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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: POL-PRE |
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PRESBYTER (Gr. apactObTepos, elder, the comparative of IrOo-Oas, an old man) , the title borne from very early times by certain officers or ministers of the Christian Church intermediate between " bishops " and " deacons." The specialized use of the word as implying not only age, but consequently wisdom and authority, is analogous to that of " senate " (from senior), of " gerousia " (from 'y pwv), and of " elder." It is the original
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The history of presbyteral government as opposed to episcopacy and pure congregationalism is not known in detail. After the Reformation, however, it was adopted by Calvin and his followers, who created that system which has ever since been known as Presbyterianism (q.v.). There are many theories as to the origin of the office of presbyter in the Christian Church. (1) Some connect it with the appointment of the seven recorded in Acts vi. This is the view taken by Boehmer,1 Ritschl 2 and Lindsay.' It is urged that the traditional view which regards the seven as deacons is untenable because the term " deacon " is never used in the narrative, and there is no reference to the office in the Acts. On the other hand the officials of the Jerusalem church are always called " elders " and when they are first introduced (Acts xi. 30) appear to be discharging the functions for which " the seven " were specially set apart. (2) The view adopted by the majority of English scholars is, while refusing to accept the connexion between the presbyters and the seven, to regard the office as distinctly primitive and say that it was taken over by the earliest Christian community at Jerusalem from the Jewish synagogue.' (3) Harnack and a few other modern scholars maintain that the office of presbyter did not come into existence till the 2nd century. During the last quarter of the 1st century, a three-fold organization is found in the Church: (a) a spiritual organization composed of " apostles, prophets and teachers who had been awakened by the spirit and by the spirit endowed "; (b) an administrative organization, " For the care of the poor, for worship , for correspondence, the congregation needed controlling officials. These were the bishop and the deacons, the former for higher, the latter for inferior services "; (c) a patriarchal organization based upon the natural deference of the younger to the older members of the Church. The senior members of the community, by virtue of their age and experience, watched over the conduct and guided the action of the younger and less experienced portion of the Church, though they held no official position and were not appointed for any particular work 'like the bishops and deacons. In the 2nd century the patriarchal element in the organization was merged in the administrative, and the presbytersDias. jur. eccl. p. 373. s Entstehung der altkatholischen Kirche, 2nd ed. p. 355. 'The Church and the Ministry, p. 116; cf. also Brown, Apostolical Succession, p. 144. 4 Lightfoot, Ep. to the Philippians, p. 192. 'E.g. Sohm, Kirchenrecht, 92; Weizsaeker, Apostolic Age (Eng. trans. ii. 330) ; Allen, Christian Institutions, p. 38 ; A. C. McGiffert, Apostolic Age, p. 663 (1897). became a definite order in the ministry. The time at which the change occurred cannot be definitely fixed. " In some congregations," as Harnack says, " it may have been long before the elders were chosen, in others this may have come very soon; in some the sphere of the competency of the presbyters and patrons may have been quite indefinite and in others more precise." Harnack's theory is based upon the following arguments: (a) The silence of the genuine Epistles of St Paul and the Epistle to the Hebrews. In i Cor. xii. 28 Paul says that God has given to the Church apostles, prophets, teachers, miracles, gifts of healing, helps, governments; but of presbyters he has not a word to say. Even from passages where he is speaking of the jurisdiction of the congregation, as for example in i Cor. v., vi., the presbyters are absent, while in Phil. i. 1 it is the bishops and deacons that he mentions. (b) The documents in which presbyters are mentioned in an official sense, viz. the Epistle of James, the first Epistle of Peter, the Acts of the Apostles and the Pastoral
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bear out their contention. " It will be no light sin for us if we thrust out of the oversight (E7toKolri) those who have offered the gifts unblameably and holily. Blessed are those presbyters who have gone beforefor they have no fear lest any one should remove them from their appointed place " (are) Toll tbpvhvou r67rou). There is an equally specific reference in liv. 2: " Only let the flock of Christ keep peace with its duly-appointed presbyters" (fssrh TWV KaOtoTap, sow 7rpEQj9uTEpc,v). The conclusions which we seem to reach are as follows: (1) In the earliest stage (between 30 and 6o) there is no uniform organization 1 Hort
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2 Lukas der Arzt (1906), cap. 1. Ency. Bib. p. 3134 sqq. *The Church and the Ministry, p. 16o. Cf. also Loening, Die Gemeindeverfassung des Urchristentums, p. 58. in the Christian Church. Presbyters are found in Jerusalem from primitive times. In the Pauline churches the name is not found except at Ephesus and possibly in south Galatia, though there are traces of the office, at any rate in germ, under different titles in other churches. (2) In the second stage (between 6o and ioo) there is an increasing tendency towards uniformity. The office is found definitely mentioned ,in connexion with the churches of Asia Minor (I Pet. i. I), Corinth (Epistle of Clement) and Crete (Titus). The officials were called by two names, " elders " and " bishops," the former denoting the office, the latter the function (exercising the oversight). The substantial identity of the two titles cannot be doubted in the light of such passages as Acts xx. 17, 28.; I Pet. v. i, 2; I Tim. iii. 17, V. 1719 and Titus i. 57. There is far less controversy with regard to the later history of the presbyters. The third stage of the development of the office is marked by the rise of the single episcopus as the head of the individual church (see BISHOP; EPISCOPACY). The first trace of this is to be found in the Epistles of Ignatius which prove that by the year 115 " the three orders " as they were afterwards calledbishop, presbyters and deaconsalready existed, not indeed universally, but in a large proportion of the churches. The presbyters occupied an intermediate position between the bishop and the deacons. They constituted " the council of the bishop." It was some time before the threefold ministry became universal. The Didache knows nothing of the presbyters; bishops and deacons are mentioned, but there is no reference to the second order. The Shepherd of Hermas knows nothing of the single bishop; the churches are under the control of a body of presbyter-bishops. Before the close of the 2nd century however the three orders were established almost everywhere. The sources of the Apostolic Canons (which date between 14o18o) lay down the rule that even the smallest community of Christians, though it contain only twelve members, must have its bishop and its presbyters. The original
In the fourth stage we find the presbyters, like the bishops, becoming endowed with special
With the rise of the diocesan bishops the position of the presbyters became more important. The charge of the individual church was entrusted to them and gradually they took the place of the local bishops of earlier days, so that in the 5th and 6th centuries an organization was reached which approximated in general outline to the system which prevails in the Anglican Church to-day. See Hatch, Organization of the Early Christian Churches (2nd ed., 1882), and Harnack's " excursus" in the German edition of this Tertull. De bapt, 17 : " Baptismi dandi habet jus summus sacerdos qui est episcopus; dehinc presbyteri . . . . non tamen sine episcopi auctoritate." s Cf. Ep. 58 : "Presbyteri eum episcopo sacerdotali honore conjuncti." work (1883); Harnack, Die Lehre der zwolf Apostel (1884); Loening, Die Gemeindeverfassung des Urchristentums (1889); Sohm, Kirchenrecht (1892); an article by Loofs, in Studien and Kritiken, for 1890 (pp. 619-658); Lindsay, The Church and the Ministry in the Early Centuries (1902); Schmiedel, article " Ministry," in Enc. Bib. (H. T. A.) End of Article: PRESBYTER (Gr. apactObTepos, elder, the comparative of IrOo-Oas, an old man) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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