[faithandlife] Re: [FaithandLife] Acolytes

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From: charles scott <crscottblu@...>
Date: Wed, 29 Jan 2003 04:59:16 -0800 (PST)
--- Wayne McNamara <Wayne.McNamara@...> wrote:
>  
> > Hey Men and Brethren,
> 
> Can anyone tell me the history and meaning of the
> acolyte and the vestments  they wear?  What are the
reasons usually given for  why they are specially
> vested? 
<snip>

> Thanks. 
> 
> Wayne+
> 
-------------------------------------
Fr. Wayne+

Here is a little history of minor orders from 
Lightfoot:

----------------------------------
THE SYNOD OF LAODICEA IN PHRYGIA PACATIANA
EXCURSUS ON THE MINOR ORDERS OF THE EARLY CHURCH.
(Lightfoot, Apostolic Fathers, Ignatius, Vol. I., p.
258.)

Some of these lower orders, the subdeacons, readers,
door-keepers, and exorcists, are mentioned in the
celebrated letter of Cornelius bishop of Rome (A.D.
251) preserved by Eusebius (H.E., vi., 43), and the
readers existed at least half a century earlier
(Tertull. de Praescr., 41). In the Eastern Church,
however, if we except the Apostolic Constitutions, of
which the date and country are uncertain, the first
reference to such offices is found in a canon of the
Council of Antioch, A.D. 341, where readers,
subdeacons, and exorcists, are mentioned, this being
apparently intended as an exhaustive enumeration of
the ecclesiastical orders below the diaconate; and for
the first mention of door-keepers in the East, we must
go to the still later Council of Laodicea, about A.D.
363, (see III., p. 240, for the references, where also
fuller information is given). But while most of these
lower orders certainly existed in the West, and
probably in the East, as early as the middle of the
third century the case is different with the "singers"
(<greek>yaltai</greek>) and the "labourers"
(<greek>kopiatai</greek>). Setting aside the Apostolic
Constitutions, the first notice of the "singers"
occurs in the canons of the above-mentioned Council of
Laodicea. This, however, may be accidental. The
history of the word copiatai affords a more precise
and conclusive indication of date. The term first
occurs in a rescript of Constantius (A.D. 357),
"clerici qui copiatai appellantur," and a little later
(A.D. 361), the same emperor speaks of them as "hi
quos copiatas recens usus instituit nuncupari."

(Adolf Harnack, in his little book ridiculously
intituled in the English version Sources of the
Apostolic Canons, page 85.)

Exorcists and readers there had been in the Church
from old times, subdeacons are not essentially
strange, as they participate in a name (deacon) which
dates from the earliest days of Christianity. But
acolytes and door-keepers (<greek>pulwroi</greek>) are
quite strange, are really novelties. And these
acolytes even at the time of Cornelius stand at the
head of the ordines minores: for that the subdeacons
follow on the deacons is self-evident. Whence do they
come? Now if they do not spring out of the Christian
tradition, their origin must be explained from the
Roman. It can in fact he shown there with desirable
plainness.

With regard to subdeacons the reader may also like to
see some of Harnack's speculations. In the volume just
quoted he writes as follows (p. 85 note):

