Ordination
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- This article is about the process of ordaining clergy. For other meanings, see ordination (disambiguation).
In the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Anglican and Oriental Orthodox churches, ordination is the same thing as Holy Orders and can be adminstered only by a bishop in a line of succession of bishops dating back to the Apostles. The Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox churches hold that ordination to the priesthood confers supernatural powers including the power to perform the transubstantiation, the power to absolve the sins of penitents, and various others.
In most Protestant churches, ordination is the rite by which the Church
- recognizes and confirms that an individual's has been called by God to the ministry of Word and Sacrament,
- acknowledges that the individual has gone through a period of discernment and training related to this call, and
- authorizes that individual to take on the office of ministry.
Ordination is often a requirement specified in state laws in the United States to officiate weddings. In those jurisdictions where ordination is not required by secular law, it is left to the requirements of the particular denomination or church whether ordination is required to officiate weddings.
See also
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