturgy”. (198)
Moreover, deacons, under the guidance of those in the Church who are true
teachers of divine and Catholic truth, (199) should strive to deepen their
knowledge of the word, so as to hear its call and experience its saving
power (cf. Rom 1:16). Their sanctification is based on their consecration
and on their mission. This is true also with regard to the word and they
should be conscious that they are its ministers. As members of the
hierarchy, the actions and public pronouncements of deacons involve the
Church. Consequently, it is essential for pastoral charity that deacons
should ensure the authenticity of their own teaching. Likewise, in the spirit
of the profession of faith and the oath of fidelity, (200) taken prior to
ordination, they should preserve their own clear and effective communion
with the Holy Father, the episcopal order and with their own bishops, not
only with regard to the articles of the Creed, but also with regard to the
teaching of ordinary Magisterium and the Church's discipline. Indeed,
“such is the force and power of the word of God that it can serve the
Church as her support and vigour, and the children of God for their
strength, food for the soul, and for a pure and lasting fount of spiritual
life”. (201) The closer deacons come to the word of God, therefore,
the greater will be their desire to communicate it to their brothers and
sisters. God speaks to man in Sacred Scripture: (202) by his preaching, the
sacred minister fosters this salvific encounter. Then, lest the faithful be
deprived of the word of God through the ignorance or indolence of its
ministers, deacons should devote themselves to preach the word tirelessly
and yet be mindful that the exercise of the ministry of the word is not
confined to preaching alone.
53. Likewise, when the deacon baptizes or distributes the Body and Blood
of Christ or serves at the celebration of the other sacraments and
sacramentals, he confirms his identity in the Church: he is a minister of the
Body of Christ, both mystical and ecclesial. Let him remember that, when
lived with faith and reverence, these actions of the Church contribute much
to growth in the spiritual life and to the increase of the Christian
community. (203)
54. With regard to the spiritual life, deacons should devote particular
importance to the sacraments of grace whose purpose “is to sanctify
men, to build up the Body of Christ, and finally to give worship to
God”. (204)
Above all, they should participate with particular faith at the daily
celebration of the eucharistic sacrifice, (205) possibly exercising their own
proper liturgical munus, and adore the Lord, present in the Sacrament, (206)
because in the Blessed Eucharist, source and summit of all evangelization,
“the whole spiritual good of the Church is contained”. (207)
In the Blessed Eucharist they truly encounter Christ who, for love of man,
became an expiatory victim, the food of life eternal and friend of all who
suffer.

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Conscious of his own weakness and trusting the mercy of God the deacon
should regularly approach the Sacrament of Penance, (208) in which sinful
man encounters Christ the Redeemer, receives forgiveness of sin and is
impelled towards the fullness of charity.
55. In performing the works of charity entrusted to them by their bishops,
deacons should always be guided by the love of Christ for all men instead
of personal interests and ideologies which are injurious to the universality
of salvation or deny the transcendent vocation of man. They should be ever
conscious that the diaconia of charity necessarily leads to a growth of
communion within the particular Churches since charity is the very soul of
ecclesial communion. Deacons are thus obliged to foster fraternity and co-
operation with the priests of their dioceses and sincere communion with
their bishops.
Prayer life
56. The deacon shall always remain faithful to the Lord's command:
“But watch at all times, praying that you may have strength to
escape all these things that will take place, and to stand before the Son of
man” (Lk 21:36 cf. Phil 4:6-7).
Prayer, which is a personal dialogue with God, confers the strength needed
to follow Christ and serve the brethren. In the light of this certainty,
deacons should form themselves according to the various types of prayer:
the celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours, as prescribed by the various
Episcopal Conferences, (209) should inform their whole prayer life since
deacons, as ministers, intercede for the entire Church. Such prayer is
carried over into the lectio divina, arduous mental prayer and the spiritual
retreat prescribed by particular law. (210)
The habit of penance should also be taken to heart together with other
means of sanctification which foster personal encounter with God. (211)
57. Participation in the mystery of Christ the Servant necessarily directs the
deacon's heart to the Church and her most holy Mother. Christ indeed
cannot be separated from the Church which is his Body. True union with
Christ the Head cannot but foster true love for His body which is the
Church. This love will commit the deacon to work diligently to build up the
Church by faithful discharge of his ministerial duties, through fraternity and
hierarchical communion with his own bishop and with the presbyterate. The
deacon should be concerned for the entire Church: the universal Church,
the principle and perpetually visible foundation of whose unity is the
Roman Pontiff, the Successor of St Peter, (212) as well as the particular
Church which “adhering to its pastor and united by him in the Holy
Spirit through the Gospel and the Eucharist.... in which the one, holy,
Catholic and apostolic Church of Christ is present. (213)
Love for Christ and for His Church is profoundly linked to love of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, handmaid of the Lord. With her unique title of
Mother, she was the selfless helper of her divine Son's diaconia (cf. John
19:25-27). Love of the Mother of God, based on faith and expressed in

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daily recitation of the Rosary, imitation of her virtues and trust in her, are
indeed signs of authentic filial devotion. (214)
With deep veneration and affection Mary looks on every deacon. Indeed,
“the creature who more than any other who has lived the full truth of
vocation is Mary the Virgin Mother, and she did so in intimate communion
with Christ: no one has responded with a love greater than hers to the
immense love of God”. (215) This love of the Virgin Mary,
handmaid of the Lord, which is born and rooted in the word, will cause
deacons to imitate her life. In this way a Marian dimension is introduced
into the Church which is very close to the vocation of the deacon. (216)
58. Regular spiritual direction is truly of the greatest assistance to deacons.
Experience clearly shows how much can be gained in sincere and humble
dialogue with a wise spiritual director, not only in the resolution of doubts
and problems which inevitably arise throughout life, but also in employing
the necessary discernment to arrive at better self-knowledge and to grow in
faithful fellowship of Christ.
Spirituality of deacons and states of life
59. In contrast with the requirement for the priesthood, not only celibate
men, in the first place and widowers, may be admitted to the permanent
Diaconate but also men who live in the Sacrament of Matrimony. (217)
60. With gratitude, the Church recognises the gift of celibacy which God
gives to some of her members and, in different ways, both in the East and
West, she has linked it to the ordained ministry with which it is always
particularly consonant. (218) The Church is conscious that this gift,
accepted and lived for the sake of the Kingdom of God (cf. Mt 19:12),
directs the whole person of the deacon towards Christ who devoted Himself
in chastity to the service of the Father so as to bring man to the fullness of
the Kingdom. Loving God and serving the brethren by this complete
choice, so far from impeding the personal development of deacons, fosters
man's true perfection which is found in charity. In celibate life, indeed, love
becomes a sign of total and undivided consecration to Christ and of greater
freedom to serve God and man. (219) The choice of celibacy is not an
expression of contempt for marriage nor of flight from reality but a special
way of serving man and the world.
Contemporary man, very often submerged in the ephemeral, is particularly
sensitive to those who are a living witness of the eternal. Hence, deacons
should be especially careful to give witness to their brothers and sisters by
their fidelity to the celibate life the better to move them to seek those values
consonant with man's transcendent vocation. “Celibacy 'for the sake
of the Kingdom' is not only an eschatological sign. It also has a great social
significance in contemporary life for service to the People of God”.
(220)
In order to conserve this special gift of God throughout life for the benefit
of the entire Church, deacons should not depend excessively on their own
resources, but should be faithful to the spiritual life and the duties of their

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ministry in a spirit of prudence and vigilance, remembering that “the
spirit is willing but the flesh is weak” (Mt 26:41).
They should be particularly careful in their relationships with others lest
familiarity create difficulties for continence or give rise to scandal. (221)
They must finally be aware that in contemporary society, it is necessary to
exercise careful discernment when using the means of social
communications.
61. The Sacrament of Matrimony sanctifies conjugal love and constitutes it
a sign of the love with which Christ gives himself to the Church (cf. Eph.
5:25). It is a gift from God and should be a source of nourishment for the
spiritual life of those deacons who are married. Since family life and
professional responsibilities must necessarily reduce the amount of time
which married deacons can dedicate to the ministry, it will be necessary to
integrate these various elements in a unitary fashion, especially by means of
shared prayer. In marriage, love becomes an interpersonal giving of self, a
mutual fidelity, a source of new life, a support in times of joy and sorrow:
in short, love becomes service. When lived in faith, this family service is for
the rest of the faithful an example of the love of Christ. The married deacon
must use it as a stimulus of his diaconia in the Church.
Married deacons should feel especially obliged to give clear witness to the
sanctity of marriage and the family. The more they grow in mutual love, the
greater their dedication to their children and the more significant their
example for the Christian community. “The nurturing and deepening
of mutual, sacrificial love between husband and wife constitutes perhaps
the most significant involvement of a deacon's wife in her husband's public
ministry in the Church”. (222) This love grows thanks to chastity
which flourishes, even in the exercise of paternal responsibilities, by
respect for spouses and the practice of a certain continence. This virtue
fosters a mutual self-giving which soon becomes evident in ministry. It
eschews possessive behaviour, undue pursuit of professional success and
the incapacity to programme time. Instead, it promotes authentic
interpersonal relationships, OIC, and the capacity to see everything in its
proper perspective.
Special care should be taken to ensure that the families of deacons be made
aware of the demands of the diaconal ministry. The spouses of married
deacons, who must give their consent to their husband's decision to seek
ordination to the diaconate, (223) should be assisted to play their role with
joy and discretion. They should esteem all that concerns the Church,
especially the duties assigned to their husbands. For this reason it is
opportune that they should be kept duly informed of their husbands'
activities in order to arrive at an harmonious balance between family,
professional and ecclesial responsibilities. In the children of married
deacons, where such is possible, an appreciation of their father's ministry
can also be fostered. They in turn should be involved in the apostolate and
give coherent witness in their lives.
In conclusion, the families of married deacons, as with all Christian

