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If your parish is looking for a deacon
Deacons,
according to the Book of Common Prayer, are called “to
a special ministry of servanthood . . . [to] the
poor, the weak, the sick, and the lonely” (p.
543).
Because
of their training, deacons can also minister to youth
or to immigrants, help with parish administration,
lead education programs, or be involved with most any
parish or community ministry. Deacons are assigned by
the bishop to work in a particular parish as a colleague
to a rector or vicar, and they are assigned for a particular
ministry.
Should
your parish have a deacon?
Does your parish need
a deacon? A deacon can help broaden a parish’s
understanding of the church, by presenting a different
type of ordained ministry (presider vs. service), by
being a focus for a different approach (starting a ministry,
or rejuvenating an old one), and by involving more people
(deacons encourage the service of others more than they
do it by themselves). A deacon can help a priest by being
an extra set of ears, eyes, and hands, and be a trained
partner in the ordained ministry.
How
many deacons are available in the diocese?
As
of mid-2009, there are approximately 55 active deacons
in the Diocese of New Jersey, not enough for our
many parishes. Deacons, however, also move around
frequently: their skills are needed elsewhere, some parish
relationships don’t work out, rectors leave and
circumstances change.
The Archdeacon for Deployment maintains a roster of parishes
which would be interested in having a deacon on staff.
When a deacon ends one parish relationship, he/she is
encouraged to take some time off for reflection and prayer,
and then asked to look at a selection of parishes within
reasonable driving distance of his/her home. Those selections
are developed by the archdeacon.
Consider
the following questions
If you and your parish are interested in having a deacon,
you should consider the following questions:
- What ministries is your parish looking to start
or expand?
- What
support can you and the parish provide (e.g.,
staff meetings, travel or study allowance)?
- Can
the deacon take on the usual roles of a deacon
in the Sunday liturgy (read the Gospel, call the
people to prayer and to confession, set the table,
dismiss the people) without having other people feel
as if they are losing a role in the liturgy?
- Can
you work with a deacon as a colleague, or are
you seeking another staff member?
- Do
you want someone who can assist with preaching?
You
may also want to take a look at principles
of engaging a deacon and the model
letter of agreement for deacons.
Also, know that celebrations of “deacon’s
masses” are
not allowed, per directive of Bishop Councell.
For
more information
The Archdeacon for Deployment is the Venerable W. Keith
McCoy. He can be reached at kmccoy1@optonline.net or
at 732 767-1733. Please contact him to place your parish
on the list of interested placements or if you have
questions about how to engage a deacon.
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