According to Cornelius and Cyprian subdeacons were
mentioned in the thirtieth canon of the Synod of
Elvira (about 305), so that the sub diaconate must
then have been acknowledged as a fixed general
institution in the whole west (see Dale, The Synod of
Elvira, Lond., 1882). The same is seen in the "gesta
apud Zenophilum." As the appointment of the lower
orders took place at Rome between about the years
222-249, the announcement in the Liber Pontificalis
(see Duchesne's edition, fasc. 2, 1885, p. 148) is not
to be despised, as according to it Bishop Fabian
appointed seven subdeacons: "Hic regiones dividit
diaconibus et fecit vii. subdiaconos." The Codex
Liberianus indeed (see Duchesne, fasc. 1, pp. 4 and 5;
Lipsius, Chronologie d. rom Bischofe, p. 267), only
contains the first half of the sentence, and what the
Liber Pontif. has added of the account of the
appointment of subdeacons (... qui vii notariis
imminerent, ut gestas martyrum in integro fideliter
colligerent) is, in spite of the explanation of
Duchesne, not convincing. According to Probst and
other Catholic scholars the subdiaconate existed in
Rome a long time before Fabian (Kirchl. Disciplin, p.
109), but Hippolytus is against them. Besides, it
should be observed that the officials first, even in
Carthage, are called hypo-deacons, though the word
subdiaconus was by degrees used in the West. This also
points to a Roman origin of the office, for in the
Roman church in the first part of the third century
the Greek language was the prevailing one, but not at
Carthage.

But to return to the Acolythes, and door-keepers, whom
Harnack thinks to be copies of the old Roman temple
officers. He refers to Marquardt's explanation of the
sacrificial system of the Romans, and gives the
following resume (page 85 et seqq.):

1. The temples have only partially their own priests,
but they all have a superintendent (oedituus-curator
templi). These aeditui, who lived in the temple, fall
again into two classes. At least "in the most
important brotherhoods the chosen oedituus was not in
a position to undertake in person the watching and
cleaning of the sacellum. He charged therefore with
this service a freedman or slave." "In this case the
sacellum had two oeditui, the temple-keeper,
originally called magister oedituus, and the
temple-servant, who appears to be called the oedituus
minister." "To both it is common that they live in the
temple, although in small chapels the presence of the
servant is sufficient. The temple-servant opens,
shuts, and cleans the sacred place, and shows to
strangers its curiosities, and allows, according to
the rules of the temple, those persons to offer up
prayers and sacrifices to whom this is permitted,
while he sends away the others."

2. "Besides the endowment, the colleges of priests
were also supplied with a body of servants"--the under
official--; "they were appointed to the priests, ...
by all of whom they were used partly as
letter-carriers (tabellarii), partly as scribes,
partly as assistants at the sacrifices." Marquardt
reckons, (page 218 and fol.) the various categories of
them among the sacerdotes publici, lictores, pullarii,
victimarii, tibicines, viatores, sixthly the
calatores, in the priests' colleges free men or
freedmen, not slaves, and in fact one for the personal
service of each member.

Here we have the forerunners of the Church
door-keepers and acolytes. Thus says the fourth
Council of Carthage, as far as refers to the former:
"Ostiarius cure ordinatur, postquam ab archidiacono
instructus fuerit, qualiter in dome dei debeat
conversari, ad suggestionem archidiaconi, tradat ei
episcopus claves ecclesiae de altari, dicens. Sic age,
quasi redditurus deo rationem pro his rebus, quae
hisce clavibus recluduntur." The ostiarius
(<greek>pulwros</greek>) is thus the aedituus
minister. He had to look after the opening and
shutting of the doors, to watch over the coming in and
going out of the faithful, to refuse entrance to
suspicious persons, and, from the date of the more
strict separation between the missa catechumenorum and
the missa fidelium, to close the doors, after the
dismissal of the catechumens, against those doing
penance and unbelievers. He first became necessary
when there were special church buildings (there were
such even in the second century), and they like the
temples, together with the ceremonial of divine
service, had come to be considered as holy, that is,
since about 225. The church acolytes are without
difficulty to be recognised in the under officials of
the priests, especially in the "calatores," the
personal servants of the priests. According to Cyprian
the acolytes and others are used by preference as
tabellarii. According to Cornelius there were in Rome
forty-two acolytes. As he gives the number of priests
as forty-six, it may be concluded with something like
certainty that the rule was that the number of the
priests and of the acolytes should be equal, and that
the little difference may have been caused by
temporary vacancies. If this view is correct, the
identity of the calator with the acolyte is strikingly
proved. But the name "acolyte" plainly shows the
acolyte was not, like the door-keeper, attached to a
sacred thing, but to a sacred person.