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families, are called to participate actively and responsibly in the Church's
mission in the contemporary world. “In particular the deacon and his
wife must be a living example of fidelity and indissolubility in Christian
marriage before a world which is in dire need of such signs. By facing in a
spirit of faith the challenges of married life and the demands of daily living,
they strengthen the family life not only of the Church community but of the
whole of society. They also show how the obligations of family life, work
and ministry can be harmonized in the service of the Church's mission.
Deacons and their wives and children can be a great encouragement to
others who are working to promote family life”. (224)
62. It is necessary to reflect on the situation of the deacon following the
death of his wife. This is a particular moment in life which calls for faith
and Christian hope. The loss of a spouse should not destroy dedication to
the rearing of children nor lead to hopelessness. While this period of life is
difficult, it is also an opportunity for interior purification and an impetus for
growth in charity and service to one's children and to all the members of the
Church. It is a call to grow in hope since faithful discharge of the ministry
is a way of reaching Christ and those in the Father's glory who are dear to
us.
It must be recognised, however, that the loss of a spouse gives rise to a new
situation in a family which profoundly influences personal relationships
and in many instances can give rise to economic difficulties. With great
charity, therefore, widowed deacons should be helped to discern and accept
their new personal circumstances and to persevere in providing for their
children and the new needs of their families.
In particular, the widowed deacon should be supported in living perfect and
perpetual continence. (225) He should be helped to understand the
profound ecclesial reasons which preclude his remarriage (cf. 1 Tim 3:12),
in accordance with the constant discipline of the Church in the East and
West. (226) This can be achieved through an intensification of one's
dedication to others for the love of God in the ministry. In such cases the
fraternal assistance of other ministers, of the faithful and of the bishop can
be most comforting to widowed deacons.
With regard to the widows of deacons, care should be taken, where
possible, by the clergy and the faithful to ensure that they are never
neglected and that their needs are provided for.
4
CONTINUING FORMATION OF DEACONS
Characteristics
63. The continuing formation of deacons is a human necessity which must
be seen in continuity with the divine call to serve the Church in the ministry
and with the initial formation given to deacons, to the extent that these are
considered two initial moments in a single, living, process of Christian and
diaconal life. (227) Indeed, “those who are ordained to the diaconate

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are obliged to ongoing doctrinal formation which perfects and completes
what they received prior to ordination”, (228) so that, by a periodic
renewal of the “I am” pronounced by deacons at their
ordination, the vocation “to” the diaconate continues and
finds expression as vocation “in” the diaconate. On the part
of both the Church which provides ongoing formation and of deacons who
are its recipients, such formation should be regarded as a mutual obligation
and duty arising from the nature of the vocational commitment which has
been assumed.
The continuing need to provide and receive adequate, integral formation is
an indispensable obligation for both bishops and deacons.
Ecclesiastical norms regarding ongoing formation (229) have constantly
emphasised the obligatory nature of such formation for the apostolic life
and stressed the need for it to be global, interdisciplinary, profound,
scientific and propedeutic. Application of these norms is all the more
necessary in those instances where initial formation did not adhere to the
ordinary model.
Continuing formation should be informed with the characteristics of fidelity
to Christ, to the Church and to “continuing conversion”
which is a fruit of sacramental grace articulated in the pastoral charity
proper to every moment of ordained ministry. This formation is similar to
the fundamental choice, which must be reaffirmed and renewed throughout
the permanent diaconate by a long series of coherent responses which are
based on and animated by the initial acceptance of the ministry. (230)
Motivation
64. Inspired by the prayer of ordination, ongoing formation is based on the
need of every deacon to love Christ in such manner as to imitate him
(“may they be images of your Son”). It seeks to confirm him
in uncompromising fidelity to a personal vocation to ministry (“may
they fulfil faithfully the works of the ministry”) and proposes a
radical, sincere following of Christ the Servant (“may the example
of their lives be a constant reminder of the Gospel... may they be
sincere...solicitous...and vigilant”).
The basis and motivation of this formation, therefore, “is the
dynamism of the order itself”, (231) while its nourishment is the
Holy Eucharist, compendium of the entire Christian ministry and endless
source of every spiritual energy. St Paul's exhortation to Timothy can also
be applied, in a certain sense, to deacons: “I remind you to fan into a
flame the gift of God that you have” (2 Tim 1:6; cf. 1 Tim 4:14-16).
The theological demands of their call to a singular ministry of ecclesial
service requires of them a growing love for the Church, shown forth by
their faithful carrying out of their proper functions and responsibilities.
Chosen by God to be holy, serving the Church and all mankind, the deacon
should continually grow in awareness of his own ministerial character in a
manner that is balanced, responsible, solicitous and always joyful.

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Subjects
65. From the perspective of the deacon, primary protagonist and primary
subject of the obligation, ongoing formation is first and foremost a process
of continual conversion. It embraces every aspect of his person as deacon,
that is to say, consecrated by the Sacrament of Order and placed at the
service of the Church, and seeks to develop all of his potential. This enables
him to live to the full the ministerial gifts that he has received in diverse
circumstances of time and place and in the tasks assigned to him by the
bishop. (232) The solicitude of the Church for the permanent formation of
deacons would, however, be ineffective without their co-operation and
commitment. Thus formation cannot be reduced merely to participating at
courses or study days or other such activities: it calls for every deacon to be
aware of the need for ongoing formation and to cultivate it with interest and
in a spirit of healthy initiative. Books approved by ecclesiastical authority
should be chosen as material for reading; periodicals known for their
fidelity to the Magisterium should be followed; time should be set aside for
daily meditation. Constant self-formation which helps him to serve the
Church ever better is an important part of the service asked of every
deacon.
Formators
66. From the perspective of the bishops (233) (and their fellow workers in
the presbyterate), who bear responsibility for formation, ongoing formation
consists in helping the deacon to overcome any dualism that might exist
between spirituality and ministry and, more fundamentally, any dichotomy
between their civil profession and diaconal spirituality and “respond
generously to the commitment demanded by the dignity and the
responsibility which God conferred upon them through the sacrament of
Orders; in guarding, defending, and developing their specific identity and
vocation; and in sanctifying themselves and others through the exercise of
their ministry”. (234)
Both dimensions are complementary and reciprocal since they are founded,
with the help of supernatural gifts, in the interior unity of the person.
The assistance which formators are called to offer deacons will be
successful in as much as it responds to the personal needs of each deacon,
since every deacon lives his ministry in the Church as a unique person
placed in particular circumstances.
Personalized assistance to deacons also assures them of that love with
which mother Church is close to them as they strive to live faithfully the
sacramental grace of their calling. It is thus of supreme importance that
each deacon be able to choose a spiritual director, approved by the bishop,
with whom he can have regular and frequent contact.
The entire diocesan community is also, in some sense, involved in the
formation of deacons. (235) This is particularly true of the parish priest or
other priests charged with formation who should personally support them
with fraternal solicitude.

