Saint Ignatius High School

Speakin' of Deacons

Presently, there are 132 married men actively serving in the Diocese of Cleveland as ordained ministers of the Church. Around 40,000 permanent deacons serve the global Church in ways that would astonish Stephen (one of the first deacons) and his original six companions. Even our school has been blessed by the service of these extraordinary men.

The 5th Sunday of Easter

First Reading: Acts of the Apostles 6:1-7

Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 33:1-, 4-5, 18-19

Second Reading: 1st Letter of St. Peter 2:4-9

Gospel: According to St. John 14:1-12

At the present time there are 132 married men actively serving in the Diocese of Cleveland as ordained ministers of the Church. To those outside the Catholic Faith, and even to some within it, this might seem like a strange statement, but since Pope (now Saint) Paul VI issued his document Sacrum Diaconatus Ordinem in 1967 most of us have personally benefitted from the restoration of the order of the permanent diaconate, the order to which these men belong.  This weekend’s first reading describes the origin and the role that these men played in that first generation of the Church.

Just as surprising to many as the existence of ordained married men is the revelation that the ancient Church had the same struggles with division that we have today.  As the Church spread She felt growing pains relating to the blending of those with a Greek background into a religion whose Hebrew roots went all the way back to Abraham.  The Hellenists, as the Greek speakers were known – from Hellas, the Greek word for Greece – were upset by the fact that in the “equal” distribution of food to the widows in the community some of the widows were “more equal” than others.

To realize that discrimination existed in the Church even during the time of the Apostles is to realize that part of the human condition, even after baptism, is the tendency to the sin of pride, the need to feel superior to others, often for the pettiest of reasons.

Fortunately, unlike many today who fuel the fire of pride by promoting division among peoples of different ethnic, economic, educational and geographic backgrounds, the Twelve proposed unity through the selection of seven men who are acceptable to all in the community who were to act as deacons or ministers of service.  They would perform the day-to-day efforts of Christian charity, thus leaving the Apostles time to focus on the ever-growing task of evangelization.

For the most part those original seven are merely names in a list, but one, Stephen, stands out as one of the most famous saints of that or any era, a man who is universally known as the first martyr.  In the intervening years since the stoning of Stephen the ranks of deacon have included such greats as Sts. Lawrence, Francis of Assisi and Thomas Becket.  Today’s permanent deacons carry on an amazing tradition of service to God, His Church and all of the members of the Body of Christ.

Here at Saint Ignatius we have been fortunate over the past 27 years to have been served by a spiritual descendant of these great men, and also of St. Francis of Assisi, the Rev. Mr. Dan Galla of our Theology Department.  Dan is not only a permanent deacon, but is also a lay member of the Order of Friars Minor – known to most of us simply as the Franciscans.  Next month Dan is retiring from his role at Saint Ignatius, and will be taking his talents full-time to St. Charles Borromeo Parish in Parma where he has served since his ordination in 2005 – Dan’s sense of spiritual calm, his thoughtful counsel, and his desert-dry sense of humor will truly be missed.

Every day around 40,000 permanent deacons serve the global Church in ways that would astonish Stephen and his original six companions.  From officiating at baptisms and weddings, to visiting the sick and those grieving the loss of a loved one, to performing so many other essential tasks, today’s permanent deacons have become an indispensable part of parish life wherever the Gospel has been spread.

May they and their families, whose lives are in many ways sacrificed on behalf of their communities, be blessed today and every day.  Thank you, Dan, and thank you to all the deacons serving in our diocese and throughout the Catholic world.

A.M.D.G.