(Lightfoot. Apostolic Fathers. Ignatius, ad Antioch,
xj., note. Vol. II., Sec. II., p. 240.)

The acolytes were confined to the Western Church and
so are not mentioned here. On the other hand the
"deaconesses" seem to have been confined to the
Eastern Church at this time. See also Apost. Const.,
iii., 11.; viii., 12; comp. viii., 19-28, 31; Apost.
Can., 43; Conc. Laodic., Can. 24; Conc. Antioch, Can.
10. Of these lower orders the "subdeacons" are first
mentioned in the middle of the third century, in the
passage of Cornelius already quoted and in the
contemporary letters of Cyprian. The "readers" occur
as early as Tertullian de Proescr. 41 "hodie diaconus,
qui cras lecfor," where the language shows that this
was already a firmly established order in the Church.
Of the "singers" the notices in the Apostolical
Constitutions are probably the most ancient. The
"door-keepers," like the sub-deacons, seem to be first
mentioned in the letter of Cornelius. The
<greek>kopiwntes</greek> first appear a full century
later; see the next note. The "exorcists," as we have
seen, are mentioned as a distinct order by Cornelius,
while in Apost. Const., viii., 26, it is ordered that
they shall not be ordained, because it is a spiritual
function which comes direct from God and manifests
itself by its results. The name and the function,
however, appear much earlier in the Christian Church;
e.g., Justin Mart., Apol. ii., 6 (p. 45). The forms
<greek>eporkisths</greek> and
<greek>exorkisths</greek>are convertible; e.g., Justin
Mart., Dial., 85 (p. 311). The "confessors" hardly
deserve to be reckoned a distinct order, though
accidentally they are mentioned in proximity with the
different grades of clergy in Apost. Const., viii.,
12, already quoted. Perhaps the accidental connexion
in this work has led to their confusion with the
offices of the Christian ministry in our false
Ignatius. In Apost. Const., viii., 23, they are
treated in much the same way as the exorcists, being
regarded as in some sense an order and yet not subject
to ordination. Possibly, however, the word
<greek>omologhtai</greek> has here a different sense,
"chanters," as the corresponding Latin "confessores"
seems sometimes to have, e.g., in the Sacramentary of
Gregory "Oremus et pro omnibus episcopis, presbyteris,
diaconibus, acolythis, exorcistis, lectoribus,
ostiariis, confessoribus, virginibus, viduis, et pro
omni populo sancto Dei;" see Ducange, Gloss. Lat., s.
v. (11. p. 530, Henschel).

In a law of the year 357 (Cod. Theod., xiii., 1)
mention is made of "clerici qui copiatae appellantur,"
and another law of the year 361 (Cod. Theod. xvi., 2,
15) runs "clerici vero vel his quos copiatas recens
usus instituit nuncupari," etc. From these passages it
is clear that the name <greek>kopiwntes</greek> was
not in use much before the middle of the fourth
century, though the office under its Latin name
"fossores" or "fossarii" appears somewhat earlier.
Even later Epiphanius (Expos. Fid., 21) writes as if
the word still needed some explanation. In accordance
with these facts, Zahn (I. v., A. p. 129), correctly
argues with regard to our Ignatian writer, urging that
on the one hand he would not have ascribed such
language to Ignatius if the word had been quite
recent, while on the other hand his using the
participle (<greek>tous</greek>
<greek>kopiwntas</greek>) rather than the substantive
indicates that it had not yet firmly established
itself. For these "copiatae" see especially de Rossi,
Roma Sotteranea, III., p. 533 sq., Gothofred on Cod.
Theod., II., cc., and for the Latin "fossores"
Martigny, Dict. des Antiq. Chret. s.v. See also the
inscriptions, C. I, G., 9227, Bull. de Corr. Hellen.,
vii., p. 238, Journ. of Hellen. Stud., vi., p. 362.

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