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Specificity
67. Personal concern and commitment in ongoing formation are
unequivocal signs of a coherent response to divine vocation, of sincere love
for the Church and of authentic pastoral zeal for the Christian faithful and
all men. What has been said of priests can also be applied to deacons:
“ongoing formation is a necessary means of reaching the object of
one's vocation which is service of God and one's people”. (236)
It must be seen in continuity with initial formation since it pursues the same
ends as initial formation and seeks to integrate, conserve and deepen what
was begun in initial formation.
The essential availability of the deacon to others is a practical expression of
sacramental configuration to Christ the Servant, received through
ordination and indelibly impressed upon the soul. It is a permanent
reminder to the deacon in his life and ministry. Hence permanent formation
cannot be reduced merely to complementary education or to a form of
training in better techniques. Ongoing formation cannot be confined simply
to updating, but should seek to facilitate a practical configuration of the
deacon's entire life to Christ who loves all and serves all.
Dimensions
68. Ongoing formation must include and harmonize all dimensions of the
life and ministry of the deacon. Thus, as with the permanent formation of
priests, it should be complete, systematic and personalized in its diverse
aspects whether human, spiritual, intellectual or pastoral. (237)
69. As in the past, attention to the various aspects of the human formation
of deacons is an important task for Pastors. The deacon, aware that he is
chosen as a man among men to be at the service of the salvation of all,
should be open to being helped in developing his human qualities as
valuable instruments for ministry. He should strive to perfect all those
aspects of his personality which might render his ministry more effective.
To fulfil successfully his vocation to holiness and his particular ecclesial
mission, he should, above all, fix his gaze on Him who is true God and true
man and practice the natural and supernatural virtues which conform him
more closely to the image of Christ and make him worthy of the respect of
the faithful. (238) In their ministry and daily life particularly, deacons
should foster in themselves kind-heartedness, patience, affability, strength
of character, zeal for justice, fidelity to promises given, a spirit of sacrifice
and consistency with tasks freely undertaken. The practice of these virtues
will assist in arriving at a balanced personality, maturity and discernment.
Conscious of the example of integrity in his social activity, the deacon
should reflect on his ability to dialogue, on correctness in human
relationships and on cultural discernment. He should also give careful
consideration to the value of friendship and to his treatment of others. (239)
70. Ongoing spiritual formation is closely connected with diaconal

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spirituality, which it must nourish and develop, and with the ministry,
which is sustained by “a truly personal encounter with Jesus, a
relationship with the Father and a profound experience of the
Spirit”. (240) Hence, deacons should be encouraged by the Pastors
of the Church to cultivate their spiritual lives in a responsible manner, for it
is from this life that springs up that love which sustains their ministry and
makes it fruitful, and prevents its reduction to mere
“functionalism” or bureaucracy.
In particular, the spiritual formation of deacons should inculcate those
attitudes related to the triple diaconia of word, liturgy and charity.
Assiduous meditation on Sacred Scripture will achieve familiarity and
worshipful dialogue with the living God and thus an assimilation of the
revealed word.
A profound knowledge of Tradition and of the liturgical books will help the
deacon to discover continually the riches of the divine mysteries and thus
become their worthy minister. A solicitude for fraternal charity will impel
him to practice the spiritual and corporal works of mercy, and provide
living signs of the Church's love.
All of this requires careful planning and organization of time and resources.
Improvisation should be avoided. In addition to spiritual direction, deacons
should try to pursue study courses on the great themes of the theological
tradition of Christian spirituality, intensive sessions in spirituality and
pilgrimages to places of spiritual interest.
While on retreat, which should be at least every other year, (241) deacons
should work out a spiritual programme which they should periodically
share with their spiritual directors. This programme should include a period
of daily eucharistic adoration and provide for exercises of Marian devotion,
liturgical prayer, personal meditation and the habitual ascetical practices.
The centre of this spiritual itinerary must be the Holy Eucharist since it is
the touchstone of the deacon's life and activity, the indispensable means of
perseverance, the criterion of authentic renewal and of a balanced synthesis
of life. In this way, the spiritual formation of the deacon will reveal the
Holy Eucharist as Passover, in its annual articulation in Holy Week, in its
weekly articulation on Sunday and in its constant articulation at daily Mass.
71. The insertion of deacons into the mystery of the Church, in virtue of
Baptism and their reception of the first grade of the Sacrament of Orders,
requires that ongoing formation strengthen in them the consciousness and
willingness to live in intelligent, active and mature communion with their
bishops and the priests of their dioceses, and with the Supreme Pontiff who
is the visible foundation of the entire Church's unity.
When formed in this way, they can become in their ministry effective
promoters of communion. In situations of conflict they, in particular, should
make every effort to restore peace for the good of the Church.

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72. The doctrine of the faith should be deepened by suitable initiatives such
as study days, renewal courses and the frequentation of academic
institutions. For the same reason, it would be particularly useful to promote
careful, in-depth and systematic study of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church.
It is necessary that deacons have an accurate knowledge of the Sacraments
of Holy Orders, the Holy Eucharist, Baptism and Matrimony. They must
develop a knowledge of those aspects of philosophy, ecclesiology, dogmatic
Theology, Sacred Scripture, and Canon Law which most assist them in their
ministry.
Such courses, while aimed at theological renewal, should also lead to
prayer, ecclesial communion and greater pastoral efforts in response to the
urgent need for new evangelization.
Under sure guidance, the documents of the Magisterium should be studied
in common, and in relation to the needs of the pastoral ministry, especially
those documents in which the Church responds to the more pressing moral
and doctrinal questions. Thus, with a sense of communion, deacons will be
enabled to achieve and express due obedience to the Pastor of the universal
Church and to diocesan bishops, as well as to promote fidelity to the
doctrine and discipline of the Church.
In addition, it is of the greatest use and relevance to study, appropriate and
diffuse the social doctrine of the Church. A good knowledge of that
teaching will permit many deacons to mediate it in their different
professions, at work and in their families. The diocesan bishop may also
invite those who are capable to specialize in a theological discipline and
obtain the necessary academic qualifications at those pontifical academies
or institutes recognized by the Apostolic See which guarantee doctrinally
correct formation.
Deacons should pursue systematic study not only to perfect their
theological knowledge but also to revitalize constantly their ministry in
view of the changing needs of the ecclesial community.
73. Together with study of the sacred sciences, appropriate measures should
be taken to ensure that deacons acquire a pastoral methodology (242) for an
effective ministry. Permanent pastoral formation consists, in the first place,
in constantly encouraging the deacon to perfect the effectiveness of his
ministry of making the love and service of Christ present in the Church and
in society without distinction, especially to the poor and to those most in
need. Indeed it is from the pastoral love of Christ that the ministry of
deacons draws its model and inspiration. This same love urges the deacon,
in collaboration with his bishop and the priests of his diocese, to promote
the mission of the laity in the world. He will thus be a stimulus “to
become ever better acquainted with the real situation of the men and
women to whom he is sent, to discern the call of the Spirit in the historical
circumstances in which he finds himself, and to seek the most suitable
methods and the most useful forms for carrying out his ministry
today”, (243) in loyal and convinced communion with the Supreme

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Pontiff and with his own bishop.
The effectiveness of the apostolate sometimes calls also for group work
requiring a knowledge and respect of the diversity and complementarity of
the gifts and respective functions of priests, deacons and the lay faithful,
within the organic nature of ecclesial communion.
Organization and means
74. The diversity of circumstances in the particular Churches makes it
difficult to give an exhaustive account of how best to organize the suitable
ongoing formation of permanent deacons. Yet it is necessary that all such
formation be accomplished by means which accord with theological and
pastoral clarity.
A few general criteria, easily applicable to diverse concrete circumstances,
may be mentioned in this respect.
75. The primary locus of ongoing formation for deacons is the ministry
itself. The deacon matures in its exercise and by focusing his own call to
holiness on the fulfilment of his social and ecclesial duties, in particular, of
his ministerial functions and responsibilities. The formation of deacons
should, therefore, concentrate in a special way on awareness of their
ministerial character.
76. Permanent formation must follow a well planned programme drawn up
and approved by competent authority. It must be unitary, divided into
progressive stages, and at the same time, in perfect harmony with the
Magisterium of the Church. It is better that the programme should insist on
a basic minimum to be followed by all deacons and which should be
distinct from later specialization courses.
Programmes such as this should take into consideration two distinct but
closely related levels of formation: the diocesan level, in reference to the
bishop or his delegate, and the community level in which the deacon
exercises his own ministry, in reference to the parish priest or some other
priest.
77. The first appointment of a deacon to a parish or a pastoral area is a very
sensitive moment. Introducing the deacon to those in charge of the
community (the parish priest, priests), and the community to the deacon,
helps them not only to come to know each other but contributes to a
collaboration based on mutual respect and dialogue, in a spirit of faith and
fraternal charity. The community into which a deacon comes can have a
highly important formative effect, especially when he realizes the
importance of respect for well proven traditions and knows how to listen,
discern, serve and love as Jesus Christ did.
Deacons in their initial pastoral assignments should be carefully supervised
by an exemplary priest especially appointed to this task by the bishop.
78. Periodic meetings should be arranged for deacons which treat of

