T
Timidity
Guest
Is it just my Diocese, or are “Bishop-less” confirmations becoming more the norm than the exception everywhere?
Deacon Ed, My diocese is not San Bernardino. Sorry, I never met Bishop O’Neill. I serve in the Diocese of Fresno. Our Director of the Diaconate is named, Deacon Ed.In my diocese the bishop along with his two auxillary bishops go around to every parish and do confirmations during the Easter season. In the Eastern Churches, however, the norm is that the priest does “confirmation” (we call it chrismation) at the same time as baptism and then follow it with first communion. This is what the early Church did, and what the Latin Church does with RCIA.
Deacon Tony, if you are in the San Bernardino diocese I see you are getting a new auxilliary – how wonderful. Bishop O’Neill had been an associate pastor in my parish many, many years ago and his death was a serious loss.
Deacon Ed
1313 In the Latin Rite, the ordinary minister of Confirmation is the bishop.130 Although the bishop may for grave reasons concede to priests the faculty of administering Confirmation,131 it is appropriate from the very meaning of the sacrament that he should confer it himself, mindful that the celebration of Confirmation has been temporally separated from Baptism for this reason. Bishops are the successors of the apostles. They have received the fullness of the sacrament of Holy Orders. the administration of this sacrament by them demonstrates clearly that its effect is to unite those who receive it more closely to the Church, to her apostolic origins, and to her mission of bearing witness to Christ.
1314 If a Christian is in danger of death, any priest should give him Confirmation.132 Indeed the Church desires that none of her children, even the youngest, should depart this world without having been perfected by the Holy Spirit with the gift of Christ’s fullness. -CCC
Well it appears that these paragraphs are a bit at odds with what the Code of Canon Law states.Although the bishop may for grave reasons concede to priests the faculty of administering Confirmation,131 it is appropriate from the very meaning of the sacrament that he should confer it himself, mindful that the celebration of Confirmation has been temporally separated from Baptism for this reason. Bishops are the successors of the apostles. They have received the fullness of the sacrament of Holy Orders. the administration of this sacrament by them demonstrates clearly that its effect is to unite those who receive it more closely to the Church, to her apostolic origins, and to her mission of bearing witness to Christ.1313 In the Latin Rite, the ordinary minister of Confirmation is the bishop.130
1314 If a Christian is in danger of death, any priest should give him Confirmation.132 Indeed the Church desires that none of her children, even the youngest, should depart this world without having been perfected by the Holy Spirit with the gift of Christ’s fullness. -CCC
Can. 530 The functions especially entrusted to the parish priest are as follows:
2° the administration of the sacrament of confirmation to those in danger of death, in accordance with can. 883, n. 3;
Can. 882 The ordinary minister of confirmation is a Bishop. A priest can also validly confer this sacrament if he has the faculty to do so, either from the general law or by way of a special grant from the competent authority.
Can. 883 The following have, by law, the faculty to administer confirmation:
1° within the confines of their jurisdiction, those who in law are equivalent to a diocesan Bishop;
2° in respect of the person to be confirmed, the priest who by virtue of his office or by mandate of the diocesan Bishop baptises an adult or admits a baptised adult into full communion with the catholic Church;
3° in respect of those in danger of death, the parish priest or indeed any priest.
Can. 884 §1 The diocesan Bishop is himself to administer confirmation or to ensure that it is administered by another Bishop. If necessity so requires, he may grant to one or several specified priests the faculty to administer this sacrament.
§2 For a grave reason the Bishop, or the priest who by law or by special grant of the competent authority has the faculty to confirm, may in individual cases invite other priests to join with him in administering the sacrament.
Deacon Tony,Deacon Ed, My diocese is not San Bernardino. Sorry, I never met Bishop O’Neill. I serve in the Diocese of Fresno. Our Director of the Diaconate is named, Deacon Ed.