G
GKC
Guest
If you are asking me, then, based on my roughly 10 year hobby of the sad story of Apostolicae Curae,:Okay, so these issues are worked through with due diligence on an individual basis.
How about the new Pope, assuming the context now is somewhat toward the liberal, is he likely to have a commission take another look at the issue? Or is the issue so written in stone that it will not change? If you read back at the time of schism, and you folks have studied that history, what little I have read of it, the tipping point did not have to tip: it was contingent and could have not gone the way it did. The conflict was more political than theological. Is that a reasonable statement?
The issues ( I assume you mean of the lines of converting Anglican clergy) are not systematically examined individually, to determine if OC lines are a factor, for sub conditione ordination. The cases of Fr. Graham and Fr. Hughes (I did find his autobio, and OC lines were a factor, as I thought. His case was complicated) stand alone. They were not part of the circumstances following Anglicanorum Coetibus. So far the Anglican clerical converts have been ordained absolutely, including the 5-6 bishops who have joined the ordinariate. This is the policy, without (AFAIK) any consideration of validity of orders.
You are correct that there was a possibility that AC could have gone the other way, but not a very good one, considering. And it was, as you say, a complicated matter, involving political, historical, personal, and theological matters.I especially recommend Fr. Hughes’ two books on the subject, ABSOLUTELY NULL AND UTTERLY VOID, which concentrates on the history of the thing, and STEWARDS OF THE LORD, which treats of a possible case for Anglican validity. They are, by far, the best studies of the subject I have found.
There is virtually no chance for a revisiting of the subject, by Rome. Beyond the words of finality in AC itself, the current state of Anglicanism, generally, suggests no reason why anyone would want to do so. The time for that would have been under Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey, 50 years ago. Or, even better, at the Malines conversations, almost 100 years ago.
GKC
*Anglicanus-Catholicus *