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liturgical and spiritual matters, of continuous theological renewal and study,
either at diocesan or supra-diocesan level.
Under the bishop's authority and without multiplying existent structures,
periodic meeting should be arranged between priests, deacons, religious
and laity involved in pastoral work both to avoid compartmentalization or
the development of isolated groups and to guarantee co-ordinated unity for
different pastoral activities.
The bishop should show particular solicitude for deacons since they are his
collaborators. When possible he should attend their meetings and always
ensure the presence of his representative.
79. With the approval of the diocesan bishop, a realistic programme of
ongoing formation should be drawn up in accordance with the present
dispositions, taking due account of factors such as the age and
circumstances of deacons, together with the demands made on them by
their pastoral ministry.
To accomplish this task, the bishop might constitute a group of suitable
formators or seek the assistance of neighbouring dioceses.
80. It is desirable that the bishop set up a diocesan organization for the co-
ordination of deacons, to plan, co-ordinate and supervise the diaconal
ministry from the discernment of vocation, (244) to the exercise of ministry
and formation — including ongoing formation. This organization
should be composed of the Bishop as its president, or a priest delegated by
him for this task, and a proportionate number of deacons. This organization
should not be remiss in maintaining the necessary links with the other
diocesan organizations.
The Bishops should regulate the life and activity of this organization by the
issuance of appropriate norms.
81. In addition to the usual permanent formation offered to deacons, special
courses and initiatives should be arranged for those deacons who are
married. These courses should involve, where opportune, their wives and
families. However, they must always be careful to maintain the essential
distinction of roles and the clear independence of the ministry.
82. Deacons should always be appreciative of all those initiatives for the
ongoing formation of the clergy promoted by Conferences of bishops or
various dioceses — spiritual retreats, conferences, study days,
conventions, theological and pastoral courses. They should avail
themselves of such initiatives especially when they concern their own
ministry of evangelization, worship and loving service.
The Sovereign Pontiff, Pope John Paul II, has approved this present
Directory and ordered its publication.
Rome, at the Office of the Congregations, 22 February 1998, Feast of the
Chair of Peter.

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Darío Card. Castrillón Hoyos
Prefect
+ Csaba Ternyák
Titular Archbishop of Eminenziana
Secretary
PRAYER
TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
MARY,
Who as teacher of faith, by your obedience to the word of God, has co-
operated in a remarkable way with the work of redemption, make the
ministry of deacons effective by teaching them to hear the Word and to
proclaim it faithfully.
MARY,
Teacher of charity, who by your total openness to God's call, has co-
operated in bringing to birth all the Church's faithful, make the ministry and
the life of deacons fruitful by teaching them to give themselves totally to
the service of the People of God.
MARY,
Teacher of prayer, who through your maternal intercession has supported
and helped the Church from her beginnings, make deacons always attentive
to the needs of the faithful by teaching them to come to know the value of
prayer.
MARY,
Teacher of humility, by constantly knowing yourself to be the servant of the
Lord you were filled with the Holy Spirit, make deacons docile instruments
in Christ's work of redemption by teaching them the greatness of being the
least of all.
MARY,
Teacher of that service which is hidden, who by your everyday and ordinary
life filled with love, knew how to co-operate with the salvific plan of God
in an exemplary fashion, make deacons good and faithful servants, by
teaching them the joy of serving the Church with an ardent love.
Amen

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INDEX
JOINT DECLARATION AND INTRODUCTION
Joint declaration
Introduction
I. The Ordained Ministry
II. The Diaconate
III. The Permanent Diaconate
BASIC NORMS FOR THE FORMATION OF PERMANENT DEACONS
Introduction
1. The paths of formation
2. Reference to a sure theology of the diaconate
3. The ministry of the deacon in different pastoral contexts
4. Diaconal spirituality
5. The role of Episcopal Conferences
6. Responsibility of Bishops
7. The permanent diaconate in institutes of consecrated life and in societies
of apostolic life
I. Those involved in the formation of permanent deacons
1. The Church and the Bishop
2. Those responsible for formation
3. Professors
4. The formation community of permanent deacons
5. Communities of origin
6. Aspirant and candidate
II. Characteristics of candidates for the permanent diaconate
1. General requirements
2. Requirements related to the candidate's state of life

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a) Unmarried
b) Married
c) Widowers
d) Members of institutes of consecrated life and of societies of apostolic life
III. The path of formation towards the permanent diaconate
1. The presentation of aspirants
2. The propaedeutic period
3. The liturgical rite of admission to candidacy for ordination as deacon
4. Time of formation
5. Conferral of the ministries of lector and acolyte
6. Diaconate ordination
IV. The dimensions of the formation of permanent deacons
1. Human formation
2. Spiritual formation
3. Doctrinal formation
4. Pastoral formation
Conclusion
DIRECTORY FOR THE MINISTRY AND LIFE OF PERMANENT
DEACONS
1. The Juridical Status of Deacons
Sacred minister
Incardination
2. The Diaconal Ministry
Diaconal functions
Diaconia of the word
Diaconia of the liturgy
The diaconia of charity

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The canonical mission of permanent deacons
3. The Spirituality of the Deacon
Contemporary context
Vocation to holiness 0
The relations of Holy Order
Aids to the spiritual life
Spirituality of deacons and states of life
4. Continuing Formation of Deacons
Characteristics
Motivation
Subjects
Specificity
Dimensions
Organization and means
Prayer to the Blessed Virgin Mary
(1) Cf. Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts,
Chiarimenti circa il valore vincolante dell'art. 66 del Direttorio per il
Ministero e la Vita dei Presbiteri (22 October 1994), in “Sacrum
Ministerium” 2 (1995), p. 263.
(2) This introduction is common both to the “Ratio” and to
the “Directory”. It should always be included in both
documents in the event of their being printed separately. (3) Second Vatican
Council, Lumen gentium, 18.
(4) Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1581.
(5) Cf. ibidem, n. 1536.
(6) Cf. ibidem, n. 1538.
(7) Ibidem, n. 875.
(8) Second Vatican Council, Lumen gentium, 28.

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(9) Cf. ibidem, n. 20; CIC, canon 375, § 1.
(10) Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 876.
(11) Cf. ibidem, n. 877.
(12) Cf. ibidem, n. 878.
(13) Ibidem, n. 879.
(14) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Lumen gentium, 29; Paul VI, Apostolic
Letter Ad pascendum (15 August 1972), AAS 64 (1972), p. 534.
(15) Moreover, he also describes several of the sixty who collaborated with
him as deacons: Timothy (1 Thes 3:2), Epophros (Col 1:7), Tychicus (Col
3:7; Eph 6:2).
(16) Cf. Epistula ad Philadelphenses, 4; Epistula ad Smyrnaeos, 12, 2:
Epistula ad Magnesios, 6, 1; F. X. Funk (ed.) Patres Apostolici, Tubingae
1901; pp. 266-267; 286-287; 234-235; 244-245.
(17) Cf. Didascalia Apostolorum (Syriac), capp. III, XI: A. Vööbus (ed.)
The Didascalia Apostolorum (Syriac with English translation), CSCO, vol.
I, n. 402 (t. 176), pp. 29-30; vol. II, n. 408 (t. 180), pp. 120-129; Didascalia
Apostolorum, III, 13 (19), 1-7: F. X. Funk (ed.), Didascalia et
Constitutiones Apostolorum, Paderborn 1906, I, pp. 212-216.
(18) Cf. canons 32 and 33 of the Council of Elvira (300303): PL 84, 305;
canons 16 (15), 18, 21 of the first Council of Arles. CCL, 148, pp. 12-13;
canons 15, 16, and 18 of the Council of Nicea: Conciliorum
Oecumenicorum Decreta, bilingual edition of G. Alberigo, G.L. Dossetti,
Cl. Leonardi, P. Prodi, cons. of H. Jedin, ed. Dehoniane, Bologna 1991, pp.
13-15.
(19) In the first period of Christianity, every local Church needed a number
of deacons proportionate to her numbers so that they might be known and
helped (cf. Didascalia Apostolorum, III, 12 (16): F. X. Funk, ed. cit., I, p.
208). In Rome Pope St Fabian (236-250) divided the City into seven zones
(or “regiones”, later called “diaconiae”) in
charge of each of which was placed a deacon (“regionarius”)
for the promotion of charity and assistance to the poor. Analogous diaconal
structures were to be found in many cities of the east and west during the
third and fourth centuries.
(20) Cf. Council of Trent, Session XXIII, Decreta de Reformatione, canon
17: Conciliorum Oecumenicorum Decreta, ed. cit., p. 750.
(21) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution, Lumen gentium, 29.
(22) AAS 59 (1967), pp. 697-704.
(23) AAS 60 (1968), pp. 369-373.

