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Don_Ruggero
Guest
Thank you for your post.
Oh my, here we go again. God Bless, MemawFor your first point: As a theologian, I have worked, and do work, in collaboration with the dicasteries of the Holy See…and everyone posting owes deference to the dicasteries…everyone. I am honoured for the opportunities that I have been given across my life. When one is in collaboration with the Holy See, there is no need to “reconsider” – and to even suggest that is both an insult and a want of deference to the Holy See.
For your second point: you are in violation of forum rule by even asking that question and you are reported to the moderator. The forum rules make it abundantly clear that to even question authority is strictly and absolutely forbidden
One last topic: At a recent plenary meeting with the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, you reportedly encouraged the members to push for a less rigid understanding of the priesthood, essentially telling them to give up on an objective and metaphysical notion of priesthood. Your notion was that as we have an understanding of different levels of communion with the Church among the baptized, we should have different degrees of the fullness of priesthood, so as to permit Protestants to minister without being fully ordained. What exactly did you say, and why did you say it?
I was saying we have to reflect on questions. We say, everything is valid; nothing is valid. Maybe we have to reflect on this concept of validity or invalidity. The Second Vatican Council said there is a true communion even if it is not yet definitive or full. You see, they made a concept not so decisive, either all or nothing. There’s a communion that is already good, but some elements are missing. But, if you say some things are missing and that therefore there is nothing, you err. There are pieces missing, but there is already a communion, but it is not full communion. The same thing can be said, or something similar, of the validity or invalidity of ordination. I said let’s think about it. It’s a hypothesis. Maybe there is something, or maybe there’s nothing — a study, a reflection.
I see Cardinal Coccopalmerio’s point about a lack of fullness verses complete invalidity. It would seem to me that the same point about a lack of fullness verses invalidity is held by the Church regarding baptism and marriage…that being that they are not necessarily devoid of grace when they take place outside of the Catholic Church. The radical sanation of a marriage gives the indication of marriage validity from the time the vows were made, why couldn’t the same principle apply to an Anglican ordination?
The following may help shed some light on what The Tablet wrote about Cardinal Coccopalmerio. It is from a Feb. 21, 2017 interview Cardinal Coccopalmerio gave with the National Catholic Register.
Thanks for posting this; it certainly does shed some light on The Tablet article.One last topic: At a recent plenary meeting with the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, you reportedly encouraged the members to push for a less rigid understanding of the priesthood, essentially telling them to give up on an objective and metaphysical notion of priesthood. Your notion was that as we have an understanding of different levels of communion with the Church among the baptized, we should have different degrees of the fullness of priesthood, so as to permit Protestants to minister without being fully ordained. What exactly did you say, and why did you say it?
I think we can all agree that a lack of fullness with the Anglican communion (as well as the lack of fullness that is to be had in their ordination rite) does not mean there is nothing good happening there, or that it means nothing and is completely devoid of grace, as has been claimed by the Cardinal in The Tablet. There can be grace there, as we’ve seen in the sources I, and others, have posted in this thread.
However, at some point “rigidity” has to be seen as a good instead of a stumbling block. We cannot say rigidity is wrong in all times and all places. It is good to be unwavering on certain points; the martyrs, for example, were quite rigid in resisting Diocletian and other emperors and rulers who wanted them to renounce their beliefs; who wanted the martyrs to give a little “wiggle room”. In the same way, what it comes down to, is saying whether or not what appears to be bread on the altars in a Catholic or Anglican church is the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ or not. It is either Jesus after the words of consecration, or it is not Jesus. There is no middle ground. Is this an absolute statement? Yes, but absolute statements are necessary sometimes. Knowing whether or not the Eucharist is or is not present on the altar is something we need to know before receiving it.
This is why the issue of Holy Orders is so integrally tied to this question of whether the Jesus is present on the altar and in the ciborium or He is not.1Lord, you asked why the principle of something like the radical sanation of a marriage couldn’t apply to Anglican orders. Well it couldn’t, I hold, because the principle isn’t analogous to the Anglican orders. The Cardinal in his interview with NCRegister says, "The same thing can be said, or something similar, of the validity or invalidity of ordination. I said let’s think about it. It’s a hypothesis. Maybe there is something, or maybe there’s nothing…
So we have a hypothesis, and honestly that hypothesis hasn’t been clearly elucidated anywhere that I’ve seen, either here or elsewhere. That’s why Dr. Peters asked in his article on CWR “I… hold that Catholics must regard Anglican orders as null. I can scarcely see any counter argument, let alone a plausible one, here, but if someone wants to offer it, I would listen.” While people here and elsewhere have said that perhaps Leo XIII’s declaration wasn’t absolute, no one has shown an argument for why that is so; they’ve only provided an assertion with nothing to back it up. We have seen arguments given for maintaining fidelity to Pope Leo XIII’s exercise of the Magisterium by Dr. Peters, Ms. Caridi, J.C.L., Fr. Sullins, and Cardinal Ratzinger.
