Bingo. They call themselves “Orthodox”. You call yourself “Lutheran”. I call myself “Catholic”. Words mean things.
No, they call themselves Catholic - ‘Orthodox Catholic’ - just like you call yourself ‘Roman Catholic’ - according to Pope Pius XII, in
Humani generis. Here he uses it do distinguish between those Churches who are, and those who aren’t, in communion with Rome. Not that this icludes the eastern rites.
Maybe. But this is a double-edged sword it seems to me. What you are admitting here is that there is such a thing as valid ordination that only certain people can pass on to others. I agree with this.
Yes, that is, and has always been, Lutheran teaching. From XIV
Confessio Augustana: “Of Ecclesiastical Order they teach that no one should publicly teach in the Church or administer the Sacraments unless he be regularly called [Lt. *rite vocastus].”
According to Arthur Carl Piepkorn,
rite (in
rite vocastus) “implies in the normal terminology of the 16th century a formal ordination as something over and above a mere calling.” (Piepkorn, “The Sacred Ministry and Holy Ordination in the Symbolical Books of the Lutheran Church,” in
The Church: Selected Writings of Arthur Carl Piepkorn, ed. Michael P. Plekon & William S. Wiecher (Delhi, NY: Americal Lutheran Publicity Bureau Books 1993): 62.)
But your admission also suggests that there are those who evaluate things like this and determine that yes, this ordination is valid and no, this one is not. Who are those people? And if they are able to judge ordination, are they not also able to judge who is “Catholic” and who merely calls himself “Catholic”?
But the evaluations have to do with facts, not with the situation in 1896. Four things are necessary for any valid sacrament: Valid minister (in this case a bishop); valid intent (to do what the Church does,
facere quod facit ecclesia); valid form (which in this case do
not mean a specific ‘sacrificial part,’ i.e. the
traditio instrumentorum); and valid matter (in this case a baptised male).
First, I admire your desire. Second, I hope you are correct. Third, I will wait until the Catholic Church (based in Rome) renders a decision.
Why do you have to wait before Rome makes a decision. Does Rome make decisions on everything? Are you not claiming that I must prove a negative?
You’re sure that I didn’t?
Well, it sure didn’t seem that you had read it, ir you wouldn’t have made the claim you did.
I believe you’re saying here that since you never denied those things which the Anglicans denied. So, the only real impediment was consecration by a validly consecrated bishop.
And you say this has been corrected.
That is exactly what I’m saying.
And this is one of the reasons why I insist that we should always look at each particular Church - or each communion of Churches - separately. That some American or German Lutheran do not agree with what I have laid out, or rejects it altogether, have absolutely no bearing on the validity of
my orders, or any other orders confected by the bishops of my Church (the Church of Norway). We are not judged on the intent of others.
And the sacrificial intent, though not explicit in our ordinals (which is not required anyway), can be inferred from the fact that we are in communion with the Church of England. In the
1979 Elucidation of the statement on ministry and ordination in the documents from the Anglican-Catholic dialogue (ARCIC), we read:
[The] ordained ministry is called priestly principally because it has a particular sacramental relationship with Christ as High Priest. At the eucharist Christ’s people do what he commanded in memory of himself and Christ unites them. sacramentally with himself in his self-offering. But in this action it is only the ordained minister who presides at the eucharist, in which, in the name of Christ and on behalf of his Church, he recites the narrative of the institution of the Last Supper, and invokes the Holy Spirit upon the gifts.
Read more in
Consecrated Women? A Contribution to the Women Bishops Debate, ed., Jonathan Baker (Norwich: Canterbury Press 2004): 56-57 (cf. 48-58).
Or read what the American Anglican–Roman Catholic dialogue affirms, that “only a validly ordained priest can be the minister who, in the person of Christ, brings into being the sacrament of the Eucharist and
offers sacramentally the redemptive sacrifice of Christ which God offers us,” and that “in the light of these five affirmations [the American Anglican–Roman Catholic dialogue] records its conclusions that the eucharist as sacrifice is not an issue that divides our two Churches” (emphasis added).
See
Five Affirmations on the Eucharist as Sacrifice, issued by the Anglican–Roman Catholic Dialogue in the United States of America, January 6, 1994.
So we can conclude that though there is no explicit sacrificial element (like the
traditio instrumentorum) in the ordinals of the Church of Norway, sacrificial intent can be inferred from our communion with the Church of England. I know a few Norwegian Lutherans who want to abolish, or leave, the
Porvoo Communion for just this reason. They conclude, quite rightly, that it involves a sacrificial understanding of the Eucharist and the priesthood.