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(24) AAS 64 (1972), pp. 534-540.
(25) Ten canons speak explicitly of permanent deacons: 236; 276, § 2, 3o;
288; 1031, §§ 2-3; 1032, § 3; 1035, § 1; 1037; 1042, 1o; 1050, 3o.
(26) Cf. CIC, canon 1031, § 1.
(27) Paul VI, Apostolic Letter, Sacrum diaconatus ordinem (18 June 1968):
AAS 59 (1967), p. 698.
(28) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium,
29; Decree Ad gentes, 16; Decree Orientalium Ecclesiarum, 17; Allocution
of John Paul II of 16 March 1985, n. 1: Insegnamenti, VIII, 2 (1985), p.
648.
(29) Catechesis of John Paul II at the General Audience of 6 October 1993,
n. 5, Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 954.
(30) “A particularly felt need behind the decision to restore the
permanent diaconate was that of a greater and more direct presence of
sacred ministers in areas such as the family, work, schools etc. as well as in
the various ecclesial structures”. Catechesis of John Paul II at the
General Audience of 6 October 1993 n. 6, Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p.
954.
(31) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium,
29b.
(32) Cf. ibidem, Decree Ad gentes, 16.
(33) Ibidem, Decree Ad gentes, 16. Cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church,
n. 1571.
***
(1) Cf Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem (18 June 1967): AAS
59 (1967), pp. 697-704. The Apostolic Letter, at Ch. II, which is dedicated
to younger candidates, prescribes: “6. Young men who are to be
trained for the office of deacon should go to a special institution where they
can be tested, trained to live a truly evangelical life, and instructed on how
to perform usefully the duties of their future state. 9. The period of
preparation for the diaconate as such should run for a period of at least
three years. The course of studies should be arranged in such a way that the
candidates make orderly and gradual progress toward gaining an
understanding of the various duties of the diaconate and toward being able
to carry them out effectively. The whole course of studies might well be so
planned that in the last year special training will be given in the principal
functions to be carried out by the deacon. 10. In addition, there should be
practice in teaching the fundamentals of the Christian religion to children
and others of the faithful, in teaching people to sing sacred music and lead
them in it, in reading the books of Scripture at gatherings of the faithful, in
giving talks to the people, in administering those sacraments which deacons

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may administer, in visiting the sick and, in general, in carrying out the
ministries which may be required of them”. The same Apostolic
Letter, at Chapter III, which is dedicated to older candidates, prescribes:
“14. It is desirable for these deacons, too, to acquire a good deal of
doctrine, as was said in nos. 8, 9 and 10 above, or at least for them to have
the knowledge which the episcopal conference may judge they will need to
fulfil their functions properly. They should therefore be admitted to a
special institution for a certain length of time in order to learn all they will
have to know to carry out worthily the office of deacon. 15. But if for some
reason this cannot be done, then the candidate should be entrusted to some
priest of outstanding virtue who will take a special interest in him and teach
him, and who will be able to testify to his maturity and prudence”.
(2) The Circular Letter of the Congregation indicated that courses must take
into consideration the study of sacred scripture, dogma, moral, canon law,
liturgy, “technical training, in order to prepare the candidates for
certain activities of the ministry, such as psychology, catechetical pedagogy,
public speaking, sacred song, organisation of Catholic groups, ecclesiastical
administration, keeping up to date the registers of baptism, confirmation,
marriage, deaths, etc.”.
(3) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum (15 August 1972), VII b): AAS 64
(1972), p. 540.
(4) Cf John Paul II, Post-synodal Ap. Exhort. Pastores dabo vobis (25
March 1992), 12: AAS 84 (1992), pp. 675-676.
(5) Cf Ecum. Council Vat. II, Dogm. Const. Lumen gentium, 28; 29.
(6) The Pontificale Romanum – De Ordinatione Episcopi,
Presbyterorum et Diaconorum, Editio typica altera, Typis Polyglottis
Vaticanis 1990, p. 101, cites at n. 179 of the “Praenotanda”,
relative to the ordination of deacons, the expression “in ministerio
Episcopi ordinantur” taken from the Traditio apostolica, 8 (SCh,
11bis, pp. 58-59), as taken from the Constitutiones Ecclesiae Aegypticae
III, 2: F. X. Funk (ed.), Didascalia et Constitutiones Apostolorum, II,
Paderbornae 1905, p. 103.
(7) “(They should be) compassionate, industrious, walking
according to the truth of the Lord, who was the servant of all” (St
Polycarp, Epist. ad Philippenses, 5, 2: F. X. Funk [ed.], Patres Apostolici, I,
Tubingae 1901, pp. 300-302).
(8) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum, Introduction: l.c., pp. 534-538.
(9) Cf Pontificale Romanum – De Ordinatione Episcopi,
Presbyterorum et Diaconorum, n. 207: ed. cit., pp. 115-122.
(10) Cf Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1570.
(11) Ibidem, n. 1588.

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(12) Cf Ecum. Council Vat. II, Decr. Christus Dominus, 15.
(13) Cf C.I.C., can. 266.
(14) Cf Ecum. Council Vat. II, Dogm. Const. Lumen gentium, 29.
(15) Cf Pontificale Romanum – De Ordinatione Episcopi,
Presbyterorum et Diaconorum, n. 210: ed. cit., p. 125.
(16) Cf Ecum. Council Vat. II, Dogm. Const. Lumen gentium, 29.
(17) Cf ibidem.
(18) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, I, 1: l.c., p. 699.
(19) Cf C.I.C., can. 276, § 2, 3o.
(20) Cf ibidem, can. 1031, § 3.
(21) Ecum. Council Vat. II, Decr. Optatam totius, 1.
(22) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, VII, 32: l.c., p. 703.
(23) Ibidem, VII, 35: l.c., p. 704.
(24) Ecum. Council Vat. II, Dogm. Const. Lumen gentium, 64.
(25) Ibidem, 8.
(26) Equivalent to the Diocesan Bishop in this regard are those to whom the
following have been entrusted: territorial prelature, territorial abbey,
apostolic vicariate, apostolic prefecture and a stably erected apostolic
administration (cf C.I.C., cans. 368; 381, § 2) as well as the personal
prelature (cf C.I.C., cans. 266, § 1; 295) and the military ordinariate (cf
John Paul II, Apost. Const. Spirituali militum curae [21 April 1986], art. I,
§ 1; art. II, § 1: AAS 78 [1986], pp. 482; 483).
(27) Cf C.I.C., cans. 1025; 1029.
(28) This also includes the director of the specific house of formation,
wherever it exists (cf C.I.C., can. 236, 1o).
(29) John Paul II, Post-synodal Ap. Exhort. Pastores dabo vobis, 68: l.c.,
pp. 775-776.
(30) Ibidem, 69: l.c., p. 778.
(31) Ibidem, 36: l.c., pp. 715-716.
(32) Catechismus ex decreto Concilii Tridentini ad Parochos, pars II, c. 7,
n. 3, Turin 1914, p. 288.

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(33) Didachè, 15, 1: F. X. Funk (ed.), Patres Apostolici, I, o.c., pp. 32-35.
(34) St Polycarp, Epist. ad Philippenses, 5, 1-2: F. X. Funk (ed.), Patres
Apostolici, I, o.c., pp. 300-302.
(35) C.I.C., can. 1029. Cf can. 1051, 1o.
(36) Cf Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, II, 8: l.c., p. 700.
(37) Cf C.I.C., cans. 285, §§ 1-2; 289; Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum
diaconatus ordinem, III, 17: l.c., p. 701.
(38) C.I.C., can. 1031, § 2. Cf Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus
ordinem, II, 5; III, 12: l.c., pp. 699; 700. Can. 1031, § 3 prescribes that
“Bishops' Conferences may issue a regulation which requires a later
age”.
(39) Cf C.I.C., cans. 1040-1042. The irregularities (perpetual impediments)
listed by can. 1041 are: 1) any form of insanity or other psychological
infirmity, because of which he is, after experts have been consulted, judged
incapable of properly fulfilling the ministry; 2) the offences of apostasy,
heresy or schism; 3) attempted marriage, even a civil marriage; 4) wilful
homicide or actually procured abortion; 5) grave mutilation of self or
others, and attempted suicide; 6) illicit completion of acts of order. The
simple impediments, listed by can. 1042, are: 1) the exercise of an office or
administration forbidden to, or inappropriate to, the clerical state; 2) the
state of being a neophyte (except when the Ordinary decides otherwise).
(40) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, II, 4: l.c., p. 699. Cf
Ecum. Council Vat. II, Dogm. Const. Lumen gentium, 29.
(41) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, III, 13: l.c., p. 700.
(42) Ibidem, III, 11: l.c., p. 700. Cf C.I.C., cans. 1031, § 2; 1050, 3o.
(43) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, III, 16: l.c., p. 701; Ap.
Lett. Ad pascendum, VI: l.c., p. 539; C.I.C., can. 1087.
(44) The Circular Letter, Prot. n. 26397 of 6 June 1997, of the Congregation
for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments envisages that one
only of the following conditions be sufficient for obtaining dispensation
from the impediment found in can. 1087: the great and proven usefulness of
the ministry of the deacon to the diocese to which he belongs; that he has
children of such a tender age as to be in need of motherly care; that he has
parents or parents in law who are elderly and in need of care.
(45) Cf Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, VII, 32-35: l.c., pp.
703-704.
(46) Cf Idem, Ap. Lett. Ecclesiae sanctae (6 August 1966), I, 25, § 1: AAS
58 (1966), p. 770.

