S
Soufanieh
Guest
Isn’t it true that any Christian baptized in the Church can, in extremis, baptize someone else in danger of dying? I think I remember that from my pre-confirmation classes.Thank you Aramis, I know somebody in the Latin Church that will like to know about this.
There are some agreements that can exist between the churches regarding the sacraments (mysteries); see CCEO 696 below. I do not know, but suspect, that two Latin Catholics, married and attending a Byzantine Catholic parish, must have their children follow the Latin rule for baptism, eucharist, and chrismation at three different ages, vs the Byzantine practice of infant baptism, eucharist, and chrismation. And their children will certainly be in the Latin Church (because their parents are) regardless of which church it is received from.
CCEO Canon 696
- All presbyters of the Eastern Churches can validly administer this sacrament either along with baptism or separately to all the Christian faithful of any Church sui iuris including the Latin Church.
- The Christian faithful of Eastern Churches validly receive this sacrament also from presbyters of the Latin Church, according to the faculties with which these are endowed.
- Any presbyter licitly administers this sacrament only to the Christian faithful of his own Church sui iuris; when it is a case of Christian faithful of other Churches sui iuris, he lawfully acts if they are his subjects, or those whom he lawfully baptizes in virtue of another title, or those who are in danger of death, and always with due regard for the agreements entered between the Churches sui iuris in this matter.