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CivisRomanusSum
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According to the Roman Catechism:
"It is a matter of indifference whether the ablution be performed once or thrice. For it is evident from the Epistle of St. Gregory the Great to Leander that Baptism was formerly and may still be validly administered in the Church in either way. The faithful, however, should follow the practice of the particular Church to which they belong.
Pastors should be particularly careful to observe that the baptismal ablution is not to be applied indifferently to any part of the body, but principally to the head, which is the seat of all the internal and external senses; **and also that he who baptises is to pronounce the sacramental words which constitute the form, not before or after, but when performing the ablution." **
Suppose the minister baptizes by single infusion (pouring only once, instead of thrice) while saying the prescribed form/sacramental words (the Trinitarian formula). Does it matter if he stops pouring or runs out of water while he’s not yet finished saying the words? Does the baptism become invalid if midway through the pouring/reciting of the form (like say, before “and of the Holy Spirit”) he runs out of water? Must the pouring and flowing of the water correspond and be precisely timed with the enunciation of all the sacramental words, such that the water must continue to flow without interruption from the beginning to the precise end of the formula, for the baptism’s validity? (Relatedly, how much water is necessary for the baptism to be valid?)
"It is a matter of indifference whether the ablution be performed once or thrice. For it is evident from the Epistle of St. Gregory the Great to Leander that Baptism was formerly and may still be validly administered in the Church in either way. The faithful, however, should follow the practice of the particular Church to which they belong.
Pastors should be particularly careful to observe that the baptismal ablution is not to be applied indifferently to any part of the body, but principally to the head, which is the seat of all the internal and external senses; **and also that he who baptises is to pronounce the sacramental words which constitute the form, not before or after, but when performing the ablution." **
Suppose the minister baptizes by single infusion (pouring only once, instead of thrice) while saying the prescribed form/sacramental words (the Trinitarian formula). Does it matter if he stops pouring or runs out of water while he’s not yet finished saying the words? Does the baptism become invalid if midway through the pouring/reciting of the form (like say, before “and of the Holy Spirit”) he runs out of water? Must the pouring and flowing of the water correspond and be precisely timed with the enunciation of all the sacramental words, such that the water must continue to flow without interruption from the beginning to the precise end of the formula, for the baptism’s validity? (Relatedly, how much water is necessary for the baptism to be valid?)