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(47) Cf C.I.C., can. 1026.
(48) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum, Introduction; cf I a): l.c., pp. 537-
538. Cf C.I.C., can. 1034, § 1. The rite for admission among the candidates
for Holy Order is found in the Pontificale Romanum – De
Ordinatione Episcopi, Presbyterorum et Diaconorum, Appendix, II: ed. cit.,
pp. 232ff.
(49) Cf C.I.C., cans. 1016; 1019.
(50) Cf ibidem, can. 1034, § 1; Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum, I a): l.c.,
p. 538.
(51) Cf C.I.C., can. 236 and numbers 41-44 of the present Ratio.
(52) C.I.C., can. 236, 1o. Cf Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem,
II, 6: l.c., p. 699.
(53) Ibidem, II, 7: l.c., p. 699.
(54) C.I.C., can. 236, 2o.
(55) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Sacrum diaconatus ordinem, III, 15: l.c., p. 701.
(56) C.I.C., can. 1035, § 1.
(57) Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum, II: l.c., p. 539; Ap. Lett. Ministeria
quaedam (15 August 1972), XI: AAS 64 (1972), p. 533.
(58) Idem, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum, Introduction: l.c., p. 538.
(59) Cf Idem, Ap. Lett. Ministeria quaedam, VIII a): l.c., p. 533.
(60) Cf Pontificale Romanum – De Institutione Lectorum et
Acolythorum, Editio typica, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1972.
(61) Cf Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ministeria quaedam, X: l.c., p. 533; Ap. Lett. Ad
pascendum, IV: l.c., p. 539.
(62) C.I.C., can. 1035, § 2.
(63) Ibidem, can. 1036. Cf Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum, V: l.c., p. 539.
(64) Cf C.I.C., can. 1050.
(65) Cf ibidem, cans. 1050, 3o; 1031, § 2.
(66) Ibidem, can. 1051, 1o.
(67) Ibidem, can. 1051, 2o.
(68) Cf ibidem, can. 1028. For the obligations which ordinands assume with

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the diaconate, see canons 273-289. In addition, for married deacons, there
is the impediment to contracting new marriages (cf can. 1087).
(69) Cf ibidem, can. 1037; Paul VI, Ap. Lett. Ad pascendum, VI: l.c., p.
539.
(70) Cf Pontificale Romanum – De Ordinatione Episcopi,
Presbyterorum et Diaconorum, n. 177: ed. cit., p. 101.
(71) Cf C.I.C., can. 833, 6o; Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,
Professio fidei et Iusiurandum fidelitatis in suscipiendo officio nomine
Ecclesiae exercendo: AAS 81 (1989), pp. 104-106; 1169.
(72) C.I.C., can. 1015, § 1.
(73) Cf ibidem, can. 1019.
(74) Pontificale Romanum – De Ordinatione Episcopi,
Presbyterorum et Diaconorum, cap. III, De Ordinatione diaconorum: ed.
cit., pp. 100-142.
(75) Cf C.I.C., cans. 1010-1011.
(76) Ibidem, can. 1039.
(77) John Paul II, Post-synodal Ap. Exhort. Pastores dabo vobis, 43: l.c., p.
732.
(78) Ibidem: l.c., pp. 732-733.
(79) Cf ibidem: l.c., p. 733.
(80) Idem, Encycl. Lett. Redemptor hominis (4 March 1979), 10: AAS 71
(1979), p. 274.
(81) Cf Idem, Post-synodal Ap. Exhort. Pastores dabo vobis, 44: l.c., p.
734.
(82) Cf ibidem: l.c., pp. 734-735.
(83) Cf Idem, Ap. Exhort. Familiaris consortio (22 November 1981): AAS
74 (1982), pp. 81-191.
(84) Idem, Post-synodal Ap. Exhort. Pastores dabo vobis, 44: l.c., p. 735.
(85) Cf the presentation of the Book of the Gospels, in Pontificale
Romanum – De Ordinatione Episcopi, Presbyterorum et
Diaconorum, n. 210: ed. cit., p. 125.
(86) This refers to the Apostolic Letter of Paul VI, Sacrum diaconatus
ordinem, n. 22: l.c., pp. 701-702.

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(87) Cf Congregation for Catholic Education, Circ. Lett. Come è a
conoscenza (16 July 1969), p. 2.
(88) Cf ibidem, p. 3.
(89) John Paul II, Post-synodal Ap. Exhort. Pastores dabo vobis, 57: l.c., p.
758.
(90) Cf Congregation for Catholic Education, Circ. Lett. Come è a
conoscenza, p. 3.
(91) Cf Ecum. Council Vat. II, Decr. Presbyterorum ordinis, 10; Decr. Ad
gentes, 20.
(92) Didascalia Apostolorum, III, 13 (19), 3: F. X. Funk (ed.), Didascalia
et Constitutiones Apostolorum, I, o.c., pp. 214-215.
***
(34) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
28a.
(35) Cf. CIC, canon 1034, § 1; Paul VI, Ad Pascendum, I, a: l.c., 538.
(36) Cf. CIC, canons 265-266.
(37) Cf. CIC, canons 1034, § 1, 1016, 1019; Apostolic Constitution
Spirituali Militum Curae, VI, §§ 3-4; CIC, canon 295, § 1.
(38) Cf. CIC, canons 267-268c § 1.
(39) Cf. CIC, canon 271.
(40) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 30:
l.c., 703.
(41) Cf. CIC, canon 678, §§ 1-3; 715; 738; cf. also Paul VI, Apostolic
Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, VII, 33-35: l.c., 704.
(42) Letter of the Secretariat of State to the Cardinal Prefect of the
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments,
Prot. N. 122.735, of 3 January 1984.
(43) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree Christus Dominus, n. 15; Paul VI
Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, 23; l.c., 702.
(44) Pontificale Romanum, De Ordinatione Episcopi, Presbyterorum et
Diaconorum, n. 201, (editio typica altera), Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis,
1990, p. 110; cf. CIC, canon 273.
(45) “Those dominated by an outlook of contestation or of
opposition to authority cannot adequately fulfil the functions of the

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diaconate. The diaconate can only be conferred on those who believe in the
value of the pastoral mission of bishops and priests and in the assistance of
the Holy Spirit who helps them in their activities and in the decisions they
take. It should be recalled that the deacon must ?profess respect and
obedience to the bishop'. The service of the deacon is directed to a
particular Christian community for which he should develop a profound
attachment both to its mission and divine institution” (Catechesis of
John Paul II at the General Audience of 20 October 1993, n. 2,
Insegnamenti, XVI, 2, [1993], p. 1055).
(46) CIC, canon 274, § 2.
(47) “Among the duties of the deacon there is that of ?promoting
and sustaining the apostolic activities of the laity'. Being more present and
active in the secular world than priests, deacons should strive to promote
greater closeness between ordained ministers and activities of the laity for
the common service of the Kingdom of God” (Catechesis of John
Paul II at the General Audience of 13 October 1993, n. 5, Insegnamenti,
XVI, 2 [1993], pp. 1002-1003); cf. CIC, canon 275.
(48) Cf. CIC, canon 282.
(49) Cf. CIC, canon 288 referring to canon 284.
(50) Cf. CIC, canon 284; Directory for the Ministry and Life of Priests of
the Congregation for the Clergy (31 January 1994), pp. 66-67. Clarification
of the Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts on the
binding character of article 66 (22 October 1994) in Sacrum Ministerium, 2
(1995), p. 263.
(51) Cf CIC, canon 669.
(52) Cf. CIC, canon 278, §§ 1-2, explicating canon 215.
(53) Cf. CIC, canon 278, § 3 and canon 1374; also the declaration of the
German Bishops' Conference “The Church and
Freemasonry” (28 February 1980).
(54) Congregation for the Clergy, Quidam Episcopi (8 March 1982), IV:
AAS 74 (1982), pp. 642-645.
(55) Cf. CIC, canon 299, § 3, and canon 304.
(56) Cf CIC, canon 305.
(57) Cf. Allocution of John Paul II to the Bishops of Zaïre on “Ad
Limina” visit, 30 April 1983, Insegnamenti, VI, 1 (1983), pp. 112-
113. Allocution to Permanent Deacons (16 March 1985), Insegnamenti,
VIII, 1 (1985), pp. 648-650. Cf. also idem. Allocution at the ordination of
eight new Bishops in Kinshasa (4 May 1980), 3-5 Insegnamenti, 1 (1980),
pp. 1111-1114; Catechesis at the General Audience of 6 October 1983

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Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1983), pp. 951-955.
(58) Lumen Gentium, 33; cf. CIC, canon 225.
(59) Cf. CIC, canon 288, referring to canon 285, §§ 3-4.
(60) Cf. CIC, canon 288 referring to canon 286.
(61) Cf. CIC, canon 222, § 2, and also canon 225, § 2.
(62) Cf. CIC, canon 672.
(63) Cf. CIC, canon 287, § 1.
(64) Cf. CIC, canon 288.
(65) Cf. CIC, canon 287, § 2.
(66) Cf. CIC, canon 283.
(67) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, 21: l.c.,
701.
(68) Cf. CIC, canon 281.
(69) “Since clerics dedicate themselves to the ecclesiastical ministry,
they deserve the remuneration that befits their condition, taking into
account the nature of their office and the conditions of time and place. It is
to be such that it provides for the necessities of their life and for the just
remuneration of those whose services they need” (CIC, canon 281, §
1).
(70) “Suitable provision is likewise to be made for such social
welfare as they may need in infirmity, sickness or old age” (CIC,
canon 281, § 2).
(71) CIC, canon 281, § 3. The canonical term “remuneration”
as distinct from civil law usage, denotes more than a stipend in the
technical sense of this term. It connotes that income, due in justice, which
permits a decent upkeep, congruent with the ministry.
(72) Ibid., canon 1274, § 1.
(73) Ibid., canon 1274, § 2.
(74) Ibid., canon 281, § 1.
(75) Cf. ibidem, canon 281, § 3.
(76) Cf. ibid., canon 281, § 3.

