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smad0142
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Roman Priests need faculties in order to validly hear Confessions. Is this needed in the East? Why or why not? Thanks!!
Within the Roman Rite and the Byzantine Rite (Both Catholic and Orthodox), the faculty to hear confessions is granted to pastors by virtue of their office.Do the Orthodox have this too or just the EC?
Are you sure about that? From what I understand, the faculty is normally specifically valid only in a priest’s own parish, unless the bishop grants him a plenary faculty. Perhaps brother Aramis can clarify.Yes there is. And their faculties extend through the territory of their Eparchy and they must use their own Rite.
You and I both have the same understanding. A pastor’s inherent-as-pastor faculties are for his parish only. On the other hand, I know of no priests of the Archdiocese of Anchorage in good standing who do not have plenary absolution faculties from the bishop for throughout the archdiocese. And I suspect (from conversations with several priests of the Eparchy of Holy Protection of the Mother of God) that all have been granted eparchy-wide plenary faculties as well.Dear brother Constantine,
Are you sure about that? From what I understand, the faculty is normally specifically valid only in a priest’s own parish, unless the bishop grants him a plenary faculty. Perhaps brother Aramis can clarify.
Blessings,
Marduk
What is meant by faculties?Roman Priests need faculties in order to validly hear Confessions. Is this needed in the East? Why or why not? Thanks!!
Faculties are, for lack of a better word, the permission of the bishop. The power to absolve is inherent in the reception Holy Orders, but permission to exercise that power is not. It’s the same for all Sacraments, actually. A validly ordained priest may offer Mass (or DL or whatever one wants to call it), but whether he is allowed to offer it publicly is dependent on whether or not he has faculties to do so.What is meant by faculties?
It seems to me that the Holy Orders provides the power via extention of the Bishop but faculty or permission is a matter of pastoral obedience.Faculties are, for lack of a better word, the permission of the bishop. The power to absolve is inherent in the reception Holy Orders, but permission to exercise that power is not. It’s the same for all Sacraments, actually. A validly ordained priest may offer Mass (or DL or whatever one wants to call it), but whether he is allowed to offer it publicly is dependent on whether or not he has faculties to do so.
Not all priests are given faculties to hear confession or to preach. In the old country most married priest do NOT have faculties for confession.It seems to me that the Holy Orders provides the power via extention of the Bishop but faculty or permission is a matter of pastoral obedience.