Min"is*ter , v. i. 1. To
act as a servant, attendant, or agent; to attend and serve; to perform service in any office, sacred or secular.
The Son of man came not to be
ministered unto, but to minister.
Matt. xx. 28. 2.
To supply or to things needful; esp., to supply consolation or remedies. Matt. xxv.
44.
Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased?
Shak.
Min"is*ter , v. t. [imp. & p. p. Ministered (?);
p. pr. & vb. n.
Ministering.]
[OE. ministren, OF.
ministrer, fr. L. ministrare. See Minister, n.] To furnish or apply; to afford; to supply; to administer.
He that ministereth seed to the sower.
2 Cor. ix.
10. We minister to God reason to
suspect us.
Jer. Taylor.
Min"is*ter (?), n. [OE.
ministre, F. ministre, fr. L. minister, orig. a double comparative from the root of
minor less, and hence meaning, an inferior, a servant. See 1st Minor, and cf. Master, Minstrel.]
1. A servant; a subordinate; an officer or assistant of inferior rank; hence, an agent, an instrument.
Moses rose up, and his
minister Joshua.
Ex. xxiv. 13. I
chose
Camillo for the minister, to poison
My friend Polixenes.
Shak. 2. An officer of justice. [Obs.]
I cry out the on the
ministres, quod he,
That shoulde keep and rule this
cité.
Chaucer.
3. One to
whom the sovereign or executive head of a government intrusts the management of affairs of state, or some department of such affairs.
Ministers to kings, whose eyes, ears, and hands they are, must be answerable to God and man.
Bacon. 4. A representative of a government, sent to the court,
or seat of government, of a foreign nation to transact diplomatic business.
&fist;
Ambassadors are classed (in the diplomatic sense) in the
first rank of public ministers, ministers plenipotentiary in the second. "The United States diplomatic service
employs two classes of ministers,
-- ministers plenipotentiary and ministers resident."
Abbott.
5. One who serves at the altar; one who performs sacerdotal duties; the pastor of a church duly authorized or licensed to preach the gospel and administer the
sacraments. Addison.
Syn.
-- Delegate; official;
ambassador; clergyman; parson; priest.