L
Lapey
Guest
See that? once again, we agree.![]()
But I do not join in the agreement.
See that? once again, we agree.![]()
All right. Then let me ask something, please:Iāll join in for the round of applause for you threeā¦:clapping:
But I do not join in the agreement.
you did answer my question that with allowing the EF of the mass, the old rites for the other sacraments were also allowed.To help understand this:
Summorum Pontificum
Art. 9, §1 The parish priest, after careful consideration, can also grant permission to use the older ritual in the administration of the sacraments of Baptism, Marriage, Penance and Anointing of the Sick, if advantageous for the good of souls.
The Instruction from Ecclesia Dei, personally approved by HH Benedict XVI
28. Furthermore, by virtue of its character of special law, within its own area, the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum derogates from those provisions of law, connected with the sacred Rites, promulgated from 1962 onwards and incompatible with the rubrics of the liturgical books in effect in 1962.
In other words; only the rubrics from 1962 apply.
The 1962 Roman Ritual (from the Rite of Baptism)
27. The rite described above must be observed also by a deacon who administers solemn baptism; however, he uses salt and water blessed previously for this purpose by a priest.
I understand the logic that your friend is using (and in a different context, regarding the OF only, Iād likely be in agreement), but what heās doing is trying to combine the 2 forms, OF and EF. We canāt do that.
If that is your concern, you may wish to contact the SJC also as they have had permanent deacons serving in the EF, presumably in all applicable sacraments.I think what my brother deacon and I have issues with is the attempt to diminish the role of the permanent deacon in using the EF.
It seems to me that Fr Davidās analogy is pretty good. I say that because of the specifics of the rubrics in the 1962 Rituale Romanum. The salt for baptism is to be blessed the purpose of baptism. IOW, the blessing of salt according to the formula in Title XI of the Rituale Romanum would be the equivalent of the formula in the āBook of Blessingsā (if thatās the name), which means it is NOT specifically for baptism and ergo, is not to be used for Baptism according to the Usus Antiquior⦠Likewise, and perhaps even more so, the blessing of the water, which has Oil of Catechumens as well as Holy Chrism mixed into it. Itās not regular Holy Water; this water is specifically and uniquely for Baptism, and even so, may be blessed only within the parameters defined in the Rituale Romanum (Title II Chapter 8), which Fr David has already outlined.How is it mixing the two, rather than two seperate rituals? One, the blessing of salt and/or water; two the EF baptism. There is no mixing.
The analogy you give is not equal. I am not saying bring the current day blessing formula into the EF baptism like you are comparing bringing the words of one missal to another in one single liturgy.
Perhaps if it were every to become more widespread than perhaps one EF parish in a diocese. If I were to have a couple make this same request to me, that is were I would send them, otherwise they can expect the current rite.If that is your concern, you may wish to contact the SJC also as they have had permanent deacons serving in the EF, presumably in all applicable sacraments.
What youāre saying is that your personal views on how things āshould beā over-rule Pope Benedictās own motu proprio. It doesnāt work that way.you did answer my question that with allowing the EF of the mass, the old rites for the other sacraments were also allowed.
As far as agreeing with my brother deacon, which I do, his post on allowing the deacon to bless the salt and water for the EF in my understanding can form a cannon layer in which I believe I would trust that opinion.
I think what my brother deacon and I have issues with is the attempt to diminish the role of the permanent deacon in using the EF. Since we are long past the 1962 rite and well established as ordinary ministers for the sacrament of baptism, it is that form of the rite which is extraordinary and not the ordinary minister who administers it.
It is more reasoned to think that the documents that established the permanent deacon as an ordinary minister supersede the 1962 documents, if not there are a lot of pre second Vatican II practices tha t could come out of the woodwork.
Since a valid baptism is with water and the Trinitaian form it would certainly be valid and licit no matter what extra mineral is in the water.
Beg to differ. Quite frankly, Iāve learned more about my faith from this thread alone. And Iām sure a few others (especially the ones who were actually baptized in the old rite) did as well. Whether they choose to baptize their own in the OF is another story. I feel it should be part of the Catholic educational process to learn about the 23 or so rites that exist today. Are those people curious about these things causing deeper divisions? Really?Perhaps if it were every to become more widespread than perhaps one EF parish in a diocese. If I were to have a couple make this same request to me, that is were I would send them, otherwise they can expect the current rite.
Personally I think the resurrection of the EF is like Jurassic park, interesting at first, but in the end doing more harm than good. It was suppose to unit the Church, it seems to me through discussions like this and request like this one it is very much causing deeper divisions.
Thanks! Iāve seen the three-volume edition before, but I havenāt been able to find the one-volume one.Sure is. Itās available from Preserving Christian Publications (ā¦) These are exact photostatic copies of the older books.
Mixing of rites doesnāt have to be mixing of words, it can just as well be the mixing of rubrics.How is it mixing the two, rather than two seperate rituals? One, the blessing of salt and/or water; two the EF baptism. There is no mixing.
The analogy you give is not equal. I am not saying bring the current day blessing formula into the EF baptism like you are comparing bringing the words of one missal to another in one single liturgy.
When the statements from Rome are as clear as they are, I personally would actually not trust a canon lawyer who apparently contradicts them. I would at least get a second opinion. Perhaps Iām too much of a sceptic, but still, second opinions never hurt.As far as agreeing with my brother deacon, which I do, his post on allowing the deacon to bless the salt and water for the EF in my understanding can form a cannon layer in which I believe I would trust that opinion.
