Ordination brings the ordinand into a new set of responsibilities in service of the People of God. This is usually referred to as a participation in the triple munus (function) of Word, Sacrament and Charity. Before Christmas we looked at the role of the deacon as a minister of the Word of God. Now I want to move into some reflection on the deacon as a minister of sacrament.
To do that, of course, we need to understand what we mean by "sacrament." So, here's a very, very brief "Sacraments 101".
1) Theologian Joseph Martos has referred to sacraments as "doors to the sacred" and that's a pretty good phrase. The underlying understanding of sacrament in the Catholic sense is that a sacrament "connects" the human and the divine. Another theologian, Robert Taft, SJ, once tried to describe a "symbol." He evoked Michelangelo's famous painting of the creation of Adam from the Sistine Chapel. Taft points out that God's finger, stretched out toward Adam, and Adam's finger, stretched out toward God, do not touch; there is a gap. For Taft, a "symbol" CONNECTS the two. In many ways, this can also describe our sense of sacrament as that which connects the human and the divine.
2) Prior to the Second Vatican Council, theologians began describing a deeper sense of sacramentality than most people appreciated. The bishops at the Council adopted much of this language in their own documents. So, in addition to the seven sacraments of the church, we first speak of Christ himself as the most fundamental sacrament of all: Christ IS the connection between God and humanity. The Church itself can be understood as a sacrament of our encounter with Christ, and then the seven sacraments of the church represent special encounters with Christ. We also speak today of the "sacramental principle": that understanding that all of God's creation can serve as vehicles of God's life. That's why we make such liberal use of ordinary things like water, wine, bread, oil, touch and so on.
3) Finally, the word "sacrament" itself comes from the Latin word sacramentum. A sacramentum in the Roman Empire was the oath of enlistment taken by a new recruit into the army, and early Christian writers began referring to Christian initiation as a sacramentum. For those of us who have served in the military, this analogy works very, very well! Consider what happens when a person enlists in the military: That person swears a solemn oath, after which his or her old civilian clothing is taken away. The person is given new clothes -- a uniform -- which communicates the person's new status. This uniform identifies the person's relationship to others (their relative rank and specialization, for example), and without any words at all, the simple fact that the person is now in service to an authority other than himself.
Now look at early Christian baptism: The catechumen states his or her intent to a new relationship with God. The person's old, "civilian" clothes are taken away and the catechumen, naked, enters the baptismal pool where the "sacramentum" (oath) is taken; we call it the Creed today! Then the neophyte is led from the pool, and given his new "uniform" of a white garment which marks the person as a new person in Christ. No longer acting on their own authority, they are now Christ's and have been immersed into the very life of the Trinity. Now part of God's own life, the neophyte is led fro
m the pool to the Eucharistic table to complete his or her initiation.
It is against this sense of "sacrament" that we can now turn to the role of the deacon in the sacramental life of the Church.