Thought you might have heard it beforeSounds familiar.
Thought you might have heard it beforeSounds familiar.
No, that’s not quite right.I read in this thread from Phil19034:
And while the Orthodox once questioned the Catholic Church regarding whether the Anglicans had valid Sacraments, they are now 100% in agreement with Catholics that Anglicans do not have valid sacraments.
I must apologise for misunderstanding what this meant. I thought it claimed that Catholics believe that Anglicans do not have valid sacraments. Of course, it means nothing of the kind. It obviously means baptism is not a sacrament, because a priest is not the minister. According to this reasoning marriage is not a sacrament, since the priest is not the minister, as pointed out by JonNC.
Phil19034 points out:
The phrase I used “valid sacraments” was referring to priestly sacraments - sacraments that require a deacon, priest and/or bishop…
It should have been obvious to me that ‘valid sacraments’ did not ‘mean sacraments that are valid’, but ‘some sacraments’.
I had forgotten we live in the fake news post truth world.
How many Catholics, even Catholic priests, think that for the sacrament of marriage to be valid, it must be witnessed by a deacon/priest/bishop and must take place inside the confines of a Catholic Church.Holy Matrimony: Ordinary Minster = Bride & Groom; Extraordinary Minster = none
Well, if one spouse is person is Catholic, then yes, the marriage must be witnessed by a deacon, priest or bishop in order to be valid unless there is a dispensation or Radical Sanation to retroactively declare the marriage valid.phil19034:![]()
How many Catholics, even Catholic priests, think that for the sacrament of marriage to be valid, it must be witnessed by a deacon/priest/bishop and must take place inside the confines of a Catholic Church.Holy Matrimony: Ordinary Minster = Bride & Groom; Extraordinary Minster = none
I must admit I am a little confused. I was under the impression that the sacrament of marriage is valid predicated upon the ordinary ministers of the sacrament, i.e. the bride and groom. Am I missing something?if one spouse is person is Catholic, then yes, the marriage must be witnessed by a deacon, priest or bishop in order to be valid
AugustTherese,How many Catholics, even Catholic priests, think that for the sacrament of marriage to be valid, it must be witnessed by a deacon/priest/bishop and must take place inside the confines of a Catholic Church.
No. “Valid Sacarment” means the sacrament took affect.AugustTherese:![]()
AugustTherese,How many Catholics, even Catholic priests, think that for the sacrament of marriage to be valid, it must be witnessed by a deacon/priest/bishop and must take place inside the confines of a Catholic Church.
many thanks.
I now know ‘valid sacraments’ does not mean ‘valid sacraments’, but ‘priestly sacraments’.
I also now know the sacrament of marriage need not take place in a Catholic Church, it can even take plane in an airplane - http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-42736504
The missing part is that the marriage must be viewed as valid by the Church in order for it to be valid.phil19034:![]()
I must admit I am a little confused. I was under the impression that the sacrament of marriage is valid predicated upon the ordinary ministers of the sacrament, i.e. the bride and groom. Am I missing something?if one spouse is person is Catholic, then yes, the marriage must be witnessed by a deacon, priest or bishop in order to be valid
Just researched it. You are absolutely right!AugustTherese:![]()
Well, if one spouse is person is Catholic, then yes, the marriage must be witnessed by a deacon, priest or bishop in order to be valid unless there is a dispensation or Radical Sanation to retroactively declare the marriage valid.phil19034:![]()
How many Catholics, even Catholic priests, think that for the sacrament of marriage to be valid, it must be witnessed by a deacon/priest/bishop and must take place inside the confines of a Catholic Church.Holy Matrimony: Ordinary Minster = Bride & Groom; Extraordinary Minster = none
Careful on that one. Early Church and Catholic history would seem to have some extraordinary exceptions (see Popes Boniface IX, Martin V and Innocent VIII). And at least some sound, traditional Catholics still hold to the possibility of priests ordaining priests in some instances (albeit unlikely and all but impossible today). Only relaying what some learned Roman Catholics have taught me.Holy Orders: Ordinary Minster = Bishop; Extraordinary Minster = none
Well, I’m only quoting what was I was taught when I took an online course from St. Charles Borromeo Seminary designed for lay catechists.phil19034:![]()
Careful on that one. Early Church and Catholic history would seem to have some extraordinary exceptions (see Popes Boniface IX, Martin V and Innocent VIII). And at least some sound, traditional Catholics still hold to the possibility of priests ordaining priests in some instances (albeit unlikely and all but impossible today). Only relaying what some learned Roman Catholics have taught me.Holy Orders: Ordinary Minster = Bishop; Extraordinary Minster = none
Yes, but if the bride or groom didn’t mean their vows as they were saying them, it’s invalid. Or if there is another impediment to marriage, it’s invalid.I had thought that every valid contract of marriage between Christians (Catholic or not) is a sacrament, and the contracting partners minister the sacrament to each other. In exceptional cases a valid marriage can occur without the assistance of a priest (see Ott p. 468).
Assuming that it’s true: My totally uneducated guess on that would be that the priests most likely had some extraordinary permission via letter to do that in absence of a Bishop. But today, such a need would be non-existent.I’m not necessarily disagreeing with you. I don’t presume to tell Catholics what they believe. Just noting history… Ludwig Ott would seem to be a generally trustworthy source for Catholic teachings.
Indeed, in most documented cases they did.My totally uneducated guess on that would be that the priests most likely had some extraordinary permission via letter to do that in absence of a Bishop
As I said, “unlikely and all but impossible today.”But today, such a need would be non-existent.
Which Protestants?Protestants today absolutely refuse Catholic’s and the early reformers teachings on the Eucharist and Mary.