T
TK421
Guest
K, I need to rephrase: Are Holy Orders absolutely necessary to turn the bread & wine into the body & blood?
Are Holy Orders necessary for a person to turn the bread & wine into the body & blood, or is this a discipline?
What about Reconciliation / Healing of the Sick / Marriage?
I read that Reconciliation was once done publicly, as the word is commonly used: among the entire congregation, as opposed to the adopted method in later centuries of publicly confessing just to a priest. I also heard that in the early centuries, when the Church was getting violently persecuted, the celebration of the Eucharist wasn’t necessarily done by a priest, and that Healing of the Sick was also performed by laity.
Is it doctrine which sacraments can be performed by who? I also heard that laity, such as sisters, have exorcized demons in the past, but can this now only be done by a priest or higher?
I read a brief series on the sacraments that also provided some historical background on the changes in how sacraments were administered through the 2000+ years, and it opened up a lot of questions. Since marriage wasn’t recognized as a sacrament until sometime in the middle ages, were all marriages prior to that point natural marriages rather than sacramental marriages? How could they be sacramental marriages in the past if it wasn’t even understood as a sacrament in the first place? Isn’t knowledge of the sacrament of the marriage absolutely necessary for it to be a sacramental marriage?
Are Holy Orders necessary for a person to turn the bread & wine into the body & blood, or is this a discipline?
What about Reconciliation / Healing of the Sick / Marriage?
I read that Reconciliation was once done publicly, as the word is commonly used: among the entire congregation, as opposed to the adopted method in later centuries of publicly confessing just to a priest. I also heard that in the early centuries, when the Church was getting violently persecuted, the celebration of the Eucharist wasn’t necessarily done by a priest, and that Healing of the Sick was also performed by laity.
Is it doctrine which sacraments can be performed by who? I also heard that laity, such as sisters, have exorcized demons in the past, but can this now only be done by a priest or higher?
I read a brief series on the sacraments that also provided some historical background on the changes in how sacraments were administered through the 2000+ years, and it opened up a lot of questions. Since marriage wasn’t recognized as a sacrament until sometime in the middle ages, were all marriages prior to that point natural marriages rather than sacramental marriages? How could they be sacramental marriages in the past if it wasn’t even understood as a sacrament in the first place? Isn’t knowledge of the sacrament of the marriage absolutely necessary for it to be a sacramental marriage?