Thursday, December 29, 2022

Charles Gore on the laying-on of hands for ordination in Early Christianity

  

Assuming the historical trustworthiness of the Acts and the Pastoral Epistles, we have evidence that the laying-on of apostolic hands was the method of imparting the gift of the Spirit. It was also, as a natural consequence, the method of ordination to church office. So the seven are ordained, Acts vi. 6 προσευξαμενοι επεθηκαν αυτοις τας χειρας. So Paul and Barnabas have hands laid on them by the prophets of Antioch, Acts xiii. 3—this however to send them on a special mission, rather than appoint them to an office. So St. Paul, in company with the presbytery ordained Timothy (1 Tim. vi. 14; 2 Tim. i. 6), and he writes to him that he ‘stir up the gift that is in him by the laying-on of hands.’ He also implies that Timothy will use the same ceremony in ordaining other clergy (1 Tim. v. 22). Thus, as in the case of baptism, the Church gave a new meaning, a new reality, to an old Jewish rite.

 

It was not likely that an apostolic practice would become disused. Ordination or appointment is, of course, constantly mentioned without any specification of the method, in the early Church as amongst ourselves. But we have in each century evidence to assure us of what the method was.

 

Thus in the second century the Ebionite Clementines represent St. Peter as ordaining bishops, and by implication priests and deacons, by laying-on of hands (Hom. iii. 72, with the prayer that God would give the bishop the authority to bind and loose aright; Recog. iii. 66; Ep. Clem. 2.19).

 

In the third century we have evidence that Origen was so ordained: επι την Ελλαδα στειλαμενος την δια Παλαιστινης, πρεσβυτεριου χειροθεσιαν εν Καισαρεια προς των τηδε επισκοπων αναλαμβανει (ap. Euseb. H. E. vi. 23); and he implies that this was the method by which bishops were consecrated in his day . . . , as will be seen immediately, and the African author of de Aleatoribus, assure us that his was the method of episcopal ordination in Africa, and Novatian’s schismatical ordination lets us see that it was so also at Rome. The canons of Hippolytus give us  the same assurance in the case of all three orders. . . . When Chrysostom, still later, is explaining the expression επεθηκαν αυτοις τας χειρας in Acts vi. 6 (Hom. xiv. 3), he says: ‘This is the χειροντονια: the hand of the man is laid upon the other; but all the working is of God, and His hand it is which touches the head of him who is ordained, if he be ordained aright.’ Jerome too interpreters χειροτονια in Latin as ‘extentus digitus,’ and explains it as ‘ordinatio clericorum quae non solum ad imprecationem vocis sed ad impositonem impletur manus’ (in Isai. lviii. 10).

 

In one of these case is there any controversial stress laid on the rite. It is simply assumed as the Church’s method of ordination.(Charles Gore, The Church and the Ministry [5th ed.; London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1902], 349-50)