With few exceptions, most contemporary Christians consider ordination a legitimate rite of setting selected members apart for the purpose of pastoral ministry and oversight in the Christian Church. It is also generally assumed that the rite finds its foundations in the Old and New Testaments. While this is correct, it is also true that the modern rite of ordination, as, for example, practiced by Seventh-day Adventists, does not find its exact equivalent in the Scriptures; nor do we find a New Testament requirement that such a rite should take place when selected members are asked to fulfill the office of elder. All this raises the question: from where do we get our way of understanding and practicing ordination? In this first part I will explore the etymology of the word “ordination” and then briefly address the evolution of the rite within Christianity during the second century. In the next essay, the second part will briefly touch on third and fourth century developments.
Origin of the Word and Concept of Ordination
The modern term
“ordination” comes from the Latin ordo
(order, class, rank), and its derivative ordinatio
appears to refer in ancient Rome to installment or induction, appointment or accession
to rank.[i] It is well attested historically that
pagan Roman society was ranked according to various strictly separated classes,
which were called “orders” (from the Latin plural ordines).[ii] The historical evidence points out that
already during the early phase of the Roman Empire’s existence (second century
BC), society had evolved into three basic orders. Thus historians speak of an ordo senatorum – the highest class, ordo equester (the knights), and plebs—the lowest class of the
society. It was eventually accepted
that within Roman society there was ordo
et plebs, i.e., the higher class of citizens and the lower class.[iii] If, by any chance, a person was
destined to move upward in rank, he was to go through the process of ordinatio. Thus, in Historia Augusta, it is stated that Emperor Marcus
Aurelius Antoninus (121-180 AD) would never ordain anyone to senatorial rank
whom he did not know personally.[iv] Ordinatio appears to have also been used as a classical way of
installing imperial officers. Roman
historian Seutonius (ca. 69-ca. 122 AD) reports therefore that, at one point of
his rule, Emperor Domitian (51-96 AD) decided to ordain Mettius Rufus as
prefect of Egypt. [v] At other times ordinatio
was also used to promote officers to a higher rank in the army.[vi] Finally, the idea of ordination appears
to have also been used in the cultic context of pagan Roman Society. Here, a person would be appointed to
the cultic office received from the gods of the ancient world.[vii] All this suggests that when the word ordinatio was used in the ancient world,
it clearly indicated a movement upward in rank and status.[viii] Once a man was ordained, he held some
kind of office that not only separated him from ordinary people but also allowed
him to exercise governmental, jurisdictional, or cultic authority that demanded
submission of others. Through the
work of second-century Christian writers, and especially the writings of Latin
apologist Tertullian (ca. 160-ca. 220 AD), these concepts and ideas seeped into
the Christian psyche. Eventually,
the post-Constantinian Church wholeheartedly embraced the ways in which the
Roman Empire was governed and adapted the structures of the latter to its own
needs.
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