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A recent caller to the Cathedral of Christ the King rectory wanted
to know if it were true that there are three priests in the archdiocese who are
not allowed to say Mass, or to hear confessions. It was explained that the
gentlemen in question, The Rev. Mr. Morris, the Rev. Mr. Danneher and the Rev.
Mr. Scharer, could not, indeed, say Mass, hear confessions or perform other
purely priestly functions because they are not priests, but ordained deacons,
an ancient church office that goes back as far as the Old Testament.
Many other questions have been asked about the deacons: Can they
marry? (No, they have already taken their vows of celibacy.) How should they be
addressed? (Technically, they are called Reverend Mister, but,
since they wear priestly garb including the Roman collar, it is perfectly
correct to address them as Father.)
The practice of having deacons attached to a parish has dropped
out of general use in modern times and, although Atlanta is not the first
American diocese to adopt the experiment, it is perhaps being carried out more
intensively here, in what is referred to as the active diaconate,
with each deacon assigned to the full duties of his office.
The diacontae is one of the three steps of progress toward the
priesthood, preceded by the sub-diaconate and followed by ordination to the
priesthood. Ordinarily, the candidate for the priesthood would spend the summer
before his final year in the seminary on vacation. He would then be given the
diaconate in the fall and be ordained to the priesthood in the following
spring.
In the case of the three deacons assigned here, Archbishop Paul J.
Hallinan made arrangements for them to come here (they will all ultimately be
assigned to the Atlanta archdiocese) and to be ordained to the diaconate on
last June 9 in the Cathedral. They were then assigned to parishes-Father
Danneher to St. Thomas More in Decatur, Father Scharer Morris to Our Lady of
the Assumption. The services of the deacons is not only of assistance to their
parishes, but provides them with practical experience which will be valuable to
them later on when they are assigned to their first parishes as priests.
A typical day in the official life of a deacon begins with
meditation and hearing Mass. After this their tasks vary, but follow a general
pattern, including visiting the sick, instructing religion classes and working
on parish records, particularly of baptisms and marriages. Sometime during the
day they must recite the Office.
Since the beginning of the Church the deacons have been intimately
associated with the Sacrament of Baptism and the administration of this
sacrament is a regular duty. The deacons are also authorized to preach and the
three attached here have preached regularly at Sunday Masses, in addition to
reading the Gospel and the Epistle. An additional function is the deacons
traditional task of taking care of the sacred vessels and the altar linen. All
three deacons assist in their parishes with parish organizations, such as the
St. Vincent de Paul Society.
Despite the wide range of the deacons functions there is, of
course, a definite demarcation between their office and that of the priest. The
deacon cannot say Mass, cannot hear confessions and cannot bless religious
objects.
Of the three archdiocesan deacons, only Father Michael A. Morris
is a native Atlantan. Born and raised in the West End, he went to school at St.
Anthonys, then to the preparatory seminary at Cullman. From there he went
to St. Charles Minor Seminary in Maryland, then to St. Marys Major
Seminary, also in Maryland, where he will return for his last year of studies
before returning here for parish duties. Father Edward A. Danneher is a native
of Williamsport, Penn. He, too, has been studying at St. Marys where he
will return this fall. Father James F. Scharer is a Philadelphian, educated in
that citys parochial schools and later at St. Marys.
In addition to his regular parish duties, Father Scharer is
actively interested in special teaching and has had four years experience with
the deaf and two with the retarded. He is now teaching one deaf boy and gives
religious instructions on Sundays at Rosewood, the state school for the
retarded. |