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Catholic2003
Guest
I’m attempting to convey the general opinion of canon lawyers as represented in commentaries and scholarly articles that I have read.Catholic2003, I believe you are reading something into Canon 230, and into the response to the dubium.
jordan said:“Other functions, according to the norm of law” would not have included acolyte, or altar server, since this was not according to the norm of law.
Determining the norm of law is very complicated. A 1983 article in Worship by canon lawyer John Huels assessed canons 2, 5, 6, 14, 20, 21, 23-27, 34, 129, 208, 230, 483, 930, and 1421, as well as the GIRM and other Vatican documents, in order to determine the norm of law.
“Service at the altar” refers specifically and directly to being an altar server. For example, this is how it is used in the following BCL letter excerpt:Now, if you would go back and look at the “dubium” you posted, it did not say “female altar server.” It referred to “service at the altar,” which does not equal “altar server.” “Service at the altar” is a phrase which could be linked to the specifically permitted functions for all laity, such as lector, cantor (or EMHC).
Service at the Altar: The diocesan Bishop is also charged with regulating the functioning of altar servers (GIRM, no. 107). The Guidelines for Altar Servers, prepared by the Committee on the Liturgy in 1994, may of be assistance to the Diocesan Bishop in developing such norms. This document may be found at: usccb.org/liturgy/current/servers.shtml.
The verbiage of an authentic interpretation is never deliberately confusing; this is the entire point of an authentic interpretation, to clarify confusing verbiage in the Code of Canon Law itself. Additionally, the CDWDS has no authority to clarify confusing verbiage in PCILT authentic interpretations. The purpose of the CDWDS letter was to give specific liturgical guidance above and beyond the general canon law permission given by canon 230 §2.Also, the “affirmative” response pointed to an instruction “to be given.” In other words, there was no specific permission for female altar servers, and because of the confusing verbiage, the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments came out with the 1994 letter clarifying the situation.
I would like to point out that Redemptionis Sacramentum does not say:Lastly, the Church’s official position is this:
To read “only” into this Vatican instruction is to read something that is not there.It is altogether laudable to maintain the noble custom by which only boys or youths, customarily termed servers, provide service of the altar after the manner of acolytes, and receive catechesis regarding their function in accordance with their power of comprehension.
If, in a particular parish, boys are rejecting God’s call to the priesthood because of their refusal to serve alongside altar girls, then the priest currently has the authority to disallow female altar servers. Why then should the universal Church disallow female altar servers everywhere, even in parishes where this is not a problem?I would maintain that, in general, to encourage girls is to discourage boys. The Church does not want to discourage boys. What to do?