We have been provided with no arguments against this though. If there is an argument for not regarding Anglican orders as null and void, I hope that that argument can be posted here so that we may continue the discussion. There’s unfortunately been a lot of talk on this thread about some posters’ characters and some posters’ achievements; like Mr. Bay said, it’d be great to focus on the arguments and not each other. And I have yet to see an argument supporting Cardinal Cocopamerio’s comments or rebutting the arguments of the four people I just listed.
I think that’s why it has to be either “all or nothing” considering Anglican orders as someone can’t be “partially ordained”. In the same way you can’t have Jesus “kind of” be there when attempting to confect the Eucharist. Jesus is either **there ** on the altar after the words of consecration, or He is not there. This whole talk of trying to get around the clear words of Leo XIII (“we pronounce and declare that ordinations carried out according to the Anglican rite have been, and are, absolutely null and utterly void.”) sounds a lot like the legalism of the Pharisees to me. The Pharisees were always looking for loopholes, and they used those loopholes to get around the difficult demands of the Torah. One Evangelical Christian commentator puts it like this, and I think it’s pertinent to what’s happening in this situation:With this inherent defect of “form” (in the Edwardine rite used by Anglicans) is joined the defect of “intention”… if the rite be changed, with the manifest intention of introducing another rite not approved by the Church and of rejecting what the Church does, and what, by the institution of Christ, belongs to the nature of the Sacrament, then it is clear that not only is the necessary intention wanting to the Sacrament, but that the intention is adverse to and destructive of the Sacrament.
The words of Leo XIII are clear. Since the Church is one with Christ, we are to hold that which is to be definitely held as declared by that same Church, as if it came from Jesus Himself… because it does come from Jesus Himself! Let’s stop trying to work around those teachings (like in AC) and recognize that we as Catholics have extended many olive branches, i.e. the three Anglican Ordinariates. If Anglicans see AC as a stumbling block to reunion, perhaps it’s time they search deep inside themselves, and truly try to listen to the Holy Spirit that calls them to reintegration with the One, True Church and the Chair of Peter. It’s not the Catholic Church that needs to compromise anymore, this time it’s the Anglicans that have to make the move if they want reconciliation and full communion.Another type of legalism is that which looks for a loophole in order to get out of obedience to Christ’s law. True legalists look for a way out of obedience like a legalistic lawyer who seeks to find a loophole in the wording of a contract. It is a legalistic attorney who studies to find a technicality within a document which creates a loophole. A legalist would emphasize the letter of the command in order to absolve themselves of obeying the intended meaning."
Surely Archbishop Cranmer’s intention is obvious.…
…there is not only a defect of form with the Edwardine rite, but also a “defect of intention”, as Leo XIII describes in AC 33:
The words of Leo XIII are clear. Since the Church is one with Christ, we are to hold that which is to be definitely held as declared by that same Church, as if it came from Jesus Himself…
Ecumenism at any price would consign the Church into spiritual bankruptcy. Thank Goodness the Holy Spirit won’t permit that, but individual Catholics can be misled to try the false ecumenism.…It’s not the Catholic Church that needs to compromise anymore, this time it’s the Anglicans that have to make the move if they want reconciliation and full communion.
Thank you Billy15,So back to the hypothesis. Let’s say there is a clearly elucidated hypothesis. As the Cardinal said, it could be something, or it could be nothing. As I haven’t been shown anything to support the contention that the Edwardine rite of ordination might be valid in some cases, I would have to say that the “hypothesis” amounts to nothing in light of what many others have said in accord with Leo XIII in Apostolicae Curae. As I understand it, something like a radical sanation can’t be applied to this situation of Anglican priests because there is not only a defect of form with the Edwardine rite, but also a “defect of intention”, as Leo XIII describes in AC 33:
I think that’s why it has to be either “all or nothing” considering Anglican orders as someone can’t be “partially ordained”. In the same way you can’t have Jesus “kind of” be there when attempting to confect the Eucharist. Jesus is either **there ** on the altar after the words of consecration, or He is not there. This whole talk of trying to get around the clear words of Leo XIII (“we pronounce and declare that ordinations carried out according to the Anglican rite have been, and are, absolutely null and utterly void.”) sounds a lot like the legalism of the Pharisees to me. The Pharisees were always looking for loopholes, and they used those loopholes to get around the difficult demands of the Torah. One Evangelical Christian commentator puts it like this, and I think it’s pertinent to what’s happening in this situation:
The words of Leo XIII are clear. Since the Church is one with Christ, we are to hold that which is to be definitely held as declared by that same Church, as if it came from Jesus Himself… because it does come from Jesus Himself! Let’s stop trying to work around those teachings (like in AC) and recognize that we as Catholics have extended many olive branches, i.e. the three Anglican Ordinariates. If Anglicans see AC as a stumbling block to reunion, perhaps it’s time they search deep inside themselves, and truly try to listen to the Holy Spirit that calls them to reintegration with the One, True Church and the Chair of Peter. It’s not the Catholic Church that needs to compromise anymore, this time it’s the Anglicans that have to make the move if they want reconciliation and full communion.
