Part II, Article I. Need for Appropriate Terminology

In his address to participants at the Symposium on "Collaboration of the
Lay Faithful with the Priestly Ministry", the Holy Father emphasized the
need to clarify and distinguish the various meanings which have accrued
to the term "ministry" in theological and canonical language.[53]
§ 1. "For some time now, it has been customary to use the word
ministries not only for the officia (offices) and non-ordained
[functions] munera exercised by Pastors in virtue of the sacrament of
Orders, but also for those exercised by the lay faithful in virtue of
their baptismal priesthood. The terminological question becomes even
more complex and delicate when all the faithful are recognized as having
the possibility of supplying-by official deputation given by the
Pastors-certain functions more proper to clerics, which, nevertheless,
do not require the character of Orders. It must be admitted that the
language becomes doubtful, confused, and hence not helpful for
expressing the doctrine of the faith whenever the difference 'of essence
and not merely of degree' between the baptismal priesthood and the
ordained priesthood is in any way obscured".[54]
§ 2. "In some cases, the extension of the term "ministry" to the munera
belonging to the lay faithful has been permitted by the fact that the
latter, to their own degree, are a participation in the one priesthood
of Christ. The officia temporarily entrusted to them, however, are
exclusively the result of a deputation by the Church. Only with constant
reference to the one source, the 'ministry of Christ' (...) may the term
ministry be applied to a certain extent and without ambiguity to the lay
faithful: that is, without it being perceived and lived as an undue
aspiration to the ordained ministry or as a progressive erosion of its
specific nature.
In this original sense the term ministry (servitium) expresses only the
work by which the Church's members continue the mission and ministry of
Christ within her and the whole world. However, when the term is
distinguished from and compared with the various munera and officia,
then it should be clearly noted that only in virtue of sacred ordination
does the work obtain that full, univocal meaning that tradition has
attributed to it." [55]
§ 3. The non-ordained faithful may be generically designated
"extraordinary ministers" when deputed by competent authority to
discharge, solely by way of supply, those offices mentioned in Canon
230, § 3[56] and in Canons 943 and 1112. Naturally, the concrete term
may be applied to those to whom functions are canonically entrusted e.g.
catechists, acolytes, lectors etc.
Temporary deputation for liturgical purposes - mentioned in Canon 230, §2 - does not confer any special or permanent title on the non-ordained
faithful.[57]
It is unlawful for the non-ordained faithful to assume titles such as
"pastor", "chaplain", "coordinator", " moderator" or other such similar
titles which can confuse their role and that of the Pastor, who is
always a Bishop or Priest.[58]
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