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GKMotley
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Yes!!
Thank you. I’ve bookmarked the page.
Yes!!
Thank you. I’ve bookmarked the page.
No, their ordination is what sets them apart, their receiving of the sacrament of Holy Orders. No Protestant church has Apostolic succession.Like a doctor… meaning education is what validated them.
Which ones? The fact remains no Protestant church has Apostolic succession and none can be traced back to the Church Jesus Christ established.There can still be an argument about validity and all that but many many non-Catholic ministers go through the same level of education at accredited institutions.
And yet I have not once seen you promote a Catholic position. The OP can rest assured that this forum is anything but exclusive.You’re in a Catholic forum.
Odds are, you’re only going to get one answer.
Then you need to look harder.And yet I have not once seen you promote a Catholic position.
Eh, debatable. I’ve been warned for answering a question specifically asking for a non-Catholic viewpoint.The OP can rest assured that this forum is anything but exclusive.
Case in pointGo where you feel you belong.
Well, to be honest…they are. Or at least the extreme minority.The point is to refute your claim that multi sided answers to the OP’s question are unlikely.
If a Catholic priest goes through the process of becoming an ordained Catholic priest, becomes validated to do his duties, but changes churches, does he lose his title of being an ordained priest… does he lose his validation credentials?
To the best of my knowledge, the answer is No, he doesn’t. Dominic Stockford, the current chairman of the London-based Protestant Truth Society (link below), is an ordained Catholic priest who changed his mind about religion back in the eighties or nineties. I used to get into conversation with him from time to time on comments threads at the Archbishop Cranmer blog, until he got banned about a year ago. He mentioned several times that, as far as the Catholic Church is concerned, he is still regarded as a priest in good standing, qualified — for example — to hear confessions and give absolution.If a Catholic priest goes through the process of becoming an ordained Catholic priest, becomes validated to do his duties, but changes churches, does he lose his title of being an ordained priest… does he lose his validation credentials?
The term “Protestant “ comes, not from a protest of any Church or church teaching. The protest was a formal protest at the second Diet of Speyer in 1529 against attempts by civil authorities to limit religious free exercise.The word: “Protestant” means “Protest.”
I don’t think I ever asked him about that. I remember what he said about hearing confessions.Not sure about that.To validly/licitly confect sacraments, he would have to still be under the RCC.