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(77) Cf. ibid., canons 290-293.
(78) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 29.
(79) John Paul II, Allocution to permanent deacons (16 March 1985), n. 2:
Insegnamenti, VIII, 1 (1985), p. 649; cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution. Lumen Gentium, 29; CIC, canon 1008.
(80) Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity Directory on
the applications of the principles and norms on ecumenism, (25 March
1993), 71: AAS 85 (1993), p. 1069; cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Communionis notio (28 May 1992), AAS 85 [1993], pp. 838f.
(81) Ibid., 70: l.c., p. 1068.
(82) Pontificale Romanum, n. 210: ed. cit., p. 125: “Accipe
Evangelium Christi, cuius praeco effectus es; et vide, ut quod legeris
credas, quod credideris doceas, quod docueris imiteris”.
(83) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
29. “Deacons are also to serve the People of God in the ministry of
the word, in union with the bishop and his presbyterium” (CIC,
canon 757); “By their preaching, deacons participate in the priestly
ministry” (John Paul II, Allocution to Priests, Deacons, Religious
and Seminarians in the Basilica of the Oratory of St. Joseph, Montreal,
Canada (11 September 1984), n. 9: Insegnamenti, VII, 2 (1984), p. 436.
(84) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 4.
(85) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum, 25;
Congregation for Catholic Education, circular letter Come è a conoscenza;
CIC, canon 760.
(86) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 25a;
Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum, 10a.
(87) Cf. CIC, canon 753.
(88) Cf. ibid., canon 760.
(89) Cf. ibid., canon 769.
(90) Cf Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, n. 61: Missale Romanum,
Ordo lectionis Missae, Praenotanda, n. 8, 24 and 50: ed. typica altera,
1981.
(91) Cf. CIC, canon 764.
(92) Congregation for the Clergy, Directory on the Ministry and Life of
Priests, Tota Ecclesia (31 January 1994), nn. 45-47: l.c., 43-48.
(93) Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, nn. 42, 61; Congregation for

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the Clergy, Pontifical Council for the Laity, Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments, Congregation for Bishops, Congregation for the
Evangelization of Peoples, Congregation for the Institutes of Consecrated
Life and the Societies of Apostolic Life, Pontifical Council for the
Interpretation of Legislative Texts, Instruction concerning some questions
on the collaboration of the lay faithful in the ministry of priests, Ecclesiae
de Mysterio (15 August 1997), art. 3.
(94) Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 35; cf.
52; CIC, canon 767, § 1.
(95) Cf. CIC, canon 779; cf. Congregation for the Clergy, General
Directory for Catechesis, (15 agosto 1997) n. 216.
(96) Paul VI, Apostolic Exhortation, Evangelii Nuntiandi, 8 December
1975): AAS 68 (1976), pp. 576.
(97) Cf. ibid., canons 804-805.
(98) Cf. ibid., canon 810.
(99) Cf. ibid., canon 761.
(100) Cf. ibid., canon 822.
(101) Cf. ibid., canon 823, § 1.
(102) Ibid., canon 831, §§ 1-2.
(103) Second Vatican Council, Decree Ad Gentes, 2a.
(104) Cf. CIC, canons 784, 786.
(105) Second Vatican Council, Decree Ad Gentes, 16; Pontificale
Romanum, n. 207: ed. cit., p. 122 (Prex Ordinationis).
(106) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
29.
(107) Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 10.
(108) Ibid., 7d.
(109) Cf. ibid., 22, 3; CIC, canons 841, 846.
(110) Cf. CIC, canon 840.
(111) Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1570; cf. Caeremoniale
Episcoporum, nn. 23-26.
(112) “Deacons have a share in the celebration of divine worship in

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accordance with the provisions of law” (CIC, canon 835, § 3).
(113) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium,
26-27.
(114) Cf. CIC, canon 846, § 1.
(115) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitutions Sacrosanctum Concilium,
28.
(116) Cf. CIC, canon 929.
(117) Cf. Institutio generalis Missalis Romani, nn, 81b, 300, 302; Institutio
generalis Liturgiae Horarum, n. 255; Pontificale Romanum, nn. 23, 24, 28,
29, editio typica, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1977, pp. 29 and 90; Rituale
Romanum, n. 36, editio typica, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1985, p. 18;
Ordo Coronandi Imaginem Beatae Mariae Virginis, n. 12, editio typica,
Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1981, p. 10; Congregation for Divine Worship,
Directory for celebrations in the absence of a priest, Christi Ecclesia, n 38,
in “Notitiae” 24 (1988), pp. 388-389; Pontificale Romanum,
nn. 188: (“Immediate post Precem Ordinationis, Ordinati stola
diaconali et dalmatica induuntur quo eorum ministerium abhinc in liturgia
peragendum manifestatur”) and 190; ed. cit., pp. 102, 103;
Caeremoniale Episcoporum, n. 67, editio typica, Libreria Editrice Vaticana
1995, pp. 28-29.
(118) CIC, canon 861, § 1.
(119) Cf. ibid., canon 530, n. 1o.
(120) Cf. ibid., canon 862.
(121) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 22, 1:
l.c., 701.
(122) Cf. Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani, nn. 61; 127-141.
(123) Cf. CIC, canon 930, § 2.
(124) Cf. ibid., canon 907; Congregation for the Clergy etc., Instruction
Ecclesiae de Mysterio (15 August 1997), art. 6.
(125) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 22, 6:
l.c., 702.
(126) Cf. CIC, canon 910, § 1.
(127) Cf. ibid., canon 911, § 2.
(128) Cf. ibid., canon 943 and also Pope Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum
Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 22, 3: l.c., 702.

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(129) Cf. Congregation for Divine Worship, Directory for celebrations in
the absence of a priest, Christi Ecclesia, n. 38: l.c., 388-389; Congregation
for the Clergy etc., Instruction Ecclesiae de Mysterio (15 August 1997), art.
7.
(130) Cf. John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris
Consortio, 73: AAS 74 (22 November, 1982), pp. 107-171.
(131) Cf. CIC, canon 1063.
(132) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution Lumen Gentium 29; CIC,
canon 1108, §§ 1-2; Ordo Celebrandi Matrimonii, ed. typica altera 1991,
24.
(133) Cf. CIC, canon 1111, §§ 1-2.
(134) Cf. ibidem, canon 137, §§ 3-4.
(135) Exultate Deo of the Council of Florence (DS 1325); Doctrina de
sacramento extremae unctionis of the Council of Trent, cap. 3 (DS 1697)
and cap. 4 de extrema unctione (DS 1719).
(136) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem II, 10:
l.c.,699; Congregation for the Clergy etc., Instruction, Ecclesiae de
Mysterio (15 August 1997), art. 9.
(137) Cf. CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 3o.
(138) Cf. Institutio Generalis Liturgiae Horarum, nn. 20; 255-256.
(139) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium
60; CIC, canon 1166 and canon 1168; Catechism of the Catholic Church, n.
1667.
(140) Cf. CIC, canon 1169, § 3.
(141) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem V, 22, 5:
l.c., 702; also Ordo Exsequiarum, 19; Congregation for the Clergy etc.,
Instruction Ecclesiae de Mysterio (15 August 1997), art. 12.
(142) Cf. Rituale Romanum - De Benedictionibus, n. 18 c.: ed. cit, p. 14.
(143) Cf. CIC, canon 129, § 1.
(144) St. Polycarp, Epist. ad Philippenses, 5, 2; F. X. Funk (ed.), I, p. 300;
cited in Lumen Gentium, 29.
(145) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem l.c., 698.
(146) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 29.
(147) Pontificale Romanum - De ordinatione Episcopi, presbyterorum et