Thanks Meemaw. I understand what you’re saying. We certainly believe in spiritual communion, and I’m sure there are some Anglicans (High Church/Anglo-Catholics) who really are uniting their hearts to Jesus in a way similar to how we Catholics receive spiritual Communion. By saying “all or nothing” regarding Holy Orders, I was pretty much saying the point you got across: “we can’t ‘water down’ the Sacrament of Holy Orders.”Thank you Billy15,
I would like to add a bit;
I don’t think the Catholic Church has ever said ALL or Nothing when it comes to other denominations celebrating their communion service. We do believe in Spiritual Communion. “Different levels of communion,” does not mean different levels of “ordination” for the validity of the Holy Eucharist. Sacraments of Baptism and Marriage are different than Holy Orders. Even a lay person can Baptize in case of emergency. The vow of Marriage is between a man and a women, and that is why Radical Sanation applies here. It was applied where priest were not available to many people who wanted to marry. But as soon as a priest was available he would “Bless” the original Marriage. The priest is a witness for the Church. Sacrament of Holy Orders is passed down in Apostolic Succession from the Apostles by the “Laying on of the Hands,” God help us if we try to “water down” the Sacrament of Holy Orders in any way!! God Bless, Memaw
Deference is for those who have gained the respect of people they interact with and historically people hiding behind a self proclaimed authority have tried to close down discussion and have done much damage to this world.For your first point: As a theologian, I have worked, and do work, in collaboration with the dicasteries of the Holy See…and everyone posting owes deference to the dicasteries…everyone. … The forum rules make it abundantly clear that to even question authority is strictly and absolutely forbidden
AMEN!! God Bless, MemawDeference is for those who have gained the respect of people they interact with and historically people hiding behind a self proclaimed authority have tried to close down discussion and have done much damage to this world.
As Christians the obvious example we have is the Pharisee treatment of Jesus through the unquestioned authority of the Sanhedrin. People who demanded deference and forbade even being questioned by those human beings they saw as lessor or inferior. In all Creation God chose this sin to be the one he would highlight for all time as man’s failure for which he needs eternal repentance.
Sometimes such people have claimed and hid behind such an authority because they are unable either intellectually or with charity to discuss issues with others.
In general I think we can agree that if people want the deference of others, they shouldn’t go about it in exactly the wrong way and such people should consider the direction to which they have chosen.
May we both pray for the Pharisees of Jesus’ day who sinned against our Lord and for the cultural Pharisees amongst us even down to this day.
There is NO comparison between Marriage and valid Catholic Holy Orders. They are both Sacraments of course but as I said before, having a Marriage Blessed requires repeating the marriage vows. To become a validly ordained Catholic Priest requires many years of study and a Valid Catholic Bishop to to ordain him with “Laying on of the Hands.” God Bless, MemawI will write a more thorough line of reasoning for those who care. If you check my profile, you will see I have reason for a little research and knowledge of the topic. As I write these next three posts, please understand that as a Catholic, I uphold the Catholic teaching on the matter.
While I have done some research, I would not consider myself an expert.
So as to not be too long, I’ll break this into three posts. First, it might be helpful to look at a story for perspective. A Catholic couple in college decides to take a vacation to Jamaica. While there, they get married by a civil magistrate on the beach. They do not have a valid Catholic marriage, but a valid civil one.(i.e. Something happened, but not a valid Catholic marriage). A few years later they decide to have the marriage validated in order to have their children baptized, so they go to the Priest and have their marriage blessed.
The following can be stated absolutely truthfully:
Basically, those saying the Anglican Church, or some Anglican Priests have valid Orders is that since AC in 1896 there were events which took place which straightened the situation out. Just like the couple.
- The couple did not have a valid Catholic wedding.
- The couple has a valid Catholic marriage today.
So a person following this line of reasoning could say:
- Anglicans did not have valid Orders in 1896.
- Some Anglican Priests have valid Orders today.
No.Deference is for those who have gained the respect of people they interact with and historically people hiding behind a self proclaimed authority have tried to close down discussion and have done much damage to this world.