Just to make myself clear, I understand this sentiment. Some traditionalist groups are for some reason hostile to permanent deacons, forgetting that married clergy and permanent deacons is part of the tradition of the Church, just confined to the East for a period.I think what my brother deacon and I have issues with is the attempt to diminish the role of the permanent deacon in using the EF.
Yes, the form is extraordinary (but then so are EMHCsSince we are long past the 1962 rite and well established as ordinary ministers for the sacrament of baptism, it is that form of the rite which is extraordinary and not the ordinary minister who administers it.
The most reasoned thing is to follow the letter of the rubrics and law. Once I see people start āthinkingā in relation to liturgy, it tends to end in disaster.It is more reasoned to think that the documents that established the permanent deacon as an ordinary minister supersede the 1962 documents, if not there are a lot of pre second Vatican II practices tha t could come out of the woodwork.
It would certainly be valid but illicit.Since a valid baptism is with water and the Trinitaian form it would certainly be valid and licit no matter what extra mineral is in the water.
Have the priest bless water according to Rituale Romanum when he blesses the salt. There is a rite for blessing water outside the Easter vigil, but I think it was mentioned that this canāt be done in Eastertide (correct me if I misunderstood, someone).So the deacon needs to have the salt blessed by a priest that much I know for sure. And the water can be used from the Easter vigil mass but what if there is no water left?
Thatās right.Have the priest bless water according to Rituale Romanum when he blesses the salt. There is a rite for blessing water outside the Easter vigil, but I think it was mentioned that this canāt be done in Eastertide (correct me if I misunderstood, someone).
According to the Rituale (Title II Cap 1, items 5 & 6), Easter vigil water is to be be used.Question for those more qualified than me: Is it most important that the water is from the Easter vigil, or is the form of blessing of the water the most important? Basically, should Easter vigil water be used no matter which form it is from?
Thatās why I suggest that you obtain some of the Easter Vigil water now, while itās still (probably) available. I recall that thereās a distance issue. I might suggest that you contact the deacon whoās going to do the Baptism, and make him aware that the EF requires that the Easter Vigil water be used during the Easter Season OR outside the Easter Season, it must still be used if itās available. If not available, it must be blessed in a special rite. I say that because most clerics do not know the rubrics of the EF, unless theyāre already regularly practicing it. Saving some of the Vigil water now will avoid that whole issue. Keep it simple.Wow I opened a can of worms with my question! I too am learning so much this is a great discussion. Thank you everyone who has participated.
That being said all I want is to have my baby baptized and for it to be done correctly. Yes, I prefer EF form just as I prefer the EF mass, but both the ordinary and EF are equally sacred. I would not be disappointed or upset with either one, but canāt a mother have her preference. I meant no disrespect to anyone. Yes, I also prefer a priest, but a Deacon is just as valid, again itās just a preference.
So the deacon needs to have the salt blessed by a priest that much I know for sure. And the water can be used from the Easter vigil mass but what if there is no water left?
In the Extraordinary Form, the Easter Vigil water MUST be used, so long as itās available.Have the priest bless water according to Rituale Romanum when he blesses the salt. There is a rite for blessing water outside the Easter vigil, but I think it was mentioned that this canāt be done in Eastertide (correct me if I misunderstood, someone).
Question for those more qualified than me: Is it most important that the water is from the Easter vigil, or is the form of blessing of the water the most important? Basically, should Easter vigil water be used no matter which form it is from?
Saving some of the Vigil water is really a very good idea.Thatās why I suggest that you obtain some of the Easter Vigil water now, while itās still (probably) available. I recall that thereās a distance issue. I might suggest that you contact the deacon whoās going to do the Baptism, and make him aware that the EF requires that the Easter Vigil water be used during the Easter Season OR outside the Easter Season, it must still be used if itās available. If not available, it must be blessed in a special rite. I say that because most clerics do not know the rubrics of the EF, unless theyāre already regularly practicing it. Saving some of the Vigil water now will avoid that whole issue. Keep it simple.
A simple call or email to the deacon, asking him to set aside enough Vigil water for baptism would be highly recommended.
This is where it gets even more confusing.Thatās right.The blessing of water is in the Rituale Romanum (Title II, Cap 8) but is not for use within Eastertide. (vid Title II, Cap 1, item 6)
According to the Rituale (Title II Cap 1, items 5 & 6), Easter vigil water is to be be used.![]()
It just keeps things so simple.Saving some of the Vigil water is really a very good idea.Shame I didnāt think of it myself.
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During Easter season, if the water runs out, it may be blessed, but only using the solemn form; which is very long and complicated. That doesnāt happen during the baptism, but as a special rite immediately preceding the baptism.
Outside the Easter season: if the water runs out, the short form may be used, but not according to the 1962 Ritual Romanum strictly speaking. The long form is still required.
The difficulty here is in interpreting the rubrics because the permission to use the short form dates from 1963. Summorum Pontificum is very specific that any changes to the rubrics after 1962 do not apply. ā¦
FYI, my reference was a PDF of the actual 1962 Latin Rituale, and I see nothing there about a āshort formā of blessing water. But itās all very clear that while a deacon may solemnly baptize as an extraordinary minister, he may not bless either the salt or the water.It just keeps things so simple.
Trying to interpret the rubrics here is very confusing. Better not to even try. Itās still close enough to Easter that there will likely be some available.
Thereās a possibility that you might be able to have it both ways, so-to-speak, or nearly so at any rate.⦠but canāt a mother have her preference. I meant no disrespect to anyone. Yes, I also prefer a priest, but a Deacon is just as valid, again itās just a preference.
So the deacon needs to have the salt blessed by a priest that much I know for sure. And the water can be used from the Easter vigil mass but what if there is no water left?