- Mar 4, 2005
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The idea that the clergy represent Christ is a Catholic thing. I would say in Protestant theology the clergy represent the Church. The point of having certain things only clergy may do (in practice, very few, but significant), is not to disenfranchise everyone else, but to allow for proper oversight of those significant things by the Church.
I know.
I know it is good practice and there are doubtless good reasons for that. I'm just saying that, as I see it, the practice isn't Scriptural. Apart from anything else, my denomination has some serious shortages in clergy numbers, and in those offering. I would ave thought that this was something able to be handed to a lay person, so that the body of Christ does not miss out on this sacrament, and our poor Ministers are not quite so frazzled.
As a priest I've taken vows of obedience to my bishop and to the canons of my church. In effect, I've promised to do things the way that the church has discerned they should be done. I can't go off and be a maverick, saying or doing whatever I like.
Yes - and I mean no disrespect; sorry.
Maybe I'm too naive about the whole thing. But if this isn't a Scriptural practice, it puzzles me that the Church - whole church, my denomination included - is so willing to uphold it.
I would never dare say that if a lay person presides at the Eucharist, Christ is not present to those who receive. That's up to Christ.
I'm sure you wouldn't; again, I mean no disrespect.
(A communion talk by a young lay person comparing Jesus to her recently deceased dead dog stands out in my mind as a particularly awful example...).'
Sounds awful; I wonder if anyone talked to her beforehand - or indeed, afterwards?
If someone really strongly feels called to preside, such that not being able to preside is a grief to them, I'd suggest that person consider whether they're actually called to ordination.
Believe me, I've tried. And the number of people who said that I'd be a great Minister because of my people skills, was humbling.
But being a Minister is about more than that. In the UK Methodist church, if I was accepted and went through college, I'd emerge as a probationer Minister and have to lead one or more churches for 2 years (min) before ordination. If I wasn't able, or didn't have the skills to do that, a burning desire to preside at communion would not be enough to keep me in the role.
Preaching, pastoral care and presiding at communion - no problem, and something I once believed to be my calling and was very keen to do.
Church management - meetings, property, finance, synod etc; not so much.
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