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diaconorum, n. 207, p. 122 (Prex Ordinationis).
(148) Hippolytus, Traditio Apostolica, 8, 24; S. Ch. 11 bis pp. 58-63, 98-99;
Didascalia Apostolorum (Syriac), chapters III and IX; A. Vööbus (ed) The
“Didascalia Apostolorum” in Syriac (original text in Syriac
with an English translation), CSCO vol. I, n. 402 (tome 176), pp. 29-30;
vol. II, n. 408 (tome 180), pp. 120-129; Didascalia Apostolorum, III (19),
1-7: F. X. Funk (ed.), Didascalia et Constitutiones Apostolorum,
Paderbornae 1906, I, pp. 212-216; Second Vatican Council, Decree
Christus Dominus, 13.
(149) Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 40-
45.
(150) Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 22, 9; l.c.,
702. Cf. John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 13 October
1993, n. 5: Insegnamenti XVI, 2 (1993), pp. 1000-1004.
(151) Cf. CIC, canon 494.
(152) Cf. CIC, canon 493.
(153) Cf. John Paul II, Address to the permanent deacons of the USA,
Detroit (19 September 1987), n. 3, Insegnamenti, X, 3 (1987), p. 656.
(154) Cf. CIC, canon 157.
(155) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
27a.
(156) Cf. CIC, canon 519.
(157) Cf. CIC, canon 517, § 1.
(158) Cf. CIC, canon 517, § 2.
(159) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 22, 10;
l.c., 702.
(160) Cf. CIC, canon 1248 § 2; Congregation for Divine Worship,
Directory for celebrations in the absence of the priest, Christi Ecclesia, 29,
l.c., 386.
(161) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 13 October 1993,
n. 4: Insegnamenti XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1002.
(162) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 24;
l.c., 702; CIC, canon 536.
(163) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 24;
l.c., 702; CIC, canon 512, § 1.

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(164) Cf. CIC, canon 463, § 2.
(165) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
28; Decree Christus Dominus, 27; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 7; CIC,
canon 495, § 1.
(166) CIC, canon 482.
(167) CIC, canon 1421, § 1.
(168) CIC, canon 1424.
(169) CIC, canon 1428, § 2.
(170) CIC, canon 1435.
(171) CIC, canon 483, § 1.
(172) CIC, canon 1420, § 4, canon 553 § 1.
(173) Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 2.
(174) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 5.
(175) Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 2b.
(176) Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 4a.
(177) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 40.
(178) Second Vatican Council, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12a.
(179) Second Vatican Council, Decree Ad Gentes, 16.
(180) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 20 October 1993,
n. 1: Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1053.
(181) “All of Christ's faithful, each according to his or her own
condition, must make a wholehearted effort to lead a holy life and to
promote the growth of the Church and its continual sanctification”
(CIC, canon 210).
(182) These “being at the service of the ministers of Christ and of
the Church must keep themselves from all vice and be pleasing to God and
dedicate themselves to those works considered good in the sight of
man” (cf. 1 Tit 3; 8-18 and 12-13): Second Vatican Council,
Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 41; Cf. also Paul VI, Apostolic
Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 25: l.c., 702.
(183) “Clerics have a special obligation to seek holiness in their
lives because they are consecrated to God by a new title through the
reception of orders, and they are stewards of the mysteries of God in the

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service of His people” (CIC, canon 276, § 1).
(184) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 20 October 1993,
n. 2: Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1054.
(185) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 20 October 1993,
n. 1. Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1054.
(186) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 20 October 1993,
n. 1: Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1054.
(187) John Paul II allocution of 6 March 1985, n. 2: Insegnamenti, VIII, 1
(1985), p. 649. Post Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis, 3,
21: l.c., 661, 688.
(188) Cf. John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 16: l.c., 681.
(189) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 20 October 1993,
n. 2: Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1055.
(190) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, V, 23:
l.c., 702.
(191) Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Redemptor Hominis (4 March
1979), nn 13-17: AAS 71 (1979), pp. 282-300.
(192) Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, II, 8: l.c.,
700.
(193) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 20 October 1993,
n. 2: Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1054.
(194) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, nn. 14 &
15: CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 1o.
(195) Second Vatican Council, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12.
(196) Pontificale Romanum - De Ordinatione Episcopi, presbyterorum et
diaconorum, n. 210; ed. cit., p. 125.
(197) St Augustine, Sermones, 179, 1: PL 38, 966.
(198) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum 25; cf.
Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 26, 1; l.c., 703;
CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 2o.
(199) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
25a.
(200) Cf. CIC, canon 833; Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,
Professio fidei et iusiurandum fidelitatis in suscipiendo officio nomine

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Ecclesiae exercendo: AAS 81 (1989), pp. 104-106 and 1169.
(201) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum, 21.
(202) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium,
7.
(203) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium,
7.
(204) Second Vatican Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 59a.
(205) Cf. CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 2; Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum
Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 26, 2: l.c., 703.
(206) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 26, 2:
l.c., 703.
(207) Second Vatican Council, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 5b.
(208) Cf. canon 276, § 2, n. 5o; Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum
Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 26, 3: l.c., 703.
(209) Cf. CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 3o.
(210) Cf. CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 4o.
(211) Cf. CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 5o.
(212) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
23a.
(213) Second Vatican Council, Decree Christus Dominus, 11; CIC, canon
369.
(214) Cf. CIC, canon 276, § 2, n. 5o; Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum
Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 26, 4: l.c., 703.
(215) John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 36, quoting Propositio 5 of the Synodal fathers: l.c., 718.
(216) Cf. John Paul II, Allocution to the Roman Curia, 22 December 1987:
AAS 80 (1988), pp. 1025-1034; Apostolic Letter Mulieris Dignitatem, 27:
AAS 80 (1988), p. 1718.
(217) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
29b.
(218) His rationibus in mysteriis Christi Eiusque missione fundatis,
coelibatus ...omnibus ad Ordinem sacrum promovendis lege impositum
est”: Second Vatican Council, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 16; cf.

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CIC, canon 247, § 1; canon 277, § 1, canon 1037.
(219) Cf. CIC, canon 277, § 1; Second Vatican Council, Decree Optatam
Totius, 10.
(220) John Paul II, Letter to Priests on Holy Thursday, 8 April 1979, 8: AAS
71 (1979), p. 408.
(221) Cf. canon 277, § 2.
(222) John Paul II, Allocution to the permanent deacons of the U.S.A. in
Detroit (19 September 1987), n. 5: Insegnamenti, X, 3 (1987), p. 658.
(223) Cf. CIC, canon 1031, § 2.
(224) John Paul II, Allocution to the permanent deacons of the USA in
Detroit, 19 September 1987, n. 5; Insegnamenti, X, 3 (1987), pp. 658-659.
(225) Cf. CIC, canon 277, § 1.
(226) Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, III, 16: l.c.,
701: Apostolic Letter Ad Pascendum, VI: l.c., 539; CIC, canon 1087.
Provision is made for possible exceptions to this discipline in the circular
letter of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments, N. 26397, of 6 June 1997, n. 8.
(227) John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Pastores Dabo
Vobis, n. 42.
(228) John Paul II, Catechesis at the General Audience of 20 October 1993,
n. 4: Insegnamenti, XVI, 2 (1993), p. 1056.
(229) Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, II, 8-10; III,
14-15: l.c., 699-701; Apostolic Letter Ad Pascendum, VII: l.c., 540; CIC,
canons 236, 1027, 1032 § 3.
(230) Cf. John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 70: l.c., 780.
(231) John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 70: l.c., 779.
(232) John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 76; 79: l.c., 793; 796.
(233) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree Christus Dominus, 15; John Paul
II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis, 79: l.c., 797.
(234) Congregation for the Clergy, Tota Ecclesia, Directory for the ministry
and life of priests (31 January 1994), n. 71: p. 76.
(235) Cf. John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo

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Vobis, 78: l.c., 795.
(236) Congregation for the Clergy, Directory for the ministry and life of
priests Tota Ecclesia, 71: p. 76.
(237) Cf. John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 71: l.c., 783; Congregation for the Clergy, Directory for the ministry
and life of priests, Tota Ecclesia, n. 74, p. 78.
(238) Cf. St Ignatius of Antioch: “Deacons, who are ministers of
Christ Jesus, must be acceptable to all in every respect. They are not
servants of food and drink. They are ministers of the Church of
God” (Epist. ad Trallianos, 2, 3: F. X. Funk, o.c., I, pp. 244-245).
(239) Cf. John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 72: l.c., 783; Congregation for the Clergy, Directory for the ministry
and life of priestly, Tota Ecclesia, 75, ed. cit., pp. 75-76.
(240) John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 72: l.c., 785.
(241) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Letter Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem, VI, 28:
l.c., 703; CIC, canon 276, § 4.
(242) Cf. CIC, canon 279.
(243) John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Pastores Dabo
Vobis, 72: l.c., 783.
(244) Cf. CIC, canon 1029.