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Since when is parisionerās consent needed by the Church in matters of Church Discipline? The One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church is not a democracy.I have nothing against this,provided that the parishioners give their consent. Frankly, I cannot see it working with the youth. If they find the all-inclusive Mass in the vernacular boring I cannot see them being thrilled by Latin.
SighHmmm. You ask someone else for āproofā of an unsubstantiated claim, and then you make a totally unsubstantiated claim yourself!
I, too, am curious as to who you are speaking of. While there may be persons in the Vatican who are sympathetic to Archbishop LeFebvre, I donāt know of anyone there who would uphold some of his more āoutrageousā statements regarding the Sacred Liturgy.
In Manibus Dei,
- Mike M.
āLet us build a house where love can grow and all can safely liveā¦ā Ugh- I hate that song. We donāt need to build that house- we already have the Church! āKCTDoes this mean that weāll finally be able to burn the heretical works of Marty Haugen and company?! 0_0 Eeeeee!
What is said in a confessional is bound by Oath, not the reception of the Sacrament itself.okay, i have a question. ppl can be let back in the Church through confession, right? so, how does the EM know to let that person have communion without the priest violating the oath of silence?
The whole issue raises questions. Something has to be known by the public when a person is publicly excluded from Eucharist. With excommunication though, the matter need not be publicly known. And it is appropriate to recall that correction, reprimand, and warning are preferred by the Church over the imposition of censures, such as excommunication. The law of the Church is never to be read as a sledge hammer. While juridic in nature, it is governed by laws of charity and merciful application according to the apostolic constitution by which John Paul promulgated it.If asked, a priest may say in public that a particlar person came to him for that Sacrament.